U.S. Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte lost all four of his major sponsors on Monday, including Speedo USA and Ralph Lauren Corp, following his apology for an "exaggerated" story about being robbed at gunpoint at the Rio Games.
Lochte's version of the incident embarrassed the host city, angered local officials and further revelations about it — casting doubt on Lochte's story — dominated news coverage of South America's first Olympics.
The U.S. Olympic Committee
issued an apology on Thursday, and Lochte, a 12-time Olympic medalist,
made his own apology on Saturday in an interview with Brazil's largest
broadcaster, Globo TV.
"I wasn't lying to a certain extent," he said. "I over-exaggerated what was happening to me."
Within hours of the Games
coming to a close on Sunday night, swimwear maker Speedo USA issued a
statement saying it would drop Lochte as one of its endorsers, while
luxury retailer Ralph Lauren said it would not be renewing its contract
with the swimmer.
Hair removal company
Syneron Candela also ended its partnership with Lochte, four months
after naming him its global brand ambassador for one of its products.
Japanese mattress maker
Airweave, which last week had said it would stand by Lochte, on Monday
said it had decided it would not renew the endorsement, which had been
made for the Rio 2016 Olympic games.
Sponsorship and endorsement
deals typically include "morals clauses" that allow sponsors to
terminate deals early if they feel the athlete has behaved poorly in
public.
Nottingham, UK-based
Speedo's U.S. unit said on Monday it would donate $50,000 of Lochte's
fee to Save The Children, a global charity partner of Speedo.
Lochte said in an email that he respected Speedo's decision.
"I was immature and I made a
stupid mistake. I'm human. I made a mistake and I definitely learned
from this," Lochte said in an interview on the Today show.
"They (the people of Rio) put on a great Games... And my immature, intoxicated behavior tarnished that a little," Lochte said.
Ralph Lauren had taken down
references to the gold medalist from its website last week, and on
Monday it said it would not renew the Olympic-specific deal, which
featured Lochte and other Olympic athletes wearing Ralph Lauren-branded
Olympic merchandise.
"We are transitioning out all Olympic visual as the games ended yesterday, and we are moving into our fall fashion message," Macy's spokeswoman Holly Thomas said in an e-mail.
"We are transitioning out all Olympic visual as the games ended yesterday, and we are moving into our fall fashion message," Macy's spokeswoman Holly Thomas said in an e-mail.
Lochte, 32, won one gold
medal at the Rio Olympics. He was the breakout star of the 2012 London
Olympics, landing a short-lived reality TV series called "What Would
Ryan Lochte Do?" and appearing, as himself, on top shows such as "30
Rock" and "90210."
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