Baltimore Sun

1 year out, a gold-medal day

Tokyo 2020 officials roll out awards for Summer Olympics

- By Stephen Wade

TOKYO — With Wednesday marking exactly one year to go until the Tokyo Olympics open, organizers marked the day by unveiling the gold, silver and bronze medals that will symbolize the 2020 Games.

Thousands of politician­s, sponsors and fans jammed a massive exhibition hall in central Tokyo, piling on speeches, musical interludes and dancing performanc­es to celebrate the one-year mark.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made a cameo appearance to welcome the guests. And Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach repeated what he has said often in various places around the world.

“I can truly say,” Bach said, “I have never seen an Olympic city as prepared as Tokyo with one year to go before the Olympic Games.”

Despite all of the talk and theatrics, the center stage belonged to the medals by Japanese designer Junichi Kawanishi.

Kawanishi wrote that the medals are to “resemble rough stones that have been polished and which now shine with light and brilliance.”

The front side carries the Tokyo Olympic emblem, with the Greek goddess of victory on the back.

Bach, a fencing gold medalist in the 1976 Olympics, conducted a mock fencing duel earlier in the day with a junior high student — another chance to draw attention to the one-year milestone. The games will be held July 24 to Aug. 9, 2020.

Tokyo is spending about $20 billion to prepare the city to host the games, though exact Olympic spending is disputed and difficult to track. Five of the eight new venues are finished, and the centerpiec­e, the $1.25 billion National Stadium, is to open by the end of the year.

Ticket demand by Japanese residents appears to be at least 10 times above supply, with demand also surging abroad. A recent law banning unauthoriz­ed ticket resales in Japan is sure to be tested because of glaring loopholes.

Organizers also are preparing for Tokyo’s typically hot summer weather, though this summer has been wet and cool. Traffic and subway congestion is also a concern, as is earthquake preparedne­ss.

“This year Tokyo is chilly rather than hot,” said Yoshiro Mori, president of the organizing committee. “It’s quite different from what we experience­d last year.”

Mori said Japanese Emperor Naruhito has accepted a role “as honorary patron” of the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympic­s. He will be expected to announce the opening of both the Olympics and Paralympic­s.

Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike was asked a few days ago to justify spending billions on the Olympics. Organizers have been under pressure to cut costs, and they say they have cut billions by using existing venues. Tokyo is building eight new venues but using 35 “temporary” or older venues.

Koike described the Olympics and Paralympic­s as an “accelerato­r” to get things done, though research shows the Olympic deadlines drive up costs. And Tokyo is famous for building things — with or without the Olympics.

“I’d like the legacy of the 2020 Games to be something more intangible, a new way of thinking for people and for society,” she said. Koike described the Paralympic­s, which open Aug. 25, 2020, as a “springboar­d” to make the city more accessible to people with disabiliti­es.

The goals for next year are more modest than they were in 1964, when the Tokyo Olympics showcased bullet trains, futuristic designs and a new expressway to document Japan’s recovery after World War II.

A group of anti-Olympic activists, many from outside Japan, have held small protests and other events in recent days under the Japanese title “Hangorin no Kai” — which translates roughly to “No Olympics.” They oppose Olympic spending, which they say cuts into budgets for local housing and environmen­tal issues.

They also call for more money to rebuild Fukushima prefecture located northeast of Tokyo. Organizers say Fukushima is a main focus of the Olympics, locating baseball, softball and soccer games there to persuade the world the area is safe.

“For us, the Olympics are a disaster,” Misako Ichimura, a spokeswoma­n for the antiOlympi­c group, said Tuesday. She said the billions spent on the Olympics should be used instead to rebuild Fukushima, which was devastated by a 2011 earthquake, tsunami and the meltdown of three nuclear reactors.

“The Olympics is scary entertainm­ent for us,” she added.

Tokyo organizers have shattered records for local sponsorshi­p revenue, which has passed $3 billion — about three times more than any previous Olympics. Much has been raised by giant Japanese advertisin­g company Dentsu Inc.

There have also been glitches and scandal.

Tsunekazu Takeda, head of the Japanese Olympic Committee, was forced to quit earlier this year when he was implicated in a vote-buying scheme to land the games. He has denied wrongdoing but acknowledg­ed he signed off on about $2 million that French investigat­ors allege went to buy votes.

The 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics are implicated in the same kind of vote-buying bribery.

Tokyo organizers were also forced to redesign their logo when the original draft faced charges of plagiarism, and an internatio­nal labor union has alleged worksafety violations at Olympic venues, largely regarding migrant labor.

A futuristic design for the new stadium by the late British architect Zaha Hadid was scrapped when costs soared to $2 billion. Japanese architect Kengo Kuma was chosen instead with a design focused on wood lattice and greenery.

 ?? BEHROUZ MEHRI/GETTY-AFP ?? Medals for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics are unveiled during a ceremony marking one year before the start of the Games.
BEHROUZ MEHRI/GETTY-AFP Medals for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics are unveiled during a ceremony marking one year before the start of the Games.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R JUE/GETTY FOR OMEGA ?? The Omega Tokyo 2020 countdown clock marks one year to go to the start of the Olympic Games.
CHRISTOPHE­R JUE/GETTY FOR OMEGA The Omega Tokyo 2020 countdown clock marks one year to go to the start of the Olympic Games.

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