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Tokyo 2020 Olympics Notebook: 'The oddest Games ever...'

Sky Sports reporter Geraint Hughes sets the scene in Japan as Tokyo 2020 edges ever closer...

By Geraint Hughes

Last Updated: 20/07/21 12:57pm

The Tokyo 2020 opening ceremony is due to get underway on Friday, July 23
The Tokyo 2020 opening ceremony is due to get underway on Friday, July 23

"The oddest Games ever…" That was a throwaway comment by an IOC Member who doesn't want me to reveal their name, but having been in Tokyo now for over a week, I understand exactly what they meant.

For any athlete from Team GB arriving in Japan, the experience will be so removed from what those who have been to recent Games will remember. And that 'oddness' begins before anyone leaves the UK: three PCR tests, and stacks of paperwork just to board a flight on which you'll have to wear a mask for 12 hours.

  • Six Team GB athletes isolating after Covid contact

Then arrival in Tokyo. Whether you are the Head of an Olympic Team, a multiple Gold medallist or a first-timer, a process that lasts between three and four hours begins.

It's laborious, constant checking of forms and another PCR test where you wait for the result in an unused terminal building at Tokyo airport. If you return a negative test, they let you into Japan.

However, the testing and restrictions don't end there - a three-day quarantine begins during which you can only leave your hotel room or apartment for 15 minutes a day.

After that, you're under a 14-day quarantine ruling where your whereabouts must be accounted for at all times. On top of that, two Apps must be downloaded to a smartphone - one requires daily health questions and temperature checks, the other tracks you.

Sky Sports News' Geraint Hughes reports from Tokyo after the first two athletes in the Olympic village test positive for Covid-19

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Sky Sports News' Geraint Hughes reports from Tokyo after the first two athletes in the Olympic village test positive for Covid-19
Sky Sports News' Geraint Hughes reports from Tokyo after the first two athletes in the Olympic village test positive for Covid-19
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So it's a strange environment before anyone has got close to competing. For the athletes and Team GB in particular, there is a feeling that Tokyo is just a more extreme version of the way they have been living, training and competing for the last 15 months. I've lost track of how many athletes just sigh and say, "well, it's the new normal isn't' it?"

What Team GB athletes won't lack is the ability to prepare for competition at Tokyo 2020.

The facilities that have been secured in Japan are the envy of most Olympic Teams, even the mighty USA.

Essentially, Team GB preparations revolve around three campuses. The home of J-League football club Kawasaki Frontale - Todoroki Stadium - is where the women's footballers, rugby 7s and athletics squads will train, while Yokohama's impressive aquatics facility and Keio University provide world-class sports facilities across many disciplines.

On top of Covid, athletes have to counter and prepare for the climate in Tokyo. In July and August, the weather is hot - very hot - and humid. Temperatures will regularly creep towards the mid 30-degree range while humidity levels are high.

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So the backroom staff at Team GB come into their own. Medics, physios and sports scientists have been putting together plans for months, even years.

From heat chambers to ice-vests to sweat tracking where an individual athlete's sweat loss is measured to determine what exactly the body needs replenishing with, it's all covered. Team GB have had a reputation among the elite sporting nations at Olympic and Paralympic Games for two decades as one of the foremost in research and resources.

Despite Covid and the climate, though, every athlete I've been able to chat with so far in Tokyo is glad to be here.

Not one has said they would rather be back at home or expressed a concern to either Team GB management or the British Olympic Association. The mood is good, optimism is high and for many, Tokyo is their chance to shine.

Of the 375 athletes who will represent Team GB at the Games, the vast majority have been selected because they are 'medal competitive', meaning their top performance on paper should get them to a final or top-six finish. Other athletes have been picked with potential in mind, given the Paris 2024 Olympics are now just three years away.

Also See:

  • Tokyo 2020 Olympics latest news
  • Two athletes test positive for Covid-19 at Olympic village
Olympic 100m breaststroke champion, Adam Peaty, has set himself an ambitious target of winning three gold medals and breaking a world record at Tokyo 2020

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Olympic 100m breaststroke champion, Adam Peaty, has set himself an ambitious target of winning three gold medals and breaking a world record at Tokyo 2020
Olympic 100m breaststroke champion, Adam Peaty, has set himself an ambitious target of winning three gold medals and breaking a world record at Tokyo 2020
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The fact that most Team GB athletes are competitive on the world stage reduces the pressure they might feel from any medal targets. For these Games, there is no target set by UK Sport who fund elite Olympic and Paralympic sports with taxpayer and lottery money.

Instead, a medal range for Tokyo is in place, a range that expects Team GB to win between 45 to 70 medals. A realistic range? Well, Team GB don't seem to be quivering in their boots to achieve that range, which is the best marker I can take to show that despite Covid and the climate, Team GB are ready to perform in Tokyo.

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