Miami Herald (Sunday)

Olympics to give refunds to Japan ticket buyers

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

Fans living in Japan who bought tickets for the postponed Tokyo Olympics have been guaranteed refunds, the local organizing committee said Friday.

This does not apply to fans who have purchased tickets outside Japan through so-called Authorized Ticket Resellers appointed by national Olympic committees. Many have already set terms for refunds, which vary by nation or territory.

Fans in Japan who already know they cannot use their tickets next year can get their money back by applying online for refunds during the period Nov. 10-30. The Paralympic period is Dec. 1-21.

Organizers also said that refunds would be made if limited seating were available at venues because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“As the host there is a possibilit­y that we may not be able to provide spectating opportunit­ies to a part of the ticket holders,” Tokyo 2020 spokesman Masa Takaya said, speaking in Japanese during an on-line briefing. “In that case we will provide a refund.”

The ticket situation — like everything else surroundin­g next year’s postponed Olympics — is up in the air. Conditions will depend on the pandemic.

Organizers and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee say they intend to open the Olympics on July 23, 2021. But there are few details so far about exactly how this can happen – with or without a vaccine, using quarantine­s, or rapid testing.

The IOC and Tokyo organizers are running several task forces looking at ways to handle immigratio­n and COVID-19. Japan has been relatively safe in the pandemic with about 1,750 deaths attributed to the coronaviru­s. But conditions elsewhere haven’t been as good.

“You’re going to have to be comfortabl­e being uncomforta­ble for the next six to nine months because there is no certainty in terms of what will happen,” Ken Hanscom, the chief operating officer of the Los Angeles-based firm TicketMana­ger, told AP in an interview.

The big question for Tokyo is: How to let 15,400 Olympic and Paralympic athletes into Japan, along with thousands of officials, judges, sponsors, media and broadcaste­rs. Add to this the issue of fans. Will nonJapanes­e be allowed to attend? Or will it be only Japanese?

A major concern for the IOC is getting the Games on television, since selling broadcast rights provides 73% of its income. Another 18% is from 14 top sponsors.

Tokyo organizers have budgeted $800 million in income from ticket sales in Japan and aboard, their third largest source of income. Any shortfall could stress an already stretched budget.

Organizers say 4.48 million Olympic tickets have been sold in Japan, with 970,000 tickets for the Paralympic­s. Organizers say a total of 7.8 million Olympic tickets had been available overall.

ETC.

• NHL: The Hockey Hall of Fame will have no new inductees in 2021, with the class of 2020 honored that year instead. The 2020 inductees were to have been inducted Nov. 16 in Toronto, but the ceremony was postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 2020 class was announced in June and features forward Jarome

Iginla, winger Marian Hossa, defensemen Kevin Lowe and Doug Wilson, Canadian women’s goaltender Kim St. Pierre and longtime general manager Ken Holland.

• Soccer: Diogo Jota scored an 85th-minute winner as Liverpool came from behind to beat West Ham 2-1 and climb above Merseyside rival Everton to the top of the Premier League. Portugal winger Jota, who joined from Wolverhamp­ton in the summer transfer window, has now scored in three straight matches. ... Eden Hazard scored his first goal in more than a year for Real Madrid to lead his team to a 4-1 win over Huesca in the Spanish league.

• Tennis: Andrey Rublev advanced to his fifth final of the season, setting up a title match against Lorenzo Sonego at the Erste Bank Open at Vienna, Austria. The fifth-seeded Rublev led 6-4, 4-1 when Kevin Anderson pulled out of their semifinal with a right thigh issue. Rublev is 4-0 in finals in this shortened season and can become the first player with five tournament wins. Sonego beat Dan Evans 6-3, 6-4, a day after he upset top-seeded Novak Djokovic 6-2, 6-1 in the quarterfin­als.

• College basketball: Michigan guard Chaundee Brown has been granted immediate eligibilit­y following his transfer from Wake Forest. Brown started 74 of his 84 games in three seasons at Wake Forest, averaging 10.4 points per game.

• Cycling: David Gaudu of France won the grueling 11th stage of the Spanish Vuelta at Alto de la Farrapona, Spain, while title rivals Primoz Roglic and Richard Carapaz remained locked atop the overall classifica­tion.

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