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FAIR GAMES? - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations

From Road to IELTS Academic Reading Test 3 · Part 2 · Questions 14–27

Reading Passage

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14–27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.

FAIR GAMES?

For seventeen days every four years the world is briefly arrested by the captivating, dizzying spectacle of athleticism, ambition, pride and celebration on display at the Summer Olympic Games. After the last weary spectators and competitors have returned home, however, host cities are often left awash in high debts and costly infrastructure maintenance. The staggering expenses involved in a successful Olympic bid are often assumed to be easily mitigated by tourist revenues and an increase in local employment, but more often than not host cities are short changed and their taxpayers for generations to come are left settling the debt.

Olympic extravagances begin with the application process. Bidding alone will set most cities back about $20 million, and while officially bidding only takes two years (for cities that make the shortlist), most cities can expect to exhaust a decade working on their bid from the moment it is initiated to the announcement of voting results from International Olympic Committee members. Aside from the financial costs of the bid alone, the process ties up real estate in prized urban locations until the outcome is known. This can cost local economies millions of dollars of lost revenue from private developers who could have made use of the land, and can also mean that particular urban quarters lose their vitality due to the vacant lots. All of this can be for nothing if a bidding city does not appease the whims of IOC members – private connections and opinions on government conduct often hold sway (Chicago’s 2012 bid is thought to have been undercut by tensions over U.S. foreign policy).

Bidding costs do not compare, however, to the exorbitant bills that come with hosting the Olympic Games themselves. As is typical with large-scale, one-off projects, budgeting for the Olympics is a notoriously formidable task. Los Angelinos have only recently finished paying off their budget-breaking 1984 Olympics; Montreal is still in debt for its 1976 Games (to add insult to injury, Canada is the only host country to have failed to win a single gold medal during its own Olympics). The tradition of runaway expenses has persisted in recent years. London Olympics managers have admitted that their 2012 costs may increase ten times over their initial projections, leaving tax payers 20 billion pounds in the red.

Hosting the Olympics is often understood to be an excellent way to update a city’s sporting infrastructure. The extensive demands of Olympic sports include aquatic complexes, equestrian circuits, shooting ranges, beach volleyball courts, and, of course, an 80,000 seat athletic stadium. Yet these demands are typically only necessary to accommodate a brief influx of athletes from around the world. Despite the enthusiasm many populations initially have for the development of world-class sporting complexes in their home towns, these complexes typically fall into disuse after the Olympic fervour has waned. Even Australia, home to one of the world’s most sportive populations, has left its taxpayers footing a $32 million-a-year bill for the maintenance of vacant facilities.

Another major concern is that when civic infrastructure developments are undertaken in preparation for hosting the Olympics, these benefits accrue to a single metropolitan centre (with the exception of some outlying areas that may get some revamped sports facilities). In countries with an expansive land mass, this means vast swathes of the population miss out entirely. Furthermore, since the International Olympic Committee favours prosperous “global” centres (the United Kingdom was told, after three failed bids from its provincial cities, that only London stood any real chance at winning), the improvement of public transport, roads and communication links tends to concentrate in places already well-equipped with world-class infrastructures. Perpetually by-passing minor cities creates a cycle of disenfranchisement: these cities never get an injection of capital, they fail to become first-rate candidates, and they are constantly passed over in favour of more secure choices.

Finally, there is no guarantee that an Olympics will be a popular success. The “feel good” factor that most proponents of Olympic bids extol (and that was no doubt driving the 90 to 100 per cent approval rates of Parisians and Londoners for their cities’ respective 2012 bids) can be an elusive phenomenon, and one that is tied to that nation’s standing on the medal tables. This ephemeral thrill cannot compare to the years of disruptive construction projects and security fears that go into preparing for an Olympic Games, nor the decades of debt repayment that follow (Greece’s preparation for Athens 2004 famously deterred tourists from visiting the country due to widespread unease about congestion and disruption).

There are feasible alternatives to the bloat, extravagance and wasteful spending that comes with a modern Olympic Games. One option is to designate a permanent host city that would be re-designed or built from scratch especially for the task. Another is to extend the duration of the Olympics so that it becomes a festival of several months. Local businesses would enjoy the extra spending and congestion would ease substantially as competitors and spectators come and go according to their specific interests. Neither the “Olympic City” nor the extended length options really get to the heart of the issue, however. Stripping away ritual and decorum in favour of concentrating on athletic rivalry would be preferable.

Failing that, the Olympics could simply be scrapped altogether. International competition could still be maintained through world championships in each discipline. Most of these events are already held on non-Olympic years anyway – the International Association of Athletics Federations, for example, has run a biennial World Athletics Championship since 1983 after members decided that using the Olympics for their championship was no longer sufficient. Events of this nature keep world-class competition alive without requiring Olympic-sized expenses.

Questions

Questions 14–18 Matching Sentence Endings

Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A–K, below.

A. often help smaller cities to develop basic infrastructure.

B. tend to occur in areas where they are least needed.

C. require profitable companies to be put out of business.

D. are often never used again once the Games are over.

E. can take up to ten years to complete.

F. also satisfy needs of local citizens for first-rate sports facilities.

G. is usually only successful when it is from a capital city.

H. are closely related to how people feel emotionally about the Olympics.

I. are known for being very inaccurate.

J. often underlie the decisions of International Olympic Committee members.

K. are holding back efforts to reform the Olympics.

14 Bids to become a host city
15 Personal relationships and political tensions
16 Cost estimates for the Olympic Games
17 Purpose-built sporting venues
18 Urban developments associated with the Olympics

Questions 19–25 True / False / Not Given

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?

TRUE if the statement agrees with the information

FALSE if the statement contradicts the information

NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this

19 Residents of host cities have little use for the full range of Olympic facilities.
20 Australians have still not paid for the construction of Olympic sports facilities.
21 People far beyond the host city can expect to benefit from improved infrastructure.
22 It is difficult for small cities to win an Olympic bid.
23 When a city makes an Olympic bid, a majority of its citizens usually want it to win.
24 Whether or not people enjoy hosting the Olympics in their city depends on how athletes from their country perform in Olympic events.
25 Fewer people than normal visited Greece during the run up to the Athens Olympics.

Questions 26–27 Multiple Choice (Two Answers)

Choose TWO letters, A–E.

26 27 Which TWO of the following does the author propose as alternatives to the current Olympics?
  1. The Olympics should be cancelled in favour of individual competitions for each sport.
  2. The Olympics should focus on ceremony rather than competition.
  3. The Olympics should be held in the same city every time.
  4. The Olympics should be held over a month rather than seventeen days.
  5. The Olympics should be made smaller by getting rid of unnecessary and unpopular sports.

Answers & Explanations Summary

# Answer Evidence Explanation
Q14 E Bidding alone will set most cities back about $20 million, and while officially bidding only takes two years (for cities that make the shortlist), most cities can expect to exhaust a decade working on their bid from the moment it is initiated to the announcement of voting results from International Olympic Committee members Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that most cities spend ten years (a decade) working on their application to host the Olympic games before the final decision is made.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that the whole process for a city to apply to host the Olympics can last for ten years.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is E because the passage states that while the official bidding part is short, the entire process from the very start to the final announcement usually takes cities a full decade. In English, a 'decade' is a period of ten years. Therefore, 'bids to become a host city' matches the idea of 'working on their bid' for ten years.
Q15 J All of this can be for nothing if a bidding city does not appease the whims of IOC members – private connections and opinions on government conduct often hold sway (Chicago’s 2012 bid is thought to have been undercut by tensions over U.S. foreign policy) Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that even if a city works hard to host the Olympics, the people who make the final decision (the IOC) might choose based on their own friendships or feelings about a country's politics.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that personal friendships and political disagreements are often the real reasons behind the choices made by the International Olympic Committee (IOC).
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is based on the section of the text discussing the bidding process. It states that the decisions made by the committee (IOC members) are often influenced by 'private connections'—which refers to personal relationships—and 'opinions on government conduct'—which refers to political tensions. The text uses the phrase 'hold sway' to show that these factors are very powerful in deciding which city wins the bid.
Q16 I As is typical with large-scale, one-off projects, budgeting for the Olympics is a notoriously formidable task
London Olympics managers have admitted that their 2012 costs may increase ten times over their initial projections, leaving tax payers 20 billion pounds in the red
Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that making a plan for Olympic spending is a very hard job that is known for having problems. It gives an example showing that in London, the final spending might end up being ten times more than the first price they guessed.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that the guesses or plans about how much money the Olympic Games will cost are usually wrong and not close to the real price.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is supported by the passage's description of budgeting as a difficult job. The word 'notoriously' shows that it is well known for being a problem. The passage notes that 'initial projections' (the first cost estimates) often turn out to be much lower than the final bill, specifically mentioning that London's costs could be ten times higher than what was first thought. This proves that these first guesses are 'inaccurate.'
Q17 D these complexes typically fall into disuse after the Olympic fervour has waned Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage says that these sports buildings usually stop being used after the excitement of the Olympics goes away.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that sports buildings made specifically for the Olympics are usually not used anymore after the event ends.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is D because the text explains that while cities build many special places for sports (like swimming pools or stadiums), these places often become empty once the Olympic Games are finished. The passage uses the phrase "fall into disuse" to describe this, which means people stop using them. It also mentions that Australia has to pay a lot of money every year to take care of "vacant facilities," which are buildings that are empty and not in use.
Q18 B Furthermore, since the International Olympic Committee favours prosperous “global” centres (the United Kingdom was told, after three failed bids from its provincial cities, that only London stood any real chance at winning), the improvement of public transport, roads and communication links tends to concentrate in places already well-equipped with world-class infrastructures Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that the Olympic Committee likes big, rich cities. Because of this, improvements to things like roads and trains mostly happen in cities that already have very good systems, instead of helping smaller cities.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that building projects for the city (like new roads or trains) usually happen in areas that do not really need them because those places already have good facilities.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is B because the passage explains that the International Olympic Committee prefers to choose rich, 'global' cities that already have excellent facilities. As a result, new projects for transport and communication are focused on these wealthy cities that are already 'well-equipped,' rather than helping smaller cities that actually need the improvements. This creates a situation where the developments happen in places where they are 'least needed.'
Q19 TRUE Despite the enthusiasm many populations initially have for the development of world-class sporting complexes in their home towns, these complexes typically fall into disuse after the Olympic fervour has waned Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage says that even though people are happy to get new sports buildings at the start, these places usually become empty and unused after the excitement of the Olympics goes away.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that people living in the city that hosts the Olympics do not really use many of the sports buildings or areas after the event is finished.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is TRUE because the text explains that while people are excited at first, once the games are over, the sports centers are often empty and not used. The passage uses the phrase 'fall into disuse' to show that these buildings do not stay busy or useful for the local residents. It also mentions 'vacant facilities,' which means the buildings are empty.
Q20 NOT GIVEN Even Australia, home to one of the world’s most sportive populations, has left its taxpayers footing a $32 million-a-year bill for the maintenance of vacant facilities Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage states that people in Australia have to pay millions of dollars every year to look after and repair empty Olympic buildings, but it never mentions the debt from building them.
Answer Explanation:
The answer is NOT GIVEN because the text does not provide information about whether the money spent to build (construct) the Olympic venues in Australia has been fully paid or not.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is NOT GIVEN because the passage mentions that Australian taxpayers are paying a $32 million-a-year bill for the "maintenance" of its sports facilities. Maintenance refers to the ongoing cost of keeping a building in good condition (cleaning, repairs, etc.). However, the passage does not mention the status of the "construction" costs, which is the money spent to build the facilities in the first place. Therefore, we cannot know from this text if the construction debt still exists.
Q21 FALSE Another major concern is that when civic infrastructure developments are undertaken in preparation for hosting the Olympics, these benefits accrue to a single metropolitan centre (with the exception of some outlying areas that may get some revamped sports facilities). In countries with an expansive land mass, this means vast swathes of the population miss out entirely Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that when a city builds new systems like better transport or buildings for the Olympics, these gains only happen in that one city. In big countries, this results in most of the people living in other areas getting no benefits.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that the idea that people living far away from the Olympic host city will get better roads, transport, or buildings is incorrect.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is FALSE because the passage states that when a city builds new things for the Olympics, the benefits usually only go to that one main city. In large countries, this means many people living across the rest of the country do not get any of these improvements. The text uses the words 'accrue to a single metropolitan centre' to show that the good things stay in one place, and that many people 'miss out entirely,' which means they get no benefit at all.
Q22 TRUE Furthermore, since the International Olympic Committee favours prosperous “global” centres (the United Kingdom was told, after three failed bids from its provincial cities, that only London stood any real chance at winning), the improvement of public transport, roads and communication links tends to concentrate in places already well-equipped with world-class infrastructures. Perpetually by-passing minor cities creates a cycle of disenfranchisement: these cities never get an injection of capital, they fail to become first-rate candidates, and they are constantly passed over in favour of more secure choices Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that the group in charge of the Olympics likes big, rich cities and often ignores smaller cities, which means those smaller cities are not chosen because they are not viewed as the safest or best options.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that it is a fact that smaller, less famous cities face great difficulty when trying to be selected to host the Olympic Games.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is TRUE because the text states that the International Olympic Committee (IOC) prefers large, wealthy "global" cities. It notes that "minor cities" (a synonym for small cities) are often ignored or "passed over" because they do not have the same level of existing infrastructure or fame as bigger cities. This makes it very hard for them to compete or be seen as good candidates.
Q23 NOT GIVEN The “feel good” factor that most proponents of Olympic bids extol (and that was no doubt driving the 90 to 100 per cent approval rates of Parisians and Londoners for their cities’ respective 2012 bids) can be an elusive phenomenon, and one that is tied to that nation’s standing on the medal tables Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage mentions that for specific 2012 bids, the people of Paris and London showed very high support. However, it also explains that this positive feeling is difficult to capture and depends on how many medals the country wins. It does not state that a majority of people in every city usually support a bid to host the Olympics.
Answer Explanation:
The answer is NOT GIVEN because the passage does not provide enough information to say if most people in a city normally want their city to win an Olympic bid.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is NOT GIVEN because while the text mentions very high support (90 to 100 percent) in two specific cases—Paris and London for the 2012 Games—it does not claim that this high level of support is a general or 'usual' rule for all cities that bid. The passage notes that the 'feel good' factor is 'elusive', which means it is difficult to find or define, suggesting it is not something that always happens with every city's population.
Q24 TRUE The “feel good” factor that most proponents of Olympic bids extol (and that was no doubt driving the 90 to 100 per cent approval rates of Parisians and Londoners for their cities’ respective 2012 bids) can be an elusive phenomenon, and one that is tied to that nation’s standing on the medal tables Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage states that the good feeling people get from hosting the Games is hard to capture and is linked to the country's position on the list of medal winners.
Answer Explanation:
The answer is TRUE because the text mentions that the happiness people feel about hosting the Olympics is connected to how successful their country is at winning medals.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is TRUE because the passage links the 'feel good' factor (the enjoyment of hosting) to the nation's success on the 'medal tables' (how well their athletes perform). It suggests that the positive feeling is not guaranteed and often depends on their athletes' victories. Therefore, public enjoyment of the games is directly influenced by sports performance.
Q25 TRUE (Greece’s preparation for Athens 2004 famously deterred tourists from visiting the country due to widespread unease about congestion and disruption) Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that because Greece was getting ready for the 2004 Olympics, tourists were afraid of the crowds and traffic problems, so they did not visit.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means the statement matches what the text says. It is true that not as many people visited Greece while the country was getting ready for the Olympic Games in Athens.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is TRUE because the passage says that preparing for the 2004 Athens Olympics "deterred" tourists. The word "deterred" means to make someone not want to do something. Tourists were worried about "遊客" (tourists) being bothered by "congestion" (too many people or cars) and "disruption" (problems that stop things from working normally). Because they were worried, fewer people visited Greece during that time.
Q26
Q27 A / C One option is to designate a permanent host city that would be re-designed or built from scratch especially for the task
Failing that, the Olympics could simply be scrapped altogether. International competition could still be maintained through world championships in each discipline
Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage suggests that one choice is to pick a single city to be the home for the Games forever. If that does not happen, it says the Olympics could be stopped entirely. In that case, athletes would keep competing in world championships for their individual sports.
Answer Explanation:
The answer shows that the writer suggests two ideas to change how the Olympics work. One idea is to stop the Olympics completely and have separate world contests for every sport instead. The second idea is to choose one city to host the Olympics every single time instead of picking a new city every four years.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is A and C because the author describes these as possible ways to avoid high costs. In the seventh paragraph, the author writes about choosing a 'permanent host city', which matches Choice C. In the last paragraph, the author says the Olympics could be 'scrapped' (stopped) and replaced by 'world championships' for each sport, which matches Choice A.

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