Published: 17:50, March 29, 2021 | Updated: 21:05, June 4, 2023
Overseas athletes may be able to take part in Olympic test events
By Reuters

A man walks on the Odaiba waterfront in Tokyo on Tuesday as Olympic rings are seen in the background. (KOJI SASAHARA / AP)

TOKYO - International athletes could be invited to participate in test events before the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games this summer, organizers said on Monday.

The events will be a dress rehearsal in how to prevent the spread of COVID-19 as organizers host an international sports event during a global pandemic.

“At the moment we are currently gauging how many athletes would like to participate in the test events... We will coordinate with the government once we can confirm those numbers,” senior Tokyo 2020 official Yasuo Mori told reporters.

Test events for five competitions, including track and field and the marathon, could involve foreign athletes participating, the organizers said.

At the moment we are currently gauging how many athletes would like to participate in the test events... We will coordinate with the government once we can confirm those numbers.

Yasuo Mori, Senior Tokyo 2020 official

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Asked what Tokyo 2020 would do with the test events if there were another wave of coronavirus infections, Games Delivery Officer Hidemasa Nakamura said they were “inextricably linked with the domestic and local coronavirus situation.”

Tokyo 2020 is planning 18 test events before the Games begin on July 23. Test events for skateboarding and shooting were this month postponed from April until May because of the pandemic’s impact on scheduling.

The Olympic Torch relay started last week, with bystanders asked to stay masked, stand apart and clap instead of cheer for torchbearers as organizers try to ease public safety concerns.

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Tokyo 2020 organizers have banned international spectators from attending the Games. The decision appeared to be received positively by the Japanese public, with 85 percent in favour according to a poll by daily Asahi Shimbun published last week.

The same poll also suggested that people were still wary of holding the event this summer, with 36 percent preferring another postponement, 33 percent an outright cancellation, and 27 percent saying the Olympics should be held as planned.