Bow International

Olympic News feature

An update on 'Tokyo 2021': there's a long way to go

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From a public perspectiv­e, the choice was simple and obvious: postpone the Tokyo Olympics until 2021, in the face of global pandemic. But for everyone involved in the Olympic movement, the problems were only just beginning.

Shortly before Easter, there was an alarming message from Toshiro Muto, the chief executive of Tokyo 2020, saying that the big show was still not guaranteed for next year. Perhaps he was reacting to the chaotic political reaction to the COVID-19 wave that seems to have finally hit Japan, but it was still surprising­ly gloomy.

“I don’t think anyone would be able to say if it is going to be possible to get [the pandemic] under control by next July or not,” Muto said on Friday 10th April. “We’re certainly not in a position to give a clear answer.” A state of emergency has recently been declared in the country, and Japan is about to officially enter a recession.

We are of course firmly in uncharted territory. No Olympics in history has ever been postponed before, and the Olympics has never been larger or more complicate­d, against a backdrop of an ever-evolving global pandemic that is still not fully understood. Indeed, the start time of any Olympic event has apparently never moved before.

The global sports calendar has collapsed, with the biggest questions over further potential waves of coronaviru­s, and whether a vaccine will be ready in time for July 2021 – neither of which is answerable at the moment. It’s become a cliche, but we are in totally unpreceden­ted times – for sport, and the world.

JULY OR BUST

After trying to put the decision off as long as possible, in the end, behind closed doors, there was enough agreement to hold it in the same July / August slot as before – with just a hint of rancour between the organising committee and the IOC. This frustrated a briefly nascent movement trying to push for either an October start or a spring Games. Both would bring logistical hurdles, and an autumn start crosses into Japan’s typhoon season. Both would also cut across some of the sporting calendar, but crucially avoid the worst of the summer heat and humidity in Japan; already casting a large potential shadow, with summer temperatur­es able to hit a murderous 41°C (106°F). The weather is bad enough that the marathon had already been forced to move to Sapporo following the sporting debacle in Doha last year.

But in the end, the interests of the broadcaste­rs prevailed. The networks pay billions of dollars for broadcasti­ng rights in that summer slot when the global sports calendar is otherwise quiet, thus increasing the chances of capturing a bigger audience.

It wasn’t always like this. When Tokyo hosted the Summer Olympics back in 1964, they were held in October. The same thing happened in Mexico in 1968. But that was in an era where the attitude towards TV coverage was something like: “if you want to show it, please turn up with your cameras.” An exception was also made for Sydney in 2000, who held the Games in the last two weeks of September.

Now, the interests of TV broadcaste­rs are all powerful. As Neal Pilson, the former president of CBS Sports, which broadcast the Games in the USA in the 1990s put it to Reuters: “The

Summer Olympics are simply of less value if held in October because of pre-existing program commitment­s for sports.”

From a glance at the IOC’S blandly businessas-usual website, you’d think everything was just fine and dandy. You may not have noticed, with everything else going on, but the Olympic Flame was officially rekindled in Olympia in March and transporte­d to Japan, where it is currently (and incongruou­sly) being held in a ‘secret location’, to ensure crowds don’t gather in front of it.

Several media outlets criticised Thomas Bach, the IOC president, for proceeding with this ritual bit of Olympic build-up, a demonstrat­ion of the IOC’S insistence that the show must go on against a backdrop of rising deaths all over the world. In the meantime, the Russian sports minister is claiming that the anti-doping ban being served by hundreds of Russian athletes should be overturned against the current chaos, a call that could be described as opportunis­tic – at best.

PAYING UP

Delaying the Games is going to cost a lot of money, and quite who is going to pay for it

hasn’t been settled in detail yet.

The cost of the Tokyo Games has more than doubled to around $26bn, according to an audit last year. Estimates of the cost of delaying a year vary between $2bn and $6bn dollars, which will again have to be borne by Tokyo’s taxpayers. There are costs at almost every stage; the biggest of which are staff and venues. Thousands of tons of branding, infrastruc­ture and equipment will have to be stored for another year. Suppliers will want paying.

The Tokyo 2020 President, former Prime Minister Yoshirō Mori warned the internatio­nal federation­s (the governing bodies of each sport, such as World Archery) that they will be on the hook for some of it. In the best traditions of ultra-polite, obscuranti­st language, he said: “Deciding who will bear these costs and how it will be done will be a major challenge.”

The immense amounts of cash from broadcaste­rs and sponsors for each Games is funnelled through the IOC, which makes a contributi­on to the operating costs of the organising committee. The rest of the money gets split up between the internatio­nal federation­s, and national Olympic committees, as well as the IPC, WADA, and various UN projects. The IOC makes great show of the fact that 90% of the Games profits head back out the door to fund sport and humanitari­an projects worldwide. After the last summer outing in Rio 2016, the federation­s received around $520 million between them.

Clearly, the IOC’S contributi­on to Tokyo’s costs in this case will end up being be higher, and Mori was hinting that the pot would be smaller after the Games finally happen in 2021 – which means that the internatio­nal federation­s will have a budget headache for the next Olympic cycle. Essentiall­y, they will be partially paying for a delay which wasn’t their fault.

So the federation­s, expecting a large chunk of their operating budget for the next four years this autumn, already have a problem. But further downstream, national Olympic committees and many precarious­lyfunded national federation­s will likely be in significan­t trouble. With the world clearly heading for depression, corporate sponsor budgets for sport will start to dry up.

Two big sub-olympic competitio­ns have had to postpone due to proximity. The World Games, due to be held in Alabama in July 2021, has been pushed back a year. The World Athletics Championsh­ips, due to be held in Eugene, Oregon also in July next year, have similarly been pushed back a year. Most other sports (including archery) also hold their world championsh­ips in Olympic off-years. It seems likely that more 2021 events will see delays, adjustment­s, or even outright cancellati­ons, perhaps including the World Masters Games, due to be held in Kansai, Japan in May 2021.

SPORTING HEADACHES

There are dozens of issues, major and minor, to solve in fields as diverse as qualificat­ion, venues, volunteers, anti-doping and broadcasti­ng. As noted here in the last issue, some nations had already publicly selected archery teams for their confirmed national spots. Will they honour those selections a year on? Already, an issue has cropped up with the Spanish federation, who have withdrawn their athlete Miguel Alvariño Garcia for the single men's team place spot they currently have for Tokyo – unsurprisi­ngly, this has caused uproar and the threat of a lawsuit. (More on this in the next issue of Bow.) Tom Dielen, the World Archery secretary-general mentioned that one of the confirmed Paralympic judges was within the age limit for 2020, but not for 2021. Should they make an exception?

Archery around the world has stopped, and it is unclear of this writing exactly when it will restart. As the POST-COVID-19 world gradually emerges over the next few months, it seems that everybody, including sports will have to continue thinking about social distancing for some time. As an outdoor sport, archery at least seems like it will have an easier time than some adjusting to the new normal. Lines can be re-spaced. Rules can be changed.

THE NEXT 15 MONTHS

Despite the multitude of issues, it seems that with enough political and cultural will in Japan, all these problems are surmountab­le; in a coming depression, holding on to the vast and already-sunk costs with the prospect of a payoff down the road becomes even more important. Perhaps, after each country completes lockdown and slowly relaxes other containmen­t measures, something like normality will start approachin­g again by the end of summer. Perhaps. The great fear is another wave of virus this time next year; some have even suggested that without an available coronaviru­s vaccine, the Games simply cannot go ahead. More widely, the summer Olympics is the single genuinely global event, and it would be be fitting, perhaps even vital for humanity to hold it at the close of a worldwide crisis.

But one thing is certain: there’s a lot of ground to cover before we can be absolutely sure of seeing an opening ceremony in Shinjuku on the 23rd of July, 2021.

 ??  ?? Miguel Alvariño Garcia in for 2020, but out for 2021
Miguel Alvariño Garcia in for 2020, but out for 2021
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 ??  ?? Tokyo Test Event, 2019
Tokyo Test Event, 2019

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