Horse & Hound

The logistics

Putting back an Olympics by a year is a staggering­ly huge undertakin­g. Lucy Higginson finds out what’s involved

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We explore what it takes to postpone an Olympic Games

UST how hard is it to postpone Tokyo’s Olympics by a year?

By this stage of the annus horribilis that is 2020, almost everyone has had to cancel or reschedule something sizeable. Be it a party, holiday, wedding or reunion, we’ve had to balance personal disappoint­ment against the greater crisis, and spend hours unpicking plans, chasing up deposits, cancelling flights and more.

Spare a thought then for the Tokyo Olympic Organising committee (TOKOG) who have had to postpone 2020’s biggest party of all, involving 41 different venues, 11,000 athletes and an anticipate­d 600,000 visitors from around the world.

Toshiro Muto, TOKOG chief executive, explained to the media that numerous Olympic venues had already been booked for other purposes next year, producing scheduling conflicts that have had to be resolved. For other venues, it’s been a more straightfo­rward question of extending leases.

“Our plan was to return all of the Games venues once we had finished,” Muto explained as the postponeme­nt was announced. “So to hire them again means we have to pay

Jadditiona­l costs for them and we might have to hire people until next year.”

Chief among the facilities affected was the Athletes’ Village, built overlookin­g Tokyo Bay, and our riders’ base through the Games. As at other Olympics including Barcelona and London, this is to be converted into luxury apartments afterwards, and some 900 of them have already been sold to new owners who had expected to move in by next summer.

“Even if it’s not a financial hit, it’s going to be a big inconvenie­nce to them,” Zoe Ward, director of Tokyo Property Central told Asia Times. She believes buyers may now scour the small print of their contracts to see if they can pull out without losing their deposits.

HE Olympic equestrian events are centred at the Japan Racing Associatio­n’s (JRA) Equestrian Park in Setagaya. The same site hosted the 1964

TTokyo Olympic equestrian events, but has been redevelope­d and hired by TOKOG, and is one of the closest venues to the Athletes’ Village.

Postponeme­nt “wasn’t a huge shock” by the time it was announced, says Alec Lochore, consultant equestrian sport manager for Tokyo, “just a disappoint­ment”.

“There are people seconded from other roles in Japan, and Europeans, Americans and Australian­s who now must stay for another year [to deliver the Games],” he explains. “Ownership of the venue will now revert back to JRA for a while, but they are generously moving their own plans back by a year.”

The unexpected delay gives the organising team more time to test the venue, which has been developed enormously since last year’s test event.

“They could now potentiall­y arrange a dressage or jumping competitio­n ahead of the Games,” agrees Alec. “I would if it were up to me, to check for snagging.”

The island venue hosting the cross-country, Sea Forest, is due to become a National Park after the Games. Numerous fences were out and in place, explains Alec, and have had to be removed so they don’t suffer climatic damage.

“All sorts of other equipment must

“We’ll have quite a high level of reliance on specialist volunteers such as fence judges, from places like New Zealand, Australia, Britain and Germany”

ALEC LOCHORE, CONSULTANT EQUESTRIAN SPORT MANAGER FOR TOKYO

now be stored too such as showjumps and dressage arenas,” he continues, “and the horse ambulances will now be stored in the UK.”

As for the many internatio­nal volunteers who had been lined up to help steward the equestrian events – roughly a third of volunteers for these Games are coming from overseas – it is unclear as yet how many can and will come next year instead.

“We’ll have quite a high level of reliance on specialist volunteers such as fence judges, from places like New Zealand, Australia, Britain and Germany, and I know that we still will want those people,” says Alec. “I hope they can still come.”

The FEI is also collaborat­ing with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and TOKOG to identify areas “where we can improve cost efficiency and adapt the cost implicatio­ns of the postponeme­nt with minimal impact on the sport and the

athletes, always taking into account public health and economic contexts,” according to an FEI spokespers­on.

F we’re to find a bright side to this situation, Will Connell, director of sport for the US Equestrian Federation, believes that equestrian­ism is better equipped than many sports to handle the postponeme­nt.

“We’re ideally placed to cope with coming out of Covid-19 because we’re all used to horses making us take unexpected leave from play, such as by going lame,” he says. “We know how to avoid the temptation to rush back. Secondly, biosecurit­y is second nature to us, especially at FEI events where there is tight stable security.”

It’s also a source of some relief to everybody that the challenge of rearrangin­g has fallen to a nation so utterly organised and efficient that apologetic announceme­nts are made if a train is even one minute late.

“The Japanese mentality regarding business priorities has helped,” agrees Will, for whom this will be a seventh Olympics as a sports manager. “They want the Games to work and for people to enjoy the visit and be proud of them.”

Sophie Thomas, British Equestrian’s World Class Programme leader, who is responsibl­e for many of the logistics for the British teams, has found this too.

“The hotel we’d booked for owners and so on has been completely understand­ing,” she says.

It’s a similar story for the property close to the equestrian venue that had been secured for equine staff who don’t get a bed by right in the grooms’ village or Athletes’ Village. This is a relief since “Japan is really tricky for private rental accommodat­ion,” explains Sophie. “It’s just not the culture there.”

The postponeme­nt was in some ways timed well, announced before food and forage had been shipped. One Team GB shipping container, crammed with things like buckets, bunting, banners, storm guards, stable drapes and more, was a week away from sailing and will sit for months now until it’s needed.

From Sophie’s point of view, an Olympic postponeme­nt is easier than something similar befalling another championsh­ip.

“We have huge support from the BOA [British Olympic Associatio­n] and BPA [British Paralympic Associatio­n], who arrange

Ia lot of shipping, athlete accommodat­ion, kit and so on,” she says. “In a World Championsh­ip year, that would have fallen to us.”

In most cases, vets, selectors, team managers and other support staff will remain constant. There are some exceptions of course, and the FEI has the sad task of choosing a replacemen­t for Jon Doney who was due to have officiated at his third Olympic Games in Tokyo, as president of the jumping ground jury, but who died unexpected­ly in April.

RITISH EQUESTRIAN is working on the assumption that exactly the same support team will be available to the British team, though in the States and other countries no doubt there are people who are delaying planned retirement­s.

“They’re almost all going to carry on to next year, including selectors,” says Will. “You don’t want these to change until after the Games.”

One big question is how the reschedule­d Tokyo affects the rest of next year’s calendar.

“We’re waiting to hear if other events will move their dates,” he says. “Normally you’d compete in an Olympics, review how it went, dust off a plan working towards the following Olympics and hit ‘go’ in November of that year.

“Instead, we’ll come out of Tokyo 2021 and be less than a year out of the first opportunit­y to qualify for Paris,” he explains. He points out that championsh­ips like the Europeans (cancelled for 2021 because of the Tokyo clash,

Balthough it’s possible they may be reinstated) are used by federation­s to experiment with new rider combinatio­ns for future Olympics.

“It means next year will be the equivalent of having to run two different plays but with one theatre,” he adds, but federation­s everywhere will just have to adapt. “Innovation must come out of this or the human race has failed.” Of course the elephant in the room is whether the global health situation will allow the Games to take place even in 2021. While lockdown eases around the world, no one yet knows when mass gatherings and unfettered internatio­nal travel will be on the cards. The thought of losing the 2020 Games altogether is heartbreak­ing for athletes, support staff and organisers, not to mention the millions of us who love and follow sport.

In the meanwhile, as Sophie Thomas explains: “We, like our athletes, have got to keep in a positive frame of mind, plan that it will take place and ignore the mutterings until anybody says otherwise.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A view of the Athletes’ Village –
after the Games facilities are to be converted into apartments, some of which have already
been sold to new owners
A view of the Athletes’ Village – after the Games facilities are to be converted into apartments, some of which have already been sold to new owners
 ??  ?? Cross-country fences from the 2020 test event are now stored away to avoid climatic damage
Cross-country fences from the 2020 test event are now stored away to avoid climatic damage
 ??  ?? Hotels have generally been accommodat­ing and the efficient Japanese mentality has helped
Hotels have generally been accommodat­ing and the efficient Japanese mentality has helped
 ??  ?? The ups and downs of the Tokyo delay for para riders
The Equestrian Park could stage a competitio­n ahead of the Games, “to check for snagging”
The ups and downs of the Tokyo delay for para riders The Equestrian Park could stage a competitio­n ahead of the Games, “to check for snagging”

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