USA TODAY International Edition

Days before Games open, officials scramble to contain spread of virus

- Tom Schad

TOKYO – For more than a year, Olympic organizers have worked with a group of experts to design the COVID- 19 countermea­sures for the Summer Games in Tokyo.

Now, just a few days before the opening ceremony, those protocols are being tested for the first time.

Four people in the Olympic Village, including three athletes, tested positive for COVID- 19 over the weekend, according to news releases from their respective Olympic committees. The group includes two men’s soccer players from South Africa, a video analyst on the team and a Czech beach volleyball player.

Officials said all four of the infected individual­s are now isolating at a hotel, which is serving as a quarantine facility during the Games.

“The important thing is the response to the positive cases,” Tokyo 2020 spokespers­on Masa Takaya said Monday. “We cannot say that there will be no positive cases, given that we have a massive number of people engaged in the project. But there is no significant rise in the positive test rate compared to any other place.”

Even before the official start of competitio­n, COVID- 19 has become a constant theme – and concern – for athletes and staff, with more than 22,000 Olympic visitors now in Tokyo and an additional 60,000 still expected to arrive.

The head coach of South Africa’s sevens rugby team, an IOC member from South Korea, American tennis starlet Coco Gauff and the leader of the Refugee Olympic Team are among the Olympic stakeholde­rs whose plans have been curtailed by positive tests so far.

U. S. officials also confirmed Monday that an alternate on the high- profile U. S. women’s gymnastics team tested positive at a pre- Games training camp.

However, it is the positive tests among athletes in the Olympic Village that could prove to be the most significant.

In the case of the South African trio, organizers said Monday that they had identified 21 other individual­s as close contacts, meaning they might have been exposed to the virus. Takaya said all 21 people had so far recorded negative tests but they are now under a more strict set of protocols – instructed to eat alone in their rooms, for example, and take dedicated vehicles to training sessions instead of team buses.

Takaya indicated that the majority of those 21 close contacts are other players on the soccer team, which is set to play Japan on Thursday.

Athletes who are identified as close contacts must take a PCR test six hours before a game and test negative in order to compete.

“These are the strict guidelines we are putting in place as we work closely with the IOC, experts and relevant authoritie­s,” Takaya said. “With these measures, we’ll see if the South African team will be able to participat­e.”

In the case of the other athlete who tested positive in the Olympic Village – Czech beach volleyball player Ondřej Perušič – the country’s Olympic committee said in a statement that it is exploring the possible postponeme­nt of Peruši萒 s opening match, scheduled for July 26.

The positive tests among athletes have stoked fears of a possible outbreak in the Olympic Village, which would be the nightmare scenario for organizers.

The IOC and Tokyo 2020 have each sought to reassure athletes that the Olympic Village is safe and secure. IOC executive director Christophe Dubi stressed the difference between “a COVID safe environmen­t” and one that is “COVID free.”

“I don’t think we can ever say COVIDfree,” Dubi said.

From July 1 to Monday, a total of 58 individual­s connected with the Games had tested positive for COVID- 19, according to the organizing committee. Those include contract workers, journalist­s, team personnel and athletes.

Another IOC representa­tive, Brian McCloskey, said the positive tests thus far are proof that the protocols are working.

“What we’re seeing is what we expected to see, essentiall­y,” said McCloskey, the chair of an independen­t expert panel that is advising the IOC on its COVID- 19 countermea­sures.

“If I thought all the tests that we did were going to be negative, then I wouldn’t go on doing the tests in the first place. We do the tests because they are a way of filtering out people who might be developing infection, who might become a risk later.”

 ?? DAVID GANNON/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Members of the Netherland­s delegation wait for screening and coronaviru­s testing upon arrival in Japan on Sunday.
DAVID GANNON/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Members of the Netherland­s delegation wait for screening and coronaviru­s testing upon arrival in Japan on Sunday.
 ?? KIICHIRO SATO/ AP ?? Simone Biles, center, and the U. S. Women's Gymnastics team arrive Thursday at Narita Internatio­nal Airport for the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympic Games.
KIICHIRO SATO/ AP Simone Biles, center, and the U. S. Women's Gymnastics team arrive Thursday at Narita Internatio­nal Airport for the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympic Games.

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