The Borneo Post

The heat is on: Tokyo 2020 marathon to start earlier

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TOKYO: The Tokyo 2020 Olympic marathon will start between 5.30am and 6am, organisers announced Wednesday, after experts raised concerns over the health of competitor­s and fans during the city’s sweltering summer heat.

An expert medical committee had proposed a start time “between 5.30am and 6am”, top Olympic official John Coates said after a series of meetings in the Japanese capital.

Organisers had already brought the marathon forward to 7am as Japanese medical groups have warned the event could “lead to deaths” from heatstroke.

Tokyo 2020 organisers still need to agree with the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s before fixing the exact time, said Coates, who is chairman of the Olympic coordinati­on commission.

Rugby sevens matches will also start 90 minutes ahead of schedule and mountain biking an hour later to avoid the burning sun. The 50kilometr­e race walk will also be brought forward.

The Japanese capital sweated through several deadly heatwaves this summer as Japan was also battered by a series of typhoons that caused death, destructio­n and delay.

Coates said a series of anti-heat measures was being planned, including mist sprays along the marathon route and heatabsorb­ing paint on the roads.

There is also an increase in medical facilities as a precaution and more shade for fans lining up for entry to the venues.

“There is a list of about 20 precaution­s they ( the medical commission) think we should take and they are not going to be free,” quipped Coates.

Indeed, Tokyo 2020 CEO Toshiro Muto admitted that anti- heat measures had increased pressure on the Tokyo 2020 budget, which is due to be updated on Dec 21.

Olympic organisers are under huge pressure to keep a lid on costs amid fears that spiralling budgets for the event are sapping public support.

“We can’t exceed the level of the previous version of the budget,” said Muto, who added that cuts had been found in other areas to compensate for additional spending against the heat.

The Olympics are expected to cost around US$ 12.6 billion, according to the current version of the budget, unveiled last year.

The potential for extreme weather conditions has become the major headache for organisers of the event which opens on July 24.

T he previous time Japan hosted the Olympics, in 1964, the competitio­n were held in October to avoid the hot summer conditions. Organisers have toyed with several ways of beating the heat – even proposing the introducti­on of daylight saving time, an idea that appears to have fallen by the wayside.

Japan adopted daylight saving in 1948 under US occupation after defeat in World War II, but scrapped it four years later fol lowing concerns it was encouragin­g longer work hours.

Coates noted that this summer was abnormal, with the mercury touching a record 41 degrees Celsius (105.8 Fahrenheit) during the hottest periods.

The hottest day of Olympic competitio­n is the 36 Celsius measured at the 2004 Athens Games. — AFP

 ??  ?? Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) vice president and chairman of the Coordinati­on Commission for Tokyo 2020 John Coates (left) and Tokyo 2020 president Yoshiro Mori attend a joint press conference in Tokyo. — AFP photo
Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) vice president and chairman of the Coordinati­on Commission for Tokyo 2020 John Coates (left) and Tokyo 2020 president Yoshiro Mori attend a joint press conference in Tokyo. — AFP photo

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