Sport

OLYMPICS

Scandal-hit Tokyo looks to final torchbearer to mend Games’ battered image

Scandal-hit Tokyo looks to final torchbearer to mend Games’ battered image
People gather at the 'Fire of Recovery' for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Torch exhibition in Fukushima, Japan on 24 March 2020. (Photo: EPA-EFE/JIJI PRESS)

Battered by scandal on the eve of the opening ceremony, the 2020 Olympics organisers have the chance to patch up the Games’ image when they reveal today who will carry the Olympic flame for the final few steps to light the stadium’s cauldron.

The opening ceremony starts at 1pm South African time

The identity of the final torchbearer is one of the Games’ most closely held secrets, yet speculation has swirled for months around well-known athletes including Naomi Osaka, the four-time Grand Slam tennis champion, whose superstar status could also draw attention away from the string of gaffes by organisers in the build-up to the Games.

The event’s director was fired on the eve of the opening ceremony after comments he made about the Holocaust in a 1990s comedy sketch resurfaced and sparked a public outcry.

Days earlier, the ceremony’s composer stepped down after comments he made in interviews in the 1990s about abusing and bullying classmates were circulated on social media.

And former Tokyo 2020 chief Yoshiro Mori was forced to quit early in 2021 after he made sexist comments about women talking too much.

Japan has also come under fire for holding the Olympics in the midst of the pandemic. Two-thirds of people said they doubted that Japan could host a safe Games, with more than half saying they opposed the Olympics going ahead, according to a recent poll.

Tokyo 2020 organisers said three more athletes had tested positive for Covid-19, bringing the total to 11 since 2 July. All Olympic-related cases, including officials and media, rose by 19 to 106.

Sporting icons

Naomi Osaka, 23

With an Haitian father and Japanese mother, Osaka represents a more modern and diverse Japan and is a voice supporting racial and gender equality in a ceremony where many countries are promoting athletes with a message of diversity. Named by Time magazine as one of the most influential people in the world for the past two years, she is Japan’s most recognisable athlete.

Ichiro Suzuki, 47

An icon of Japanese baseball, Suzuki won fame both in Japan and the US as a player of the Seattle Mariners and New York Yankees. His move to the US garnered criticism at home, but he won over sceptics with a career that saw him in 2016 reach 3,000 hits, a feat only a handful of players have achieved. Known for his focus and hard work, he is often held up as a symbol for children to aspire to.

Shohei Ohtani, 27

The baseball all-rounder is the latest Japanese player to score big in the US after joining the Los Angeles Angels in 2018. Earning the nickname Shotime, the left-hand batter and right-handed pitcher is known for his good looks and cool demeanour.

Tadahiro Nomura, 46

The judo champion, and son of an Olympic gold medallist, began learning the Japanese martial art when he was a child. Nomura picked up his first Olympic gold medal in Atlanta in 1996, followed by his second in 2000 and a third four years later to become the first person to take three consecutive judo golds.

Kosuke Kitajima, 38

The two-time breaststroke gold medallist and former world record holder retired in 2016, but remains a popular figure in Japan, appearing on television as a commentator and celebrity. He is also the general manager of the Tokyo Frogs, a professional swimming team that competes around the world and is active in promoting swimming lessons for children.

Saori Yoshida, 38

An Olympic wrestling champion who also won 13 straight world championships, she is admired for dedication to a sport she began at the age of three with a strict training schedule overseen by her father, a one-time national champion. She is known for her lobbying to keep wrestling as an event in the 2020 Games after the International Olympic Committee said it was considering dropping the sport.

Recovery

Yet some commentators have called for a non-celebrity who would represent the country’s recovery from the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that caused the Fukushima nuclear disaster, devastated Japan’s northeast coastline and killed nearly 20,000 people.

Japan made a similar choice in 1964 – the last time Tokyo hosted the Games – when Yoshinori Sakai, a 19-year-old college athlete born in Hiroshima on 6 August 1945, the day of the US atomic bombing, brought the flame into the stadium.

Whoever carries the torch on Friday, the new stadium, built on the same site as the one used for the 1964 Games, will be nearly empty, with only about 950 people, mostly officials and journalists, watching in the stands.

Yet the torchbearer’s face will probably be seen by hundreds of millions of people watching around the world.

As the hours ticked down to the event which starts at 8pm Tokyo time (1pm South African time), Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and Emperor Naruhito met a series dignitaries who will attend the ceremony, including US First Lady Jill Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron.

Close to the stadium, surrounded by metal fences and other barriers, some Japanese gathered in scorching heat to snap pictures.

“I was looking forward to the Olympics. I even had tickets,” said 29-year-old Ryusuke Kawano. “But there’s this coronavirus situation, so half of me wants to see [the matches], and the other half of me thinks there’s nothing I can do about it.”

Le Clos and Mbande to carry South African flag

Olympic gold medallist Chad le Clos and national women’s hockey goalkeeper Phumelela Mbande have been named as the flagbearers for Team SA at Friday’s opening ceremony.

In a positive break from tradition, the International Olympic Committee confirmed in March 2020 that each national federation could nominate one female and one male athlete as flagbearers. Reuters/DM

 

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