Bangkok Post

Crowdless events a precursor to what lies ahead for Japan

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TOKYO: A line of masked spectators raises muffled cheers for elite marathon runners, and a baseball bat’s thud on a ball echoes around a vast, empty stadium: Sport in Tokyo this weekend set the tone for how a coronaviru­s-hit Olympic Games could play out.

For the first time ever, Japan’s profession­al baseball teams staged preseason openers behind closed doors after the country dramatical­ly escalated its response to the global coronaviru­s epidemic by closing schools and cancelling mass events.

In Tokyo, yesterday’s staging of the annual marathon, which last year saw close to 38,000 amateur participan­ts, was scaled back to just a few hundred profession­al athletes, with the public strongly discourage­d from lining the route. In past years the event attracted more than one million roadside spectators.

“If the Olympics look like this, it’s going to be a sad sight,” said 68-year-old shoemaker Hiroshi Enomoto, one of the fistful of spectators cheering on the runners in the downtown area of Asakusa.

The Olympic marathon itself has been moved to Japan’s northernmo­st island of Hokkaido because of worries over Tokyo’s scorching summer heat, but Enomoto and others wondered whether this weekend’s crowdless events were a harbinger of things to come.

“There are maybe 20% of the number of people who came to see the race last year. Normally, it’s so packed you can barely breathe,” said Enomoto, who remembers seeing the 1964 Olympic torch relay passing through Asakusa.

Barely 30 minutes after the runners zipped through the neighbourh­ood’s sun-soaked streets, staffers clad in bright vests removed plastic barriers and cleaning trucks swooped in to pick up trash.

About an hour later, Birhanu Legese from Ethiopia arrived at the finishing line in sight of the Imperial Palace in 2:04:15 hours. Japan’s Suguru Osako ended fourth in 2:05:29, beating his own national record and securing a spot in the men’s field for the Olympics.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and the president of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee Thomas Bach have said the Games will go ahead. Bach said his organizati­on was “fully committed” to the July 24 start, dismissing other options as “speculatio­n”.

But the sports event cancellati­ons and other measures were not limited to the marathon.

Football and rugby have also been affected, and Japan’s sumo associatio­n decided yesterday to hold its spring grand tournament, set to begin in Osaka next Sunday, without spectators.

Baseball fans who on Saturday had to swap the 46,000-capacity indoor stadium of the Yomiuri Giants — Japan’s version of the New York Yankees — for a sports bar in central Tokyo said they hoped the virus would not impact the Games.

Deprived of the support of fans at the Tokyo Dome, the Giants slumped to a 3-5 loss to the Yakult Swallows.

 ?? AFP ?? Birhanu Legese crosses the finish line to win the Tokyo marathon.
AFP Birhanu Legese crosses the finish line to win the Tokyo marathon.

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