The Guardian Australia

Athletes across globe call for Olympic postponeme­nt as countries pull out

- Sean Ingle Chief sports reporter

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee is facing almost irresistib­le pressure to postpone the Tokyo Olympic Games this week rather than wait until its midApril deadline – with a growing number of athletes, government­s and national federation­s saying it is unfair to keep them in limbo during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The British Olympic Associatio­n is expected to add to the voices calling for a delay in the Games until next year when it meets today, with its chair, Hugh Robertson, admitting that if the virus continues as predicted: “I don’t think there is any way we can send a team”.

If there is a postponeme­nt it would be first time in the Olympics 124-year modern history, although the Games were cancelled in 1916, 1940 and 1944. There seems little alternativ­e for the IOC with so many athletes are unable to train properly because facilities are shut and countries in lockdown.

Canada and Australia have already confirmed that they will not send athletes to Tokyo this summer, while the British and French government­s have urged the IOC to make a quick decision.

That view is supported by British Olympic chiefs, especially given many of the 600 Team GB athletes who are due to go to the Olympics and Paralympic­s are unable to train as planned.

Robertson said: “We can’t see any way that this can go ahead as things are constitute­d at the moment and I expect we will be joining Canada and Australia shortly.”

Pushing back the Games until 2021 is by far the most likely option. Shinzo Abe, the Japanese prime minister, has conceded postponeme­nt is now a possibilit­y if the Games could not be held in their “complete form”.

The IOC president, Thomas Bach, has said he will take the next four weeks to deal with the complex legal and financial problems before making a decision.

A growing chorus of British athletes, including Dina Asher-Smith, Britain’s 200m world champion, are voicing their frustratio­n at the IOC. “Does this mean that athletes face up to another FOUR weeks of finding ways to fit in training — whilst potentiall­y putting ourselves, coaches, support staff and loved ones at risk just to find out they were going to be postponed anyway?” Asher-Smith wrote on Twitter.

Dai Greene, the former 400m hurdles world champion, said he was having to flip tractor tyres on his partner’s farm and use bales of hay for box jumps to keep fit. “On Saturday morning, I went to recce the local 400m track by one of the private schools near where I live,” he said. “I even had a look at the fence and wondered to myself – can I jump over it?

He added: “The world’s athletes need answers now, not in mid April.”

Ed Warner, the chairman-designate of GB wheelchair rugby and a respected voice in British sport, said Bach had misjudged the mood of athletes by setting a four-week deadline on Sunday to decide the fate of the Games.

“The IOC has said it will make a decision in four weeks,” he said. “It hasn’t got that long. It probably has only got four days. The right thing for the IOC to do is to announce it will postpone the Games immediatel­y – and then use the next couple of weeks to decide when it will be. Athletes have led the way on this and the IOC have trailed far them. That has to change.”

Warner also urged the IOC to heed the voices of Paralympia­ns who are particular­ly worried about Covid-19. Athletes with a degree of paralysis from the chest downwards have reduced lung function, which means they are more vulnerable should they catch an infection. “Athlete welfare must always be our top priority,” Warner said.

Opposition to holding the event in July has risen sharply in recent days, with US Track and Field and UK Athletics among those calling for a delay. Brazil, Norway and Slovenia have also pressed the IOC to consider postponeme­nt but have not threatened a boycott.

The head of safety at the London 2012 Games, Lawrence Waterman, also urged the Games to be delayed, saying the need for precaution­s against coronaviru­s such as physical distancing and self-isolation means groups of people cannot be safely assembled to test the venues for crowd control.

“These games need to be postponed and the sooner the IOC and the Japanese government face up to this the better. It’s simply not safe to put the Games on during a global pandemic,” Waterman said. “People’s safety and health should come before the costs of delaying contracts.”

The veteran IOC member Dick Pound told USA Today the Games would be postponed, likely to 2021. “The parameters going forward have not been determined but the Games are not going to start on 24 July, that much I know.”

Pound said the IOC would announce its next steps soon. “It will come in stages,” he said. “We will postpone this and begin to deal with all the ramificati­ons of moving this, which are immense.”

 ??  ?? If there is a postponeme­nt it would be first time in the Games 124-year modern history. Photograph: Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images
If there is a postponeme­nt it would be first time in the Games 124-year modern history. Photograph: Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images
 ??  ?? Dina Asher-Smith is one of the athletes to have voiced her frustratio­ns with the IOC. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA
Dina Asher-Smith is one of the athletes to have voiced her frustratio­ns with the IOC. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

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