The Star (Jamaica)

Olympics postponeme­nt getting likelier

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IOC members, national Olympic committees, and athletes were all racing towards the same conclusion yesterday: The Tokyo Olympics are not going to take place this summer.

Craig Reedie, a longtime member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC), told The Associated Press (AP) that everyone can see where things are headed, with the coronaviru­s pandemic spreading and Olympic hopefuls around the world unable to train.

“In the balance of probabilit­ies, the informatio­n known about conditions in Japan and the COVID19’s effect on the rest of world clearly indicates the likelihood of postponeme­nt,” Reedie said. “The length of postponeme­nt is the major challenge for the IOC.”

Earlier in the day, IOC member Dick Pound told USA Today that he had reached the same conclusion about the games, which are scheduled to start July 24. A tweet put out by the newspaper read: “The 2020 Summer Olympics

Have Been Postponed Over

Concerns.”

The IOC said no decision had been made, and Reedie was quick to acknowledg­e that he was speaking only for himself and not because of any insight provided to him by IOC president Thomas Bach, who will guide the final decision. Pound did not return a message left by AP. Earlier in the day, after Pound’s pronouncem­ent, an IOC spokesman said, “It is the right of every IOC member to interpret the decision of the IOC (executive board) from Sunday.”

Indeed, the interpreta­tions and opinions are just that and haven’t always been spot on.

Coronaviru­s

Last month, Pound told AP that cancellati­on, not postponeme­nt, was the only real option if the Tokyo Games couldn’t start on time.

But a lot has changed since then, and the rapid momentum of the “postpone” movement among athletes and nations seemed to diminish the likelihood that it will take all of four weeks for the IOC to reach a conclusion. That was the timeline the IOC’s executive committee decided on Sunday when it announced it was putting together working groups to study the massive logistical issues involved in postponing the games.

Among those issues include the availabili­ty of venues in Japan, the disruption to the internatio­nal sports calendar during whatever new date is chosen, the resetting of qualifying procedures, and insurance considerat­ions; both the IOC and the Japanese organising committee hold massive policies, the legalese of which will take time to unwind.

 ??  ?? Bach
Bach
 ??  ?? Reedie
Reedie
 ??  ?? Pound
Pound

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