USA TODAY US Edition

Olympic undertakin­g:

Postponing the games would tie up organizers, broadcaste­rs, sponsors, sports federation­s – and big money.

- Christine Brennan Columnist

Dick Pound, the influentia­l, longtime member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, said what needed to be said Monday afternoon about the fate of the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. “Postponeme­nt has been decided.” Pound, 78, a Canadian who is the longest-serving IOC member, has been a no-holds-barred, on-the-record stalwart in the world of internatio­nal sports for as long as I have known him, which is more than 30 years.

While the IOC itself has not officially confirmed what Pound told USA TODAY, he is the man who a month ago dramatical­ly put a deadline on an Olympic decision.

He said at the time that in the midst of the worldwide coronaviru­s outbreak, a decision would have to be made on the fate of the Tokyo Games by late May.

His stark words received a lot of attention in the days and weeks that followed, becoming a bench mark in Olympic planning.

And now, this: He has said that the decision has been made, with the next steps to reschedule the Olympics coming within the next four weeks, the time period IOC President Thomas Bach announced Sunday without officially postponing.

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

Moving a Summer Olympic Games, the largest regularly scheduled gathering of the world, is going to be a massive undertakin­g. No one is certain how difficult it is going to be, for one very good reason:

It has never been done before. Olympic Games have been canceled due to World War I and II, and boycott

ed for political reasons in 1976, 1980 and 1984, but never postponed.

The decision, as announced by Pound, is both extraordin­ary and poignant. It is the biggest decision ever made in the history of the Olympic Games. Some might see this as just another in a long line of suspension­s, postponeme­nts and cancellati­ons: the NCAA men’s and women’s basketball tournament­s, the NBA, the NHL, the Masters, the Boston Marathon.

But it’s much more than that. Postponing an Olympics is nothing at all like suspending a season or a tournament. Preparatio­ns for the Tokyo Olympics have been years in the making: all the venues, the Olympic village, hotels, the works.

To not hold the Games this summer is crushing to the hundreds of thousands of people planning to work at and go to the Olympics, even though it is the right decision due to the awful explosion of this deadly virus.

The news is also devastatin­g to Olympians everywhere.

As training conditions deteriorat­ed and postponeme­nt became inevitable, a sadness enveloped the Olympic world.

The Games were the biggest sports event of the year, and one of the last marque events of the summer left standing in our world.

Now, according to Pound, they too are gone.

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 ?? BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A man wearing a face mask amid concerns over the spread of the COVID-19 coronaviru­s walks past the Olympic Games countdown clock outside Tokyo station on Tuesday.
BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A man wearing a face mask amid concerns over the spread of the COVID-19 coronaviru­s walks past the Olympic Games countdown clock outside Tokyo station on Tuesday.

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