The Guardian Australia

Sebastian Coe says delaying Olympics relieved 'mental turmoil' of athletes

- Ewan Murray

Sebastian Coe has said the postponeme­nt of the Olympics was necessary in order to safeguard the psychologi­cal wellbeing of athletes because many were in “mental turmoil” not knowing if the Tokyo Games were to proceed as scheduled.

The 2020 Olympic Games were postponed last Tuesday in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic following talks between Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee president, Thomas Bach.

Two weeks ago Lord Coe, the president of World Athletics, had been circumspec­t, saying “anything is possible” and emphasisin­g the difficulti­es of moving the Games to 2021. He now concedes events necessitat­ed action.

“We’re no different from everyone else out there but we just concluded that sport, on this occasion, had to take a back seat,” Coe told TalkSport. “We didn’t want to have the athletes in a position where they were countering government advice, maybe even breaking the law.

“And of course in the back of their minds was always that concern, it wasn’t just their own training programme, but that they ran the risk of effectivel­y infecting themselves, their families, their kids, grandparen­ts or parents, and we just wanted to take them out of that mental turmoil as quickly as we possibly could.”

Bach has setup an IOC taskforce called Here We Go whose brief is to work with 33 internatio­nal sports federation­s about setting new dates for the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympic­s. Among the considerat­ions is staging the Games in the spring of next year. “The agreement is that we want to organise these Games at the latest in the summer 2021,” Bach said. “This is not restricted just to the summer months. All the options are on the table including the summer 2021.”

The new head of UK Athletics has vowed to restore belief in an organisati­on that has been mired in controvers­y. Joanna Coates, appointed chief executive late last year, is well aware of the negative focus triggered by the results of its independen­t review into the handling of Alberto Salazar, Mo Farah’s former coach. Neil Black, the UKA performanc­e director, became the latest senior figure to leave his role before another review was launched, this time by UK Sport.

“The board has given me the remit to make changes to ensure this organisati­on gets back to where it should be,” Coates told the Sunday Tele

graph. “There will be major change in the organisati­on, and that doesn’t just mean people. That means policy, procedures, how we liaise with other organisati­ons.” “I do not want medals at all costs. I hope Dina [Asher-Smith] wins. I believe she will and we want her to. But it’s about her story, her journey in athletics and what athletics can bring to anybody that participat­es. That’s what it should be about.”

 ??  ?? Sebastian Coe, the president of World Athletics, says the decision to postpone the Tokyo Olympics was made for the wellbeing of athletes. Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/ AFP via Getty Images
Sebastian Coe, the president of World Athletics, says the decision to postpone the Tokyo Olympics was made for the wellbeing of athletes. Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/ AFP via Getty Images

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