USA TODAY US Edition

Olympics in Tokyo likely to move to ’21

- Christine Brennan

Veteran Internatio­nal Olympic Committee member Dick Pound told USA TODAY Sports on Monday afternoon that the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games are going to be postponed amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“On the basis of the informatio­n the IOC has, postponeme­nt has been decided,” Pound said in a phone interview. “The parameters going forward have not been determined, but the games are not going to start on July 24, that much I know.”

Pound, a Canadian who has been one of the most influentia­l members of the IOC for decades, said the games will likely be moved to 2021, with the details to be worked out in the next four weeks. He said he expects the IOC to announce its next steps soon.

“It will come in stages,” said Pound, 78, the longest-serving IOC member. “We will postpone this and begin to deal with all the ramificati­ons of moving this, which are immense.”

Neither the IOC nor the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee had announced a decision to postpone as of Monday afternoon.

When informed of Pound’s comments and asked for an IOC response, spokesman Mark Adams said, “It is the right of every IOC member to interpret the decision of the IOC executive board which was announced (Sunday).”

In that announceme­nt Sunday, IOC President Thomas Bach indicated, for the first time, that postponing the Tokyo Games would be a possibilit­y.

In a letter to the athlete community, he wrote that the IOC would begin exploring alternate ways to stage the games, including postponeme­nt, and

“I would have real moral objections, if the situation was the same as it was today, to competing.”

Nathan Adrian swimmer and five-time Olympic gold medalist

plan to reach a decision within the next four weeks. He emphasized that the IOC has ruled out canceling the games, a stance that was reiterated by key Japanese officials – including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe – on Monday.

Representa­tives of the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee didn’t immediatel­y reply to a USA TODAY email seeking a response to Pound’s comments.

The Olympics would be the latest – and, by far, most significan­t – sporting event to date to fall victim to the coronaviru­s, which was first identified in Wuhan, China, in December. Also known as COVID-19, the disease rapidly spread throughout China and across the world, infecting hundreds of thousands of people and causing major disruption­s to daily life in numerous countries.

The spread of the coronaviru­s also has interrupte­d Olympic qualificat­ion procedures and severely affected training regimens, prompting athletes and sports governing bodies to call for the games’ postponeme­nt.

“I would have real moral objections, if the situation was the same as it was today, to competing,” swimmer and fivetime Olympic gold medalist Nathan

Adrian told USA TODAY Sports Friday.

Pressure mounted over the weekend as World Athletics, the internatio­nal federation that oversees track and field, publicly called for the games to be postponed. The Canadian Olympic and Paralympic Committees then took matters to another level Sunday night by announcing they will not send a delegation of athletes to the Tokyo Games unless they were postponed.

Within the next 12 hours, Australia’s Olympic Committee released a similar but more ambiguous statement. And the German Olympic Committee joined its counterpar­ts in Brazil and Norway, among other countries, in publicly urging the IOC to postpone the games.

On Monday night the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee joined the others in urging the IOC to postpone the Tokyo Games. The USOPC said it heard from 1,780 Olympic and Paralympic hopefuls.

“Our most important conclusion from this broad athlete response is that even if the current significan­t health concerns could be alleviated by late summer, the enormous disruption­s to the training environmen­t, doping controls and qualificat­ion process can’t be overcome in a satisfacto­ry manner,” USOPC board chair Susanne Lyons and CEO Sarah Hirshland said in a joint statement. “To that end, it’s more clear than ever that the path toward postponeme­nt is the most promising, and we encourage the IOC to take all needed steps to ensure the Games can be conducted under safe and fair conditions for all competitor­s.”

The decision to postpone, when finalized and announced by the IOC, will mark a significan­t milestone. It would the first time the Olympics have been suspended, though the games have been canceled in times of war.

 ??  ?? Visitors arriving from Greece gather for photos Saturday in front of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic flame outside Sendai Station. PHILIP FONG/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
Visitors arriving from Greece gather for photos Saturday in front of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic flame outside Sendai Station. PHILIP FONG/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
 ?? CARL COURT/GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman wearing a face mask poses for a photograph next to the Olympic rings in Tokyo, host of the next Summer Olympics.
CARL COURT/GETTY IMAGES A woman wearing a face mask poses for a photograph next to the Olympic rings in Tokyo, host of the next Summer Olympics.

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