The Cairns Post

Good sports

MEL McLAUGHLIN BELIEVES TOKYO GAMES ARE JUST THE TICKET IN A PANDEMIC-RAVAGED WORLD

- JAMES WIGNEY

Despite the delays, disruption­s and debate over whether they should even go ahead, Mel McLaughlin believes the Tokyo Olympic Games are exactly what the world needs right now. The versatile Channel 7 presenter has headed to the Japanese capital fresh from a stint for Optus Sport covering the recent Euro 2020 football championsh­ip, and says the public reaction she saw from one of the first major tournament­s to take place since the coronaviru­s pandemic has made her believe even more strongly in the healing power of sport.

“When you look at the Euros, you see the absolute joy and euphoria and what it meant,” she says. “Nothing brings together people like sport – you laugh and you cry and whenever there is an Olympics montage on TV, I will get goosebumps or cry. Just put something in slow motion and that’s me gone.

“But it’s not just the English fans and the Italian and Danish fans jumping around celebratin­g in the streets, all of us at home watching are riding that wave as well and it’s bringing joy. It’s what the world needs.”

That said, she understand­s that these Olympic Games – delayed by a year due to Covid – will be like no other and respects the groundswel­l of discontent within the host nation, which is still struggling with a fourth wave of the deadly virus. Earlier this month, crowds were banned from the Olympic venues and athletes and visiting press will have to operate under strict safety protocols, but there is still a significan­t percentage of the Japanese population who would prefer the event was canned entirely.

“I definitely respect that opinion,” says McLaughlin. “Everything in this whole situation divides opinion doesn’t it, and there’s no exact sciences with lockdowns and what you can and can’t do isn’t always consistent. But everyone is trying as best they can.”

COVID RULES

McLaughlin is a veteran of huge overseas tournament­s, having covered both Summer and Winter Olympics as well as the Commonweal­th Games and football World Cups, but the Covid protocols will add an extra degree of difficulty to the Tokyo Games for her and her fellow commentato­rs. All have been vaccinated and will have to mask up and socially distance between hotel and venue bubbles, making interactio­ns with athletes and their families all the more challengin­g. McLaughlin has been deep in preparatio­n mode, making old-school, handwritte­n notes to cover football (beginning with tonight’s Matildas match against New Zealand), basketball, canoeing, skateboard­ing and “whatever else pops up” for the network.

McLaughlin is particular­ly pleased that a record number of women will represent Australia at this year’s Games and will outnumber the men by 254 to 218. Having worked in the traditiona­lly maledomina­ted area of sports journalism and presenting for more than 15 years, she says it’s high time that the faces on the track and in the studios represent a broader cross-section of society.

“I have said this for a long time when I am asked about sports coverage and being a female hosting sport for years,” she says.

“You have to reflect society. I get stopped in the street by mums and grandmas and they might come up with their daughter saying ‘I just want my daughter to meet you’ and you feel very privileged for that experience. It’s purely because they want their daughters to see females represente­d.

“And it terms of athletes, that has come such a long way.

“It is absolutely indicative of 2021. There are just no excuses any more.

It’s not a novelty, it’s not ‘we need a token female’. It’s because society is not five men with grey hair in suits.”

McLaughlin’s other passion project in the lead-up to the Games has been to launch a podcast of indepth interviews with extraordin­ary members of the Olympic and

Paralympic teams. But while No

Turning Back has featured

They might come up with their daughter, saying ‘I just want my daughter to meet you’

household names including basketball great Patty Mills and canoeist Jess Fox, she was also keen to put the spotlight on inspiratio­nal, lesserknow­n figures such as Nic Beveridge, who set his sights on triathlons after becoming a paraplegic as a teenager, and Bendere Oboya, who moved to Australia from Ethiopia at the age of three, grew up idolising Cathy Freeman and will now represent her adopted country on the track in the 400m and 4 x 400m relay.

“The only thing I resented is that they are all overachiev­ers who made me feel like I had done nothing with my life,” McLaughlin says with a laugh.

“For many athletes sport can be their salvation and something that has drawn them out of a very dark period and turned their lives around. Every individual has an amazing story but I have long thought that sport is something in life that can unify people and make them happy.”

Channel 7’s Olympics coverage kicks off with the opening ceremony broadcast live on Friday at 8.50pm

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