While the flames that razed Pacific Palisades came uncomfortably close to the Riviera Country Club – which will host 2028’s Olympic golf tournament – the overwhelming majority of venues are situated outside what would be regarded as high-risk fire zones.
Historical data, meanwhile, indicates that the chances of a similar disaster erupting during the 2028 Olympics are highly unlikely.
Prior to last week, no fire in Los Angeles County had appeared on a list of the 20 most destructive fires in California history, according to statistics provided by CalFire, the state’s fire agency.
The 2028 Olympics will also be taking place in July, a time of year when there are no Santa Ana winds, the powerful seasonal gusts widely seen as the biggest factor behind the unprecedented scale and scope of last week’s carnage.
And Los Angeles has already staged the Olympics successfully on two occasions – in 1984 and 1932.
Nevertheless, Dan Plumley, sports finance expert at Sheffield Hallam University, said the fires would have set alarm bells ringing among Olympic organisers.
“Organising committees will have factored these events into their planning but you’re very much working on a contingency basis – how much do you reasonably budget for this and how cautious or not cautious are you going to be?” Plumley told the iPaper.
“How much risk they want to build in, we’ll have to wait and see but these fires will have acted as an enormous wake-up call.”
Meanwhile, Pennsylvania State University professor Mark Dyerson floated the idea of the Olympics being moved to 2024 hosts Paris if LA was unable to deliver the games.
“They could go back to Paris,” the academic told the New York Post. “It would be unfortunate, but I’m sure they have some kind of committee – the IOC [International Olympic Committee] is a huge bureaucracy – that allegedly looks at contingencies.”
California Governor Gavin Newsom, however, told NBC’s Today morning programme that planning for the 2028 Olympics and the Fifa World Cup in 2026 – when eight matches are set to take place in Los Angeles – was on track.
Newsom said the flurry of major sporting events in Los Angeles over the next few years – the city will also host the NFL’s Super Bowl in 2027 – should be seen as an opportunity.
“My humble position, and it’s not just being naively optimistic, [is] that only reinforces the imperative [of] moving quickly, doing it in the spirit of collaboration and co-operation,” Newsom told NBC.
Conservative pundits, however, have wasted no time in demanding that Los Angeles be stripped of the Olympics.
“The Los Angeles Olympics should be cancelled,” right-wing provocateur Charlie Kirk wrote on X, formerly Twitter, last week.
“If you can’t fill a fire hydrant, you aren’t qualified to host the Olympics. Move them to Dallas, or Miami, so the world’s athletes can compete in a place capable of actually safely building and running something.”
Los Angeles 2028 organisers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.