The Star Malaysia

Very early start for Tokyo 2020 marathons

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TOKYO: The 2020 Olympic marathons will start at 6:00am, organisers confirmed, after doctors warned a traditiona­l mid-morning start could lead to deadly medical emergencie­s in Tokyo’s stifling summer heat.

The men’s 50km race walk will start even earlier, at 5:30am, with organisers saying they had taken medical advice into account in timetablin­g the events.

Other sports, including rugby sevens, triathlon and mountain biking have also seen schedules shifted to avoid the worst of potentiall­y blistering temperatur­es for the July 24 to Aug 9 Games.

Games organisers had already announced the marathons would start “between 5:30am and 6am” in the wake of a heatwave that struck the country last summer prompting Japanese medics to warn that running the race in mid-morning could “lead to deaths” from heatstroke.

Last time Japan hosted the Summer Olympics, in 1964, the competitio­n was held in October to avoid the hot summer conditions.

Tokyo 2020 CEO Toshiro Muto (pic) said the possibilit­y of extreme weather conditions, ranging from typhoons to heatwaves, was a “major issue” for the Games and Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) chief Thomas Bach has also voiced concern.

Tokyo has considered a range of options to counteract the heat, including the adoption of daylight saving, a proposal that gained little traction.

But other countermea­sures such as solar-blocking paint on roads and mobile misting stations are planned, with Muto admitting that there had been a knock-on impact on the US$12.6bil (RM52bil) budget.

There are plans for a special centre to monitor extreme weather and warn of potential emergencie­s including the risk of heatstroke, even recommendi­ng evacuation if necessary.

Head of the IOC Tokyo 2020 coordinati­ng committee John Coates said in a recent visit to Tokyo that medics had recommende­d “a list of about 20 precaution­s they think we should take and they are not going to be free”.

Last summer, Tokyo sweated through several deadly heatwaves and Japan was also battered by a series of typhoons that caused death, destructio­n and delay.

At one point, the mercury touched a record 41º C (105.8º F). The hottest day of Olympic competitio­n in history was recorded at the 2004 Athens Games when temperatur­es soared to 36ºC.

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