Almost three-quarters of the 300 US athletes who took part in a virtual town hall with US Olympic officials support delaying the 2020 Tokyo Games, USA Today reported yesterday.
The poll followed calls to postpone the Olympics due to the global coronavirus pandemic by USA Swimming and USA Track & Field — the federations set to send the most American athletes to Japan in an expected delegation of more than 600 competitors.
In all, 70 percent of the athletes supported a postponement with another 23 percent saying it would depend on the consequences of such a move, according to details of the weekend poll given to the newspaper by a member of the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) Athletes Advisory Council who participated in the meeting.
When asked if they supported the Tokyo Olympics going ahead as scheduled from July 24-August 9, 41 percent replied they did not back that idea with 34 percent saying the matter was complicated and more information was needed.
The two-hour meeting also included athletes being asked when a decision should be made on what to do with the Tokyo Olympics, with a third saying the choice needed to come as soon as the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has enough information.
Almost a quarter wanted a decision no later than April 15, while 18 percent wanted an immediate decision.
USOPC board chair Susanne Lyons said on Friday her group will defer to the IOC as it gathers information from around the world.
“At this point in time, we do not feel that it’s necessary for us to insist that they make a decision,” Lyons said.
Nathan Adrian, a five-time US Olympic relay swim champion, says he doesn’t want to compete under current conditions.
“I would have real moral objections, if the situation was the same as it was today, to competing,” Adrian told USA Today.
US hammer thrower Gwen Berry told the newspaper she worries over the IOC’s decision.
“I feel the IOC is being really, really selfish in trying to push it,” she said. “And there’s no need to push it.”
Some US athletes told the newspaper about the disruption to training that safety measures to avoid spreading coronavirus have caused, including six-time US all-around men’s gymnastics champion Sam Mikulak, who has struggled to find access to equipment to train upon.
“I’ve had a plan for four years to do Olympic-level routines, and right now I’d have to drop back to my basic routines,” Mikulak said.
“It’s really throwing a four-year preparation out the window if they keep doing this.”

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