The Guardian Australia

Olympic Games highlights: your day-by-day guide to the best bits in Tokyo

- Ian Malin

Friday 23 July

The opening ceremony in the Olympic Stadium will be spectacula­r but has been shrouded in secrecy so far. Because of Covid restrictio­ns fewer athletes than usual will be joining the parade of nations. As usual Greek athletes will lead the march behind the flags with the Americans and French last before the entry of the host Japanese team. Like the final event of the Games it will be a marathon and a lump in the throat is inevitable.

That opening ceremony does not leave a lot of time for events on the first real day of competitio­n although Britain’s rowers are quickly into action on the Sea Forest Waterway. The women’s quadruple sculls, Mathilda HodgkinsBy­rne, Hannah Scott, Charlotte Hodgkins-Byrne and Lucy Glover are a strong combinatio­n and Team GB expect another healthy haul of medals.

The other events on the first Friday are the individual ranking rounds for men and women in archery at Yumenoshim­a Park. The six-strong British team includes Naomi Folkard who is competing in her fifth Games with the 18-year-old James Woodgate competing in his first Olympics. India will be hoping to build on their recent impressive World Cup displays.

Saturday 24 July

The start of the men’s and women’s tennis competitio­n at Ariake Tennis Park and all Britain will begin to will Andy Murray on to a third successive gold medal. Since Rio, of course, Murray has been beset by injury problems and his hip surgery two years ago means that winning gold will be a monumental task but with Murray nothing seems impossible. Win or lose, expect plenty of tears.

Back on the Sea Forest Waterway the women’s pairs heats feature twotime Olympic champion Helen Glover who is seeking to become the first British rower to compete at an Olympics after having children. Glover partners Polly Swann, who won silver in the women’s eight in Rio. The 35-year-old Glover gave birth to twins in January last year and to a boy in 2018.

Charlotte Dujardin, who began riding horses as a two-year-old, is the most successful British dressage rider in history. The team event begins today and the 36-year-old is hoping to add another gold to the two she won in London and the one in Rio. Her horse Valegro has retired and Dujardin will be riding Renai Hart in Tokyo.

Sunday 25 July

Britain is sending a team of 11 boxers – seven men and four women – to Tokyo and all expect to win medals. The women’s middleweig­ht competitio­n starts today and 2019 world champion Lauren Price has every chance of picking up a gold. “It has been my dream to compete at the Olympic Games since I was eight years old,” said the former Wales internatio­nal footballer, who took gold in the 2018 Commonweal­th Games, “so to finally have the opportunit­y is amazing.”

Weather permitting, this day also sees the introducti­on of a new sport to the Games. Forty surfers from 17 different countries are taking part in the surfing competitio­n at Tsurigasak­i Beach. Kanoa Igarashi and Hiroto Ohhara are the home hopes in the men’s event and Mahina Maeda and Amuro Tsuzuki in the women’s. Not surprising­ly, Americans and Brazilians are favourites for medals with Brazil’s Gabriel Medina looking hard to beat.

Britain’s men’s eights won gold in Rio five years ago and on Sunday morning they begin their quest for a repeat as the heats begin. Mohamed Sbihi, one of those medallists in Brazil, is competing in his third Games. It will be a difficult achievemen­t to repeat Rio but the British team are confident they can triumph in what has been a successful event in the past.

Monday 26 July

When Adam Peaty won in Rio it was the first gold medal at an Olympics by a male British swimmer for 24 years. The 26-year-old Peaty is a red-hot favourite to successful­ly defend his 100m breaststro­ke title at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre. Peaty is the world-record holder and an eight-time world champion.

In the pool we will also get the chance to see Ariarne Titmus, a 20-yearold from Tasmania. Titmus is known as “The Terminator” and at the Australian trials swam the 200m and 400m freestyle faster than the great Katie Ledecky. As ever, the main rivalry in swimming will be between the Australian­s and the Americans, who have chosen the youngest squad in their history.

Yorkshire’s Tom Pidcock celebrates his 22nd birthday during the Games and he has high hopes in the cross-country mountain bike event. He has returned to racing after breaking his collarbone in a training crash. Pidcock recently won a World Cup event in the Czech Republic, comfortabl­y ahead of rival Mathieu van der Poel, who has been making a name for himself in the Tour de France.

Tuesday 27 July

The football tournament started two days before the opening ceremony andthe women’s match against Canada will be a stiff test for a Great Britain squad under new coach Hege Riise. Riise won gold as a player with Norway in Sydney in 2000 and has a strong squad that includes 11 players from Manchester City, including Fifa’s 2020 player of the year Lucy Bronze. Gold for Bronze is a headline waiting to be written though the Americans may have something to say about that.

Great Britain’s men’s hockey team have only four players who competed in a disappoint­ing Rio campaign and their captain, Adam Dixon, says they are ready to “ruffle some feathers”. The meeting with Germany in a Pool B game at Oi Hockey Stadium will be an acid test for the British men who famously won gold in 1988.

Who can defeat the all-conquering Chinese at table tennis? This day in the Metropolit­an Gymnasium sees the men’s and women’s singles round of 16 and Britain are represente­d by Chesterfie­ld’s Liam Pitchford, who is in his third Olympics, and Tin-Tin Ho who is in her first. Ho is a 22-year-old medical student at the University of Nottingham and the pair have played mixed doubles for England, winning silver at the last two Commonweal­th Games.

Wednesday 28 July

Katie Ledecky is the world’s best female swimmer and her best event, the 1500m freestyle, is now in the Olympic programme. The American will not be as dominant as she was in Rio but, at 24, she will still be the overwhelmi­ng favourite in the 1500m and in the 800m which she won by an astonishin­g 11 seconds back in 2016.

Tao Geoghegan Hart did not defend his Giro d’Italia title this year. One reason was that he wanted to compete in Tokyo. Today he and former Tour de France winner Geraint Thomas compete in the men’s time trial. The 26year-old Londoner has recovered from a bad crash in the Paris-Nice race and expects to be at the peak of fitness in time for Tokyo.

Naomi Osaka missed Wimbledon but the No 2-ranked woman in the world, who was born in Japan to a Haitian father and Japanese mother, would not miss Tokyo for the world. It would be a major shock not to see her reach the quarter-finals, especially in the absence of other leading women such as Serena Williams. It would be a shock too if Osaka didn’t go on to win gold.

Thursday 29 July

Simone Biles, America’s phenomenon, is trying to become the first female gymnast in more than half a century to win consecutiv­e all-around Olympic golds. This is expected to be one of the real spectacles of Tokyo and the 4ft 8in Biles, who won four medals in seven days in Rio, is set to be the biggest star of the Olympics.

Great Britain’s women kick off their Rugby Sevens programme at the Tokyo Stadium with high hopes of success although New Zealand, who they meet in the pool stages, will be favourites for the event. The Wasps pair Meg Jones and Celia Quansah are in the British squad. They are a same-sex couple but not the first to compete for Team GB – Kate and Helen Richardson-Walsh won hockey gold in Rio.

Great Britain’s women hockey players face a pivotal match in the competitio­n against the strong Netherland­s team in their quest to defend that gold medal. The British team includes Laura Unsworth, whose 276 caps make her the most experience­d player in her country’s history. The young 16strong British squad contains nine players making their first Olympic appearance­s but they look powerful enough to fight for medals.

Friday 30 July

The business end of any Olympics is track and field. It begins with a highlight, the men’s 10,000m final. Sam Atkin, from Grimsby, is Britain’s sole representa­tive but Mo Farah has gone and his title is certainly Africa-bound. The Ugandan Joshua Cheptegei is the world champion and firm favourite.

Back in the pool Freya Anderson, a 20-year-old from Birkenhead, is a freestyle sprinter who has attracted plenty of attention since her 100m win in the world juniors in Indianapol­is four years ago. Anderson won five golds at the Europeans in Budapest last year and will be eyeing at least a place in today’s 100m final.

It may be a good opportunit­y to watch one of the Olympic greats at the Nippon Budokan. Teddy Riner, who was born in Guadeloupe, is France’s star judoka. The 32-year-old Riner won gold in London and Rio in the +100kg category. Kokoro Kageura, one of the few to have beaten Riner, is the world champion and will have the whole of Japan in his corner.

Saturday 31 July

The race to decide who is the world’s fastest woman, the 100m final, pitches Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann FraserPryc­e, the second quickest woman in history after her recent 10.63 run in this event, against the likes of Britain’s Dina Asher-Smith, the 200m world champion. The flamboyant American Sha’Carri Richardson is banned and misses out.

The Olympic Stadium will also see the final of the 4x400 mixed relay. Doha in 2019 was the first event of its kind. The men usually start and end the relay but that is not compulsory. In Doha the world-record holders USA beat Jamaica to gold. That will be a pointer in Tokyo with Britain hoping to mount a challenge in this fascinatin­g event.

Team GB, as usual, have medal prospects in sailing. This day seesthe men’s and women’s finals of the RS:X class. Both British windsurfer­s Tom Squires and Emma Watson are Olympic newcomers with 20-year-old Watson the youngest in the British squad. Britain have won 28 golds since sailing made its Olympic debut in Paris in 1900 and this team can ride that wave.

Sunday 1 August

Hideki Matsuyama will be a posterboy in Japan after donning the Green Jacket in April following his win in the Masters. The final round in the men’s stroke play takes place at the Kasumigase­ki Country Club and a nation is expectant. The first Japanese man to win the Masters and the first to win an Olympic golf gold would be a film script come to life.

The BMX freestyle finals for men and women will see Britain’s Declan Brooks and Charlotte Worthingto­n competing for medals at the Ariake Urban Sports Park. Worthingto­n, from Manchester, is a real hope for a medal. She has won British and European titles in this freestyle event that is included in an Olympics for the first time.

Nine days of fencing come to an end with the men’s foil gold medal match at the Makuhari Messe Hall. The United States, France and Italy are the favourites for medals in the climax to the fencing programme. Londoner Marcus Mepstead hopes to make progress in the earlier individual event.

Monday 2 August

Britain’s Emily Campbell won three golds at the recent European Weightlift­ing Championsh­ips and competes in the 87kg category. The 2018 Commonweal­th Games bronze medallist is in the same category as New Zealander Laurel Hubbard who becomes the first transgende­r athlete at a Games.

Back in the Olympic Stadium the final event of the day sees the women’s 5,000m final. Jess Judd, Amy-Eloise Markovc and Eilish McColgan are the

strong British contingent with Judd and McColgan doubling up in the 10,000m. Liz McColgan’s 30-year-old daughter is in her third Olympics and has an outside chance of a medal in the shorter event.

The women’s doubles and the men’s singles finals bring an end to the badminton competitio­n. Lauren Smith and Chloe Birch are the doubles partnershi­p. The pair are hopeful in a competitio­n expected to be dominated by Japanese players.

Tuesday 3 August

Scotland’s Laura Muir has been the standout British hope in the 800m for some time but she has a new rival in a 19-year-old from Manchester, Keely Hodgkinson, who powered past her to win in the British Championsh­ips in her home city earlier this summer. The pair are likely to be medal contenders in this final.

This will also be the moment Dina Asher-Smith hopes she can run into the history books. The world 200m champion is the fastest British woman ever with national records in both the 100m and 200m. The competitio­n will be fierce and the margins for success and failure wafer-thin but the 25-yearold Blackheath & Bromley Harrier can provide Britain with one of its highlights in Tokyo.

Away from the athletics stadium, British eyes will turn to the Enoshima Yacht Harbour where Giles Scott will be hoping to repeat his dominant display in Rio and retain the gold medal in the Finn class. Scott won in Rio with a day to spare and has six world titles as evidence that he will be a favourite again.

Wednesday 4 August

The beginning of an eagerlyawa­ited heptathlon sees Britain’s Katarina Johnson-Thompson compete in her third Olympics. The Liverpudli­an scored a British record 6,981 points on her way to a world title two years ago but has been hampered by injury problems which will put her gold-medal prospects in the balance.

Who will be the next Usain Bolt? The American Noah Lyles is convinced it will be him. Lyles has the stats to back him up. He is the reigning 200m world champion and his 19.74sec the fastest time this year. This day sees the final of the 200m and the 23-year-old from Florida looks unbeatable. TEam GB’s Adam Gemili is an outside prospect for a medal.

Some of the top women golfers in the world are in the first round of the women’s individual stroke play. Nelly Korda’s first major win in the Women’s PGA Championsh­ip put the American on top of the Tokyo rankings ahead of the South Koreans Ko Jin-young and Inbee Park. Melissa Reid and Jodi Ewart Shadoff are the British challenger­s in a field of 60.

Skateboard­ing takes its bow in the Olympics and Sky Brown is Team GB’s great hope. The 12-year-old Brown is set to become Britain’s youngest ever summer Olympian. Only a year ago she suffered a head injury after a fall in training but she has recovered and is joined in the Ariake Urban Sports Park by 15-year-old Bombette Martin.

Thursday 5 August

Wayde van Niekerk of South Africa is the Olympic champion and world record-holder in the 400m and near the end of the day this prestigiou­s event has its final. Despite tearing an anterior cruciate ligament playing in a charity rugby game in 2017 he still thinks he can run below 43sec after shattering Michael Johnson’s record in Rio. It could be one of the great comeback stories.

The beach volleyball at Shiokaze Park enters its semi-final stage. This was one of the most joyous events in Rio. This summer because of Covid restrictio­ns on crowds it may be less fun. The Brazilians are expected to challenge for medals again with the Canadian pair Sarah Pavan and Melissa Humana-Paredes favourites for gold.

Karate at the Nippon Budokan is sure to be a big draw for Japanese spectators but perhaps has only novelty value for the rest of the world. This new Olympic sport may, though, see a Spanish winner in Sandra Sánchez, a current world and European champion in the discipline of kata which has its women’s final bout.

Friday 6 August

Tom Daley is a 27-year-old veteran now and about to compete in his fourth Olympics. Daley suffered a shock semi-final eliminatio­n in the individual 10m platform event in Rio. He is in the preliminar­ies on this day and will line up alongside Matty Smith in the synchronis­ed event. The 16-yearold Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix is also expected to make a splash – hopefully not too big a one.

Britain expects medals in the velodrome and Laura Kenny, who already has four Olympic golds, is thankfully back after breaking her shoulder last year. She should be in the madison final after also winning a place in the team pursuit and omnium.

Kate French is the world No 2 in the modern pentathlon and she will be hopeful of a place on the podium at the end of the women’s competitio­n after considerin­g leaving the sport in protest at changes in format for the Paris Olympics. The 30-year-old was fifth in Rio and is joined in the British team by James Cooke who in 2018 became the first British man in more than a quarter of a century to become a world champion.

Saturday 7 August

The men’s gold medal game in basketball at the Saitama Super Arena is always a major event at any Olympics but one of the most predictabl­e. It would be a shock if the USA didn’t repeat their gold performanc­e in Rio. Since the door was opened to NBA players at the Barcelona Olympics in 1992 men’s “Dream Teams” have won six of the seven golds. Even without LeBron James the Americans look too strong although World Cup champions Spain can dream.

Adam Burgess is Britain’s first under-23 world champion in the canoe singles and has won silver in the European Championsh­ip and World Cup. The men’s finals take place and Britain complete a campaign spearheade­d by Liam Heath, a reigning Olympic champion in the K1 200m.

The men’s 1500m final should be one of athletics’ most thrilling spectacles. The American Matthew Centrowitz Jr won in Rio and should be among the medals again but he was beaten in the US trials by a university freshman Cole Hocker and the man from Maryland will have his work cut out to strike gold again.

Sunday 8 August

The final of the super-heavyweigh­t boxing comes on the last day of competitio­n and Frazer Clarke is looking to follow in Anthony Joshua’s footsteps. The 29-year-old captain of the British team is from Swadlincot­e in Derbyshire, oddly the birthplace of former British heavyweigh­t Jack Bodell. Surely an omen there.

Jason Kenny already has six Olympic gold medals, a figure only matched by Chris Hoy. The final day of the Olympics can see Britain add to their medal tally and in the men’s keirin final Kenny could be stepping back on the middle of the podium.

The traditiona­l end of the Olympics sees the men’s marathon final at Sapporo Odori Park with the medals presented during the closing ceremony at the Olympic Stadium. Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge is the greatest marathon runner of the modern era and, at 36, can successful­ly defend his crown.

 ?? Photograph: Philip Fong/ AFP/Getty Images ?? A man stands next to the Olympic rings at dusk in Yokohama.
Photograph: Philip Fong/ AFP/Getty Images A man stands next to the Olympic rings at dusk in Yokohama.
 ?? Photograph: Justin Setterfiel­d/Getty Images for British Olympic Associatio­n ?? Team GB’s men’s eight (Joshua Bugajski, Jacob Dawson, Thomas George, Mohamed Sbihi, Charles Elwes, Oliver Wynne-Griffith, James Rudkin, Thomas Ford and Henry Fieldman (cox)) begin their quest for gold on Sunday 25 July.
Photograph: Justin Setterfiel­d/Getty Images for British Olympic Associatio­n Team GB’s men’s eight (Joshua Bugajski, Jacob Dawson, Thomas George, Mohamed Sbihi, Charles Elwes, Oliver Wynne-Griffith, James Rudkin, Thomas Ford and Henry Fieldman (cox)) begin their quest for gold on Sunday 25 July.

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