Western Daily Press (Saturday)

LET THE GAMES BEGIN

- ELEANOR CROOKS

TENNIS star Naomi Osaka lit the Olympic flame as the Tokyo Games were opened yesterday with an understate­d ceremony held behind closed doors.

The culminatio­n came as great Japanese athletes, key workers and children from regions affected by the devastatin­g earthquake and tsunami 10 years ago linked up before handing the flame to four-time grand slam champion Osaka.

The 23-year-old walked across the stage at the Olympic Stadium and climbed a symbolic depiction of Mount Fuji to light the cauldron.

Earlier, Internatio­nal Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach had addressed the athletes, media and dignitarie­s that made up the sparse crowd, saying: “Today is a moment of hope.

“Yes it is very different from what all of us had imagined. But let us cherish this moment because finally we are all here together. This is the unifying power of sport. This is the message of solidarity, of peace and the message of resilience.”

The ceremony has had plenty of troubles irrespecti­ve of the wider backdrop of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Earlier this week, the show’s director, Kentaro Kobayashi, was sacked over alleged anti-Semitic jokes he made during a comedy routine in 1998.

That followed the resignatio­n of composer Keigo Oyamada after footage emerged of interviews in which he admitted bullying disabled children during his schooldays, while executive creative director Hiroshi Sasaki stepped down in March following criticism of his suggestion that plus-size model Naomi Watanabe dress up as a pig.

The stadium was surrounded by a ring of steel beyond which Japanese fans who had hoped to be on the inside had to make do with taking pictures of the Olympic rings and watching ticket-holding journalist­s walk through security check points.

Protesters against the holding of the Games, meanwhile, marched outside the arena and could be clearly heard during quiet moments in the ceremony.

There were plenty of those, of course, with only a smattering of journalist­s, dignitarie­s and volunteers sat in the stands of the stadium, built for the Games on the site of the 1964 arena.

This was very much a ceremony for its time, with a moment of silence to remember those lost to the pandemic.

The choreograp­hed displays were pared back and the parade of athletes featured noticeably smaller delegation­s than normal, although some countries, especially the USA and Japan, were very well represente­d.

The British delegation, led for the first time like all the nations by joint male and female flag bearers in sailor Hannah Mills and rower Mohamed Sbihi, consisted of just 22 people.

Sbihi, the first Muslim athlete to carry the British flag at an opening ceremony, said: “It’s amazing to be able to share it with the select few we have here, to share it with Hannah. It’s just a huge step towards equality and inclusion.”

Organisers allowed themselves one real wow moment when nearly 2,000 drones formed a blue and white globe above the stadium, and the tone became lighter towards the end.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Pictures: Martin Rickett/PA & Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images ?? Great Britain flagbearer­s Hannah Mills and Mohamed Sbihi lead out the team during yesterday’s opening ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Below, tennis star Naomi Osaka of Team Japan lights the Olympic cauldron
Pictures: Martin Rickett/PA & Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images Great Britain flagbearer­s Hannah Mills and Mohamed Sbihi lead out the team during yesterday’s opening ceremony of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Below, tennis star Naomi Osaka of Team Japan lights the Olympic cauldron

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom