Japan surf star hoping to avoid ‘heartbreaking’ Olympic cancellation

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TOKYO, March 19, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Japan’s top surfer Kanoa Igarashi is
already seeing his training for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics hit by the
coronavirus outbreak, but he’s still hoping a “heartbreaking” cancellation
can be avoided.

“The travel ban is what’s affecting me the most. Not being able to go
anywhere. That’s the main one,” the 22-year-old told AFP in an interview on
Wednesday from Los Angeles.

“Surfing is a sport where we have to travel a lot to train in different
types of conditions and types of waves in the world.”

“For me as an athlete, as a possible Olympian, it’s affecting training,”
added Igarashi, who was born and raised in the United States but represents
Japan.

The bleach-blond Igarashi is a gold medal hope for his home country at the
2020 Games, where surfing will make its debut.

But the global coronavirus pandemic has raised growing questions about
whether the Games can open as scheduled on July 24.

Organisers have scrapped qualifiers, scaled back test events and altered
the Olympic torch relay. On Tuesday, the deputy head of Japan’s Olympic
committee announced he had contracted the virus.

The waves of bad news have left athletes around the world in limbo, with
lockdowns and quarantines making it increasingly hard for them to train for
Games that might not even take place.

“It’s a little bit difficult to try to motivate (myself), preparing for
something that might possibly not be there,” Igarashi conceded.

“It’s a time to be a little bit unsure and worried.”

But he said the chance to represent his sport at its first outing at the
Games was keeping him going.

“I feel really proud to be part of surfing right now. That’s my
motivation,” he said.

“The goal has been so clear for the last two years for me that I’m going
to keep going the same way I have been preparing for the Olympics,” he said.

– ‘Out of my control’ –

Surfing will feature as part of a drive to make the Games relevant to
younger audiences, after being included for the first time along with
skateboarding and sport climbing.

The surfing competition will be held in Chiba, northeast of Tokyo and
Igarashi said he felt he would be representing the sport as a whole.

“It’s such a big opportunity for us as a sport,” said Igarashi, whose
backers include the Kinoshita Group conglomerate.

“That’s what motivates me to want to do my best and bring my best
performance out and to win the gold medal not just for my country, Japan, but
also for the world of surfing.”

Organisers have insisted preparation for the Games continues despite the
spread of the new coronavirus, which has infected more than 200,000 people
and killed over 8,000 worldwide.

On Tuesday, the International Olympic Committee said it was not the time
for “drastic decisions” on a possible postponement or cancellation of the
Games.

Some athletes have hit back at the IOC for its stance, pointing to
cancellation of qualifiers and the impossibility of training as the world
hunkers down against the virus.

Igarashi said a cancellation of the Games would be “very heartbreaking for
many people”.

But the surfer, who has already provisionally qualified for the Games,
said he was confident the IOC would make the right call.

“I know the IOC will think about the health of the athletes and also doing
what’s right,” he said.

“Obviously, everybody wants to compete. Everybody in the Olympics, they
want to compete deep down inside.”

But he said, since the decision was “out of my control” he wouldn’t focus
on it.

“Whatever happens, everything happens for reason,” he said.

“I’m trying to stay positive.”