The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Tokyo holds meet to test Olympics viability

- By Stephen Wade

TOKYO » The good news for the Tokyo Olympics is that Japan on Nov. 8 held a one-day exhibition gymnastics meet in front of several thousand fans with 22 athletes participat­ing from Russia, China, and the United States.

They were joined by eight from Japan.

The non-Japanese entered after a 14-day quarantine at home and were largely kept penned up in their Tokyo hotel in strict isolation.

The event is the latest — a Japanese baseball stadium was filled to capacity last week — intended to show that the postponed Tokyo Olympics can open in just under nine months.

But there are more difficult numbers that the Olympics must overcome.

Next year’s Games will involve 11,000 athletes from 206 nations and territorie­s, all affected differentl­y by COVID-19. Add to this 4,400 more Paralympia­ns and thousands more officials, judges, VIPs, media, broadcaste­rs and sponsors who will also need to enter Japan.

Will tens of thousands of non-Japanese fans be allowed to attend, or will the

Games be for only Japanese spectators?

Tokyo organizers and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee have given few details and concrete plans are not expected until next year when a vaccine and rapid testing might be available to resolve some problems.

Kohei Uchimura, Japan’s three-time Olympic gold medal gymnast, set out the problem very clearly after the exhibition meet.

“Unfortunat­ely, 80% of

the Japanese don’t believe that the Tokyo Olympics can take place as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic,” he said, speaking after the meet in Japanese on a public-address system to fans in the Yoyogi National Stadium. He was also addressing his fellow athletes.

“I know it is natural to think this way,” he added. “But I would like people to change their minds from: We can’t hold the Olympics to how can we do it?”

Uchimura pointed out

that many athletes had not been able to practice and many have gone the entire year without any competitio­n. How will they qualify?

If the Olympics happen, these will not be Olympics like any other. Rules will be strict. Travel will be limited. And despite all the precaution­s, some athletes are bound to get COVID-19 and be removed from the competitio­n. IOC President Thomas Bach and Vice President John Coates have acknowledg­ed this.

 ?? HIRO KOMAE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Audience members cheer for Wataru Tanigawa of Japan as he competes in the rings during an internatio­nal gymnastics meet Nov. 8 in Tokyo.
HIRO KOMAE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Audience members cheer for Wataru Tanigawa of Japan as he competes in the rings during an internatio­nal gymnastics meet Nov. 8 in Tokyo.

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