“…According to Cottle (2010), such investments often attract a high premium to the host community which, as opined by Müller and Gaffney (2018), include capital cost of material interventions in the city such as the upgrading or building of new sports venues, roads, railway lines, airports, conference centres, security systems, and hotels and often runs into billions of dollars, which is several times the operational cost of putting on the event itself (Humphrey and Fraser, 2016;Gold and Gold, 2016). The escalating costs, and the increasingly substantial sums of taxpayers' resources that are regularly sunk into preparing the stadia for such hosting activities, often are followed by either low keyed legacy outcomes with little or scant policy learning taking place (Bama and Tichaawa, 2020;Girginov, 2011;Grix and Brannagan, 2017;Kim et al, 2019;Leopkey and Parent, 2012;Tomlinson, 2014). Legacy should, therefore, be considered as a high-risk strategy for justifying exorbitant expenditures on sport mega-events with no dedicated focus on research that informs the existence and process through which sport mega-events enhance the attainment of legacies (Byers et al, 2019;Zimbalist, 2017).…”