It is with profound sadness that Kim McDonald International Management
announces the death of its founder and chief executive. Kim, aged 45 was found
dead from a heart attack in his hotel room last Wednesday, while on holiday in
Brisbane, Australia. The delay in making the news public was necessitated by
the process of identification and informing next of kin, his mother Margaret
and his daughter Bridget, along with her mother Ellen. A very good runner
himself - a 4.02 miler and a 2.19 marathoner - Kim was one of the first people
to recognise and act on the realisation that athletes would need serious
representation in the new professional world of the sport in the mid-80s. Even
earlier, on trips to East Africa in the 70s, he had seen the potential for
Kenyan athletic development, in which he would later play a huge role. Kims
seriousness, business acumen, and reputation for honest and straight dealing
quickly gained the confidence of many of the sports luminaries, and he was soon
representing a group of the worlds leading athletes - Steve Ovett, John Walker,
Peter Elliott, Liz McColgan, Sonia OSullivan, and many of the top Kenyans, led
by Moses Kiptanui and Noah Ngeny, and most recently, the great young British
sprinter, Mark Lewis-Francis. If he had one regret, it was that people did not
recognise the extent and value of his coaching skills. But Peter Elliott said
this morning, "Kim took over my programme in the late 80s, and basically I
owe my Olympic silver and my Commonwealth gold to Kim". That same ability
guided Noah Ngeny to the Olympic 1500 metres gold in Sydney last year. Sonia
OSullivan, with whom he remained friends and her business representative, even
after their own personal relationship ended, said this morning from Australia,
"I was in Brisbane last week, but the only reason we didn meet was he was
on holiday, and I knew hed coming here to Melbourne this week. But we talked on
the phone. I was really looking forward to seeing him, and I think he was
pleasantly surprised when I said I wanted to get back to a situation where he
advised me, and we talked every day". The inevitable antagonism with
officialdom soon vanished, and Kim became a close and trusted advisor of IAAF
President, Lamine Diack. Speaking from Beijing this morning, Lamine said,
"This is tragic news. I remember Kim as a young man full of life and
enthusiasm. We had been friends for many years and I greatly appreciated the
seriousness, honesty and passion he demonstrated when we worked together on the
development of athletics in Africa". The offices of K.I.M., in London and
in Boston have been inundated with phone calls, faxes and emails from across
the world, expressing the same shock and regret that we feel, who have worked
with Kim, in one particular case, for over 25 years. Arrangements are being
made to bring Kims body back from Australia, and as soon as we have funeral
details, they will be made public.
Pat Butcher