Los Angeles Times

Tokyo Olympics reschedule­d for summer 2021

Event will start July 23, almost exactly one year after it was originally planned.

- By David Wharton

Vowing to overcome the “unpreceden­ted challenge” of the COVID-19 pandemic, Olympic leaders announced Monday that the 2020 Tokyo Games will be reschedule­d for mid-summer of 2021.

The July 23-Aug. 8 dates fall almost exactly a year after the global sporting event was originally scheduled to be held this year.

“Humankind currently finds itself in a dark tunnel,” said Thomas Bach, president of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee. “These Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 can be a light at the end of this tunnel.”

IOC officials and Tokyo organizers issued their joint statement a day after reports that COVID-19 cases were rising sharply in Japan’s capital city, with the potential for a public lockdown.

Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike vowed that her metropolit­an government will “commit all its resources” to creating a safe atmosphere for approximat­ely 11,000 athletes and hundreds of thousands of fans.

“In considerat­ion of the global coronaviru­s outbreak, we need a certain time frame before we fully prepare for the delivery of Games that are safe and secure for the athletes and spectators,” Koike said.

The Paralympic Games were also reschedule­d to take place from Aug. 24 to Sept. 5, with an Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee

official saying, “It is fantastic news that we could find new dates so quickly.”

Only a week ago, the IOC and the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee — facing pressure from athletes and member nations worldwide — agreed to a postponeme­nt, stating that “2020” would remain in the official name no matter when the event was held.

Over the course of a century, the modern Olympics had previously been canceled during World Wars but never postponed.

Finding a new date meant forging a compromise among the Olympic movement’s vast web of stakeholde­rs, including television broadcaste­rs and the 33 internatio­nal federation­s that govern each sport.

Bach initially said “all the options are on the table” when it came to rescheduli­ng, with springtime under considerat­ion. But officials had indicated last week they favored a summer window. The late-July start provides breathing room given that numerous qualifiers and major competitio­ns have been postponed because of the pandemic. In many parts of the world, training facilities have been closed.

“A certain amount of time is required for the selection and qualificat­ion of athletes and for their training and preparatio­n,” said Yoshiro Mori, the Tokyo 2020 president. “And the consensus was that staging the reschedule­d Games during the summer vacation in Japan would be preferable.”

The decision should be popular among athletes who have faced growing uncertaint­y since the onset of the coronaviru­s late last year.

“I can’t wait to get back to training,” Natalya Coyle, who will represent Ireland in the pentathlon, posted on social media.

Broadcaste­rs should also be happy. A springtime date would have plopped the Olympics into the middle of the pro basketball, hockey and baseball seasons in the U.S., and a busy soccer schedule in Europe. Summer offers more room for sports content on television.

There will be a conflict with the previously scheduled track and swimming world championsh­ips, but the internatio­nal federation­s for those sports had already expressed a willingnes­s to adapt.

“Everyone needs to be flexible and compromise,” the internatio­nal track federation said in a statement supporting Monday’s announceme­nt.

The IOC and Tokyo 2020 promised that disruption to other scheduled events will be kept to a minimum, adding: “These new dates give the health authoritie­s and all involved in the organizati­on of the Games the maximum time to deal with the constantly changing landscape and the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.”

 ?? Kazuhiro Nogi AFP via Getty Images ?? A COUNTDOWN CLOCK to the Olympics before its postponeme­nt, left, was adjusted for the new date, right.
Kazuhiro Nogi AFP via Getty Images A COUNTDOWN CLOCK to the Olympics before its postponeme­nt, left, was adjusted for the new date, right.

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