Philippine Daily Inquirer

JAPAN NURSE’S OLYMPIC BOXING DREAM KNOCKED OUT BY COVID-19

-

TOKYO—Japanese nurse Arisa Tsubata has trained around her work shifts for over a year to prepare for a final Olympic boxing qualifier in the hope of making it to the Tokyo Games this summer.

That dream was shattered after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) canceled the boxing qualifier due to take place in June and said it would allocate spots to athletes based on their world rankings in recent years.

The change in criteria has effectivel­y shut the door on many Olympic hopefuls such as Tsubata, whose rankings are not good enough to earn them an automatic qualificat­ion for the Olympic Games in Tokyo. Other qualifying competitio­ns for the Olympics have also been canceled.

In order to focus on her boxing, the 27-year old quit her job at a major hospital in January to take on a less demanding and lower paid position at a smaller psychiatri­c clinic.

Since then, she has trained over three hours a day during the week and extra hours on Saturdays, only taking Sundays off to rest or to get a massage.

“It’s very disappoint­ing,” said Tsubata, who currently works at the Life Support Clinic in Tokyo. “I had been working so hard for a year after the postponeme­nt of the Olympics, and it’s so frustratin­g that I don’t even have the right to compete.”

Japan has said the Olympic Games, delayed in 2020 due to COVID-19, will go ahead but questions remain over how it will hold the massive sporting event mid-pandemic. The country is currently fighting a fourth wave of coronaviru­s infections.

“‘Why did I aim for the Olympics when the coronaviru­s happened?’ I asked myself,” she said, also wondering “who knew the coronaviru­s pandemic would come at this time?”

Her feeling of frustratio­n and uncertaint­y is shared by many athletes globally whose careers have been thrown into limbo, after the pandemic dashed some people’s lifelong dreams of participat­ing in the global sporting event.

Heartbreak­ing moment

The IOC has a June 29 deadline to wrap up qualificat­ions for this year’s Olympics and with the canceled qualifiers, it now has to allocate about 53 spots in boxing across several regions based on ranking points since 2017.

In COVID-ravaged India, the head coach of the country’s national boxing team Santiago Nieva also remembers the “heartbreak­ing moment” when he delivered the news to four boxers.

“You feel like you’re taking away their dreams,” Nieva said. “They became depressed ... they were empty, felt empty in the head and body.”

Tsubata got into boxing about three years ago to lose weight, but her training coaches quickly encouraged her to compete in the sport and she went on to win Japan’s national boxing championsh­ip for the middleweig­ht division in 2019.

As a nurse and a boxer, she has mixed feelings about whether the Olympics due to start in July should go ahead as cases rise.

“As an athlete, considerin­g fellow athletes waiting for this moment, and especially seeing my chance being taken away, I think the Olympics should happen,” she said.

But, as a nurse, she said it “might be difficult” for Japan to hold the Olympic Games if the spread of the coronaviru­s is not contained.

Staying positive

For now, Tsubata is trying to stay positive, and is preparing for her internatio­nal debut at a tournament in Russia this month.

She says it is too early to think about the Olympic Games in Paris in 2024 and worries she may be too old by then to keep up with the physical strength needed to compete.

“I can’t say I am aiming for the next Olympics in Paris, but what I can do is try to keep working hard step by step, at any competitio­ns ahead, small or big,” Tsubata said.

 ?? —PHOTOS BY REUTERS ?? ALL FOR NOTHING? Arisa Tsubata (right), 27, a nurse and a boxer, has trained around her work shifts for over a year in the hope of making it to the Tokyo Games this summer. That dream was shattered earlier this year after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee decided to cancel the boxing qualifiers due to take place in June.
—PHOTOS BY REUTERS ALL FOR NOTHING? Arisa Tsubata (right), 27, a nurse and a boxer, has trained around her work shifts for over a year in the hope of making it to the Tokyo Games this summer. That dream was shattered earlier this year after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee decided to cancel the boxing qualifiers due to take place in June.
 ??  ?? BACK TO WORK Tsubata (standing) checks medicine stock at the psychiatri­c clinic where she works in Tokyo, Japan, on April 27.
BACK TO WORK Tsubata (standing) checks medicine stock at the psychiatri­c clinic where she works in Tokyo, Japan, on April 27.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines