Arab Times

Ex-IOC VP Pound says ‘fans’ optional for Tokyo Olympics

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TOKYO, Jan 21, (AP): Former IOC vice president Dick Pound says the Tokyo Olympics could go ahead without fans. And he predicted the games will open on July 23 despite surging coronaviru­s cases in Japan and around the globe.

“The question is - is this a ‘must-have’ or ‘nice-to-have.’ It’s nice to have spectators. But it’s not a must-have,” Pound said in an interview with Japan’s Kyodo news agency published on Thursday.

Pound is no longer a part of the IOC’s decision-making executive board, but he has been speaking out recently to generate enthusiasm for the postponed Olympics.

His words come as recent polls in Japan show 80% of the public believe the Olympics should not happen with virus cases surging or will not happen.

Pound, a veteran Canadian Olympic official and inaugural president of the World Anti-Doping

Agency, repeated what the IOC and local organizers have been saying for months: the games will be canceled if they cannot be held this time. There will not be another postponeme­nt.

“It’s either 2021, or nothing,” he said. Pound said “nobody can guarantee ”the Olympics will open on July 23. But I think there’s a very, very, good chance that they can, and that they will.”

Pound’s words suggest the Olympics may be shaping up as a largely TV-only event with athletes kept in a bubble, transporte­d back and forth to venues, and encouraged to leave Japan as soon as their participat­ion ends.

Japanese media have said the opening ceremony will be limited to 6,000 athletes. About 11,000 are expected to compete in the Olympics. The Paralympic­s add another 4,400 athletes.

For the Switzerlan­d-based Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, getting the event on television fans or no fans - is critical to its finances.

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