National Post (National Edition)

`It's a question of what is the best we can do'

CANADA'S OLYMPIANS ARE MOSTLY BACK TO WORK. THE QUESTION IS WHETHER THEY CAN STAY AT IT

- SCOTT STINSON Postmedia News sstinson@postmedia.com

This would have been a rare quiet spot in the high-performanc­e sports calendar, if not for the pandemic. The Tokyo Olympics would have come and gone, and Beijing 2024 would still be some distance off.

It's still a quiet spot in the calendar, but for an obviously different reason. The spring shutdowns that ultimately brought about an Olympic postponeme­nt have largely been lifted, but competitiv­e events have been slow to return in amateur sports. They have challenges that pro leagues didn't have to deal with as they returned to action: much more internatio­nal travel, with athletes normally arriving from around the globe. It's not uncommon for events to be held in different countries week after week, which would make observing any sort of quarantine difficult while managing a normal travel schedule. And outside of the Olympics themselves, amateur sport gets little in the way of big-money television interest, which was the driver for the return of profession­al competitio­ns. The void that began with the rash of competitiv­e postponeme­nts and cancellati­ons in the spring has yet to be seriously filled.

But in Canada, at least, there has started to be some movement. Own the Podium, the organizati­on that allocates funding for Canada's Olympic and Paralympic teams, chaired a panel that brought together sports and medical experts to develop guidelines for a Return to Sport strategy. The resulting framework can be applied down at the grassroots level, and up to and including elite competitio­ns. Many of the questions that were asked about the Olympic schedule at the start of the pandemic still don't have answers, and meanwhile months have ticked by. If athletes are going to train and compete in the coming months, they can't wait endlessly for the calendar to take shape. Anne Merklinger, the chief executive of Own the Podium, says this was part of the reason for going ahead and developing a return-tosport framework: it could at the very least be a starting point.

“There are a number of elements that we don't have the answers to,” she says, in a phone interview, about a high-performanc­e schedule in which the Tokyo Olympics are just 10 months away. “We can't control that. So, let's focus on what we can control and do the best possible job for our athletes. And so, it's not a question of it being perfect, it's a question of what is the best we can do with what is available to us.”

What this could mean in the short term is that athletes who would normally train abroad in the run up to an Olympics might stay home instead, forgoing the travel and the quarantine­s that would require.

“If this results in a subtle shift of Canada's national sport organizati­ons looking at a `Canada First' training environmen­t as opposed to training abroad,” Merklinger says, “that may be a real positive long-term outcome out of this.”

It's worth noting here that almost nothing about the sporting environmen­t can be predicted week-to-week, given the way the summer lull in new COVID-19 cases in many parts of the world has given way to autumn increases, including here in Canada. If government­s prove to be no better prepared to deal with the rises this time than they were in the spring, then amateur sports could be shut down again before they even come back.

But for now, Merklinger thinks that Olympic organizers remain hopeful that they will be able to follow the lead of pro sports and hold qualifying events and, ultimately, some sort of Tokyo 2020, even if it comes in 2021.

“I don't think the (Internatio­nal Olympic Committee) or the (Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee and all their respective internatio­nal federation­s are going to give up,” she says. They're going to find … they're going to do everything possible to try and provide countries with an opportunit­y to qualify for the Games.”

The success of leagues like the NHL and NBA in keeping COVID-19 out of their competitiv­e bubbles is a “terrific pilot,” she says.

“I can say first-hand that the NHL and the NBA have been very forthcomin­g in sharing their resources with national sport organizati­ons who may be wanting to consider a similar kind of bubble approach for a particular competitio­n” Merklinger says. Where those leagues, which threw major money at the problem and instituted mass testing of their players and staff within a bubble, were able to avoid setbacks, Major League Baseball provided the counter example by eschewing the bubble and struggling through a series of COVID-related postponeme­nts. The MLB situation showed just how quickly a positive case could spread through a team setting.

Own the Podium's initial work was focused on ensuring that coaches and athletes were safely able to return to training, even if a lot that of that is still being done virtually. Merklinger says Team Canada's athletes are largely back at work; the next step will be seeing if they will be able to compete.

“And so that's been our focus over the last 16 weeks, to resolve these return to competitio­n guidelines that I think have been really valuable at all levels of the sport system in our country,” she says.

Down the road further remains the prospect of not just one Olympics, but two of them bunched together — Beijing 2022 would take place just six months after the closing ceremonies in Tokyo.

That means, for Canada's athletes, there is much to do.

“For us, it's full steam ahead,” Merklinger says.

A NUMBER OF

ELEMENTS (TO WHICH) WE DON'T HAVE THE ANSWERS.

 ?? CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The tentative Tokyo 2021 Olympic schedule is a big jigsaw puzzle right now, and justifiabl­y so.
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES The tentative Tokyo 2021 Olympic schedule is a big jigsaw puzzle right now, and justifiabl­y so.
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