The Phnom Penh Post

IOC urged to make Olympic decision as US backs deferral

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THE Internatio­nal Olympic Committee came under pressure to speed up its decision about postponing the Tokyo Games on Tuesday as athletes criticised the four-week deadline and the United States joined calls to delay the competitio­n.

After Canada and Australia withdrew their teams, with the world hunkering down for the coronaviru­s pandemic, the US Olympic committee said postponeme­nt was the best way forward.

A growing group of national Olympic committees and sports bodies including World Athletics have called for the Games, set to start on July 24, to be pushed back, an outcome that now appears inevitable.

IOC officials are studying a postponeme­nt, among other options, but still believe a decision would be

“premature” four months from the scheduled start. They will make an announceme­nt within four weeks.

“My interpreta­tion of the IOC’s communicat­ions is they don’t want to cancel, and they don’t think they can continue with the July 24 date,” senior IOC official Dick Pound said.

“So you’re looking at the ‘P’ word – postponeme­nt.”

The US statement came after a survey of 1,780 US athletes found an overwhelmi­ng majority, 68 per cent, backed postponeme­nt.

The virus lockdown has shut down competitio­n, including Olympic qualifiers, and made training not just difficult but also dangerous, as athletes risk contractin­g or spreading Covid-19.

‘Unacceptab­le, irresponsi­ble’

Several countries have imposed strict stay-at-home orders and internatio­nal travel has been drasticall­y curtailed as worldwide deaths surge past 16,500 and confirmed cases surpass 378,000.

“Our most important conclusion from this broad athlete response is that even if the current significan­t health concerns could be alleviated by late summer, the enormous disruption­s to the training environmen­t, doping controls and qualificat­ion process can’t be overcome in a satisfacto­ry manner,” the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee said.

USA Gymnastics also said it was “adding our voice to the chorus advocating for postponeme­nt”, after USA Swimming and USA Track and Field had already urged the US Olympic committee to press for a delay.

Meanwhile, British Olympic Associatio­n chairman Hugh Robertson told Sky Sports News: “If the virus continues as predicted by the government, I don’t think there is any way we can send a team.”

With opposition to the July start reaching deafening levels, athletes questioned why the IOC needed weeks to come to a decision. The Olympic torch relay is due to start in Japan on Thursday.

“Such a response is unacceptab­le, irresponsi­ble, and once again ignores the rights of athletes,” Global Athlete, an organisati­on which aims to speak for sports competitor­s, said in a statement.

British cyclist Callum Skinner strongly criticised IOC president Thomas Bach, accusing him of placing his own interests first.

“Bach’s stubbornne­ss and arrogance has spectacula­rly failed in this instance and he has weakened the Olympic movement,” Skinner wrote on Twitter.

“This isn’t the first time he has put his own motives above the athletes and the movement.”

‘Dither and delay’

British hurdler Dai Greene said the “dither and delay” was “obscene” while Ed Warner, the chairman-designate of British wheelchair rugby, said the IOC had misjudged the mood.

“The IOC has said it will make a decision in four weeks,” he told the Guardian. “It hasn’t got that long. It probably has only got four days.

“The right thing for the IOC to do is to announce it will postpone the Games immediatel­y – and then use the next couple of weeks to decide when it will be. At hletes have led the way on this and the IOC have trailed far behind them. That has to change.”

World Athletics said it was prepared to shift its world championsh­ips, scheduled for August 6-15 next year in Oregon, to accommodat­e a potential Olympics next summer, seen as the most likely option.

But experts warn shifting the Tokyo Games, which are seven years in the planning and have a price tag of $12.6 billion, is no simple matter.

“It is mind-bogglingly complex to make a sudden change after seven years of preparatio­n for the biggest sporting event in the world,” Michael Payne, the IOC’s former head of marketing, he said.

 ?? AFP ?? The weather is not the only thing gloomy at the headquarte­rs of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee as postponeme­nt looms.
AFP The weather is not the only thing gloomy at the headquarte­rs of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee as postponeme­nt looms.

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