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2020 Summer Olympics

The 2020 Summer Olympics (Japanese: 2020年夏季オリンピック, Hepburn: Nisen Nijū-nen Kaki Orinpikku), officially the Games of the XXXII Olympiad (第三十二回オリンピック競技大会, Dai Sanjūni-kai Orinpikku Kyōgi Taikai) and also known as Tokyo 2020 (東京2020, Tōkyō Nii Zero Nii Zero), was an international multi-sport event held from 23 July to 8 August 2021 in Tokyo, Japan, with some preliminary events that began on 21 July 2021. Tokyo was selected as the host city during the 125th IOC Session in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on 7 September 2013.[3]

Games of the XXXII Olympiad
Emblem of the 2020 Summer Olympics[a]
Host cityTokyo, Japan
MottoUnited by Emotion[b]
Nations206 (including EOR and ROC teams)
Athletes11,420[2]
Events339 in 33 sports (50 disciplines)
Opening23 July 2021
Closing8 August 2021
Opened by
Cauldron
StadiumJapan National Stadium (known as Olympic Stadium during Games)
Summer
Winter
2020 Summer Paralympics

Originally scheduled to take place from 24 July to 9 August 2020, the event was postponed to 2021 on 24 March 2020 due to the global COVID-19 pandemic, the first such instance in the history of the Olympic Games (previous games had been cancelled but not rescheduled).[4] However, the event retained the Tokyo 2020 branding for marketing purposes.[5] It was largely held behind closed doors with no public spectators permitted due to the declaration of a state of emergency in the Greater Tokyo Area in response to the pandemic, the first and only Olympic Games to be held without official spectators.[c] The Games were the most expensive ever, with total spending of over $20 billion.[7]

The Games were the fourth Olympic Games to be held in Japan, following the 1964 Summer Olympics (Tokyo), 1972 Winter Olympics (Sapporo), and 1998 Winter Olympics (Nagano). Tokyo became the first city in Asia to hold the Summer Olympic Games twice.[d] The 2020 Games were the second of three consecutive Olympics to be held in East Asia, following the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea and preceding the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China. Due to the one-year postponement, Tokyo 2020 was the first and only Olympic Games to have been held in an odd-numbered year[9] and the first Summer Olympics since 1900 to be held in a non-leap year.

New events were introduced in existing sports, including 3x3 basketball, freestyle BMX and mixed gender team events in a number of existing sports, as well as the return of madison cycling for men and an introduction of the same event for women. New IOC policies also allowed the host organizing committee to add new sports to the Olympic program for just one Games. The disciplines added by the Japanese Olympic Committee were baseball and softball, karate, sport climbing, surfing and skateboarding, the last four of which made their Olympic debuts, and the last three of which will remain on the Olympic program.[10]

The United States topped the medal count by both total golds (39) and total medals (113), with China finishing second by both respects (38 and 89). Host nation Japan finished third, setting a record for the most gold medals and total medals ever won by their delegation at an Olympic Games with 27 and 58. Great Britain finished fourth, with a total of 22 gold and 64 medals. The Russian delegation competing as the ROC finished fifth with 20 gold medals and third in the overall medal count, with 71 medals. Bermuda, the Philippines and Qatar won their first-ever Olympic gold medals.[11][12][13] Burkina Faso, San Marino and Turkmenistan also won their first-ever Olympic medals.[14][15][16]

Bidding process

The three candidate cities were Tokyo, Istanbul, and Madrid. The applicant cities of Baku and Doha were not promoted to candidate status. A bid from Rome was withdrawn.[17]

Host city selection

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) voted to select the host city of the 2020 Summer Olympics on 7 September 2013, at the 125th IOC Session in Buenos Aires, Argentina, using an exhaustive ballot system.[17] None of the candidate cities won more than 50% of the votes in the first round; Madrid and Istanbul were tied for second place, so a runoff vote was held to determine which of the two cities would be eliminated. The final vote was a head-to-head contest between Tokyo and Istanbul. Tokyo was selected by 60 votes to 36, gaining at least the 49 votes required for a majority.[17]

2020 Summer Olympics host city election[18]
City Team Round 1 Runoff Round 2
Tokyo   Japan 42 60
Istanbul   Turkey 26 49 36
Madrid   Spain 26 45

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

 
Few pedestrians on the Shibuya Crossing during the state of emergency in the middle of Japan's first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, early 2020

In January 2020, concerns were raised about the potential impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on athletes and visitors to the Summer Olympic Games.[19] Tokyo organizers and the International Olympic Committee insisted they were monitoring the spread of the disease to minimize its effects on preparations for the Olympics.[20] The IOC stated that in 2020, their Japanese partners and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe "made it very clear that Japan could not manage a postponement beyond next summer [2021] at the latest".[21] Unlike the case for Zika virus during the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, SARS-CoV-2 can be transmitted directly between humans, posing tougher challenges for the organizers to counteract the infectious disease and host a safe and secure event.[19] Also unlike the case for H1N1 "swine flu" during the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, COVID-19 has a higher fatality rate, and there was no effective vaccine until December 2020.[22] In a February 2020 interview, Conservative London mayoral candidate Shaun Bailey argued that London would be able to host the Olympic Games at the former 2012 Olympic venues should the Games need to be moved because of the COVID-19 pandemic.[23] Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike criticized Bailey's comment as inappropriate.[24] In early 2021, officials in the U.S. state of Florida offered to host the delayed Games in their state, while John Coates, the IOC vice president in charge of the Tokyo Olympics, said the Games would open even if the city and other parts of Japan were under a state of emergency because of COVID-19.[25][26]

Estimates by the National Institute of Infectious Diseases and Kyoto University predicted that states of emergency might be required during the Games.[27] The reports published at the Ministry of Health experts' panel also showed new patients increasing to 10,000 if the Games were to allow spectators.[28]

Qualifying event cancellation and postponement

Concerns about the pandemic began to affect qualifying events in early 2020. Some that were due to take place in February were moved to alternative locations to address concerns about travelling to the affected areas, particularly China. For example, the women's basketball qualification was played in Belgrade, Serbia, instead of Foshan, China.[29] The Asia & Oceania boxing qualification tournament, which was originally planned to be held from 3–14 February in Wuhan, China (the location of the original outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic), instead took place in Amman, Jordan, at the beginning of March.[30] The third round of the women's football qualification tournament was also affected, as the group matches formerly scheduled to be held in China were moved to Australia.[31] The European boxing qualification began on 14 March 2020 in London, United Kingdom, but was suspended after two days of competition before being rescheduled for April 2021.[32][33] It eventually resumed in June 2021 but was moved to Paris, France,[34] because of renewed concerns over travel to the United Kingdom. Other qualifying events that were due to take place in March to June 2020 began to be postponed until later in the year and mid-2021 as part of a wider suspension of international sporting competitions in response to the pandemic. A multitude of Olympic sports were affected, including archery, baseball, cycling, handball, judo, rowing, sailing, volleyball, and water polo.[35]

Effect on doping tests

Mandatory doping tests were being severely restricted by the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. European anti-doping organizations raised concerns that blood and urine tests could not be performed and that mobilizing the staff necessary to do so before the end of the pandemic would be a health risk. Despite the need for extensive testing to take place in advance of the Games, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) stated that public health and safety were their topmost priorities.[36] The Chinese anti-doping agency temporarily ceased testing on 3 February 2020, with a planned resumption of phased testing towards the end of the month,[37] and the anti-doping organizations in the United States, France, Great Britain, and Germany had reduced their testing activities by the end of March.[36]

Postponement to 2021

The Tokyo Organizing Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (TOCOG) released a statement on 2 March 2020, confirming that preparations for the upcoming Tokyo Olympics were "continuing as planned".[38] On 23 March, both Canada and Australia indicated that they would withdraw from the Games if they were not postponed by a year.[39] On the same day, Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe stated he would support a proposed postponement, citing that ensuring athlete safety was "paramount," and veteran IOC member and former vice president Dick Pound said that he expected the Games to be postponed.[40][41]

On 24 March 2020, 122 days to go for the planned start, the IOC, TOCOG and prime minister Abe released a joint statement announcing that the 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics would be rescheduled to a date "beyond 2020 but not later than summer 2021". They stated that the Games could "stand as a beacon of hope to the world during these troubled times", and that the Olympic flame could become "the light at the end of the tunnel in which the world finds itself at present".[42] Prime Minister Abe stated that IOC president Thomas Bach responded "with 100% agreement" to his proposal to delay the Games. For continuity and marketing purposes, it was agreed that the Games would still be branded as Tokyo 2020 despite the change in schedule.[5]

On 30 March 2020, the IOC and TOCOG announced that they had reached an agreement on the new dates for the 2020 Summer Olympics, which would now begin with the opening ceremony on 23 July 2021 and end with the closing ceremony on 8 August 2021, still to be held in Tokyo.[43][44] The subsequent Winter Olympics in Beijing are scheduled to begin on 4 February 2022, less than six months later. Shortly before the postponement was confirmed, the IOC and Tokyo 2020 organizers formed a task force named "Here We Go" with the remit to address any issues arising from postponing the Games, such as sponsorship and accommodation. The organizers confirmed that all athletes who had already qualified for Tokyo 2020 would keep their qualification slots.[45]

Calls for cancellation

Health experts expressed concern in April 2020 that the Games might have to be cancelled if the pandemic should persist.[46] In an interview, the then president of TOCOG and former Japanese prime minister, Yoshirō Mori, asserted that the Games would be "scrapped" if they could not go ahead in 2021.[47] On 29 April 2020, Prime Minister Abe stated that the Games "must be held in a way that shows the world has won its battle against the coronavirus pandemic".[48] Thomas Bach acknowledged in an interview on 20 May 2020, that the job of reorganizing the Tokyo Games was "a mammoth task" and also admitted that the event would have to be cancelled altogether if it could not take place in the summer of 2021.[49] However, both Mori and Bach expressed optimism about the Games going ahead.[47][49]

A member of the Japanese COVID-19 Advisory Committee on the basic action policy co-authored a British Medical Journal editorial, which stated, "holding Tokyo 2020 for domestic political and economic purposes—ignoring scientific and moral imperatives—is contradictory to Japan's commitment to global health and human security".[50]

On 21 January 2021, multiple sources reported that the Japanese government had "privately concluded" that the Games would have to be cancelled.[51] The government dismissed the claims, stating that the reports were "categorically untrue".[52] The new Japanese prime minister Yoshihide Suga confirmed on 19 February that the G7 had given unanimous support for the postponed Games to go ahead as scheduled.[53] It was reported in April 2021, just three months before the start of the Games, that there was still the option to cancel the Tokyo Olympics with the country having vaccinated less than 1% of its population, with tens of thousands of volunteers expected to take part and athletes not being required to quarantine after arriving in Japan.[54][55]

Public support for the Games in Japan decreased significantly amid a 2021 surge in COVID-19 cases in the country.[56] Multiple organizations of medical professionals voiced oppositions to the Games,[50][57][58] while an opinion poll in April 2021 saw 40% of participants support the cancellation of the Games, and 33% support a second postponement.[59] In May 2021, 83% of those polled supported the cancellation or postponement of the Games.[60] The Tokyo Medical Practitioners Association called for the cancellation, stating that hospitals in Tokyo "have their hands full and have almost no spare capacity" in an open letter to the prime minister.[61] At least nine out of 47 elected governors supported the cancellation of the Games.[62] Nearly 37% of Japanese companies surveyed supported the cancellation of the Games, and 32% supported postponement.[63]

Kenji Utsunomiya, who had previously run for Governor of Tokyo, collected more than 351,000 signatures on a petition calling for the organisers to "prioritise life" over the Olympics.[64] Japanese writers Jiro Akagawa[65][66] and Fuminori Nakamura also called for the Games to be postponed or cancelled.[67]

On 26 May 2021, the Asahi Shimbun newspaper, which was a local sponsor of the Games, published an editorial calling for Prime Minister Suga to "calmly and objectively assess the situation and decide on the cancellation of the event this summer."[68] On 4 June it was reported that Japanese sponsors proposed to the organisers for "the Games to be postponed for several months," citing a comment by a corporate sponsor senior executive: "It just makes much, much more sense from our perspective to hold the Games when there are more vaccinated people, the weather is cooler and maybe public opposition is lower."[69]

In July 2021, it was announced that all events in Tokyo were to be held behind closed doors with no spectators due to a new state of emergency. A poll by the Asahi Shimbun found that 55% of those surveyed supported the cancellation of the Olympics, and 68% felt that organisers would not be able to suitably control COVID-19 at the Games.[70] The decision was also detrimental to local sponsors, which had planned in-person presences to promote their products during the Games; an executive of official sponsor Toyota stated that the company had pulled a television advertising campaign it had planned for the Games in Japan, citing that the Olympics were "becoming an event that has not gained the public's understanding."[70][71]

Had the games been cancelled, it would have been the first time since World War II that an Olympic event had been called off and the first games to be scrapped due to circumstances unrelated to war.[e] A complete cancellation would have also cost Japan ¥4.52 trillion (US$41.5 billion), based on operating expenses and loss of tourism activity due to Japan had closed its international borders to foreign travellers since March 2020, and did not eventually reopen until October 2022, more than a year after the Games ended.[72]

Costs and insurance

According to an estimate conducted by professor emeritus Katsuhiro Miyamoto of Kansai University and reported by the NHK in March 2020, the cost of delaying the 2020 Olympics by one year would be 640.8 billion yen (US$5.8 billion), taking maintenance expenditures for the unused facilities into account.[72]

The Nomura Research Institute estimated that cancelling the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics in 2021 would cost around 1.81 trillion yen ($17 billion), less than the economic damages projected if another state of emergency is declared, noting that a decision to hold the games "should be made based on the impact on infection risks, not from the standpoint of economic loss".[73]

The Tokyo Games were protected through the commercial insurance marketplace Lloyd's of London, by global reinsurers Munich Re and Swiss Re. The IOC takes out around $800 million of insurance for each Summer Olympics, with the total amount of loss insured for the 2020 Games likely to be more than $2 billion.[needs update] The disruption caused by postponing the Games was covered by the insurance policy, with those likely to make claims for their financial losses including local organizers, sponsors, hospitality firms, and travel providers.[74][75][needs update]

Holders of tickets purchased from overseas prior to postponement were entitled to refunds for both Olympic and Paralympic ticket purchases, except for the costs of cancelled hotel bookings. Although about 600,000 Olympic tickets and 300,000 Paralympic tickets were eligible to be refunded, organizers said that they would not release the total costs of the refunds.[76] Reuters quoted industry sources who estimated that the Tokyo Olympics Committee had taken out US$500–800 million in insurance, and that after accounting for costs such as rebooking sporting venues and the Olympic Village, little of that payout would be available to recoup the proceeds of lost and refunded ticket sales.[77] The local organizers are responsible for ticket sales and use them to defray the costs of holding the games; ticket sales were expected to bring in approximately US$800 million, but actual sales were close to zero.[78]

In June 2022, the Tokyo Organizing Committee revealed in the final budget report for the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics that the cost for the Olympic Games was 640.4 billion yen (US$5.8 billion [f]), which higher than the cost for the Rio 2016.[80][2]

Public opinion and COVID-19 effect during and after the Games

Prior to the Tokyo Olympics being held, many Japanese people were negative about hosting the event, but their attitudes had become more positive towards the end of the Games. According to a public opinion poll conducted jointly by the Nippon News Network and the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper, which targeted Japanese citizens at the end of the Olympics, 38% of respondents said that it was possible to hold the Olympics in a safe manner against COVID-19, while 55% said that it was not possible. However, 64% answered that it was good that the Tokyo Games had gone ahead, while 28% answered that they wished the event had not been held. Of the respondents, 61% were glad the event had been held without spectators and only 12% said that spectators should have been allowed.[81]

On 29 July, less than a week into the Games, journalist Masaki Kubota reported his analysis of the Japanese people's perspective on the Olympics, which he believed was greatly influenced by the change in the way the Japanese news media reported on the Games. He pointed out that many Japanese news media had insisted on canceling the Olympics, citing fears that COVID-19 would spread, but once Japanese athletes started winning medals, the media changed their reporting policy and began livening up the Olympics, which had the effect of altering public opinion in Japan.[82]

Once the Tokyo Olympics were underway, followed by the Tokyo Paralympics, there was a sharp increase in COVID-19 cases in Japan, especially those caused by the Delta variant. On 26 July, there were 60,157 cases detected in Japan, breaking the record of 44,961 cases recorded on 10 May. On 9 August, one day after the Olympics had ended, daily cases in Japan reached 100,000 for the first time, and new cases continued to increase until the peak on 23 August, when 156,931 cases were recorded.[83]

Development and preparation

 
The Olympic rings on display at Tokyo Bay to promote the Games

The Tokyo Organizing Committee was originally headed by former Japanese prime minister Yoshirō Mori,[84] but he resigned in February 2021 due to backlash from sexist comments about women in meetings.[85][86][87] Seiko Hashimoto was chosen to succeed him. Tamayo Marukawa, Minister for the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games, was responsible for overseeing the preparations on behalf of the Japanese government.[87]

The Tokyo Metropolitan Government set aside a fund of ¥400 billion (more than US$3.67 billion) to cover the cost of hosting the Games. The Japanese government was considering easing airspace restrictions to allow an increased slot capacity at both Haneda and Narita airports. A new railway line was planned to link both airports through an expansion of Tokyo Station, cutting travel time from Tokyo Station to Haneda from 30 minutes to 18 minutes, and from Tokyo Station to Narita from 55 minutes to 36 minutes; funded primarily by private investors, the line would cost ¥400 billion. The East Japan Railway Company (JR East) was also planning a new route near Tamachi to Haneda Airport.[88]

There were plans to fund the accelerated completion of the Central Circular Route, Tokyo Gaikan Expressway, and Ken-Ō Expressway, and the refurbishment of other major expressways in the area.[89] The Yurikamome automated transit line was also to be extended from its existing terminal at Toyosu Station to a new terminal at Kachidoki Station, passing the site of the Olympic Village, although the line was not expected to have adequate capacity to serve major events in the Odaiba area on its own.[90]

In April 2018, the Tokyo Organizing Committee signed a partnership with the International Labour Organization to ensure decent work in the preparation of and during the 2020 Olympic Games.[91]

In June 2020, the chief executive of the Organizing Committee, Toshirō Mutō, stated that the committee was exploring options for streamlining the Games to achieve cost savings.[92] On 25 September, the IOC and Tokyo Organizing Committee agreed to a suite of measures to simplify the Games' logistics, including a cut to non-athlete staff, use of online meetings, and streamlined transport, among others. The committee also outlined areas it would be exploring in order to maintain the health and safety of all participants.[93]

Venues and infrastructure

 
The newly built Japan National Stadium in Tokyo was the venue for the ceremonies and the athletics events.

In February 2012, it was announced that Tokyo's former National Stadium, the central venue for the 1964 Summer Olympics, would undergo a ¥100 billion renovation for the 2019 Rugby World Cup and the 2020 Summer Olympics.[94] In November 2012, the Japan Sport Council announced that it was taking bids for proposed stadium designs. Of the 46 finalists, Zaha Hadid Architects was awarded the project, which would replace the old stadium with a new 80,000-seat stadium. There was criticism of the Zaha Hadid design—which was compared to a bicycle helmet and regarded as clashing with the surrounding Meiji Shrine—and widespread disapproval of the costs, even with attempts to revise and "optimize" the design.[95]

In June 2015, the government announced plans to reduce the new stadium's permanent capacity to 65,000 in its athletics configuration (although with the option to add up to 15,000 temporary seats for football) as a further cost-saving measure.[96][97] The original plan to build a retractable roof was also abandoned.[98] At the end of 2015, as a result of public opposition to the increasing costs of the new stadium (which had reached ¥252 billion), the government chose to reject Zaha Hadid's design entirely and selected a new design by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma. Inspired by traditional temples and with a lower profile, Kuma's design had a budget of ¥149 billion. The changes meant the new stadium could not be completed in time for the 2019 Rugby World Cup as originally intended.[99] The National Stadium, which was inaugurated on 21 December 2019, was named the Olympic Stadium for the duration of the Tokyo Games.[100]

In October 2018, the Board of Audit issued a report stating that the total cost of the Olympic venues could exceed US$25 billion.[101]

Of the 33 competition venues in Tokyo, 28 were within 8 kilometers (5 miles) of the Olympic Village, with eleven new venues to be constructed.[102] On 16 October 2019, the IOC announced that there were plans to re-locate the marathon and racewalking events to Sapporo for heat concerns.[103] The plans were made official on 1 November 2019 after Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike accepted the IOC's decision, despite her belief that the events should have remained in Tokyo.[104]

Security

 
Police patrolling and watching from a rooftop near the tennis venue

In December 2018, the Japanese government chose to ban drones from flying over venues being used for the Olympic and Paralympic Games. A similar ban was also imposed for the 2019 Rugby World Cup, which Japan also hosted.[105] In January 2020, counterterrorism drills began in different parts where the Games would take place, after intelligence data showed that terrorist groups could have carried out an attack seeking worldwide attention.[106] In July 2021, prior to the start of the Games, the Japan Coast Guard conducted counterterrorism drills in the Tokyo Bay. The drill consisted of two inflatable boats trying to stop a suspicious ship from getting to shore.[107]

Volunteers

Applications for volunteering at the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games were accepted beginning on 26 September 2018. By 18 January 2019, a total of 204,680 applications had been received by the Tokyo Organizing Committee.[108] Interviews to select the requisite number of volunteers began in February 2019, with training scheduled to take place in October 2019.[109] The volunteers at the venues were to be known as "Field Cast", and the volunteers in the city were to be known as "City Cast". These names were chosen from a shortlist of four from an original 150 pairs of names; the other three shortlisted names were "Shining Blue" and "Shining Blue Tokyo", "Games Anchor" and "City Anchor", and "Games Force" and "City Force". The names were chosen by the people who had applied to be volunteers at the Games.[110]

As of early June 2021, approximately 10,000 out of the 80,000 registered volunteers resigned from the Games. Media attributed the rise in pandemic cases as the reason for massive quitting.[111] More volunteer assignments were expected to be cancelled due to the spectator ban.[112]

Medals

 
Due to COVID-19 protocols, the medals were presented to the athletes on a tray and each athlete was asked to put on their own medal, rather than have it placed around their neck by a dignitary.[113]

In February 2017, the Tokyo Organizing Committee announced an electronics recycling program in partnership with Japan Environmental Sanitation Center and NTT Docomo, soliciting donations of electronics such as mobile phones to be reclaimed as materials for the medals. Aiming to collect eight tonnes of metals to produce the medals for the Olympic and Paralympic Games, collection boxes were deployed at public locations and NTT Docomo retail shops in April 2017.[114][115] A design competition for the medals was launched in December of that year.[116]

In May 2018, the organizing committee reported that they had obtained half the required 2,700 kilograms of bronze but were struggling to obtain the required amount of silver; although bronze and silver medals purely utilize their respective materials, IOC requirements mandate that gold medals utilize silver as a base.[117] The collection of bronze was completed in November 2018, with the remainder estimated to have been completed by March 2019.[118]

On 24 July 2019 (one year ahead of the originally scheduled opening ceremony), the designs of the medals were unveiled.[119][120] The medals for the Olympic and Paralympic Games were designed by Junichi Kawanishi following a nationwide competition.[121] A new feature shared with the Paralympic medals is that the ribbons contain one, two, or three silicone convex lines to distinguish gold, silver, and bronze medals, respectively.[120]

Torch relay

The slogan of the 2020 Summer Olympics torch relay was "Hope Lights Our Way".[122][123]

As determined by a 2009 IOC ruling that banned international torch relays for any future Olympic Games,[124] the 2020 Summer Olympics torch was scheduled to only visit the two countries of Greece and the host nation Japan. The first phase of the relay began on 12 March 2020, with the traditional flame lighting ceremony at the Temple of Hera in Olympia, Greece. The torch then travelled to Athens, where the Greek leg of the relay culminated in a handover ceremony at the Panathenaic Stadium on 19 March, during which the torch was transferred to the Japanese contingent.[122] The flame was placed inside a special lantern and transported from Athens International Airport on a chartered flight to Higashimatsushima in Japan. The torch was then expected to begin the second phase of its journey on 20 March, as it traveled for one week around the three most affected areas of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunamiMiyagi, Iwate and Fukushima—where it would go on display under the heading "Flame of Recovery". After leaving Naraha on 26 March, the torch would commence its main relay around Japan, incorporating all 47 prefectural capitals.[123]

After the decision to postpone the Games was made, the torch was placed again in a special lantern on display in the city of Fukushima for a month. After that, the lantern was transferred to the Tokyo prefecture, where it was kept safe until the restart of the relay in 2021.[125] On 23 July 2020 (one year ahead of the rescheduled opening ceremony), a promotional video was released featuring Japanese swimmer Rikako Ikee carrying the lantern inside Japan National Stadium, drawing comparisons between emergence from the pandemic and her own return to sport after being diagnosed with leukemia.[126] On 20 August 2020, it was announced that the torch relay would begin again in Naraha, Fukushima on 25 March 2021, nearly a year later than originally planned.[125][127]

The relay ended at Tokyo's National Stadium (Olympic Stadium) on 23 July, with tennis player Naomi Osaka lighting the Olympic cauldron at the finale of the opening ceremony.[128] The cauldron lit in the Olympic Stadium was only used during the Opening and Closing ceremonies: a separate cauldron was lit on the Tokyo waterfront for public view at the Yume no ohashi bridge in Odaiba, making it only the second time in olympic history where the cauldron was not displayed in the athletics stadium, the other time being in 2016.[129]

Biosecurity protocols

 
Temperature check and COVID-19 countermeasures at the tennis venue

In February 2021, the IOC began releasing "playbooks" containing details on planned COVID-19 biosecurity protocols for athletes, officials, the press, and other staff, including standard protocols such as practicing social distancing, hygiene, the wearing of face masks (outside of training and competition for athletes), and being restricted from visiting bars, restaurants, shops, and other tourist areas around Greater Tokyo Area, or using public transport unless otherwise permitted. Participants would be asked to use Japan's COCOA Exposure Notification app and would be tested at least every four days. Athletes who tested positive would be unable to compete and could be quarantined at a government facility (although leeway would be given in the event of false positives). Close contacts would also need to test negative in order to be cleared for competition. Athletes would be discouraged from "excessive" celebrations because the actions could spread infected droplets.[130][131][132] The playbooks were criticized in a paper published by The New England Journal of Medicine in May 2021, for lacking "scientifically rigorous risk assessment" and failing to "distinguish the various levels of risk faced by athletes". The playbook stated that the athletes were required to arrive up to five days prior to the start of the competition and to leave within 48 hours of being eliminated from their sport or the conclusion of the competitions.[133][134]

The IOC recommended the vaccination of athletes against COVID-19 if vaccines were available to them, but this was not a prerequisite for participation and the IOC advised against athletes "jumping the queue" in order to obtain priority over essential populations.[135] On 12 March 2021, Thomas Bach announced that in nations where they were approved for use, the Chinese Olympic Committee had offered to cover the costs of the Chinese CoronaVac and the Sinopharm BIBP vaccine for athletes competing in the 2020 Summer Olympics and 2022 Winter Olympics, and would purchase two doses for their nation's general public for each vaccinated athlete.[136] On 6 May 2021, Pfizer announced that it would donate doses of its vaccine to NOCs competing in Tokyo.[137]

Approximately 93,000 athletes and officials were exempt from the quarantine rules upon arriving in Japan, provided that they remained in areas separated from the local population. With around 300,000 local staff and volunteers entering and exiting these bubbles, and 20,000 vaccine doses allocated for this group, this led to concerns of COVID-19 spreading both during the Games and when teams returned to their countries.[138][139]

Due to international travel restrictions, the organizing committee announced in March 2021 that no international guests (including spectators, and friends and family members of the athletes) would be allowed to attend the Games. As per existing guidance for spectator sports in Japan, spectators would be asked to refrain from cheering or shouting.[132] On 19 June 2021, Governor Koike announced that plans for public viewing events for the Games had been scrapped, in order to use the planned venues (such as Yoyogi Park) as mass vaccination sites instead.[140] On 21 June, it was announced that all venues would be capped at a maximum of 10,000 ticketed spectators or 50% capacity, whichever was lower.[141]

On 2 July 2021, the new TOCOG president Seiko Hashimoto warned that there was still a possibility of the Games being held behind closed doors because of rising COVID-19 cases in the country.[142][143] Japan's slow vaccination rate had been of particular concern.[144][145] A simulation run by the University of Tokyo in May 2021 projected that a new wave of infections could peak in mid-October if the Games went on after the existing state of emergency in Tokyo had expired.[146][147]

On 8 July 2021, after Tokyo had recorded 920 new COVID-19 cases (its highest increase since May), Prime Minister Suga declared a new state of emergency in the Tokyo area from 12 July through 22 August (ending only two days before the Paralympics' opening ceremony), and announced that all events at venues in the area would therefore be held behind closed doors with no spectators permitted. Hashimoto stated that "it is extremely regrettable that the Games will be staged in a very limited manner in the face of the spread of novel coronavirus infections." IOC President Thomas Bach stated that "we will support any measure which is necessary to have a safe and secure Olympic and Paralympic Games for the Japanese people and all the participants."[144][145][148]

The announcement stated that spectators would still be allowed at events being held outside of Tokyo, subject to the approval by local health authorities and the aforementioned 50%/10,000-spectator limit. The prefectures of Fukushima, Hokkaido and Ibaraki announced that they would prohibit spectators at events held in the areas.[149] The opening ceremony was expected to be limited to fewer than 1,000 VIP guests, including IOC representatives and dignitaries,[150] while some events did allow members of other competing delegations to occupy spectator seats as well.[151] School students were invited to watch football matches in Ibaraki.[152][153]

On 16 July, it was reported that Bach had asked Prime Minister Suga about the possibility that restrictions on spectators could be eased later on if COVID-19 conditions were to improve in Tokyo.[150] However, on 2 August, Suga announced that all existing state of emergency declarations would be extended through 31 August, and be extended to Chiba, Kanagawa, Saitama, and parts of Osaka.[154]

Ticketing

The opening ceremony tickets were expected to range from ¥12,000 to ¥300,000, with a maximum price of ¥130,000 for the finals of the athletics track and field events.[155] The average ticket price was ¥7,700, with half the tickets being sold for up to ¥8,000. A symbolic ticket price of ¥2,020 was expected for families, groups resident in Japan, and in conjunction with a school program.[155] Tickets would be sold through 40,000 shops in Japan and by mail order to Japanese addresses through the internet.[156] International guests, had they been allowed, would have needed to visit Japan during the sales period, or arrange to buy tickets through a third party such as a travel agent.[157]

Tickets went on general sale in Japan in the autumn of 2019 and were expected to be sold globally from June 2020; however, this plan was suspended when the Games were postponed on 24 March 2020. The Tokyo Organizing Committee confirmed that tickets already purchased would remain valid for the same sessions according to the new schedule and that refunds were also being offered.[158]

On 20 March 2021, it was announced that due to COVID-19-related concerns, no international guests would be allowed to attend the 2020 Olympics or Paralympics. This included both spectators, as well as the friends and family of athletes. All overseas ticketholders would be refunded.[132] Hashimoto cited uncertainties surrounding international travel restrictions, and goals to preserve the safety of all participants and spectators, and not place a burden on the health care system.[132] It was ultimately announced in July that all local spectators were not allowed to attend any events held in Tokyo, Fukushima and Hokkaido.[144][145][148]

Cultural festival

A cultural program known as Nippon Festival was scheduled to coincide with the Olympics and Paralympics, running from April to September 2021 as a series of streaming events held by the Tokyo Organizing Committee and other partners. The events reflected the themes of "Participation and Interaction", "Towards the Realisation of an Inclusive Society" and "Reconstruction of the Tohoku Region". The program was either downsized or reformatted to virtual format due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the postponement of the Games.[159] One of these events was a concert held on 18 July, which featured J-rock band Wanima, choreography by dancers Aio Yamada and Tuki Takamura, and the presentation of animated "creatures" based on illustrations "embodying the thoughts and emotions of people from across the world".[160]

The original plans for Nippon Festival included events such as Kabuki x Opera (a concert that would have featured stage actor Ichikawa Ebizō XI, opera singers Anna Pirozzi and Erwin Schrott, and the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra), an arts and culture festival focusing on disabilities,[161][162][163][164] and a special two-day exhibition sumo tournament at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan shortly after the Olympics—which would have differed significantly from the traditional bi-monthly Honbasho tournaments, and featured special commentary in English and Japanese to help explain to spectators the customs and traditions of professional sumo, which are deeply rooted in the Shinto religion.[165][166]

The Games

Opening ceremony

 
A scene from the Opening Ceremony at the Olympic Stadium, with drones flying around and creating the official logo of the Games

The opening ceremony was held on 23 July 2021 in the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo. It included the traditional Parade of Nations. Emperor Naruhito formally opened the Games, and at the end of the torch relay the Olympic cauldron was lit by Japanese tennis player Naomi Osaka.[167]

For the first time in the 2020 Olympic Games, it was decided that one male and one female in each country would take turns holding flags and serve as two of them.[168] This was done by embodying the "Agenda 2020" set during President Bach's term.[169][170]

For the first time in the history of the games, a moment of silence was observed in the opening ceremony for the victims of the Munich massacre.[171]

Sports

 
Tsurigasaki Beach, Chiba

The event program for the 2020 Summer Olympics was approved by the IOC executive board on 9 June 2017. IOC president Thomas Bach stated that their goal was to give the Games "youthful" and "urban" appeal, and to increase the number of female participants.[172][173]

The Games featured 339 events in 33 different sports, encompassing a total of 50 disciplines. Karate, sport climbing, surfing, and skateboarding made their Olympic debut, while baseball and softball also made a one-off return to the Summer Olympics for the first time since 2008. 15 new events within existing sports were also added, including 3×3 basketball, freestyle BMX, and the return of madison cycling, as well as 9 new mixed events in several sports (table tennis, archery, judo, shooting (3), triathlon, 4 × 400 m relay running and 4 × 100 m medley swimming).[174]

In the list below, the number of events in each discipline is noted in parentheses.[174]

2020 Summer Olympic Sports program

New sports

On 12 February 2013, with a remit to control the cost of the Games and ensure they are "relevant to sports fans of all generations", the IOC Executive Board recommended the removal of one of the 26 sports contested at the 2012 Summer Olympics, leaving a vacancy which the IOC would seek to fill at the 125th IOC Session. The new entrant would join golf and rugby sevens (which would both debut in 2016) as part of the program of 28 "core" sports. Five sports were shortlisted for removal, including canoe, field hockey, modern pentathlon, taekwondo, and wrestling. In the final round of voting by the executive board, eight members voted to remove wrestling from the Olympic program. Hockey and taekwondo were both tied in second with three votes each.[175][176][177]

The decision to drop wrestling surprised many media outlets, given that the sport's role in the Olympics dates back to the ancient Olympic Games, and was included in the original program for the modern Games. The New York Times felt that the decision was based on the shortage of well-known talent and the absence of women's events in the sport.[178][179][180] Out of the shortlist from the IOC vote, Wrestling was duly added to the shortlist of applicants for inclusion in the 2020 Games, alongside the seven new sports that were put forward for consideration.[178]

On 29 May 2013, it was announced that three of the eight sports under consideration had made the final shortlist: baseball/softball, squash and wrestling.[181] The other five sports were rejected at this point: karate, roller sports, sport climbing, wakeboarding, and wushu.[182] At the 125th IOC Session on 8 September 2013, wrestling was chosen to be included in the Olympic program for 2020 and 2024. Wrestling secured 49 votes, while baseball/softball and squash received 24 votes and 22 votes respectively.[183]

With the adoption of the Olympic Agenda 2020 in December 2014, the IOC shifted from a "sport-based" approach to the Olympic program to an "event-based" program—establishing that organizing committees may propose discretionary events to be included in the program to improve local interest.[184][185] As a result of these changes, a shortlist of eight new proposed sports was unveiled on 22 June 2015, consisting of baseball/softball, bowling, karate, roller sports, sport climbing, squash, surfing, and wushu.[186] On 28 September 2015, the Tokyo Organizing Committee submitted their shortlist of five proposed sports to the IOC: baseball/softball, karate, sport climbing, surfing, and skateboarding.[187] These five new sports were approved on 3 August 2016 by the IOC during the 129th IOC Session in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and were included in the sports program for 2020 only, bringing the total number of sports at the 2020 Olympics to 33.[188][189]

Test events

A total of 56 test events were scheduled to take place in the run-up to the 2020 Olympics and Paralympics. Two of the events were held in late 2018, but the main test event schedule commenced in June 2019 and was originally due to be completed in May 2020 prior to the start of the Olympics. Several of the events were incorporated into pre-existing championships, but some have been newly created specifically to serve as Olympic test events for the 2020 Summer Games.[190][191]

In February 2019, it was announced that the test events would be branded under the banner "Ready, Steady, Tokyo". The Tokyo Organizing Committee is responsible for 22 of the test events, with the remaining events being arranged by national and international sports federations. The first test event was World Sailing's World Cup Series, held at Enoshima in September 2018. The last scheduled event is the Tokyo Challenge Track Meet, which was originally due to take place at the Olympic Stadium on 6 May 2020.[192]

All test events originally scheduled to take place from 12 March 2020 onwards were postponed due to COVID-19, with the test event calendar to be reviewed during the preparations for the rescheduled Games.[g][193]

Participating National Olympic Committees

The Republic of Macedonia has competed under the provisional name "Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" in every Summer and Winter Games since its debut in 1996 because of the disputed status of its official name. The naming disputes with Greece ended in 2018 with the signing of the Prespa agreement, and the country was officially renamed North Macedonia in February 2019. The new name was immediately recognized by the IOC, although the Olympic Committee of North Macedonia (NMOC) was not officially adopted until February 2020. The NMOC sent a delegation to the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics in January 2020, but the Tokyo Games were North Macedonia's first appearance at the Summer Olympics under its new name.[194]

Since competing as Swaziland ten times at the Summer and Winter Olympics, Eswatini made its debut under that name after the renaming of the country by the king in 2018.[195]

On 9 December 2019, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) banned Russia from all international sport for a period of four years, after the Russian government was found to have tampered with laboratory data that it had provided to WADA in January 2019 as a condition of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency being reinstated. As a result of the ban, WADA planned to allow individually cleared Russian athletes to take part in the 2020 Summer Olympics under a neutral banner, as instigated at the 2018 Winter Olympics, but they would be excluded from team sports. The head of WADA's Compliance Review Committee, Jonathan Taylor, stated that the IOC would not be able to use the "Olympic Athletes from Russia" (OAR) designation as it did in 2018, emphasizing that neutral athletes could not be portrayed as representing a specific country.[196][197][198] Russia later filed an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) against WADA's decision.[199] After reviewing the case on appeal, CAS ruled on 17 December 2020 that the penalty placed on Russia be reduced. Instead of a total ban from all sporting events, the ruling allowed Russia to participate at the Olympics and other international events, but the team would not be permitted to use the Russian name, flag, or anthem for a period of two years and must present themselves as "Neutral Athlete" or "Neutral Team". The ruling does allow for "Russia" to be displayed on the team uniform—although it should be no more visible than the "Neutral Athlete/Team" designation—as well as the use of the Russian flag's colors within the uniform's design.[200]

On 19 February 2021, it was announced that Russia would compete under the acronym "ROC" after the name of the Russian Olympic Committee although the name of the committee itself in full could not be used to refer to the delegation. The ROC team would be represented by the flag of the Russian Olympic Committee.[201]

On 6 April 2021, North Korea announced that it would not participate in the 2020 Summer Olympics because of COVID-19 concerns.[202] This marked North Korea's first absence from the Summer Olympics since 1988.[203] In September, a month after the games concluded, the Olympic Committee of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea was banned from participation in the 2022 Winter Olympics, after they failed to participate in the Tokyo Olympics. On 21 July 2021, Guinea announced it would not be sending a delegation to the Tokyo Olympics, allegedly due to COVID-19 concerns, though media outlets suggested that financial considerations may have been the real motivating factor.[204] Guinea later reversed the decision and confirmed that it would be participating.[205]

 
Participating nations
 
Country by team size

The following 206 teams qualified (including the 104 universality places guaranteed in athletics, under which all 206 NOCs may send competitors regardless of qualification).[206]

Participating National Olympic Committees

Number of athletes by National Olympic Committee

11,420 athletes from 206 NOCs:[2][207]

Medal summary

  *   Host nation (Japan)

2020 Summer Olympics medal table[208]
RankNOCGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  United States394133113
2  China38321989
3  Japan*27141758
4  Great Britain22202264
5
2020, summer, olympics, 2020, olympics, tokyo, 2020, 2021, olympics, redirect, here, winter, youth, olympics, lausanne, switzerland, 2020, winter, youth, olympics, summer, paralympics, 2020, summer, paralympics, japan, 2020, japan, 2021, redirect, here, events. 2020 Olympics Tokyo 2020 and 2021 Olympics redirect here For the Winter Youth Olympics in Lausanne Switzerland see 2020 Winter Youth Olympics For the Summer Paralympics see 2020 Summer Paralympics Japan 2020 and Japan 2021 redirect here For the events in 2020 in Japan see 2020 in Japan For the events in 2021 in Japan see 2021 in Japan The 2020 Summer Olympics Japanese 2020年夏季オリンピック Hepburn Nisen Niju nen Kaki Orinpikku officially the Games of the XXXII Olympiad 第三十二回オリンピック競技大会 Dai Sanjuni kai Orinpikku Kyōgi Taikai and also known as Tokyo 2020 東京2020 Tōkyō Nii Zero Nii Zero was an international multi sport event held from 23 July to 8 August 2021 in Tokyo Japan with some preliminary events that began on 21 July 2021 Tokyo was selected as the host city during the 125th IOC Session in Buenos Aires Argentina on 7 September 2013 3 Games of the XXXII OlympiadEmblem of the 2020 Summer Olympics a Host cityTokyo JapanMottoUnited by Emotion b Nations206 including EOR and ROC teams Athletes11 420 2 Events339 in 33 sports 50 disciplines Opening23 July 2021Closing8 August 2021Opened byEmperor NaruhitoCauldronNaomi OsakaStadiumJapan National Stadium known as Olympic Stadium during Games Summer Rio 2016Paris 2024 Winter PyeongChang 2018Beijing 2022 2020 Summer ParalympicsOriginally scheduled to take place from 24 July to 9 August 2020 the event was postponed to 2021 on 24 March 2020 due to the global COVID 19 pandemic the first such instance in the history of the Olympic Games previous games had been cancelled but not rescheduled 4 However the event retained the Tokyo 2020 branding for marketing purposes 5 It was largely held behind closed doors with no public spectators permitted due to the declaration of a state of emergency in the Greater Tokyo Area in response to the pandemic the first and only Olympic Games to be held without official spectators c The Games were the most expensive ever with total spending of over 20 billion 7 The Games were the fourth Olympic Games to be held in Japan following the 1964 Summer Olympics Tokyo 1972 Winter Olympics Sapporo and 1998 Winter Olympics Nagano Tokyo became the first city in Asia to hold the Summer Olympic Games twice d The 2020 Games were the second of three consecutive Olympics to be held in East Asia following the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang South Korea and preceding the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing China Due to the one year postponement Tokyo 2020 was the first and only Olympic Games to have been held in an odd numbered year 9 and the first Summer Olympics since 1900 to be held in a non leap year New events were introduced in existing sports including 3x3 basketball freestyle BMX and mixed gender team events in a number of existing sports as well as the return of madison cycling for men and an introduction of the same event for women New IOC policies also allowed the host organizing committee to add new sports to the Olympic program for just one Games The disciplines added by the Japanese Olympic Committee were baseball and softball karate sport climbing surfing and skateboarding the last four of which made their Olympic debuts and the last three of which will remain on the Olympic program 10 The United States topped the medal count by both total golds 39 and total medals 113 with China finishing second by both respects 38 and 89 Host nation Japan finished third setting a record for the most gold medals and total medals ever won by their delegation at an Olympic Games with 27 and 58 Great Britain finished fourth with a total of 22 gold and 64 medals The Russian delegation competing as the ROC finished fifth with 20 gold medals and third in the overall medal count with 71 medals Bermuda the Philippines and Qatar won their first ever Olympic gold medals 11 12 13 Burkina Faso San Marino and Turkmenistan also won their first ever Olympic medals 14 15 16 Contents 1 Bidding process 1 1 Host city selection 2 Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic 2 1 Qualifying event cancellation and postponement 2 2 Effect on doping tests 2 3 Postponement to 2021 2 4 Calls for cancellation 2 5 Costs and insurance 2 6 Public opinion and COVID 19 effect during and after the Games 3 Development and preparation 3 1 Venues and infrastructure 3 2 Security 3 3 Volunteers 3 4 Medals 3 5 Torch relay 3 6 Biosecurity protocols 3 7 Ticketing 3 8 Cultural festival 4 The Games 4 1 Opening ceremony 4 2 Sports 4 2 1 New sports 4 3 Test events 5 Participating National Olympic Committees 5 1 Number of athletes by National Olympic Committee 6 Medal summary 6 1 Podium sweeps 6 2 Medal ceremonies 7 Calendar 7 1 Event scheduling 8 Marketing 8 1 Look of the Games 9 Concerns and controversies 10 Broadcasting 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksBidding process EditMain article Bids for the 2020 Summer Olympics The three candidate cities were Tokyo Istanbul and Madrid The applicant cities of Baku and Doha were not promoted to candidate status A bid from Rome was withdrawn 17 Host city selection Edit The International Olympic Committee IOC voted to select the host city of the 2020 Summer Olympics on 7 September 2013 at the 125th IOC Session in Buenos Aires Argentina using an exhaustive ballot system 17 None of the candidate cities won more than 50 of the votes in the first round Madrid and Istanbul were tied for second place so a runoff vote was held to determine which of the two cities would be eliminated The final vote was a head to head contest between Tokyo and Istanbul Tokyo was selected by 60 votes to 36 gaining at least the 49 votes required for a majority 17 2020 Summer Olympics host city election 18 City Team Round 1 Runoff Round 2Tokyo Japan 42 60Istanbul Turkey 26 49 36Madrid Spain 26 45 Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic EditMain articles COVID 19 cases at the 2020 Summer Olympics and 2020 Summer Paralympics and List of athletes not attending the 2020 Summer Olympics due to COVID 19 concerns See also COVID 19 pandemic in Japan and Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on sports Few pedestrians on the Shibuya Crossing during the state of emergency in the middle of Japan s first wave of the COVID 19 pandemic early 2020 In January 2020 concerns were raised about the potential impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on athletes and visitors to the Summer Olympic Games 19 Tokyo organizers and the International Olympic Committee insisted they were monitoring the spread of the disease to minimize its effects on preparations for the Olympics 20 The IOC stated that in 2020 their Japanese partners and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made it very clear that Japan could not manage a postponement beyond next summer 2021 at the latest 21 Unlike the case for Zika virus during the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro SARS CoV 2 can be transmitted directly between humans posing tougher challenges for the organizers to counteract the infectious disease and host a safe and secure event 19 Also unlike the case for H1N1 swine flu during the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver COVID 19 has a higher fatality rate and there was no effective vaccine until December 2020 22 In a February 2020 interview Conservative London mayoral candidate Shaun Bailey argued that London would be able to host the Olympic Games at the former 2012 Olympic venues should the Games need to be moved because of the COVID 19 pandemic 23 Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike criticized Bailey s comment as inappropriate 24 In early 2021 officials in the U S state of Florida offered to host the delayed Games in their state while John Coates the IOC vice president in charge of the Tokyo Olympics said the Games would open even if the city and other parts of Japan were under a state of emergency because of COVID 19 25 26 Estimates by the National Institute of Infectious Diseases and Kyoto University predicted that states of emergency might be required during the Games 27 The reports published at the Ministry of Health experts panel also showed new patients increasing to 10 000 if the Games were to allow spectators 28 Qualifying event cancellation and postponement Edit Concerns about the pandemic began to affect qualifying events in early 2020 Some that were due to take place in February were moved to alternative locations to address concerns about travelling to the affected areas particularly China For example the women s basketball qualification was played in Belgrade Serbia instead of Foshan China 29 The Asia amp Oceania boxing qualification tournament which was originally planned to be held from 3 14 February in Wuhan China the location of the original outbreak of the COVID 19 pandemic instead took place in Amman Jordan at the beginning of March 30 The third round of the women s football qualification tournament was also affected as the group matches formerly scheduled to be held in China were moved to Australia 31 The European boxing qualification began on 14 March 2020 in London United Kingdom but was suspended after two days of competition before being rescheduled for April 2021 32 33 It eventually resumed in June 2021 but was moved to Paris France 34 because of renewed concerns over travel to the United Kingdom Other qualifying events that were due to take place in March to June 2020 began to be postponed until later in the year and mid 2021 as part of a wider suspension of international sporting competitions in response to the pandemic A multitude of Olympic sports were affected including archery baseball cycling handball judo rowing sailing volleyball and water polo 35 Effect on doping tests Edit Mandatory doping tests were being severely restricted by the COVID 19 pandemic in early 2020 European anti doping organizations raised concerns that blood and urine tests could not be performed and that mobilizing the staff necessary to do so before the end of the pandemic would be a health risk Despite the need for extensive testing to take place in advance of the Games the World Anti Doping Agency WADA stated that public health and safety were their topmost priorities 36 The Chinese anti doping agency temporarily ceased testing on 3 February 2020 with a planned resumption of phased testing towards the end of the month 37 and the anti doping organizations in the United States France Great Britain and Germany had reduced their testing activities by the end of March 36 Postponement to 2021 Edit The Tokyo Organizing Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games TOCOG released a statement on 2 March 2020 confirming that preparations for the upcoming Tokyo Olympics were continuing as planned 38 On 23 March both Canada and Australia indicated that they would withdraw from the Games if they were not postponed by a year 39 On the same day Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe stated he would support a proposed postponement citing that ensuring athlete safety was paramount and veteran IOC member and former vice president Dick Pound said that he expected the Games to be postponed 40 41 On 24 March 2020 122 days to go for the planned start the IOC TOCOG and prime minister Abe released a joint statement announcing that the 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics would be rescheduled to a date beyond 2020 but not later than summer 2021 They stated that the Games could stand as a beacon of hope to the world during these troubled times and that the Olympic flame could become the light at the end of the tunnel in which the world finds itself at present 42 Prime Minister Abe stated that IOC president Thomas Bach responded with 100 agreement to his proposal to delay the Games For continuity and marketing purposes it was agreed that the Games would still be branded as Tokyo 2020 despite the change in schedule 5 On 30 March 2020 the IOC and TOCOG announced that they had reached an agreement on the new dates for the 2020 Summer Olympics which would now begin with the opening ceremony on 23 July 2021 and end with the closing ceremony on 8 August 2021 still to be held in Tokyo 43 44 The subsequent Winter Olympics in Beijing are scheduled to begin on 4 February 2022 less than six months later Shortly before the postponement was confirmed the IOC and Tokyo 2020 organizers formed a task force named Here We Go with the remit to address any issues arising from postponing the Games such as sponsorship and accommodation The organizers confirmed that all athletes who had already qualified for Tokyo 2020 would keep their qualification slots 45 Calls for cancellation Edit Health experts expressed concern in April 2020 that the Games might have to be cancelled if the pandemic should persist 46 In an interview the then president of TOCOG and former Japanese prime minister Yoshirō Mori asserted that the Games would be scrapped if they could not go ahead in 2021 47 On 29 April 2020 Prime Minister Abe stated that the Games must be held in a way that shows the world has won its battle against the coronavirus pandemic 48 Thomas Bach acknowledged in an interview on 20 May 2020 that the job of reorganizing the Tokyo Games was a mammoth task and also admitted that the event would have to be cancelled altogether if it could not take place in the summer of 2021 49 However both Mori and Bach expressed optimism about the Games going ahead 47 49 A member of the Japanese COVID 19 Advisory Committee on the basic action policy co authored a British Medical Journal editorial which stated holding Tokyo 2020 for domestic political and economic purposes ignoring scientific and moral imperatives is contradictory to Japan s commitment to global health and human security 50 On 21 January 2021 multiple sources reported that the Japanese government had privately concluded that the Games would have to be cancelled 51 The government dismissed the claims stating that the reports were categorically untrue 52 The new Japanese prime minister Yoshihide Suga confirmed on 19 February that the G7 had given unanimous support for the postponed Games to go ahead as scheduled 53 It was reported in April 2021 just three months before the start of the Games that there was still the option to cancel the Tokyo Olympics with the country having vaccinated less than 1 of its population with tens of thousands of volunteers expected to take part and athletes not being required to quarantine after arriving in Japan 54 55 Public support for the Games in Japan decreased significantly amid a 2021 surge in COVID 19 cases in the country 56 Multiple organizations of medical professionals voiced oppositions to the Games 50 57 58 while an opinion poll in April 2021 saw 40 of participants support the cancellation of the Games and 33 support a second postponement 59 In May 2021 83 of those polled supported the cancellation or postponement of the Games 60 The Tokyo Medical Practitioners Association called for the cancellation stating that hospitals in Tokyo have their hands full and have almost no spare capacity in an open letter to the prime minister 61 At least nine out of 47 elected governors supported the cancellation of the Games 62 Nearly 37 of Japanese companies surveyed supported the cancellation of the Games and 32 supported postponement 63 Kenji Utsunomiya who had previously run for Governor of Tokyo collected more than 351 000 signatures on a petition calling for the organisers to prioritise life over the Olympics 64 Japanese writers Jiro Akagawa 65 66 and Fuminori Nakamura also called for the Games to be postponed or cancelled 67 On 26 May 2021 the Asahi Shimbun newspaper which was a local sponsor of the Games published an editorial calling for Prime Minister Suga to calmly and objectively assess the situation and decide on the cancellation of the event this summer 68 On 4 June it was reported that Japanese sponsors proposed to the organisers for the Games to be postponed for several months citing a comment by a corporate sponsor senior executive It just makes much much more sense from our perspective to hold the Games when there are more vaccinated people the weather is cooler and maybe public opposition is lower 69 In July 2021 it was announced that all events in Tokyo were to be held behind closed doors with no spectators due to a new state of emergency A poll by the Asahi Shimbun found that 55 of those surveyed supported the cancellation of the Olympics and 68 felt that organisers would not be able to suitably control COVID 19 at the Games 70 The decision was also detrimental to local sponsors which had planned in person presences to promote their products during the Games an executive of official sponsor Toyota stated that the company had pulled a television advertising campaign it had planned for the Games in Japan citing that the Olympics were becoming an event that has not gained the public s understanding 70 71 Had the games been cancelled it would have been the first time since World War II that an Olympic event had been called off and the first games to be scrapped due to circumstances unrelated to war e A complete cancellation would have also cost Japan 4 52 trillion US 41 5 billion based on operating expenses and loss of tourism activity due to Japan had closed its international borders to foreign travellers since March 2020 and did not eventually reopen until October 2022 more than a year after the Games ended 72 Costs and insurance Edit According to an estimate conducted by professor emeritus Katsuhiro Miyamoto of Kansai University and reported by the NHK in March 2020 the cost of delaying the 2020 Olympics by one year would be 640 8 billion yen US 5 8 billion taking maintenance expenditures for the unused facilities into account 72 The Nomura Research Institute estimated that cancelling the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics in 2021 would cost around 1 81 trillion yen 17 billion less than the economic damages projected if another state of emergency is declared noting that a decision to hold the games should be made based on the impact on infection risks not from the standpoint of economic loss 73 The Tokyo Games were protected through the commercial insurance marketplace Lloyd s of London by global reinsurers Munich Re and Swiss Re The IOC takes out around 800 million of insurance for each Summer Olympics with the total amount of loss insured for the 2020 Games likely to be more than 2 billion needs update The disruption caused by postponing the Games was covered by the insurance policy with those likely to make claims for their financial losses including local organizers sponsors hospitality firms and travel providers 74 75 needs update Holders of tickets purchased from overseas prior to postponement were entitled to refunds for both Olympic and Paralympic ticket purchases except for the costs of cancelled hotel bookings Although about 600 000 Olympic tickets and 300 000 Paralympic tickets were eligible to be refunded organizers said that they would not release the total costs of the refunds 76 Reuters quoted industry sources who estimated that the Tokyo Olympics Committee had taken out US 500 800 million in insurance and that after accounting for costs such as rebooking sporting venues and the Olympic Village little of that payout would be available to recoup the proceeds of lost and refunded ticket sales 77 The local organizers are responsible for ticket sales and use them to defray the costs of holding the games ticket sales were expected to bring in approximately US 800 million but actual sales were close to zero 78 In June 2022 the Tokyo Organizing Committee revealed in the final budget report for the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics that the cost for the Olympic Games was 640 4 billion yen US 5 8 billion f which higher than the cost for the Rio 2016 80 2 Public opinion and COVID 19 effect during and after the Games Edit Prior to the Tokyo Olympics being held many Japanese people were negative about hosting the event but their attitudes had become more positive towards the end of the Games According to a public opinion poll conducted jointly by the Nippon News Network and the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper which targeted Japanese citizens at the end of the Olympics 38 of respondents said that it was possible to hold the Olympics in a safe manner against COVID 19 while 55 said that it was not possible However 64 answered that it was good that the Tokyo Games had gone ahead while 28 answered that they wished the event had not been held Of the respondents 61 were glad the event had been held without spectators and only 12 said that spectators should have been allowed 81 On 29 July less than a week into the Games journalist Masaki Kubota reported his analysis of the Japanese people s perspective on the Olympics which he believed was greatly influenced by the change in the way the Japanese news media reported on the Games He pointed out that many Japanese news media had insisted on canceling the Olympics citing fears that COVID 19 would spread but once Japanese athletes started winning medals the media changed their reporting policy and began livening up the Olympics which had the effect of altering public opinion in Japan 82 Once the Tokyo Olympics were underway followed by the Tokyo Paralympics there was a sharp increase in COVID 19 cases in Japan especially those caused by the Delta variant On 26 July there were 60 157 cases detected in Japan breaking the record of 44 961 cases recorded on 10 May On 9 August one day after the Olympics had ended daily cases in Japan reached 100 000 for the first time and new cases continued to increase until the peak on 23 August when 156 931 cases were recorded 83 Development and preparation EditSee also Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games The Olympic rings on display at Tokyo Bay to promote the Games The Tokyo Organizing Committee was originally headed by former Japanese prime minister Yoshirō Mori 84 but he resigned in February 2021 due to backlash from sexist comments about women in meetings 85 86 87 Seiko Hashimoto was chosen to succeed him Tamayo Marukawa Minister for the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games was responsible for overseeing the preparations on behalf of the Japanese government 87 The Tokyo Metropolitan Government set aside a fund of 400 billion more than US 3 67 billion to cover the cost of hosting the Games The Japanese government was considering easing airspace restrictions to allow an increased slot capacity at both Haneda and Narita airports A new railway line was planned to link both airports through an expansion of Tokyo Station cutting travel time from Tokyo Station to Haneda from 30 minutes to 18 minutes and from Tokyo Station to Narita from 55 minutes to 36 minutes funded primarily by private investors the line would cost 400 billion The East Japan Railway Company JR East was also planning a new route near Tamachi to Haneda Airport 88 There were plans to fund the accelerated completion of the Central Circular Route Tokyo Gaikan Expressway and Ken Ō Expressway and the refurbishment of other major expressways in the area 89 The Yurikamome automated transit line was also to be extended from its existing terminal at Toyosu Station to a new terminal at Kachidoki Station passing the site of the Olympic Village although the line was not expected to have adequate capacity to serve major events in the Odaiba area on its own 90 In April 2018 the Tokyo Organizing Committee signed a partnership with the International Labour Organization to ensure decent work in the preparation of and during the 2020 Olympic Games 91 In June 2020 the chief executive of the Organizing Committee Toshirō Mutō stated that the committee was exploring options for streamlining the Games to achieve cost savings 92 On 25 September the IOC and Tokyo Organizing Committee agreed to a suite of measures to simplify the Games logistics including a cut to non athlete staff use of online meetings and streamlined transport among others The committee also outlined areas it would be exploring in order to maintain the health and safety of all participants 93 Venues and infrastructure Edit The newly built Japan National Stadium in Tokyo was the venue for the ceremonies and the athletics events Main article Venues of the 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics In February 2012 it was announced that Tokyo s former National Stadium the central venue for the 1964 Summer Olympics would undergo a 100 billion renovation for the 2019 Rugby World Cup and the 2020 Summer Olympics 94 In November 2012 the Japan Sport Council announced that it was taking bids for proposed stadium designs Of the 46 finalists Zaha Hadid Architects was awarded the project which would replace the old stadium with a new 80 000 seat stadium There was criticism of the Zaha Hadid design which was compared to a bicycle helmet and regarded as clashing with the surrounding Meiji Shrine and widespread disapproval of the costs even with attempts to revise and optimize the design 95 In June 2015 the government announced plans to reduce the new stadium s permanent capacity to 65 000 in its athletics configuration although with the option to add up to 15 000 temporary seats for football as a further cost saving measure 96 97 The original plan to build a retractable roof was also abandoned 98 At the end of 2015 as a result of public opposition to the increasing costs of the new stadium which had reached 252 billion the government chose to reject Zaha Hadid s design entirely and selected a new design by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma Inspired by traditional temples and with a lower profile Kuma s design had a budget of 149 billion The changes meant the new stadium could not be completed in time for the 2019 Rugby World Cup as originally intended 99 The National Stadium which was inaugurated on 21 December 2019 was named the Olympic Stadium for the duration of the Tokyo Games 100 In October 2018 the Board of Audit issued a report stating that the total cost of the Olympic venues could exceed US 25 billion 101 Of the 33 competition venues in Tokyo 28 were within 8 kilometers 5 miles of the Olympic Village with eleven new venues to be constructed 102 On 16 October 2019 the IOC announced that there were plans to re locate the marathon and racewalking events to Sapporo for heat concerns 103 The plans were made official on 1 November 2019 after Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike accepted the IOC s decision despite her belief that the events should have remained in Tokyo 104 Security Edit Police patrolling and watching from a rooftop near the tennis venue In December 2018 the Japanese government chose to ban drones from flying over venues being used for the Olympic and Paralympic Games A similar ban was also imposed for the 2019 Rugby World Cup which Japan also hosted 105 In January 2020 counterterrorism drills began in different parts where the Games would take place after intelligence data showed that terrorist groups could have carried out an attack seeking worldwide attention 106 In July 2021 prior to the start of the Games the Japan Coast Guard conducted counterterrorism drills in the Tokyo Bay The drill consisted of two inflatable boats trying to stop a suspicious ship from getting to shore 107 Volunteers Edit Applications for volunteering at the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games were accepted beginning on 26 September 2018 By 18 January 2019 a total of 204 680 applications had been received by the Tokyo Organizing Committee 108 Interviews to select the requisite number of volunteers began in February 2019 with training scheduled to take place in October 2019 109 The volunteers at the venues were to be known as Field Cast and the volunteers in the city were to be known as City Cast These names were chosen from a shortlist of four from an original 150 pairs of names the other three shortlisted names were Shining Blue and Shining Blue Tokyo Games Anchor and City Anchor and Games Force and City Force The names were chosen by the people who had applied to be volunteers at the Games 110 As of early June 2021 approximately 10 000 out of the 80 000 registered volunteers resigned from the Games Media attributed the rise in pandemic cases as the reason for massive quitting 111 More volunteer assignments were expected to be cancelled due to the spectator ban 112 Medals Edit Further information Olympic medal Due to COVID 19 protocols the medals were presented to the athletes on a tray and each athlete was asked to put on their own medal rather than have it placed around their neck by a dignitary 113 In February 2017 the Tokyo Organizing Committee announced an electronics recycling program in partnership with Japan Environmental Sanitation Center and NTT Docomo soliciting donations of electronics such as mobile phones to be reclaimed as materials for the medals Aiming to collect eight tonnes of metals to produce the medals for the Olympic and Paralympic Games collection boxes were deployed at public locations and NTT Docomo retail shops in April 2017 114 115 A design competition for the medals was launched in December of that year 116 In May 2018 the organizing committee reported that they had obtained half the required 2 700 kilograms of bronze but were struggling to obtain the required amount of silver although bronze and silver medals purely utilize their respective materials IOC requirements mandate that gold medals utilize silver as a base 117 The collection of bronze was completed in November 2018 with the remainder estimated to have been completed by March 2019 118 On 24 July 2019 one year ahead of the originally scheduled opening ceremony the designs of the medals were unveiled 119 120 The medals for the Olympic and Paralympic Games were designed by Junichi Kawanishi following a nationwide competition 121 A new feature shared with the Paralympic medals is that the ribbons contain one two or three silicone convex lines to distinguish gold silver and bronze medals respectively 120 Torch relay Edit Main article 2020 Summer Olympics torch relay The slogan of the 2020 Summer Olympics torch relay was Hope Lights Our Way 122 123 As determined by a 2009 IOC ruling that banned international torch relays for any future Olympic Games 124 the 2020 Summer Olympics torch was scheduled to only visit the two countries of Greece and the host nation Japan The first phase of the relay began on 12 March 2020 with the traditional flame lighting ceremony at the Temple of Hera in Olympia Greece The torch then travelled to Athens where the Greek leg of the relay culminated in a handover ceremony at the Panathenaic Stadium on 19 March during which the torch was transferred to the Japanese contingent 122 The flame was placed inside a special lantern and transported from Athens International Airport on a chartered flight to Higashimatsushima in Japan The torch was then expected to begin the second phase of its journey on 20 March as it traveled for one week around the three most affected areas of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami Miyagi Iwate and Fukushima where it would go on display under the heading Flame of Recovery After leaving Naraha on 26 March the torch would commence its main relay around Japan incorporating all 47 prefectural capitals 123 After the decision to postpone the Games was made the torch was placed again in a special lantern on display in the city of Fukushima for a month After that the lantern was transferred to the Tokyo prefecture where it was kept safe until the restart of the relay in 2021 125 On 23 July 2020 one year ahead of the rescheduled opening ceremony a promotional video was released featuring Japanese swimmer Rikako Ikee carrying the lantern inside Japan National Stadium drawing comparisons between emergence from the pandemic and her own return to sport after being diagnosed with leukemia 126 On 20 August 2020 it was announced that the torch relay would begin again in Naraha Fukushima on 25 March 2021 nearly a year later than originally planned 125 127 The relay ended at Tokyo s National Stadium Olympic Stadium on 23 July with tennis player Naomi Osaka lighting the Olympic cauldron at the finale of the opening ceremony 128 The cauldron lit in the Olympic Stadium was only used during the Opening and Closing ceremonies a separate cauldron was lit on the Tokyo waterfront for public view at the Yume no ohashi bridge in Odaiba making it only the second time in olympic history where the cauldron was not displayed in the athletics stadium the other time being in 2016 129 Biosecurity protocols Edit Temperature check and COVID 19 countermeasures at the tennis venue In February 2021 the IOC began releasing playbooks containing details on planned COVID 19 biosecurity protocols for athletes officials the press and other staff including standard protocols such as practicing social distancing hygiene the wearing of face masks outside of training and competition for athletes and being restricted from visiting bars restaurants shops and other tourist areas around Greater Tokyo Area or using public transport unless otherwise permitted Participants would be asked to use Japan s COCOA Exposure Notification app and would be tested at least every four days Athletes who tested positive would be unable to compete and could be quarantined at a government facility although leeway would be given in the event of false positives Close contacts would also need to test negative in order to be cleared for competition Athletes would be discouraged from excessive celebrations because the actions could spread infected droplets 130 131 132 The playbooks were criticized in a paper published by The New England Journal of Medicine in May 2021 for lacking scientifically rigorous risk assessment and failing to distinguish the various levels of risk faced by athletes The playbook stated that the athletes were required to arrive up to five days prior to the start of the competition and to leave within 48 hours of being eliminated from their sport or the conclusion of the competitions 133 134 The IOC recommended the vaccination of athletes against COVID 19 if vaccines were available to them but this was not a prerequisite for participation and the IOC advised against athletes jumping the queue in order to obtain priority over essential populations 135 On 12 March 2021 Thomas Bach announced that in nations where they were approved for use the Chinese Olympic Committee had offered to cover the costs of the Chinese CoronaVac and the Sinopharm BIBP vaccine for athletes competing in the 2020 Summer Olympics and 2022 Winter Olympics and would purchase two doses for their nation s general public for each vaccinated athlete 136 On 6 May 2021 Pfizer announced that it would donate doses of its vaccine to NOCs competing in Tokyo 137 Approximately 93 000 athletes and officials were exempt from the quarantine rules upon arriving in Japan provided that they remained in areas separated from the local population With around 300 000 local staff and volunteers entering and exiting these bubbles and 20 000 vaccine doses allocated for this group this led to concerns of COVID 19 spreading both during the Games and when teams returned to their countries 138 139 Due to international travel restrictions the organizing committee announced in March 2021 that no international guests including spectators and friends and family members of the athletes would be allowed to attend the Games As per existing guidance for spectator sports in Japan spectators would be asked to refrain from cheering or shouting 132 On 19 June 2021 Governor Koike announced that plans for public viewing events for the Games had been scrapped in order to use the planned venues such as Yoyogi Park as mass vaccination sites instead 140 On 21 June it was announced that all venues would be capped at a maximum of 10 000 ticketed spectators or 50 capacity whichever was lower 141 On 2 July 2021 the new TOCOG president Seiko Hashimoto warned that there was still a possibility of the Games being held behind closed doors because of rising COVID 19 cases in the country 142 143 Japan s slow vaccination rate had been of particular concern 144 145 A simulation run by the University of Tokyo in May 2021 projected that a new wave of infections could peak in mid October if the Games went on after the existing state of emergency in Tokyo had expired 146 147 On 8 July 2021 after Tokyo had recorded 920 new COVID 19 cases its highest increase since May Prime Minister Suga declared a new state of emergency in the Tokyo area from 12 July through 22 August ending only two days before the Paralympics opening ceremony and announced that all events at venues in the area would therefore be held behind closed doors with no spectators permitted Hashimoto stated that it is extremely regrettable that the Games will be staged in a very limited manner in the face of the spread of novel coronavirus infections IOC President Thomas Bach stated that we will support any measure which is necessary to have a safe and secure Olympic and Paralympic Games for the Japanese people and all the participants 144 145 148 The announcement stated that spectators would still be allowed at events being held outside of Tokyo subject to the approval by local health authorities and the aforementioned 50 10 000 spectator limit The prefectures of Fukushima Hokkaido and Ibaraki announced that they would prohibit spectators at events held in the areas 149 The opening ceremony was expected to be limited to fewer than 1 000 VIP guests including IOC representatives and dignitaries 150 while some events did allow members of other competing delegations to occupy spectator seats as well 151 School students were invited to watch football matches in Ibaraki 152 153 On 16 July it was reported that Bach had asked Prime Minister Suga about the possibility that restrictions on spectators could be eased later on if COVID 19 conditions were to improve in Tokyo 150 However on 2 August Suga announced that all existing state of emergency declarations would be extended through 31 August and be extended to Chiba Kanagawa Saitama and parts of Osaka 154 Ticketing Edit The opening ceremony tickets were expected to range from 12 000 to 300 000 with a maximum price of 130 000 for the finals of the athletics track and field events 155 The average ticket price was 7 700 with half the tickets being sold for up to 8 000 A symbolic ticket price of 2 020 was expected for families groups resident in Japan and in conjunction with a school program 155 Tickets would be sold through 40 000 shops in Japan and by mail order to Japanese addresses through the internet 156 International guests had they been allowed would have needed to visit Japan during the sales period or arrange to buy tickets through a third party such as a travel agent 157 Tickets went on general sale in Japan in the autumn of 2019 and were expected to be sold globally from June 2020 however this plan was suspended when the Games were postponed on 24 March 2020 The Tokyo Organizing Committee confirmed that tickets already purchased would remain valid for the same sessions according to the new schedule and that refunds were also being offered 158 On 20 March 2021 it was announced that due to COVID 19 related concerns no international guests would be allowed to attend the 2020 Olympics or Paralympics This included both spectators as well as the friends and family of athletes All overseas ticketholders would be refunded 132 Hashimoto cited uncertainties surrounding international travel restrictions and goals to preserve the safety of all participants and spectators and not place a burden on the health care system 132 It was ultimately announced in July that all local spectators were not allowed to attend any events held in Tokyo Fukushima and Hokkaido 144 145 148 Cultural festival Edit A cultural program known as Nippon Festival was scheduled to coincide with the Olympics and Paralympics running from April to September 2021 as a series of streaming events held by the Tokyo Organizing Committee and other partners The events reflected the themes of Participation and Interaction Towards the Realisation of an Inclusive Society and Reconstruction of the Tohoku Region The program was either downsized or reformatted to virtual format due to the COVID 19 pandemic and the postponement of the Games 159 One of these events was a concert held on 18 July which featured J rock band Wanima choreography by dancers Aio Yamada and Tuki Takamura and the presentation of animated creatures based on illustrations embodying the thoughts and emotions of people from across the world 160 The original plans for Nippon Festival included events such as Kabuki x Opera a concert that would have featured stage actor Ichikawa Ebizō XI opera singers Anna Pirozzi and Erwin Schrott and the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra an arts and culture festival focusing on disabilities 161 162 163 164 and a special two day exhibition sumo tournament at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan shortly after the Olympics which would have differed significantly from the traditional bi monthly Honbasho tournaments and featured special commentary in English and Japanese to help explain to spectators the customs and traditions of professional sumo which are deeply rooted in the Shinto religion 165 166 The Games EditOpening ceremony Edit A scene from the Opening Ceremony at the Olympic Stadium with drones flying around and creating the official logo of the Games Main article 2020 Summer Olympics opening ceremony The opening ceremony was held on 23 July 2021 in the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo It included the traditional Parade of Nations Emperor Naruhito formally opened the Games and at the end of the torch relay the Olympic cauldron was lit by Japanese tennis player Naomi Osaka 167 For the first time in the 2020 Olympic Games it was decided that one male and one female in each country would take turns holding flags and serve as two of them 168 This was done by embodying the Agenda 2020 set during President Bach s term 169 170 For the first time in the history of the games a moment of silence was observed in the opening ceremony for the victims of the Munich massacre 171 Sports Edit See also Olympic sports Nippon Budokan Ariake Arena Ariake Gymnastics Centre Tokyo Aquatics Centre Yoyogi Gymnasium Saitama Super Arena Ryogoku Kokugikan Enoshima Yacht Harbor Kanagawa Tsurigasaki Beach Chiba The event program for the 2020 Summer Olympics was approved by the IOC executive board on 9 June 2017 IOC president Thomas Bach stated that their goal was to give the Games youthful and urban appeal and to increase the number of female participants 172 173 The Games featured 339 events in 33 different sports encompassing a total of 50 disciplines Karate sport climbing surfing and skateboarding made their Olympic debut while baseball and softball also made a one off return to the Summer Olympics for the first time since 2008 15 new events within existing sports were also added including 3 3 basketball freestyle BMX and the return of madison cycling as well as 9 new mixed events in several sports table tennis archery judo shooting 3 triathlon 4 400 m relay running and 4 100 m medley swimming 174 In the list below the number of events in each discipline is noted in parentheses 174 2020 Summer Olympic Sports programAquatics Artistic swimming 2 Diving 8 Marathon swimming 2 Swimming 35 Water polo 2 Archery 5 Athletics 48 Badminton 5 Baseball Baseball 1 Softball 1 Basketball Basketball 2 3 3 basketball 2 Boxing 13 Canoeing Slalom 4 Sprint 12 Cycling BMX freestyle 2 BMX racing 2 Mountain biking 2 Road cycling 4 Track cycling 12 Equestrian Dressage 2 Eventing 2 Jumping 2 Fencing 12 Field hockey 2 Football 2 Golf 2 Gymnastics Artistic 14 Rhythmic 2 Trampoline 2 Handball 2 Judo 15 Karate Kata 2 Kumite 6 Modern pentathlon 2 Rowing 14 Rugby sevens 2 Sailing 10 Shooting 15 Skateboarding 4 Sport climbing 2 Surfing 2 Table tennis 5 Taekwondo 8 Tennis 5 Triathlon 3 Volleyball Volleyball 2 Beach volleyball 2 Weightlifting 14 Wrestling Freestyle 12 Greco Roman 6 New sports Edit On 12 February 2013 with a remit to control the cost of the Games and ensure they are relevant to sports fans of all generations the IOC Executive Board recommended the removal of one of the 26 sports contested at the 2012 Summer Olympics leaving a vacancy which the IOC would seek to fill at the 125th IOC Session The new entrant would join golf and rugby sevens which would both debut in 2016 as part of the program of 28 core sports Five sports were shortlisted for removal including canoe field hockey modern pentathlon taekwondo and wrestling In the final round of voting by the executive board eight members voted to remove wrestling from the Olympic program Hockey and taekwondo were both tied in second with three votes each 175 176 177 The decision to drop wrestling surprised many media outlets given that the sport s role in the Olympics dates back to the ancient Olympic Games and was included in the original program for the modern Games The New York Times felt that the decision was based on the shortage of well known talent and the absence of women s events in the sport 178 179 180 Out of the shortlist from the IOC vote Wrestling was duly added to the shortlist of applicants for inclusion in the 2020 Games alongside the seven new sports that were put forward for consideration 178 On 29 May 2013 it was announced that three of the eight sports under consideration had made the final shortlist baseball softball squash and wrestling 181 The other five sports were rejected at this point karate roller sports sport climbing wakeboarding and wushu 182 At the 125th IOC Session on 8 September 2013 wrestling was chosen to be included in the Olympic program for 2020 and 2024 Wrestling secured 49 votes while baseball softball and squash received 24 votes and 22 votes respectively 183 With the adoption of the Olympic Agenda 2020 in December 2014 the IOC shifted from a sport based approach to the Olympic program to an event based program establishing that organizing committees may propose discretionary events to be included in the program to improve local interest 184 185 As a result of these changes a shortlist of eight new proposed sports was unveiled on 22 June 2015 consisting of baseball softball bowling karate roller sports sport climbing squash surfing and wushu 186 On 28 September 2015 the Tokyo Organizing Committee submitted their shortlist of five proposed sports to the IOC baseball softball karate sport climbing surfing and skateboarding 187 These five new sports were approved on 3 August 2016 by the IOC during the 129th IOC Session in Rio de Janeiro Brazil and were included in the sports program for 2020 only bringing the total number of sports at the 2020 Olympics to 33 188 189 Test events Edit A total of 56 test events were scheduled to take place in the run up to the 2020 Olympics and Paralympics Two of the events were held in late 2018 but the main test event schedule commenced in June 2019 and was originally due to be completed in May 2020 prior to the start of the Olympics Several of the events were incorporated into pre existing championships but some have been newly created specifically to serve as Olympic test events for the 2020 Summer Games 190 191 In February 2019 it was announced that the test events would be branded under the banner Ready Steady Tokyo The Tokyo Organizing Committee is responsible for 22 of the test events with the remaining events being arranged by national and international sports federations The first test event was World Sailing s World Cup Series held at Enoshima in September 2018 The last scheduled event is the Tokyo Challenge Track Meet which was originally due to take place at the Olympic Stadium on 6 May 2020 192 All test events originally scheduled to take place from 12 March 2020 onwards were postponed due to COVID 19 with the test event calendar to be reviewed during the preparations for the rescheduled Games g 193 Participating National Olympic Committees EditSee also 2020 Summer Olympics Parade of Nations The Republic of Macedonia has competed under the provisional name Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in every Summer and Winter Games since its debut in 1996 because of the disputed status of its official name The naming disputes with Greece ended in 2018 with the signing of the Prespa agreement and the country was officially renamed North Macedonia in February 2019 The new name was immediately recognized by the IOC although the Olympic Committee of North Macedonia NMOC was not officially adopted until February 2020 The NMOC sent a delegation to the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics in January 2020 but the Tokyo Games were North Macedonia s first appearance at the Summer Olympics under its new name 194 Since competing as Swaziland ten times at the Summer and Winter Olympics Eswatini made its debut under that name after the renaming of the country by the king in 2018 195 On 9 December 2019 the World Anti Doping Agency WADA banned Russia from all international sport for a period of four years after the Russian government was found to have tampered with laboratory data that it had provided to WADA in January 2019 as a condition of the Russian Anti Doping Agency being reinstated As a result of the ban WADA planned to allow individually cleared Russian athletes to take part in the 2020 Summer Olympics under a neutral banner as instigated at the 2018 Winter Olympics but they would be excluded from team sports The head of WADA s Compliance Review Committee Jonathan Taylor stated that the IOC would not be able to use the Olympic Athletes from Russia OAR designation as it did in 2018 emphasizing that neutral athletes could not be portrayed as representing a specific country 196 197 198 Russia later filed an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport CAS against WADA s decision 199 After reviewing the case on appeal CAS ruled on 17 December 2020 that the penalty placed on Russia be reduced Instead of a total ban from all sporting events the ruling allowed Russia to participate at the Olympics and other international events but the team would not be permitted to use the Russian name flag or anthem for a period of two years and must present themselves as Neutral Athlete or Neutral Team The ruling does allow for Russia to be displayed on the team uniform although it should be no more visible than the Neutral Athlete Team designation as well as the use of the Russian flag s colors within the uniform s design 200 On 19 February 2021 it was announced that Russia would compete under the acronym ROC after the name of the Russian Olympic Committee although the name of the committee itself in full could not be used to refer to the delegation The ROC team would be represented by the flag of the Russian Olympic Committee 201 On 6 April 2021 North Korea announced that it would not participate in the 2020 Summer Olympics because of COVID 19 concerns 202 This marked North Korea s first absence from the Summer Olympics since 1988 203 In September a month after the games concluded the Olympic Committee of the Democratic People s Republic of Korea was banned from participation in the 2022 Winter Olympics after they failed to participate in the Tokyo Olympics On 21 July 2021 Guinea announced it would not be sending a delegation to the Tokyo Olympics allegedly due to COVID 19 concerns though media outlets suggested that financial considerations may have been the real motivating factor 204 Guinea later reversed the decision and confirmed that it would be participating 205 Participating nations Country by team size The following 206 teams qualified including the 104 universality places guaranteed in athletics under which all 206 NOCs may send competitors regardless of qualification 206 Participating National Olympic Committees Afghanistan 5 Albania 9 Algeria 41 American Samoa 6 Andorra 2 Angola 20 Antigua and Barbuda 6 Argentina 189 Armenia 17 Aruba 3 Australia 477 Austria 75 Azerbaijan 44 Bahamas 16 Bahrain 32 Bangladesh 6 Barbados 8 Belarus 101 Belgium 121 Belize 3 Benin 7 Bermuda 2 Bhutan 4 Bolivia 5 Bosnia and Herzegovina 7 Botswana 13 Brazil 302 British Virgin Islands 3 Brunei 2 Bulgaria 42 Burkina Faso 7 Burundi 6 Cambodia 3 Cameroon 12 Canada 381 Cape Verde 6 Cayman Islands 5 Central African Republic 2 Chad 3 Chile 58 China 406 Colombia 70 Comoros 3 Cook Islands 6 Costa Rica 14 Croatia 59 Cuba 70 Cyprus 15 Czech Republic 115 Democratic Republic of the Congo 7 Denmark 108 Djibouti 4 Dominica 2 Dominican Republic 63 East Timor 3 Ecuador 48 Egypt 132 El Salvador 5 Equatorial Guinea 3 Eritrea 13 Estonia 33 Eswatini 4 Ethiopia 38 Federated States of Micronesia 3 Fiji 30 Finland 45 France 385 Gabon 5 The Gambia 4 Georgia 35 Germany 425 Ghana 14 Great Britain 376 Greece 83 Grenada 6 Guam 5 Guatemala 24 Guinea 5 Guinea Bissau 4 Guyana 7 Haiti 6 Honduras 27 Hong Kong 46 Hungary 166 Iceland 4 India 126 Indonesia 28 Iran 65 Iraq 4 Ireland 116 Israel 90 Italy 381 Ivory Coast 28 Jamaica 50 Japan 556 host Jordan 14 Kazakhstan 93 Kenya 85 Kiribati 3 Kosovo 11 Kuwait 11 Kyrgyzstan 17 Laos 4 Latvia 33 Lebanon 6 Lesotho 2 Liberia 3 Libya 4 Liechtenstein 5 Lithuania 42 Luxembourg 12 Madagascar 6 Malawi 5 Malaysia 30 Maldives 4 Mali 4 Malta 6 Marshall Islands 2 Mauritania 2 Mauritius 8 Mexico 164 Moldova 20 Monaco 6 Mongolia 43 Montenegro 33 Morocco 48 Mozambique 10 Myanmar 2 Namibia 11 Nauru 2 Nepal 5 Netherlands 278 New Zealand 213 Nicaragua 8 Niger 7 Nigeria 58 North Macedonia 8 Norway 85 Oman 5 Pakistan 10 Palau 3 Palestine 5 Panama 10 Papua New Guinea 8 Paraguay 8 Peru 35 Philippines 19 Poland 210 Portugal 92 Puerto Rico 37 Qatar 16 Refugee Olympic Team 29 Republic of the Congo 3 ROC 335 h Romania 101 Rwanda 6 Saint Kitts and Nevis 2 Saint Lucia 5 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 3 Samoa 8 San Marino 5 Sao Tome and Principe 3 Saudi Arabia 29 Senegal 9 Serbia 87 Seychelles 5 Sierra Leone 4 Singapore 23 Slovakia 41 Slovenia 53 Solomon Islands 3 Somalia 2 South Africa 177 South Korea 237 South Sudan 2 Spain 321 Sri Lanka 9 Sudan 5 Suriname 3 Sweden 134 Switzerland 107 Syria 6 Chinese Taipei 68 Tajikistan 11 Tanzania 3 Thailand 41 Togo 4 Tonga 6 Trinidad and Tobago 23 Tunisia 63 Turkey 108 Turkmenistan 9 Tuvalu 2 Uganda 25 Ukraine 155 United Arab Emirates 5 United States 613 Uruguay 11 Uzbekistan 64 Vanuatu 3 Venezuela 44 Vietnam 18 Virgin Islands 4 Yemen 5 Zambia 26 Zimbabwe 5 Number of athletes by National Olympic Committee Edit 11 420 athletes from 206 NOCs 2 207 Ranking NOC Athletes1 United States 6132 Japan Host 5563 Australia 4784 Germany 4255 China 4066 France 3987 Canada 3818 Italy 3819 Great Britain 37610 ROC 33511 Spain 32112 Brazil 30113 Netherlands 27814 South Korea 23715 New Zealand 21116 Poland 21017 Argentina 18918 South Africa 17719 Hungary 16620 Mexico 16221 Ukraine 15522 Sweden 13423 Egypt 13324 India 12225 Belgium 12126 Ireland 11627 Czech Republic 11528 Turkey 10829 Switzerland 10730 Denmark 10731 Romania 10132 Belarus 10133 Kazakhstan 9334 Portugal 9235 Israel 9036 Serbia 8637 Kenya 8538 Greece 8339 Norway 7540 Colombia 7041 Cuba 7042 Chinese Taipei 6843 Iran 6644 Uzbekistan 6545 Dominican Republic 6246 Tunisia 6247 Austria 6048 Nigeria 6049 Croatia 5950 Chile 5851 Slovenia 5352 Jamaica 5053 Morocco 5054 Ecuador 4855 Hong Kong 4656 Finland 4557 Algeria 4458 Venezuela 4459 Azerbaijan 4460 Mongolia 4361 Thailand 4262 Bulgaria 4263 Lithuania 4264 Slovakia 4165 Ethiopia 3866 Puerto Rico 3767 Georgia 3568 Peru 3569 Montenegro 3470 Latvia 3371 Estonia 3372 Bahrain 3273 Fiji 3074 Malaysia 3075 Refugee Olympic Team 2976 Saudi Arabia 2977 Indonesia 2878 Ivory Coast 2879 Zambia 2680 Uganda 2581 Guatemala 2482 Singapore 2383 Honduras 2284 Trinidad and Tobago 2285 Angola 2086 Moldova 2087 Philippines 1988 Vietnam 1889 Armenia 1790 Bahamas 1691 Kyrgyzstan 1692 Qatar 1693 Cyprus 1594 Costa Rica 1495 Ghana 1496 Jordan 1497 Botswana 1398 Eritrea 1399 Cameroon 12100 Luxembourg 12101 Kosovo 11102 Kuwait 11103 Namibia 11104 Tajikistan 11105 Uruguay 11106 Mozambique 10107 Pakistan 10108 Panama 10109 Albania 9110 Senegal 9111 Sri Lanka 9112 Turkmenistan 9113 Barbados 8114 Mauritius 8115 Nicaragua 8116 North Macedonia 8117 Papua New Guinea 8118 Paraguay 8119 Samoa 8120 Benin 7121 Bosnia and Herzegovina 7122 Burkina Faso 7123 Democratic Republic of the Congo 7124 Guyana 7125 Niger 7126 American Samoa 6127 Antigua and Barbuda 6128 Bangladesh 6129 Burundi 6130 Cape Verde 6131 Cook Islands 6132 Grenada 6133 Haiti 6134 Lebanon 6135 Madagascar 6136 Malta 6137 Monaco 6138 Rwanda 6139 Syria 6140 Tonga 6141 Afghanistan 5142 Bolivia 5143 Cayman Islands 5144 El Salvador 5145 Gabon 5146 Guam 5147 Guinea 5148 Liechtenstein 5149 Malawi 5150 Nepal 5151 Oman 5152 Palestine 5153 Saint Lucia 5154 San Marino 5155 Seychelles 5156 Sudan 5157 United Arab Emirates 5158 Yemen 5159 Zimbabwe 5160 Bhutan 4161 Djibouti 4162 Eswatini 4163 The Gambia 4164 Guinea Bissau 4165 Iceland 4166 Iraq 4167 Laos 4168 Libya 4169 Maldives 4170 Mali 4171 Sierra Leone 4172 Togo 4173 Virgin Islands 4174 Aruba 3175 Belize 3176 British Virgin Islands 3177 Cambodia 3178 Chad 3179 Comoros 3180 East Timor 3181 Equatorial Guinea 3182 Federated States of Micronesia 3183 Kiribati 3184 Liberia 3185 Myanmar 3186 Palau 3187 Republic of the Congo 3188 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 3189 Sao Tome and Principe 3190 Solomon Islands 3191 Suriname 3192 Tanzania 3193 Vanuatu 3194 Andorra 2195 Bermuda 2196 Brunei 2197 Central African Republic 2198 Dominica 2199 Lesotho 2200 Marshall Islands 2201 Mauritania 2202 Nauru 2203 Somalia 2204 Saint Kitts and Nevis 2205 South Sudan 2206 Tuvalu 2Total 11 483Medal summary EditSee also 2020 Summer Olympics medal table and List of 2020 Summer Olympics medal winners Host nation Japan 2020 Summer Olympics medal table 208 RankNOCGoldSilverBronzeTotal1 United States3941331132 China383219893 Japan 271417584 Great Britain222022645 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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