From Putin to the podiums, the Winter Olympics 2022 aren’t short of stories
With a cast of around 3,000 athletes representing 90 nations, there are certain to be an abundance of stories when the Beijing Games begin this week.
Before the action has even started, though, there are numerous questions hanging over the Winter Olympics.
Whether they are an inevitable consequence of an influx of arrivals, confirmation of the fears that had led some to call for a rethink on the Games or both, the latest figures from Beijing have undoubtedly shown a rise in local cases – the highest total for 18 months has been reported in the week ahead of the start of the Olympics.
There are said to be 54 new cases across China, including 13 athletes or Games personnel tested at the airport, and officials have responded by introducing lockdowns in some hotspots and announcing that two million people will be tested.
Games organizers are keeping athletes in a ‘closed-loop’ bubble in a bid to minimize infections, with everyone expected to wear masks and isolate if they test positive until they have passed two negative tests within 24 hours. Athletes are surely praying that they will not have traveled to China – requiring chartered flights amid tight restrictions – only to test positive and have to sit out the events they have trained so hard for.
Numerous hopefuls have endured chaos to their travel plans or had to abandon their hopes of competing entirely as a result of positive tests. The International Olympic Committee said in January that it had adapted its protocols to give competitors who were facing test-related delays the best chance of taking part.