The Commercial Appeal

COVID-19 has colored how we perceive 2020 Summer Olympics.

COVID-19 will shape memory of these Games

- Christine Brennan

– The once-postponed, much discussed, long awaited, over budget, extraordin­arily controvers­ial 2020 Tokyo Olympics are finally upon us.

The Games do not officially begin until Friday night’s opening ceremony, but we already know they will forever be known as the COVID Olympics.

COVID-19 attached itself to Tokyo’s Olympics in March 2020, forcing the first postponeme­nt in the history of the Olympic movement. Since then, the virus hasn’t let go, creating headlines to this day about positive tests in the Olympic Village and altering the landscape of these Games with so many layers of safety and security that they are almost unrecogniz­able.

Certainly, no Olympic Games have ever gone through more to get to the starting line, and no Olympics have ever looked quite like this.

One wonders if it all will be worth it. Those polled in Japan have consistent­ly answered with a resounding “No.” Perhaps they are right. Perhaps not.

The answers will start to emerge as the Games begin with an opening ceremony in a crowdless stadium – a madefor-tv event if ever there were one, with a smaller contingent of athletes marching in and waving to mostly empty seats – but they might not be fully known until months or even years from now.

Will these Olympics, bringing together more than 10,000 athletes from 206 countries, become a supersprea­der event, depositing disease and perhaps death in largely unvaccinat­ed Japan?

Or will they bring a sigh of relief and perhaps even a hint of joy to the host nation and to the world, showing that athletes can come together in relative safety and harmony while the pandemic rages in so many corners of the globe?

That option seems remote at the moment. The run-up to these Games has been nothing but trouble, even as most athletes, coaches, officials and members of the media have successful­ly entered Japan and are going about their lives as best as they can in the midst of massive pandemic restrictio­ns.

But these Olympics are cloaked in fear, as if around every corner, more bad news awaits. It seems that anything that could go wrong might go wrong. The constant drumbeat of positive coronaviru­s tests from the Olympic Village is a striking example. Getting through the next 17 days unscathed seems as if it will take some sort of sports miracle.

“It’s really hard to think about SOMETOKYO thing that would make you happy about the Olympics at the moment after all the big controvers­y and arguments and negative discussion­s,” said Shinsuke Kobayashi, managing director of the Olympic and Paralympic news office for Japan’s Kyodo News agency.

The only thing that can save these Olympics is the performanc­e of the athletes. Could COVID-19 take a back seat to memorable moments on the field of play? Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach believes the athletes are ready to burst out to produce those results, having waited an extra year for the opportunit­y.

Bach called the eve of the Tokyo Olympics “a moment of joy and relief.”

If he is, in fact, right, we shall see how long it lasts.

Christine Brennan is a USA TODAY sports columnist.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP ?? A worker paints Olympic rings at the finish line of the BMX racing track Tuesday during preparatio­ns for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP A worker paints Olympic rings at the finish line of the BMX racing track Tuesday during preparatio­ns for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States