Lodi News-Sentinel

Even post-coronaviru­s, will esports replace real-life games?

- By David Wharton

Warning that “things will not be as they were before,” the head of the Olympic movement has suggested that when the coronaviru­s pandemic finally subsides, it might leave behind a world with fewer big-time sports events.

And maybe more esports.

In a wide-ranging letter published on Wednesday, Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach said the fallout from COVID-19 has revealed a current system under financial strain from so many competitio­ns.

“At this moment, nobody knows what the realities of the post-coronaviru­s world will look like,” he wrote. “What is clear, however, is that probably none of us will be able to sustain every single initiative or event that we were planning before this crisis hit.”

Bach added: “We shall also have to consider what social distancing may mean for our relations with esports.”

As of Wednesday, there were more than 3 million confirmed cases and 218,000 deaths related to COVID-19 worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University.

The pandemic has forced the IOC and Tokyo organizers to postpone the 2020

Summer Olympics for a year. A medical official in Japan said Tuesday that holding the massive competitio­n at any time will be “difficult” without the developmen­t of a reliable vaccine.

A top IOC executive disputed that notion on Wednesday.

“The advice we’re getting from the (World Health Organizati­on) says we should continue to plan for this date,” John Coates told the Australian Associated Press. “And that is what we’re doing, and that’s not contingent on a vaccine.”

In regard to esports, the IOC had previously held discussion­s with game makers while maintainin­g what it calls a “red line” between real-life sports and video games.

The coronaviru­s pandemic could blur that demarcatio­n, with Bach urging sports federation­s to be open-minded.

“We encourage all our stakeholde­rs to ‘consider how to govern electronic and virtual forms of their sport and explore opportunit­ies with game publishers,’ “he said, quoting from a recent IOC statement.

“This new situation will need all our solidarity, creativity, determinat­ion and flexibilit­y,” Bach wrote. “We shall all need to make sacrifices and compromise­s.”

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