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Fair Games Reading Answers: IELTS Reading Practice Test

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Updated on Sep 03, 2024, 11:13

This passage critiques the financial and logistical burdens of hosting the Summer Olympic Games. It highlights the high costs of bidding, hosting, and maintaining infrastructure, often leaving host cities with long-term debt and underutilised facilities. The passage suggests that while the Olympics are celebrated for their athleticism and global unity, they often result in economic disadvantages for host cities. 

 

It proposes alternatives, such as a permanent host city or extending the event's duration, and even considers scrapping the Olympics in favour of individual world championships.

 

This passage helps students practice identifying the main arguments and supporting details, summarising complex information, and understanding cause-effect relationships. It also helps students hone skills for extracting key points from lengthy and dense texts, which is crucial for the IELTS Reading test.

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1. Fair Games Reading Passage

You should spend approximately 20 minutes answering Questions 1 - 13 based on the Reading Passage below. This approach can help manage time effectively during a reading comprehension activity or exam. 

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2. Fair Games Reading Answers & Questions

Discover exciting and informative IELTS reading answers about Is Fair Games Reading Answers & Questions 

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1.

Fair Games Reading Passage

General Information

  • Read Instructions: Understand each question before answering.
  • Manage Time: Spend about 20 minutes per passage.
  • Skim and Scan: Quickly get the main idea and find specific information.
  • Highlight Key Info: Underline essential words or phrases.
  • Answer All Questions: Attempt every question; no penalty for wrong answers.
  • Stay Focused: Avoid distractions and keep your attention on the task.
  • Check Spelling: Ensure correct spelling and grammar.
  • Transfer Answers Clearly: Write answers neatly on the answer sheet.
  • Don’t Dwell: Move on if stuck and return later.
  • Review: If time allows, review your answers.

 

Understand the IELTS Pattern in detail before you begin! 

 

 

 

Fair Games Reading Passage 

 

 

Paragraph A:


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.

 

Paragraph B:


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).

 

Paragraph C:


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 taxpayers 20 billion pounds in the red.

 

Paragraph D:


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 hometowns, 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.

 

Paragraph E:


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 create 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.

 

Paragraph F:


Finally, there is no guarantee that the 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 percent 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).

 

Paragraph G:


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 redesigned 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.

 

Paragraph H:


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.

2.

Fair Games Reading Answers & Questions

Discover exciting and informative IELTS reading answers about Fair Games 

Questions and Answers 1-5
  • Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-K, below.
  • Write the correct letter, A-K, in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.

 

1. Bids to become a host city
2. Personal relationship and Political tensions
3. Cost estimates for the Olympic Games
4. Purpose- Built sporting venues
5. Urban developments associated with the Olympics

 

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 out of business
D. Are often never used once the Game is over
E. Can take up to ten years to complete
F. Also satisfy the 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.

 

Fair Games Reading Answers with Explanations (1-5)

 

 

Type of question: Matching Features

 

In the task of "Matching Features," you typically need to pair related items based on certain criteria. This could involve comparing characteristics, identifying connections, or linking items that complement each other. The specific approach will depend on the task's context. 


 

How to best answer the question

 

  • Start by identifying the key aspects of each item and then clearly demonstrate how they align or differ. 
  • Providing specific examples or evidence to support your comparisons can strengthen your answer. 
  • It's also essential to ensure that your response is organised and easy to follow, so consider using a structured format such as a table or a side-by-side comparison. 

     
1. E

 

Reference: 


Paragraph B: 
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.

 

Explanation: 
The reference in Paragraph B discusses the extensive time required for cities to prepare and complete an Olympic bid, matching the idea that it "can take up to ten years to complete."

 

 

2. J

 

Reference: 


Paragraph B: 
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).

 

Explanation: 
This line from Paragraph B directly ties personal relationships and political tensions to the decision-making process of IOC members, explaining why personal connections and government conduct can influence Olympic bids.

 

3. I

 

Reference: 


Paragraph C: 
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.

 

Explanation: 
The mention of ongoing debts and the difficulty in budgeting within Paragraph C explains the notorious inaccuracy of cost estimates for the Olympic Games.

 

4. D

 

Reference: 


Paragraph D: 
Despite the enthusiasm many populations initially have for the development of world-class sporting complexes in their hometowns, these complexes typically fall into disuse after the Olympic fervor has waned.

 

Explanation: 
The reference in Paragraph D clearly states that purpose-built sporting venues often fall into disuse after the Olympics, explaining why they are often never used once the Games are over.

 

5. B

 

Reference: 


Paragraph E: 
The improvement of public transport, roads, and communication links tends to concentrate in places already well-equipped with world-class infrastructures."

 

Explanation: 
This line in Paragraph E explains that urban developments associated with the Olympics tend to occur in areas where infrastructure is already robust, indicating they are least needed.

 

Read more about Dictation Words for IELTS: Practice and Preparation!

 

Questions and Answers 6-12
Do the following statements agree with the information given in the Reading Passage?
In boxes 6-12 on your answer sheet, write

  • TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
  • FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
  • NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this in the passage

 

6. Residents of host cities have little use for the full range of Olympics facilities.

7. Australians have still not paid for the construction of Olympics sports facilities.

8. People far beyond the host city can expect to benefit from improved infrastructure.

9. It is difficult for small cities to win an Olympic bid.

10. When a city makes an Olympic bid, a majority of its citizens usually want it to win.

11. Whether or not people enjoy hosting the Olympics in their city depends on how athletes from their country perform in Olympics events.

12. Fewer people than normal visited Greece during the run-up to the Athens Olympics.

 

Fair Games Reading Answers with Explanations (6-12)

 

Question Type:  True/False/Not Given

 

In this task, you are presented with a statement, and your task is to determine if it agrees with the information in the passage (True), contradicts the information in the passage (False), or if there is insufficient information in the passage to decide (not given).

 

How to best answer the question:

 

  • Read the statement carefully to ensure you understand exactly what it is saying. 
  • Pay attention to details such as dates, numbers, and specific information.
  • Scan the passage to find the section where the relevant information is likely to be located. 
  • Focus on finding evidence that either supports or contradicts the statement.
  • True: If the statement agrees with the information in the passage.
  • False: If the statement contradicts the information in the passage.
  • Not Given: If there is no information in the passage that confirms or contradicts the statement.

 

6. True

 

Reference: 


Paragraph D: 
Despite the enthusiasm many populations initially have for the development of world-class sporting complexes in their hometowns, these complexes typically fall into disuse after the Olympic fervor has waned.

 

Explanation: 
This statement from Paragraph D supports the idea that residents of host cities have little use for the full range of Olympics facilities after the events are over.

 

7. Not Given

 

Reference: 


Not Given

 

Explanation: 
The passage does not provide any specific information about whether Australians have or have not paid for their Olympic facilities.

 

8. False

 

Reference: 


Paragraph E: 
Another major concern is that when civic infrastructure developments are undertaken in preparation for hosting the Olympics, these benefits accrue to a single metropolitan center.

 

Explanation: 
This line in Paragraph E indicates that infrastructure benefits are concentrated in the host city, not extending far beyond it, making the statement about benefits reaching far beyond false.

 

9. True

 

Reference: 


Paragraph E: 
Perpetually by-passing minor cities create 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 favor of more secure choices.

 

Explanation: 
This line from Paragraph E supports the idea that it is difficult for small cities to win an Olympic bid because they are often overlooked in favor of more secure, larger cities.

 

10. Not Given

 

Reference: 


Not Given

 

Explanation: 
The passage does not mention how citizens feel about their city winning an Olympic bid.

 

11. True

 

Reference: 


Paragraph F: 
The 'feel good' factor... can be an elusive phenomenon, and one that is tied to that nation’s standing on the medal tables.

 

Explanation: 
This line in Paragraph F suggests that the enjoyment of hosting the Olympics is tied to the success of the host nation's athletes, making this statement true.

 

12. True

 

Reference: 


Paragraph F: 
Greece’s preparation for Athens 2004 famously deterred tourists from visiting the country due to widespread unease about congestion and disruption.

 

Explanation: 
This line from Paragraph F confirms that fewer people visited Greece during the run-up to the Athens Olympics due to concerns about congestion and disruption.


 

Read more about A Guide on Most Common English Words Used in Daily Life!

Questions and Answers 13-14
  • Choose a letter, A-E
  • Write the correct letters in boxes 13 and 14 on your answer sheet.
  • Which TWO of the following does the author propose as alternatives to the current Olympics?

 

A. The Olympics should be canceled in favor of individual competitions for Each sport
B. The Olympics should focus on ceremony rather than competition.
C. The Olympics should be held in the same city every time.
D. The Olympics should be held over a month rather than seventeen days.
E. The Olympics should be made smaller by getting rid of unnecessary and unpopular sports.

 

 

Fair Games Reading Answers with Explanations (13-14)

 

 

Question Type: Multiple Choice 

 

Multiple Choice questions in the IELTS reading test present you with a question followed by a set of options from which you must choose the correct answer. Typically, there are three or four options to choose from. You must carefully read the question and each option before selecting the correct answer.


 

How to best answer this question:

 

  • You must comprehend the passage to select the most accurate option.
  • Efficient skimming and scanning help locate relevant information quickly.
  • Some options may be designed to mislead you, so it's crucial to base your choice on evidence from the passage.
  • Multiple-choice questions can be time-consuming if you dwell on each option too long. Manage your time wisely to ensure you can attempt all questions. 

     
13. C

 

Reference: 


Paragraph G: 
One option is to designate a permanent host city that would be re-designed or built from scratch especially for the task.

 

Explanation: 
Paragraph G discusses the idea of having a permanent host city for the Olympics, aligning with the suggestion that the Olympics should be held in the same city every time.

 

14. A

 

Reference: 


Paragraph H: 
Failing that, the Olympics could simply be scrapped altogether. International competition could still be maintained through world championships in each discipline.

 

Explanation: 
This line in Paragraph H proposes canceling the Olympics in favor of individual competitions for each sport, offering an alternative to the current Olympic structure.

 

 

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FAQs

Q. What types of questions are in the IELTS Reading section?

Ans. The IELTS Reading section features various question types, including multiple-choice, true/false/not given, matching headings, summary completion, sentence completion, and short answer questions. These are designed to test a range of reading skills, such as understanding main ideas, detail, logical argument, and recognising writers' opinions, attitudes, and purposes.

Q. How long is the IELTS Reading test?

Ans. The IELTS Reading test lasts for 60 minutes. During this time, candidates must read three passages and answer a total of 40 questions. Time management is crucial to ensure all questions are attempted.

Q. Can I write on the question paper?

Ans. Yes, candidates are allowed to write on the question paper, which can help note key points or highlight important information. However, only answers written on the answer sheet will be marked, so it is essential to transfer answers accurately.