SASCOC will have to pick Tokyo Olympics team again, says IOC

Athletes already qualified for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics will need to be picked again by their respective National Olympic Committees, said IOC Sports Director, Kit McConnell. Photo: Jean-Christophe Bott/Keystone via AP

Athletes already qualified for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics will need to be picked again by their respective National Olympic Committees, said IOC Sports Director, Kit McConnell. Photo: Jean-Christophe Bott/Keystone via AP

Published Apr 2, 2020

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ATHENS – Athletes already qualified for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics will need to be picked again by their respective National Olympic Committees to compete at the postponed Games in 2021, the International Olympic Committee said on Thursday.

The IOC and Japanese government succumbed to intense pressure from athletes and sporting bodies around the world last week by agreeing to postpone the Games by a year to 2021 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

"All of the qualifications that have been achieved by National Olympic Committees and individual athletes remain in place," IOC Sports director Kit McConnell said in a conference call.

"Any athlete needs to be individually selected because they represent their NOC. In all sports the NOC retains the right to select the athletes."

Some 57% of the 11,000 athletes had already qualified for the Tokyo Games before qualification tournaments were scrapped as the virus spread in recent months.

Sascoc will have the final say on who qualifies for the Tokyo Olympics. Photo: AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko

The IOC is also efforting to make the athletes' village available again after it was planned to be sold off as apartments after this year's Games.

"The village is part of the first priority," the IOC's Olympic Games Executive Director Christophe Dubi said. "The village is the home away from home, a fantastic development. It is one of the very first tasks to re-secure this fantastic property. Yes, it is absolutely on that urgency list".

Dubi said those first priority venues, including the dozens of sports venues, convention sites and thousands of hotel rooms, would need to be re-secured quickly.

"All of this has to be re-secured for one year later," Dubi said. "It is a massive undertaking to get back to fundamentals." He added that the IOC planned to have finalised talks for those "priority" locations in a matter of weeks.

Reuters

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