Investigation reveals power struggles and questionable financial dealings within Switzerland-based World DanceSport Federation's Olympic breaking program.

"Breaking could be our ticket to the Olympics. [...] We need to use Breaking as our chance for Std or Latin to be accepted."
"The federation is not the be-all and end-all."
While the world watched breakers spin and freeze in Paris, a calculated power play was unraveling behind the scenes in Switzerland. An explosive investigation by public broadcaster SRF has exposed the Lausanne-based World DanceSport Federation (WDSF) for allegedly treating the sport of breaking as nothing more than a pawn. The accusation is damning: the WDSF exploited the street culture of breaking solely to smuggle its own traditional ballroom and Latin dance styles into the Olympic arena.
The Paris 2024 debut of breaking was hailed publicly as a modernization of the Games. However, insiders now reveal that the WDSF, a body with zero historical ties to hip-hop culture, orchestrated the move with ulterior motives. Instead of championing the breakers, the federation stands accused of prioritizing its own survival and relevance. The investigation uncovers a trail of opaque cash flows and strategic manipulation, suggesting that the athletes spinning on the world stage were merely leverage in a high-stakes bureaucratic game played by executives in Swiss boardrooms.
The evidence against the WDSF is not just hearsay; it is written in black and white. In a stunning revelation, SRF Investigativ obtained exclusive emails from WDSF President Shawn Tay, dating back to the lead-up to the Games. Tay’s correspondence to the executive presidium lays bare a cynical strategy: "Breaking could be our ticket to the Olympics... We need to use Breaking as our chance for Std or Latin to be accepted."
This is a smoking gun. Tay, who took power in 2018, explicitly advocated for keeping breaking "protected from the hands of others"—a euphemism for maintaining absolute control to ensure the WDSF reaped the benefits. The federation's defense—that they invested heavily in the sport—rings hollow against the internal admission that breaking was merely the bait. This calculated maneuver highlights a deep betrayal of the athletes who believed their sport was being respected, rather than utilized as a stepping stone for waltzes and tangos.
The disconnect between the governing body and the athletes is absolute. Breaking was born in the 1970s on the gritty streets of New York, forged in neighborhoods dominated by gangs where dance became a vehicle for peace, love, and unity. In stark contrast, the WDSF operates out of posh, mirrored ballrooms, governing dancers clad in coattails and sequins. It is a collision of worlds that was never destined to mesh.
While breakers battle in cyphers fueled by raw energy and community respect, WDSF officials glide through formal halls steeped in rigid tradition. Why does a federation obsessed with posture and gowns have jurisdiction over headspins and freezes? The investigation highlights that true breaking remained underground, organized by communities, until the WDSF seized the reins. Top German breaker Jilou puts it bluntly: "The federation is not the be-all and end-all." The cultural appropriation of a Black American art form by a Swiss-based bureaucracy represents a fundamental misunderstanding of the sport's soul.
The WDSF didn't just mismanage the culture; they actively suppressed its pioneers. Niels "Storm" Robitzky, a legendary figure in the global breaking community, was initially courted by the federation to lend credibility to their Olympic bid. Today, he stands as one of their fiercest critics. Storm alleges that once the WDSF secured its position, it systematically silenced critical voices and seized total control.
This was not a partnership; it was a takeover. The federation is accused of ignoring the input of the very people who built the scene, treating them as obstacles rather than experts. By marginalizing legends like Storm, the WDSF alienated the core community it claimed to represent. The result was a sanitized, bureaucratized version of breaking that left many athletes feeling exploited. The "peace, love, and unity" of the cypher were replaced by the cold, political maneuvering of sports administration.
Ultimately, the WDSF's Machiavellian scheme collapsed. The grand plan to use breaking to drag ballroom and Latin dance into the Olympic fold failed spectacularly. Neither Standard nor Latin dance has been accepted for future Games, and breaking itself faces an uncertain Olympic future after Paris. The federation gambled its reputation and the trust of a global community on a strategy that delivered nothing but controversy.
For Switzerland, home to the WDSF and the IOC, this scandal casts a shadow over the integrity of international sports governance centered in Lausanne. The investigation reveals a story of hubris—a belief that corporate structure could simply absorb and exploit organic culture without consequence. As the dust settles, the WDSF is left with a tarnished image, a furious community of breakers, and the realization that authenticity cannot be manufactured in a boardroom.