Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Tokyo has no ‘Plan B’ for Games Marathoner­s say no time to fear Oly cancellati­on

Fears remain but IOC backs Japan’s insistence Olympics will be held

- Agencies Reuters

TOKYO: Tokyo has no Plan B for this year’s Summer Olympics despite alarm over the spread of the coronaviru­s in Japan and elsewhere with under five months before the event, a senior official said on Friday.

“There will not be one bit of change in holding the Games as planned,” Katsura Enyo, deputy director general of the Tokyo 2020 Preparatio­n Bureau at the city government, told Reuters.

Having prepared for years and invested some $12 billion, Japan is eager to quell fears the Games might be called off, postponed or moved to a different location due to the virus.

Though on the decline in China where it originated, the flu-like disease is moving fast around the world, including more than 200 cases and five deaths in Japan.

Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) president and former fencing champion Thomas Bach bolstered Tokyo’s stance on Thursday, saying his organizati­on was “fully committed” to holding the Olympics on schedule. In a telephone interview, Enyo said organisers were “facing up to” the coronaviru­s -but it would not derail the July 24-Aug. 9 event. “We are not even thinking of when or in what contingenc­y we might decide things. There is no thought of change at all in my mind,” she said.

Some Japanese media have reported organisers were considerin­g postponing the Games for six months to a year, but Enyo denied that.

“No such debate is going on,” she said, adding that preparatio­ns were on track.

Japan is, however, considerin­g scaling back the Olympic torch relay due to the coronaviru­s threat.

And despite its optimism over the Olympics, Japan has cancelledn­umerousspo­rtingevent­s. Tokyo’s Yomiuri Giants will play two pre-season baseball games in an empty stadium, while the Tokyo Marathon will take place on Sunday with elite runners only. The country has also had more than 700 coronaviru­s cases and four other deaths on a cruise liner quarantine­d off Yokohama.

Japan has built a raft of new facilities for the Games, including a 156.9 billion yen ($1.42 billion) National Stadium, and hoped for a huge boost in tourism, which Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has made a cornerston­e of his economic plan.

But markets have begun pricing in the risk of a cancelled Olympics, with the Dentsu Group ad agency’s share price hammered as investors fret about its high exposure.

The showpiece event was last called off due to World War Two but doubts about Tokyo have grown since Organising Committee chief executive Toshiro Muto said he was “seriously concerned” the virus would pour cold water on their momentum.

In its latest statement on the issue, the IOC said preparatio­ns for Tokyo 2020 “continue as planned” and it had “full confidence” in authoritie­s to take all necessary measures.

ATLANTA: Aspring Olympians at the US marathon trials said on Thursday that they were concerned first with securing one of the coveted few tickets to Tokyo 2020 -- and less, at least for now, about whether there would even be an Olympics this year.

“I don’t have coronaviru­s at the moment and I hope it stays that way,” Scott Fauble said.

Fauble is one of the most promising competitor­s in the men’s field. His Olympic dreams proved tantalisin­gly out of grasp in 2016, when he came in fourth in the 10,000-metres at the Olympic trials. “Me worrying about what the coronaviru­s does in six months doesn’t really help me on Saturday,” said Fauble.

In Atlanta, runners were focused on strategy and rest Saturday’s competitio­n . “There is a significan­t barrier to be covered in order to just make the team,” said Jake Riley, who clocked the fastest timing among the Americans at 2019 Chicago Marathon.

 ?? AFP ?? Mask-clad people pose with an installati­on of the Olympic rings in Tokyo on Friday.
AFP Mask-clad people pose with an installati­on of the Olympic rings in Tokyo on Friday.

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