Tokyo 2020 Olympic Organisers Respond to Frustrated Athletes
Olympic
organisers have warned "no solution will be ideal" in preparing for
Tokyo 2020 after being accused of putting athletes "in danger".
The summer
showpiece is scheduled to begin on 24 July despite the relentless
cancellation of sporting events as a result of the coronavirus outbreak.
Olympic
champion Katerina Stefanidi said the International Olympic Committee was
"risking our health".
Britain's
Katarina Johnson-Thompson said training had become "impossible".
The
International Olympic Committee (IOC) responded, stating: "This is an
exceptional situation which requires exceptional solutions. The IOC is
committed to finding a solution with the least negative impact for the
athletes, while protecting the integrity of the competition and the athletes'
health.
"No
solution will be ideal in this situation, and this is why we are counting on
the responsibility and solidarity of the athletes."
World
heptathlon champion Johnson-Thompson, 27, is returning to the UK from her
training base in France as a result of the country being in lockdown.
Tokyo 2020
organisers have pledged to deliver a "complete" Games but
Johnson-Thompson said current guidance from the International Olympic Committee
(IOC) is confusing.
She said:
"The IOC advice 'encourages athletes to continue to prepare for the
Olympics Games as best as they can' with the Olympics only four months away but
the government legislation is enforcing isolation at home, with tracks, gyms
and public spaces closed.
"I feel
under pressure to train and keep the same routine, which is impossible.
"I'm in
a very fortunate place given the circumstances. I'm healthy, well supported and
I have already qualified for the Olympics. But at this moment it's difficult to
approach the season when everything has changed in the lead up apart from the
ultimate deadline."
All club
training sessions, events, competitions, club committee and face-to-face
meetings, athlete camps, running groups and social events have been suspended
across England, Scotland and Wales.
Several
athletes have joined Johnson-Thompson in pointing to confusion on how they
should prepare.
Stefanidi,
who won gold for Greece in pole vault at Rio 2016, said: "This is not
about how things will be in four months. This is about how things are now.
"The
IOC wants us to keep risking our health, our family's health and public health
to train every day? You are putting us in danger right now, today, not in four
months."
Hayley
Wickenheiser, a member of the IOC, has said the Olympic governing body's
decision to "move ahead, with such conviction, is insensitive and
irresponsible given the state of humanity."
Spanish
Olympic Committee (COE) President Alejandro Blanco has told Reuters he
would prefer this year's Games be postponed.
Around 57%
of the athletes set to attend the Games have so far qualified.
On Tuesday,
the IOC asked athletes to continue preparations "as best they can".
Jessica
Judd, who represented Britain over 5,000m at the 2019 world championships,
tweeted: "How on earth are we meant to carry on preparing best we can?
"Will
someone share with me what races we can do to get times and whether trials will
go ahead and when training can return to normal?"
Japan's
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has insisted the Games will go ahead as planned in
July.
Events
including the handover of the Olympic torch in Athens have faced
disruption.
At the time
of publishing this article on Wednesday (10:30 GMT), World Health
Organization figures show more than 184,000 people globally have been
infected by coronavirus, with more than 7,500 deaths.
No comments