Or at least not when it comes to its hopes for hosting the Winter Olympics in 2018.
Because on Sunday, Edgar Grospiron, the head of the bid committee, resigned.
Happier days when Edgar Grospiron was still "proud and enthusiastic" at being the head of the bid committee (screenshot from TV8 Mont-Blanc, February 2010)
His decision of course was all about money.
The former Olympic champion quit his post because as far as he was concerned, the €20 million budget simply wasn't enough.
“I cannot win the Games with the budget we have and in the time remaining,” he said.
"We have a lot of important things to do, but we just don't have the means to be competitive."
Ah yes.
Proof once again that when it comes to the Olympics - whether they're the Summer or Winter games - cash (along with lobbying) is arguably one of the most important factors.
Of course the French Olympic Committee (Le Comité national olympique et sportif français, CNOSF) attempted to play down what was undoubtedly a blow.
Its president, Denis Masseglia, said that a successor would be appointed within the next couple of days and Grospiron would still be helping out in an advisory role.
"We continue (our bid) with humility and authenticity," he said in what is surely just another way of admitting that he didn't really hold much hope of Annecy being chosen.
Mind you Masseglia's rather noble sentiment was one echoed by the newly appointed minister of sports, Chantal Jouanno, in an interview with the national daily Le Parisien.
She, of course, was disappointed in the wake of Grospiron's resignation, but also called for "commitment and dignity."
"The French are often their own worst enemies," she admitted.
"Now is the time to look forward rather than back and to roll up our sleeves," she continued, sounding more like a typical sports journalist with every word.
"Withdrawal isn't an option. We have to defend the image of France and follow through the bid to its end with dignity especially as its (Annecy's) bid isn't a bad one."
Her solution? Lobbying and communication.
Ah, that's the spirit. Time to stand up and sing La Marseillaise.
Somehow though the smart money (yep it's hard to get away from the "filthy lucre") is on the other two cities bidding to host the 2018 Games; fellow European rival Munich and South Korea's Pyeongchang, which is making its third consecutive attempt to host the Games.
The International Olympic Committee will select the host city at a meeting in Durban, South Africa, on July 6, 2011.
The last time France staged the Winter Games was in Albertville in 1992.
The CNOSF awarded Annecy the right to bid on behalf of France back in March last year and (to any reasonable thinking person) the town has been considered an outsider from the outset.
Hallelujah for the Olympic ideal!
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