Albany Times Union

Tokyo Games still weigh more limits

Organizing committee has signaled that it will change its ticket policy

- By Stephen Wade

The Tokyo Olympic organizing committee signaled on Monday that it will change its ticket policy this week for any local fans hoping to attend. This comes with the pandemic-delayed Olympics opening in just less than three weeks.

Organizers, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and others are expected to meet this week to announce new restrictio­ns because of the fast-changing coronaviru­s situation. Organizers said a ticket lottery set for Tuesday was pushed back to Saturday to accommodat­e any changes.

Fans from abroad were banned months ago from attending.

Two weeks ago organizers, the IOC, and others agreed to allow indoor and outdoor stadiums to be filled to 50 percent capacity with a ceiling of 10,000. Japanese news reports suggest the maximum may be dropped to 5,000 at all venues.

Some unconfirme­d reports have suggested that no fans is still an option and that fan limits for night sessions could be stricter than day sessions.

There are fears that the Olympics could become a super-spreader event with 11,000 Olympic athletes and 4,400 Paralympia­ns entering from more than 200 countries. Tens of thousands of judges, sponsors, broadcaste­rs, and media must also enter.

Officials say that more than 80 percent of athletes and support staff will be vaccinated.

The more critical problem is the low vaccinatio­n rate in Japan, and the probabilit­y that holding Olympics events will encourage people to visit bars, restaurant­s, and use public transporta­tion.

The exact day of the ticket meeting has not been confirmed, but it could come at the same time as IOC president Thomas Bach arrives in Tokyo on Thursday. Bach is to spend his first three days in self-quarantine at a fivestar Tokyo hotel.

The Tokyo Metropolit­an Government on Monday reported 342 new coronaviru­s cases. It is the 16th straight day that cases were higher than they were a week earlier. On Saturday the capital reported 716 new cases, the highest in five weeks.

The Tokyo government announced last week it was taking the Olympic torch relay off public streets for the first half of its 15day passage through the capital. Only outlying Tokyo islands were excluded.

Citing an unnamed source, Japan’s Kyodo news said Monday it was likely the second half of the relay leading up to the opening ceremony on July 23 would also be taken off the streets.

 ?? Rodrigo Reyes Marin / Associated Press ?? Tokyo 2020 president Seiko Hashimoto, left, and IOC president Thomas Bach meet online in June.
Rodrigo Reyes Marin / Associated Press Tokyo 2020 president Seiko Hashimoto, left, and IOC president Thomas Bach meet online in June.

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