Australian Olympic Committee Chief Executive Matt Carroll, left, and Australian Team Chef de Mission for Tokyo 2020 Ian Chesterman. Reuters
Australian Olympic Committee Chief Executive Matt Carroll, left, and Australian Team Chef de Mission for Tokyo 2020 Ian Chesterman. Reuters
Australian Olympic Committee Chief Executive Matt Carroll, left, and Australian Team Chef de Mission for Tokyo 2020 Ian Chesterman. Reuters
Australian Olympic Committee Chief Executive Matt Carroll, left, and Australian Team Chef de Mission for Tokyo 2020 Ian Chesterman. Reuters

Australia asks athletes to prepare for Olympics in 2021


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The Australian Olympic Committee has asked its athletes to prepare for an Olympics in 2021.

Ian Chesterman, Australia’s team leader for Tokyo, on Monday said “It’s clear the games can’t be held in July” because of the coronavirus pandemic.

“Our athletes have been magnificent in their positive attitude to training and preparing, but the stress and uncertainty has been extremely challenging for them,” Chesterman said in a statement. “They have also shouldered the burden of concern for their peers around the world. That has been a consistent message to me.”

AOC chief executive Matt Carroll said Australia had athletes based overseas and training in central locations around the country and “with travel and other restrictions this becomes an untenable situation.”

The Australian committee’s executive board agreed unanimously in an emergency teleconference Monday that “an Australian team could not be assembled in the changing circumstances at home and abroad” and decided to notify athletes as soon as possible.

The Canadian Olympic Committee had earlier said it won’t send athletes to the Tokyo Games unless they’re postponed for a year.

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Japan welcomes Olympic flame

  • People wearing protective face masks queue as they try to watch the Olympic cauldron during the Tokyo 2020 Olympics Flame of Recovery tour at Sendai Station, Miyagi prefecture, on Saturday. Kyodo/Reuters
    People wearing protective face masks queue as they try to watch the Olympic cauldron during the Tokyo 2020 Olympics Flame of Recovery tour at Sendai Station, Miyagi prefecture, on Saturday. Kyodo/Reuters
  • People queue as they try to watch the Olympic cauldron during the Tokyo 2020 Olympics Flame of Recovery tour at Sendai Station, Miyagi prefecture, on Saturday. Kyodo/Reuters
    People queue as they try to watch the Olympic cauldron during the Tokyo 2020 Olympics Flame of Recovery tour at Sendai Station, Miyagi prefecture, on Saturday. Kyodo/Reuters
  • The Olympic flame on a cauldron is displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, on Friday. EPA
    The Olympic flame on a cauldron is displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, on Friday. EPA
  • A family takes a selfie with the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park. EPA
    A family takes a selfie with the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park. EPA
  • A woman peeks through a fence surrounding the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Saturday. AP
    A woman peeks through a fence surrounding the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Saturday. AP
  • A group of students from Uruguay pose for a souvenir picture on the Olympic Rings set outside the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Saturday. AP
    A group of students from Uruguay pose for a souvenir picture on the Olympic Rings set outside the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Saturday. AP
  • People stop to take a picture of one of the main entrances of the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Saturday. AP
    People stop to take a picture of one of the main entrances of the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on Saturday. AP
  • A family takes a selfie with the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park on Friday. EPA
    A family takes a selfie with the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park on Friday. EPA
  • People in a queue to see the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park. EPA
    People in a queue to see the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park. EPA
  • People crowd around the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park. EPA
    People crowd around the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park. EPA
  • A family takes a selfie with the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park. EPA
    A family takes a selfie with the Olympic flame on a cauldron displayed at Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Recovery Memorial Park. EPA
  • A family takes a selfie with the Olympic flame. EPA
    A family takes a selfie with the Olympic flame. EPA

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Until late last week the Australian committee was supporting the IOC’s plans to go ahead as scheduled with the Games, but there’s been considerable backlash since then from athletes and some sports and more severe travel restrictions imposed by Australian federal and state governments.

“Moving the world’s biggest sporting event, which involves so many sports, athletes, the world’s media, sponsors and the rest … is not easy to do,” Carroll said. “Last Thursday was a different set of circumstances to standing here today. There has been dramatic change in our own country and across the world."