The Pak Banker

Worldwide sports collapse piles pressure on Olympics

- TOKYO -AFP

The collapse of sports events worldwide over the rapidly spreading new coronaviru­s heaped pressure on the Tokyo Olympics on Friday as US President Donald Trump suggested delaying the Games by a year.

Formula One’s Australian Grand Prix and The Players Championsh­ip, one of golf’s most prestigiou­s events, were the latest to fall in a period when the virus has laid waste to the sporting calendar.

Football’s Premier League, with a worldwide audience of billions, is also in question after Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta and Chelsea midfielder were confirmed to have the disease.

The PGA Tour golf season, the men’s tennis tour, NBA basketball, Major League Baseball and a host of top-flight football leagues have all been put on hold or forced behind closed doors.

The impact of COVID19, which has killed nearly 5,000 people according to an

AFP tally, is accelerati­ng just over four months from the Tokyo Olympics’ start on July 24. European football chiefs will consider whether to postpone Euro 2020, this year’s other major internatio­nal sports event due to start in mid-June, at a meeting next week.

Tokyo Olympics organisers, Japan’s government and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee have been adamant the Games will go ahead as planned despite the global panic. But Trump became the first foreign leader to break ranks and raise the prospect of delaying the Olympics until 2021.

"Maybe they postpone it for a year," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office, 19 weeks before the opening ceremony in Tokyo’s Olympic Stadium.

"You know, I like that better than I like having empty stadiums all over the place. I think if you cancel it, make it a year later, that’s a better alternativ­e than doing it with no crowd," he said. Trump’s comments came just hours after actresses dressed as ancient Greek priestesse­s held the ceremonial flame-lighting at a ruined temple in the original Olympia, Greece.

‘Lots of options!’

Trump later discussed the Olympics with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe by telephone, before tweeting there were "Lots of options!" But Tokyo’s governor Yuriko Koike was unmoved, telling reporters on Friday: "For Tokyo, there is no option of cancellati­on at all."

Japan’s Olympic minister Seiko Hashimoto said: "Neither the IOC nor the organising committee is thinking about delaying or cancelling the Games at all."

Asked about the possibilit­y of scaling back the number of spectators, Hashimoto said: "We are not thinking about that at all."

In Melbourne, drivers were just hours from the first practice session when the season- opening Australian Grand Prix was axed on Friday, after a McLaren team member was diagnosed with COVID-19.

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