IWWF urges water ski community to weigh in on Brisbane 2032 Olympic vision

Shaping the Future: Brisbane 2032
By Jack Burden
The International Waterski & Wakeboard Federation (IWWF) is calling on athletes, fans, and anyone with a stake in the sport to speak up, as the Brisbane 2032 Olympic organizers open the door—just slightly—for public input on the Games’ direction.
A short survey, open to the public until June 20, invites people from around the world to help shape the vision for the 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games. It’s a rare chance for the waterskiing community to register on the radar of Olympic decision-makers—and maybe, just maybe, push the sport one step closer to the five rings.
This campaign comes at a curious and potentially pivotal moment. For the first time in years, the Olympic conversation doesn’t feel like a one-way street. According to insiders, it was the Brisbane 2032 Organising Committee—not the waterski federations—that initiated talks about possible inclusion. That’s a reversal big enough to raise eyebrows across a sport long relegated to the Olympic sidelines.
Cindy Hook, the CEO of Brisbane 2032, may be part of the reason. She has a background in skiing—not just the kind with lift tickets and après, but the kind pulled behind a boat. How much that personal link matters is anyone’s guess, but in Olympic politics, connections have always mattered more than most people would like to admit.
USA Water Ski & Wake Sports Executive Director Kevin Michael recently confirmed that the organization has launched a new Olympic campaign, anchored by meetings with Brisbane officials. “We’re making the right pitch to the right people at the right time,” he said in The Water Skier magazine. “No promises yet, but this journey will absolutely pay dividends for the sport.”
Whether those dividends come in the form of Olympic inclusion—or simply more visibility and legitimacy—remains to be seen. The waterski world is split. Some see this as a tired, expensive dream that has sapped energy from more realistic efforts to grow the sport. Others view it as a necessary gamble, a long shot worth taking if only to show future generations that the sport hasn’t stopped dreaming.
Behind the scenes, there’s cautious optimism. Rumors are circulating of quiet support within the International Olympic Committee, and even whispers of water skiing being considered for exhibition status at the 2028 Los Angeles Games. But for now, it’s all speculation and strategy meetings.
What isn’t speculation is this: there’s a survey open, and the people running Brisbane 2032 say they want to hear from the public. So, if you’ve ever had an opinion about where the sport should be—or where it could go—now’s the time to speak up.
Take the Brisbane 2032 survey here. Deadline: June 20.
Yes !!! I hope waterski, wakeboard and handi ski will held for Brisbane 2032