The head of the organising committee for the London Olympics in 2012 has said the Tokyo Games scheduled for this summer look “unlikely” to go ahead.
As the Guardian reports, Sir Keith Mills told the BBC he “would be making plans for cancellation” if he were in charge of this year’s Olympics, postponed from 2020 over the coronavirus pandemic that has shown little sign of dissipating as a slow vaccine rollout begins.
Japan is currently under a state of emergency prompted by a surge in Covid-19 cases, just six months before thousands of athletes are set to converge for the Olympiad.
A significant number of competitors have yet to qualify for Tokyo 2020, including the likes of Irish Laser sailor Ewan McMahon, Rio rep Finn Lynch as well as Liam Glynn all vying for one fo the last Tokyo berths along with Ireland’s two 49er campaign duos.
Despite the present situation, World Athletics president Sebastian Coe said he was confident the Games will go ahead “but they will look different”.
Last week a spokesperson for the Tokyo organising committee insisted there had been no discussion about a cancellation or extended delay.
The committee’s head Yoshiro Mori said postponing the Games a second time would be “absolutely impossible”.
The Guardian has more on the story HERE.