Baltimore Sun

Qualifying standards set for Tokyo ’21

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About 6,500 athletes who already have earned their spots for the Tokyo Games are in for 2021 under redrawn qualifying regulation­s published Tuesday by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

The IOC released its rewritten roadmap for qualifying for the games, which were reschedule­d due to the coronaviru­s. They’ll be held July 23 through Aug. 8 next year.

The new deadline for qualifying is June 29, 2021, and entry lists are due a week later. Individual internatio­nal sports federation­s will still be in charge of their qualifying procedures.

Many sports allow athletes to qualify by compiling results over a series of events. The IOC urged the federation­s to find a balance “between protecting those athletes who were close to qualifying based on the previous 2020 deadlines and also ensuring the best athletes at the Olympic Games” by taking into considerat­ion performanc­es in 2021.

The IOC announceme­nt confirmed reports last week that the sports had agreed to let athletes keep spots they already had earned. It clarified a number of points, including the need for boxing to relax a rule that sets the top age in the sport at 40. It also requires sports such as gymnastics to decide whether to allow athletes who would’ve been too young to compete in 2020 to try to be eligible for 2021.

The IOC also said “athlete health is the guiding principle in the scheduling of any remaining Olympic qualificat­ion events.” It urged sports not to confirm rescheduli­ng until the impacts of COVID-19 can be assessed.

Along those lines, World Athletics announced it was shutting down all qualifying procedures through Nov. 30. Its new window for qualifying will run from Dec. 1 through June 29, 2021.

Auto racing: Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Burton and Carl Edwards are among the new nominees for NASCAR’s next Hall of Fame class. All are first-time nominees. NASCAR had no announceme­nt on when Hall of Fame voting will be conducted.

Colleges: Obi Toppin of Dayton won the John R. Wooden Award as the nation’s outstandin­g men’s college basketball player. Toppin, along with Saddiq Bey of Villanova, Luka Garza of Iowa, Myles Powell of Seton Hall and Peyton Pritchard of Oregon, also won positional awards from the Basketball Hall of Fame. Toppin is the first player from Dayton to win the Wooden Award and the first Atlantic-10 Conference player to do so since Jameer Nelson of St. Joseph’s in 2004. Toppin averaged 20 points, 7.0 rebounds and shot 60% from the field. He led the nation in dunks with a school-record 107 and his 190 career slams also set a school mark.

NHL: For the first time since halting play four weeks ago, NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman raised the possibilit­y of not completing the regular season in order to squeeze in time to award the Stanley Cup. Bettman also acknowledg­ed during an interview with NBCSN the league is considerin­g having games played at neutral sites in the event not all teams will be allowed into their home rinks. ... A third player for the Avalanche tested positive for the coronaviru­s. The unnamed player is in self-isolation, and according to the league, he hasn’t had close contact with any other Avs players or staff members. He’s the eighth NHL player to test positive. The five others are on the Senators. The Avs and Senators played games in California in March before the season was paused.

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