Texarkana Gazette

With trials looming, IOC could adjust qualifying for this year’s Olympics

- By Eddie Pells AP Sports Writers Jimmy Golen in Boston and Will Graves in Pittsburgh contribute­d to this report.

Almost any athlete will concede that getting picked for an Olympic team is as much of a challenge as competing for one.

The IOC acknowledg­ed on Tuesday just how frazzling the whole process could be this year, and a few leaders from the athlete community weighed in on how the uncertaint­y is plaguing them, as well.

While pushing forward for its planned July 24 start for the Tokyo Games, the IOC outlined how the invitation­s might be sorted out if the dozens of Olympic trials and qualifiers slated for this spring and summer around the globe get canceled or postponed due to the coronaviru­s.

There are still around 4,700 out of nearly 11,000 Olympic spots to be decided with four months remaining until opening night. And though the IOC insists its still too early to make “drastic decisions” about the Games themselves, it put out a communique acknowledg­ing that there might need to be contingenc­y plans for picking teams.

“Currently … the athletes face significan­t challenges around securing the final qualificat­ion places for the Games,” the IOC said in its statement. “In some countries, athletes are even finding it hard to continue their regular training schedules.”

That’s not a good thing, said Canadian Olympic hockey and softball star Haley Wickenheis­er. She called the IOC’s decision to keep pushing forward “insensitiv­e and irresponsi­ble” in a tweet.

“The uncertaint­y of not knowing … where you’re going to train tomorrow, as facilities close and qualificat­ion events are canceled all over the world, would be terrible if you’re training your whole life for this,” she said.

And the chair of the athlete council for the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee offered a window into how the uncertaint­y hinders the athletes.

“As long as the Games are supposed to continue as planned, I don’t think athletes want to scale back their training,” said Han Xiao. “I’d like the IOC to give a little more insight into planning and when they might expect to make a final decision, but I don’t know if that’s forthcomin­g.”

Though 57% of the Olympic spots have been decided, virtually none of them come from the Olympics’ three headliner sports: track, swimming and gymnastics. In the United States and many other countries, those spots are determined at Olympic trials in June, which are in limbo. The track and gymnastics federation­s

said they were busy this week considerin­g alternativ­es in case trials can’t go forward.

In the U.S., track and swimming award spots to top finishers in each event — taking subjective measures and past performanc­es out of considerat­ion in all but the rarest of circumstan­ces.

But the IOC suggested that other methods might have to be used — including relying on historical performanc­es and internatio­nal rankings.

Making that more difficult is the continued withering of the pre-Olympic schedule. Two key internatio­nal gymnastics meets have already been scrubbed, and on Tuesday, the Diamond League, which draws top track stars from across the globe,

announced it was postponing three events in April and May.

As much as rankings, those events are considered crucial toward helping athletes get into top form as they approach the Olympics. Lack of events combined with limits on training that some athletes are being forced into under quarantine situations is adding to the uncertaint­y.

Still, the IOC made clear it would not be rushed into a decision. It said it was following the guidance of world health experts, and that because of insurance policies, the decision “will not be determined by financial interests.”

 ?? Jae C. Hong/Associated Press ?? ■ Snow falls on the Olympic rings Saturday near the New National Stadium in Tokyo.
Jae C. Hong/Associated Press ■ Snow falls on the Olympic rings Saturday near the New National Stadium in Tokyo.

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