More Limits on Tokyo 2020 Overseas Visitors

(ATR) IOC President Thomas Bach will arrive in Japan on July 12.

Guardar

(ATR) The number of Olympic and Paralympic athletes at Tokyo 2020 may not have changed due to the pandemic, but the number of overseas officials and workers allowed into the country could end up being severely limited.

Kyodo News is reporting that about 78,000 will be the cap for the Games, less than half of the approximately 180,000 expected before the one-year postponement.

Last week, Tokyo 2020 CEO Muto Toshiro said the number would be 90,000 or fewer. He also said the final number could be "really small". Japan is currently in the midst of a fourth wave of COVID infections and the idea of so many people from abroad coming into the country has many worried.

Overseas spectators have already been barred from attending the Games. A decision on allowing domestic spectators has yet to be made.

The number of athletes, approximately 15,000, has remained constant.

Bach to Arrive July 12

IOC President Thomas Bach plans to arrive in Tokyo 11 days before the Opening Ceremony on July 23.

He will be busy before that, however, with an IOC Executive Board meeting planned for July 17-18 ahead of the next IOC Session on July 20-21 in the Japanese capital.

The increase in infections in Japan scuppered Bach’s plans to be in Hiroshima on May 17 to take part in the Torch Relay as part of a visit that was also supposed to include a meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Suga Yoshihide.

IOC vice-president John Coates, the chair of the Tokyo 2020 Coordination Commission, revealed Bach’s travel plan on Wednesday. Coates said earlier this month that he will be in Tokyo from mid-June.

The final Tokyo 2020 CoComm meeting began on Wednesday and runs through Friday. A media conference is scheduled following the conclusion of the three-day virtual meeting.

Homepage photo: Tokyo 2020

Written by Gerard Farek

For general comments or questions,click here.

Your best source of news about the Olympics is AroundTheRings.com, for subscribers only.

Guardar

Recent Articles

Sinner-Alcaraz, the duel that came to succeed the three phenomenons

Beyond the final result, Roland Garros left the feeling that the Italian and the Spaniard will shape the great duel that came to help us through the duel for the end of the Federer-Nadal-Djokovic era.

Sinner-Alcaraz, the duel that came

Table tennis: Brazil’s Bruna Costa Alexandre will be Olympic and Paralympic in Paris 2024

She is the third in her sport and the seventh athlete to achieve it in the same edition; in Santiago 2023 she was the first athlete with disabilities to compete at the Pan American level and won a medal.

Table tennis: Brazil’s Bruna Costa

Rugby 7s: the best player of 2023 would only play the medal match in Paris

Argentinian Rodrigo Isgró received a five-game suspension for an indiscipline in the circuit’s decisive clash that would exclude him until the final or the bronze match; the Federation will seek to make the appeal successful.

Rugby 7s: the best player

Rhonex Kipruto, owner of the world record for the 10000 meters on the road, was suspended for six years

The Kenyan received the maximum sanction for irregularities in his biological passport and the Court considered that he was part of a system of “deliberate and sophisticated doping” to improve his performance. He will lose his record and the bronze medal at the Doha World Cup.

Rhonex Kipruto, owner of the

Katie Ledecky spoke about doping Chinese swimmers: “It’s difficult to go to Paris knowing that we’re going to compete with some of these athletes”

The American, a seven-time Olympic champion, referred to the case of the 23 positive controls before the Tokyo Games that were announced a few weeks ago and shook the swimming world. “I think our faith in some of the systems is at an all-time low,” he said.

Katie Ledecky spoke about doping