Japan Postpones Sumo Tournaments Due to COVID-19 Spread

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Japan Sumo Wrestlers

Japan has postponed two sumo tournaments scheduled for later this year. The Japan Sumo Association on Friday said that the latest sporting events to fall victim to the coronavirus spreading in Japan.

The JSA further said that the next sumo “basho” or tournament, scheduled to open on May 10 in Tokyo — host city of the next Olympics, which have been postponed to 2021 — will be delayed by two weeks. The July basho suffered the same fate.

A spokesman told AFP that the JSA is yet to decide whether the tournaments would be held without spectators.

“Today we just rescheduled the two tournaments, but we can’t say anything more as the situation is changing day by day,” he said.

The spring basho, held last month in Osaka, took place without a crowd, the wrestlers surrounded by just a handful of judges in the empty arena.

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It was however broadcast live on national TV, allowing viewers to hear sounds normally drowned out by the crowd, such as the wrestlers slapping their bellies and scraping their feet on the clay ring.

During that tournament, all wrestlers had their temperature checked twice a day as some rituals were amended, including the traditional ladle of water that a winning wrestler offers to the next in the ring.

Sumo stars have been taking precautions at fan events, refraining from shaking hands and wearing surgical masks, while a ceremonial visit to a shrine was cancelled.

The no-spectator sumo tournament came after the government asked operators of sports and entertainment venues to consider cancelling or postponing mass gatherings to help prevent the spread of the virus.

Earlier this week, organisers said the Tokyo Olympics would begin on July 23 next year after the coronavirus forced the historic decision to postpone the 2020 Games until 2021.

Japan has seen a relatively low number of coronavirus cases, but a recent spike in Tokyo has fuelled speculation that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will soon declare a state of emergency.

 

AFP

 

Yetunde Adegoke