Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Let the Games begin options, scenarios

- | Reuters

JAPAN’S Olympic Minister insists the rearranged Tokyo 2020 Games must be held “at any cost”, while the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee says only that it is committed to delivering a safe event.

But with less than a year before the July 23-August 8 Games are due to start, the hugest of question marks remains over whether they can ever take place.

With neither partner seemingly willing to consider scrapping the event as the coronaviru­s pandemic continues to wreak havoc globally, we consider the options available, and possible scenarios:

PROCEED AS ORIGINALLY PLANNED

The best-case scenario for the IOC is to hold the Tokyo Games with few or no restrictio­ns in place because of Covid-19.

That will be impossible unless a stable vaccine is developed and produced in sufficient quantities over the next 10 months.

Venues at full capacity with no travel restrictio­ns in place would keep broadcaste­rs and sponsors, the Games’ biggest sources of revenue, happy, while also giving organisers muchneeded revenue.

SOCIAL DISTANCING MEASURES, ATHLETE BUBBLE

With approximat­ely 11 000 athletes expected to descend on Tokyo for the Olympics, keeping them safe is organisers’ number one priority.

Key to this will be securing the athletes’ village and making sure all measures are taken at Games venues.

One idea floated has been to bring athletes to Tokyo a month before the Games, so they can go through quarantine and testing procedures for two weeks before training for their event.

Athletes would then not be allowed to leave designated, secure areas for the duration of their time in Japan.

Fans are the other major group that organisers must consider.

More than seven million tickets have been sold for the Games, for events taking place in venues across Tokyo and beyond.

The logistical challenge of moving thousands around the city always presented a challenge, now worsened by the need for Covid-19 precaution­s.

Organisers may decide to limit the number of fans in each venue to maintain social distancing – just as the major sports in Japan have this year – or say that only Japan-based tickethold­ers can attend.

This would lead to uproar amongst tickethold­ers and financial losses for organisers.

NO FANS, ATHLETE BUBBLE

The IOC could look at examples in other sports, such as the NBA and soccer’s Champions League, and choose to lose spectators altogether.

A ‘bubble’ has been created around the NBA basketball playoffs, with all players and staff staying together at World Disney World Resort and no fans in attendance.

ESPN reported that this bubble had cost the NBA $150 million to set up so, in the case of the Olympics, with far more athletes from countries around the world, who would pay?

The logistical effort to stage the Games amid an ongoing pandemic becomes easier if hundreds of thousands of visitors stay away from the host city. Being without fans would be a major blow to the IOC’s prime product, disappoint­ing broadcaste­rs and sponsors.

POSTPONE AGAIN

Organisers have said that, with the Beijing 2022 Winter Games set for February 2022, further postponeme­nt is impossible. If a potential vaccine was to be rolled out later in 2021, it could be beneficial to delay the Games until a later date when athletes have received the inoculatio­n.

CANCEL

Cancellati­on would mean financial disaster for Japanese organisers. More than $12.6 billion has been pumped into the project, hundreds of millions more to delay it by a year.

The IOC has also signed contracts for rights and sponsorshi­p deals worth several billion dollars and their inability to stage Games would no doubt have legal repercussi­ons.

For athletes too, cancellati­on could potentiall­y wreck a lifetime of effort and endeavour. A cancellati­on is a scenario everyone will be desperate to avoid.

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