The Commercial Appeal

Coronaviru­s creating chaos for Olympics

- Christine Brennan

The speculatio­n about this summer’s Tokyo Olympic Games is coming fast and furious now. Across just a few hours on Tuesday, Japan’s Olympics minister said the coronaviru­s outbreak could lead to the postponeme­nt of the Games this summer, while the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee answered by saying it remains committed to staging the Games as scheduled July 24 to August 9.

Who knows what Wednesday will bring.

This kind of confusion should come as absolutely no surprise. The story of the coronaviru­s is both ominous and fast-changing. It was just last week that veteran IOC member Dick Pound told the Associated Press that if it proved too dangerous to hold the Tokyo Olympics, organizers were more likely to cancel the Games than postpone or move them. He added that if such a decision were to be made, it would have to come by late May.

What was shocking last week seems like normal conversati­on this week. The chaos is utterly predictabl­e. How could it not be? No one has any idea what is going to happen with a virus that has spread rapidly from country to country, leaving thousands dead in its wake, so of course the answers of Olympic officials from around the world are swinging from one extreme to the other. Until a final decision about the fate of the Tokyo Games is made, expect more of this. IOC spokespers­on Mark Adams actually said this Tuesday afternoon: “No, we’ve made a decision. And the decision is that the Games go ahead. That was made some time ago. We see no reason to change that decision. There we are.”

Except everyone knows that’s not the final word. No one has a clue, and there’s nothing new about that in the Olympic world. A decision certainly doesn’t need to be made today, or even in the next few weeks.

There will be all kinds of sporting events held between now and Pound’s drop-dead date of late May, both domestic and internatio­nal, including the men’s and women’s NCAA basketball tournament­s, the world figure skating championsh­ips in Montreal and the Masters golf tournament.

The IOC, Tokyo organizers and various Olympic stakeholde­rs, including the American television rights-holder NBC, can certainly take their lead from what happens with those events.

As we take a snapshot of the landscape at the moment, the options for the Tokyo Olympics seem to be these:

❚ The Olympics go on as scheduled July 24 to August 9.

❚ The Olympics are cancelled for just the fourth time in the summer since the rebirth of the modern Games in 1896. The reason the other three times? World War I and II.

❚ The Olympics are postponed for a few months but still held in 2020, as Japan’s Olympics minister suggested.

❚ There’s a fourth option: Hold the Olympics when they are scheduled, but without spectators.

For most of the world, the Olympics are a TV show. This option would allow the show to go on, just as the Tokyo Marathon did last weekend, through mostly empty city streets.

 ?? JEAN-CHRISTOPHE BOTT/KEYSTONE VIA AP ?? IOC President Thomas Bach issues a statement on the coronaviru­s Tuesday.
JEAN-CHRISTOPHE BOTT/KEYSTONE VIA AP IOC President Thomas Bach issues a statement on the coronaviru­s Tuesday.
 ?? Columnist USA TODAY ??
Columnist USA TODAY

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