The Day

Amid cancellati­on talk, Tokyo Olympics ‘focused on hosting’

- By STEPHEN WADE

Tokyo — IOC President Thomas Bach and local organizers are pushing back against reports that the postponed Tokyo Olympics will be canceled.

Now set to open July 23, the Tokyo Games were postponed 10 months ago at the outbreak of the coronaviru­s pandemic, and now the event appears threatened again.

The Times of London, citing unidentifi­ed government sources, reported that the games will have to be canceled. It quoted an unidentifi­ed senior member of the ruling government coalition.

“No one wants to be the first to say so but the consensus is that it's too difficult,” the person said. “Personally, I don't think it's going to happen.”

In a statement Friday, the local organizing committee did not address directly The Times story, but said the Olympics were going forward and had the support of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.

“All our delivery partners including the national government, the Tokyo Metropolit­an Government, Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee, the IOC and the IPC (Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee) are fully focused on hosting the games this summer,” the statement said.

“We hope that daily life can return to normal as soon as possible, and we will continue to make every effort to prepare for a safe and secure games.”

The IOC released a brief statement saying it is “fully concentrat­ed on and committed to the successful delivery of the Olympic and Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020 this year.”

The IPC added that it's goal of having the games this year has not changed.

“There is no doubt the Tokyo 2020 Games will be very different to any previous games and that this summer's event looks a long way off right now. However, we believe that with the robust measures and plans we have in place, the games can and will go ahead safely,” the IPC said.

Managu Sakai, the deputy chief cabinet secretary and an ally of the prime minister, also shot down the story.

“There is no such fact and we clearly deny (the report),” he said.

Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike told her regular news conference on Friday that she has “never heard such a thing.” She even suggested action against the British newspaper.

“Perhaps we should file a protest,” she said.

The Times of London said Japan hoped to land the 2032 Olympics. The IOC has already awarded the 2024 Olympics to Paris and the 2028 version to Los Angeles.

Big money

The idea of Tokyo waiting a decade seems unlikely, given the cost of maintainin­g venues, negotiatin­g new leases, and so forth. Tokyo has already spent about $25 billion to organize these Olympics, most of which is public money.

Several reports of a cancellati­on began to surface this month when the Japanese government put Tokyo and other prefecture­s under a state of emergency order to counter a surge of rising COVID-19 cases.

“We have at this moment, no reason whatsoever to believe that the Olympic Games in Tokyo will not open on the 23rd of July in the Olympic stadium in Tokyo," Bach told the Japanese news agency Kyodo on Thursday.

He also said there is “no Plan B.” Senior Internatio­nal Olympic Committee member Richard Pound said earlier in the week that the Olympics may be held largely without fans, making it a mostly television event.

The Switzerlan­d-based IOC gets 73% of its income from selling broadcast rights and has seen its main revenue source stalled by the Olympic postponeme­nt. A largely TV-only event would suit the IOC better than a cancellati­on.

Bach hinted that radical changes may be needed to pull off the Tokyo Olympics, which involve 11,000 athletes and tens of thousands of coaches, officials, judges, VIPS, media and broadcaste­rs.

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