Tokyo marks one year until Olympics with subdued ceremony

Women take photos of the Olympic rings in front of the New National Stadium on July 22, 2020, in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
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Updated 23 July 2020
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Tokyo marks one year until Olympics with subdued ceremony

  • IOC decided to postpone the Games last March to July 23, 2021 as the real scale of the pandemic began to emerge
  • Recent opinion polls showed majority of Japanese think the Games should be postponed again, or canceled altogether

TOKYO: Japan marked a year-to-go until the postponed Tokyo 2020 Olympics with a subdued ceremony Thursday as the raging coronavirus pandemic fuels fears about whether the Games will go ahead at all.
In Tokyo, which should have been buzzing with thousands of athletes and fans by now, organizers held a ceremony at near-empty National Stadium, with the public barred as infections surge in the city.
Japanese star swimmer Rikako Ikee, who has been battling leukemia, drew on her health struggles in a personal message of support to disheartened athletes who should have been readying for competition.
“Think of the coming year not simply as a one-year postponement, but a plus-one,” she said, after holding up the Olympic flame contained in a small rose-gold lantern.
“For athletes around the world and for all those they inspire, I have faith that one year from now the flame of hope will light these very grounds,” she added.
The decision in March to delay the Games came as the real scale of the pandemic began to emerge and countries imposed lockdowns that threw training into chaos and forced the cancelation of qualifiers and test events.
Since then lockdowns have eased in many places, but elsewhere the virus continues to rage — or authorities are warning of a second wave.
Tokyo itself recorded a record 366 daily infections on Thursday, with the city’s governor asking residents to stay home over a four-day holiday weekend.

Unwavering resolve
Despite the setbacks and downbeat mood, Japanese and Olympic officials have not wavered from the message that the Games will take place, serving as a symbol of the world’s recovery from the virus.
They will be “an unprecedented celebration of the unity and solidarity of humankind, making them a symbol of resilience and hope,” International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach said in a statement Thursday.
There is little appetite for a further delay, with experts and officials — including Bach and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe — mooting the prospect of the first peace-time cancelation of the multi-billion dollar Games if the pandemic is not under control by next year.
Public sentiment in Japan also appears less than optimistic, with two polls in July showing the majority of Japanese think the Games should be postponed again, or canceled altogether.
Only somewhere between one quarter and a third of respondents in the polls thought the Games should open as scheduled on July 23, 2021.
“I’m afraid about the situation even next year,” 50-year-old Sachiko Ahunwan, a department store employee, told AFP.
“I wonder if people will come.”

Logistical nightmare
The one-year postponement has caused a host of logistical and financial headaches, but one major obstacle has been cleared with Tokyo 2020 confirming this month that it has secured all the venues originally contracted for the Games.
The competition schedule has also now been set, largely along the lines of the original program.
“Now athletes aiming to take part in the Tokyo Olympics can set concrete goals to work toward,” Tokyo 2020 sports director Koji Murofushi said last week.
But some athletes openly acknowledge that the Games are the last thing on their minds.
“To be honest, I still can’t think about next year’s Olympics,” Japanese judo champion Shohei Ono told public broadcaster NHK. “I’m just setting a goal only for a week ahead.”
Much else remains unclear, including the final cost of the delay and what measures will be necessary to prevent the spread of the virus — assuming it has not been brought under control by next year.
Standing in the darkness of the National Stadium, before just a handful of journalists, Ikee said she understood “that there are those who feel it is not the right time to talk about sports when the world is going through such difficulties.”
“But to overcome adversity, what we need is hope, a flame of hope of glowing in the distance allows us to keep trying, to keep moving forward, no matter how hard it is.”


Silva scores late equalizer as Dortmund grab 2-2 draw at Leipzig

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Silva scores late equalizer as Dortmund grab 2-2 draw at Leipzig

  • Silva then seized ⁠his moment with a left footed shot five minutes into extra time
  • Dortmund remained unbeaten in their last eight away games

LEIPZIG, Germany: Fabio Silva grabbed a stoppage time equalizer as Borussia Dortmund drew 2-2 at RB Leipzig to trim Bayern Munich’s Bundesliga lead to eight points on Saturday.
Second placed Dortmund had been heading for defeat after Christoph Baumgartner scored twice from close range in the first half.
The visitors came back after the break and their hopes were revived by a Romulo own goal five minutes into the half but they were still staring at defeat as the clock ticked into an added seven ⁠minutes.
Silva then seized ⁠his moment with a left footed shot five minutes into extra time.
Dortmund remained unbeaten in their last eight away games but their six match winning run came to an end at the Red Bull Arena.
Max Beir had looked like putting them ahead ⁠when he broke clear and went one-on-one on goal for Dortmund after eight minutes, but his shot was straight at goalkeeper Maarten Vandevoordt, and then Leipzig took control.
Baumgartner made the breakthrough in the 20th minute when Yan Diomande, in sparkling form, sent a low cross into the box for him to glance in right-footed with his back to the net.
The goal was given after an offside check.
Baumgartner took his ⁠10th goal ⁠of the season and doubled his tally in the 39th with a perfectly timed run to tap in a cross from David Raum as the hosts ripped Dortmund apart down the left.
Leipzig, with just one win from their last six outings, stayed fifth in the standings, one point behind VfB Stuttgart who have a game in hand.
Harry Kane struck his eighth brace of the season as Bayern beat Eintracht Frankfurt 3-2 in an earlier kickoff. Dortmund host Bayern next week.