2020 Summer Paralympics

The 2020 Summer Paralympics (Japanese: 東京2020パラリンピック競技大会, Hepburn: Tōkyō Nisennijū Pararinpikku Kyōgi Taikai) are an upcoming major international multi-sport event for athletes with disabilities governed by the International Paralympic Committee. Scheduled as the 16th Summer Paralympic Games, they are scheduled to be held in Tokyo, Japan between 24 August and 5 September 2021. Originally due to take place between 25 August and 6 September 2020. On 24 March 2020, the IOC and the Tokyo Organizing Committee officially announced that the 2020 Summer Olympics and 2020 Summer Paralympics would be postponed to 2021, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, marking the first time that the Paralympics has been postponed. They will still be publicly marketed as the 2020 Summer Paralympics, even with the change in scheduling to one year later.[1] The new dates were later confirmed as 24 August to 5 September 2021.[2]

XVI Paralympic Games
Host cityTokyo, Japan
MottoUnited by Emotion (Japanese: 感動で、私たちはひとつになる, Hepburn: Kandō de, watashi-tachi wa hitotsu ni naru) (only the English version will be used during the Games)
Athletes4400 (expected)
Events540 in 22 sports
Opening24 August 2021
Closing5 September 2021
Opened by
Emperor of Japan (expected)
StadiumNew National Stadium
Summer
Rio 2016 Paris 2024
Winter
PyeongChang 2018 Beijing 2022

This will mark the second time Tokyo has hosted the Paralympics, as they were first hosted there in 1964 alongside the 1964 Summer Olympics.

These Games will see the introduction of badminton and taekwondo to the Paralympic programme, replacing sailing and 7-a-side football.

Bids

As part of a formal agreement between the International Paralympic Committee and the International Olympic Committee first established in 2001, the winner of the bid for the 2020 Summer Olympics must also host the 2020 Summer Paralympics.[3] After the second round of voting, which followed a tie-breaker, the 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics were awarded to Tokyo at the 125th IOC Session,

2020 Summer Olympics host city election[4]
City NOC name Round 1 Runoff Round 2
Tokyo  Japan 42 60
Istanbul  Turkey 26 49 36
Madrid  Spain 26 45

Preparations

Transport

Ahead of the 2016 Summer Paralympics closing ceremony, Governor of Tokyo Yuriko Koike advocated for the city to improve its accessibility as a legacy project for the Games. She cited narrow roadways with no sidewalks, and buildings constructed with narrow doorways and low ceilings, as challenges that needed to be overcome. In particular, she called for a transition to underground power lines to facilitate the widening of roads.[5][6][7]

Volunteers

In September 2018 applications to be volunteers as the Olympic and Paralympic Games were released. By January 2019 186,101 application had been received. Interviews to whittle the numbers down began in February 2019 and training taking place in October 2019.[8] The volunteers at the venues will be known as "Field Cast" and the volunteers in the city will be known as "City Cast." These names were chosen from a shortlist of four out of an original 149 pairs of names. The other shortlisted names were "Shining Blue and Shining Blue Tokyo", "Games Anchor and City Anchor" and "Games Force and City Force." The names were chosen by the people who had applied to be volunteers at the games.[9]

Medals

In January 2016 the task force that was created to look at the legacy of the games recommended that Tokyo follows Rio's lead and make the medals from recycled materials.[10] while a petition created in July 2016 calling for the medals to be made from recycled material had 10,000 signatures by October 2016.[11] The medals for the 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics will be constructed using recycled metals; the organizing committee began an electronics recycling program to obtain the materials, with boxes for people to donate old mobile phones appearing from April 2017.[12][13] Organisers needed to collect eight tonnes of metal – 40 kilograms of gold, 4,290 kg of silver and 2,944 kg of bronze in order to make the medals for the Olympic and Paralympic games.[14] In May 2018 the organising committee noted that they had a shortage of silver needed for the medals.[15] In November 2018 organisers announced that they had reached their 2,700 kilograms target of bronze and expected that the required amount of gold and silver would be reached by March 2019 for the medals.[16][17] In December 2017 the organising committee launched a competition with the winner having their design on the medals.[18]

The medals have a folding Japanese fan motif on the reverse; the pivot point of the fan "represents Para athletes bringing people together regardless of their nationality or ethnicity". Textured motifs in between leaves of the fan visually and tactually illustrate rocks, flowers, wood, leaves, and water. An inset contains the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics logo consisting of the checkerboard hand fan emblem, "Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games" in English, and the IPC symbol. The obverse has a similar folding fan pattern, but without the interleaving textures. Crossing ribbons contain "Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games" in English and "Tokyo 2020" in English Braille, and an inset shows the IPC symbol. The side is engraved with the name of the event, along with one, two, or three circular indentations to distinguish gold, silver, and bronze medals respectively. To aid those with visual impairments, the ribbons also contain corresponding silicone convex dots so the medals can be easily identified by touch. They are accompanied by a bag and an indigo wooden carrying box made from Japanese ash.[19][20]

Torch

Aluminium taken from temporary housing in Fukushima will be used to make the torches for the Olympic and Paralympic flames. More than 10,000 pieces of aluminium will be used and organisers contacted local authorities to see which houses were no longer being used.[17] In December 2018, organisers announced that the slogan of the relay would be "Share Your Light".

Torch relay

The details of the torch relay route were announced on 21 November 2019, there will be a Heritage Flame Celebration that will be held in Stoke Mandeville and flame lighting festivals will take place in 43 of Japan's 57 prefectures between 13 and 17 August 2020. Torch relays will be scheduled from 18 to 21 August throughout four prefectures that will co-host Paralympic events during the run up to the Paralympic Opening Ceremony. The flames from each of the flame lighting festivals hosted in each prefecture will be brought together in Tokyo on 21 August where the Paralympic Flame will be officially lit, the last four days of the torch relay will start in Tokyo. The locations in which the torch relay goes through will be similar to the 2020 Summer Olympics torch relay.[21][22][23][24]

The Games

Sports

540 Events in 22 sports will be held during the 2020 Summer Paralympics. Cycling events will be split into road and track disciplines. Team events of goalball, sitting volleyball, and wheelchair basketball continue as men's and women's events, wheelchair rugby continues to be a mixed event, while 5-a-side-football will only be open to male competitors.[25] New events and classifications have also been added or realigned in other sports.[26][27]

New sports

In January 2014, the IPC began accepting bids for new sports to be added to the Paralympic programme; they included amputee football, badminton, power hockey, powerchair football, and taekwondo. New disciplines were also proposed in existing events, including visually impaired match racing and one-person multi-hull in sailing, and 3-on-3 basketball in intellectually disabled (ID) and wheelchair classifications.[28][29]

On 31 January 2015, the IPC officially announced that badminton and taekwondo had been added to the Paralympic programme for 2020, which will replace 7-a-side football and sailing (both dropped due to an insufficient international reach).[25]

Test events

There will be test events before the Olympic and Paralympic Games,[30][31] they will be contested from June 2019 to June 2020 before the start of the 2020 Summer Olympics. The selected Paralympic sports will be athletics (2–3 May 2020), goalball (28–29 September 2019), paratriathlon (15–18 August 2019), powerlifting (26–27 September 2019), swimming (16 April 2020) and wheelchair rugby (12–15 March 2020). It was announced in February 2019 that test events would be under the banner "Ready, Steady, Tokyo." 22 of the 56 events would be organised by the Tokyo organising committee and the rest by national and international organisations. World Sailing's World Cup Series held at Enoshima was the first test event, with last one set to be the Tokyo Challenge Track Meet in May 2020.[32]

Calendar

The preliminary schedule was announced on 19 October 2018.[33] The finalized schedule was released on 13 August 2019.[34][35]

The original schedule was from 25 August to 10 September 2020. To postpone the Paralympics until 2021, all events were delayed by 364 days (one day less than a full year to preserve the same days of the week), giving a new schedule of 24 August to 9 September 2021.[36]

All times and dates use Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)
OCOpening ceremony Event competitions 1Gold medal events CCClosing ceremony
August/September 2021 24
Tue
25
Wed
26
Thu
27
Fri
28
Sat
29
Sun
30
Mon
31
Tue
1
Wed
2
Thu
3
Fri
4
Sat
5
Sun
Events
CeremoniesOCCCN/A
Archery 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 9
Athletics 13 16 19 17 21 17 18 18 24 5 168
Badminton 7 7 14
Boccia 4 3 7
Cycling Road 19 6 5 4 51
Track 4 5 5 3
Equestrian 3 2 1 5 11
Football 5-a-side 1 1
Goalball 2 2
Judo 4 4 5 13
Paracanoe 4 5 9
Paratriathlon 4 4 8
Powerlifting 4 4 4 4 4 20
Rowing 4 4
Shooting 3 2 2 1 2 2 1 13
Sitting volleyball 1 1 2
Swimming 16 14 14 14 13 15 14 15 15 16 146
Table tennis 5 8 8 5 5 31
Taekwondo 2 2 2 6
Wheelchair basketball 1 1 2
Wheelchair fencing 4 4 2 4 2 16
Wheelchair rugby 1 1
Wheelchair tennis 1 1 2 2 6
Daily medal events243044556254584548564915540
Cumulative total245498153215269327372420476525540
August/September 2021 24
Tue
25
Wed
26
Thu
27
Fri
28
Sat
29
Sun
30
Mon
31
Tue
1
Wed
2
Thu
3
Fri
4
Sat
5
Sun
Total events

Venues

The venues for the Paralympic games as detailed on the Tokyo 2020 official website.[37]

Tokyo Bay, where a number of events will be held
Nippon Budokan, host of the Judo event
The International Broadcast and Main Press Centre

Heritage Zone

Tokyo Bay Zone

Venues outside 10 km area

Non-competition venues

Participating nations

On 9 December 2019, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) banned Russia from all international sport for a period of four years, after the Russian government was found to have tampered with lab data that it provided to WADA in January 2019 as a condition of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency being reinstated. As a result of the ban, WADA will allow individually cleared Russian athletes to take part in the 2020 Summer Paralympics under a neutral banner, as instigated at the 2018 Winter Paralympics, but they will not be permitted to compete in team sports.

As of 23 December 2020, the following 96 NPCs are qualified. Guyana will make its debut appearance at the Paralympic Games while the Solomon Islands will make their second appearance after missing out of the 2016 Summer Paralympics.

Participating National Paralympic Committees

Marketing

The emblems of the 2020 Olympics and Paralympics were unveiled 25 April 2016. The Paralympic emblem features a hand fan in a circle form, filled with an indigo-colored checkerboard pattern. The design is meant to "express a refined elegance and sophistication that exemplifies Japan".[39] The designs replaced a previous emblem which had been scrapped due to allegations that it plagiarized the logo of the Théâtre de Liège in Belgium.

Mascot

Miraitowa (left), the Olympic mascot and Someity (right), the Paralympic mascot

The shortlist of mascots for the Tokyo Games was unveiled on 7 December 2017 and the winning entry was announced on 28 February 2018. Candidate pair A, created by Ryo Taniguchi, received the most votes (109,041) and was declared the winner, defeating Kana Yano's pair B (61,423 votes) and Sanae Akimoto's pair C (35,291 votes). Someity is a figure with pink chequered patterns inspired by the Games' official logo, and cherry blossom flowers; it has a calm but powerful ability, it is nature loving and speaks to the wind. Both Miraitowa and Someity were named by the Organising Committee by 22 July 2018.[40]

Animated shorts

Japanese public broadcaster NHK produced a series of short films called Animation x Paralympic: Who Is Your Hero? Each short features a different Paralympic sport, and is designed and produced in collaboration with well-known creators of anime and manga, sometimes featuring crossovers with popular series or with real-life athletes.

See also

References

  1. "Joint Statement from the International Olympic Committee and the Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee". olympic.org. 24 March 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  2. "Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics: New dates confirmed for 2021". BBC Sport. 30 March 2020. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
  3. Hope, Nick (21 May 2012). "Paralympics 2012: London to host 'first truly global Games'". BBC Sport. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  4. Wilson, Stephen (8 September 2013). "Results of the IOC vote to host the 2020 Summer Olympics". Austin American-Statesman. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 4 March 2020. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  5. Walsh, Scott (17 September 2016). "2016 Rio Paralympics: 2020 host Tokyo to undergo major overhauls to provide better disability access". adelaidenow.com.au. Archived from the original on 25 October 2016. Retrieved 19 September 2016.CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. Nagatsuka, Kaz (12 August 2016). "Marukawa says Tokyo must solve traffic issue before 2020 Games". The Japan Times. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  7. Wade, Stephen (18 September 2016). "Paralympics could help remake Tokyo's narrow roads, doorways". Japan Today. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  8. "Tokyo 2020: 180,000 apply to be volunteers". paralympic.org. 9 January 2019.
  9. "Volunteer names unveiled for Tokyo 2020". olympic.org. 30 January 2019.
  10. Palmer, Dan (17 January 2016). "Tokyo 2020 could follow Rio's lead with recycled medals". insidethegames.biz.
  11. Winters, Max (17 January 2016). "Campaign underway to use recycled metal to make Tokyo 2020 medals". insidethegames.biz.
  12. Palmer, Dan (1 February 2017). "Tokyo 2020 urge public to help create recycled medals". insidethegames.biz.
  13. "Project to recycle old mobile phones for Olympic medals gets off to slow start". The Japan Times Online. Jiji, Kyodo. 2 January 2018. ISSN 0447-5763. Archived from the original on 4 November 2018. Retrieved 4 November 2018.
  14. Pavitt, Michael (29 June 2017). "Coventry contributes to medal project and praises Tokyo 2020's empowerment of athletes". insidethegames.biz.
  15. Giles, Thomas (9 May 2018). "Japan struggles for silver for Tokyo 2020 medals". insidethegames.biz.
  16. Pavitt, Michael (25 November 2018). "Bach donates to project recycling metals for Tokyo 2020 medals". insidethegames.biz.
  17. Gillen, Nancy (4 January 2019). "Recycled aluminium from temporary housing in Fukushima to be used for Tokyo 2020 Olympic Torches". insidethegames.biz.
  18. Etchells, Daniel (22 December 2017). "Tokyo 2020 launches Olympic and Paralympic medal design competition". insidethegames.biz.
  19. "Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Medals". paralympic.org. IPC. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
  20. "Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games medal design". Tokyo 2020. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  21. "Tokyo 2020: Torch Relay concept revealed". paralympic.org. 21 December 2018.
  22. "Tokyo 2020 Unveils Paralympic Torch Relay Concept : "Share Your Light"". Tokyo 2020. Archived from the original on 22 March 2019.
  23. "Route of the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Torch Relay". Tokyo 2020. 22 November 2019.
  24. "Tokyo 2020 Unveils Paralympic Torch Relay Details". Tokyo 2020. 22 November 2019. Archived from the original on 30 December 2019.
  25. "IPC announces final Tokyo 2020 Paralympic sports program". paralympic.org. 31 January 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  26. Diamond, James (26 June 2018). "New medal event added to road cycling schedule for Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games". insidethegames.biz. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  27. Etchells, Daniel (4 September 2017). "Paralympic medal programme for Tokyo 2020 announced with athletics and swimming events reduced". insidethegames.biz. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  28. "Sports apply for 2020 Tokyo Paralympic inclusion". BBC Sport. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  29. Butler, Nick (22 January 2014). "Six sports and three disciplines confirmed as bidding for Tokyo 2020 Paralympics inclusion". insidethegames.biz. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  30. "Tokyo 2020 Test Events". Tokyo 2020. 3 January 2019.
  31. "Tokyo 2020: Test event schedule announced". paralympic.org. 2 October 2018.
  32. "Tokyo 2020 Unveils Its Olympic Test Event Schedule". olympic.org. 30 January 2019.
  33. "Tokyo 2020 Unveils Paralympic Competition Schedule". tokyo2020.org. 19 October 2018. Archived from the original on 23 March 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2019.
  34. "Paralympic Competition Schedule". tokyo2020.org. 13 August 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2019.
  35. "Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games schedule announced". tokyo2020.org. 13 August 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2019.
  36. Ingle, Sean (30 March 2020). "Tokyo Olympics to start in July 2021 after coronavirus rescheduling". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
  37. "Paralympic venues". Tokyo 2020. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  38. Badminton originally to be held at Youth Plaza Arena; venue moved in June 2015. "東京五輪、26競技の会場決定 自転車・サッカー除き". Nihon Keizai Shimbun. 9 June 2015. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
  39. McKirdy, Andrew (25 April 2016). "Checkered pattern by artist Tokolo chosen as logo for 2020 Tokyo Olympics". Japan Times. Archived from the original on 25 April 2016.
  40. "10th Meeting of the Mascot Selection Panel". Tokyo 2020 (Press release). 30 May 2018. Archived from the original on 18 June 2018. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
Preceded by
Rio de Janeiro
Summer Paralympics
Tokyo

XVI Paralympic Summer Games (2020)
Succeeded by
Paris
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