The International Olympic Committee has paved the way for the Tokyo Games to be postponed after giving itself a four-week deadline to consider its options. While the IOC has emphatically ruled out cancelling the Olympics, it will consider a scaled down Games as well as delaying them for a few months or, more likely, a year.

Only last week the IOC president, Thomas Bach, insisted that there was “No Plan B”, but it has since softened its stance amid mounting criticism by athletes amid the coronavirus crisis. The IOC will now examine several scenarios over the next month, but it is thought that deferring to the summer of 2021 is the most likely option.

On Sunday evening World Athletics became the first major sport to call for the Olympics to be postponed with its president, Seb Coe, writing to Bach to tell him that Tokyo 2020 taking place as planned in July and August is “neither feasible nor desirable” amid growing international concern over the pandemic.



“I write to you to request that the Games be moved,” Coe wrote, pointing out the impact of the Covid-19 outbreak meant there was no longer a level playing for athletes. He also warned there could be increased risk of athletes suffering injury and said that athletes could put their health and the health of their families at risk by continuing to train.



Meanwhile the sports minister Nigel Huddleston also said he welcomed the news that the IOC was seriously considering postponing the Olympic Games. “The health and safety of athletes, sports fans and officials due to work at the Games is absolutely paramount,” he added. “We would welcome the IOC making a definitive decision soon, to bring clarity to all those involved.”

Earlier, in a statement released after its executive board met on Sunday the IOC confirmed it would look at “modifying existing operational plans for the Games to go ahead on 24 July 2020, and also for changes to the start date of the Games”.

The statement added: “On the one hand, there are significant improvements in Japan where the people are warmly welcoming the Olympic flame. This could strengthen the IOC’s confidence in the Japanese hosts that the IOC could, with certain safety restrictions, organise the Olympic Games in the country whilst respecting its principle of safeguarding the health of everyone involved.

“On the other hand, there is a dramatic increase in cases and new outbreaks of Covid-19 in different countries on different continents. This led the executive board to the conclusion that the IOC needs to take the next step in its scenario planning.”

However, the IOC stressed that any delay to the Tokyo Olympics would not be straightforward. “A number of critical venues needed for the Games could potentially not be available any more. The situations with millions of nights already booked in hotels is extremely difficult to handle, and the international sports calendar for at least 33 Olympic sports would have to be adapted. These are just a few of many, many more challenges.”

Several countries have already called for the Games to be postponed, including the Brazilian Olympic Committee which cited “the notorious worsening of the Covid-19 pandemic” and “the consequent difficulty for athletes to maintain their best competitive level”.

In a letter to Olympic organisations, Bach said the health of everyone involved in the Games was the most important factor. “Human lives take precedence over everything, including the staging of the Games,” he said. “The IOC wants to be part of the solution. Therefore we have made it our leading principle to safeguard the health of everyone involved.”

Meanwhile UK Sport, the British Olympic Association and the British Paralympic Association have announced they will hold a conference call on Tuesday to discuss whether the Olympics should be delayed.

A number of sports including athletics, swimming and boxing are in favour of postponement because of the impact coronavirus has had on their training regimes – and they are supported by the BOA.

In a statement welcoming the IOC announcement the BOA chairman, Sir Hugh Robertson, urged rapid decision‑making for the sake of athletes facing significant uncertainty. “Restrictions now in place have removed the ability of athletes to compete on a level playing field and it simply does not seem appropriate to continue on the present course towards the Olympic Games in the current environment.”