REUTERS
August 8, 2021 at 22:50 JST
Athletes arrive during the closing ceremony in the Olympic Stadium at the 2020 Summer Olympics on Aug. 8 in Tokyo. (AP Photo)
Tokyo doused its Olympic flame in a ceremony on Sunday that echoed the restraint of a Games that played out without spectators and were defined and transformed by the global pandemic, dazzling sport and deeply person turmoil.
Moments after the flame was extinguished in the Olympic Stadium a volley of multi-colored fireworks lit up the night sky about the Olympic Stadium where athletes were already heading for the exits.
They were given a surreal glimpse of everyday Tokyo life when the closing ceremony was briefly transformed into a park with grass, buskers and BMX riders. Organizers said the scene was meant so they could "experience Tokyo," a poignant nod to the fact that many spent their time at the Games cooped up in rooms or competing in venues.
It was a duly odd closing to a Games that were upended by the pandemic and then transformed by the drama of politics, sport and personal turmoil. The Tokyo Olympics were originally intended to show Japan's recovery from a devastating earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis in 2011.
It was also in marked contrast to the far more festive park scene that played out in Paris, where several thousand sports fans waving the tricolor flag thronged into a fan zone across the river from the Eiffel Tower as the French capital prepared to take the Olympic baton from Tokyo for the 2024 Games.
After being postponed for a year, organizers said the Games would serve as a symbol of the world's triumph over the pandemic. Held without spectators and with COVID-19 variants resurgent, the Games fell short of triumph and the financial windfall Japan first sought.
Instead, the host nation is saddled with a $15 billion bill, double what it initially expected, and with no tourist boom to offset it.
The president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) thanked the Japanese people and touted the Olympics as a symbol of hope during a trying pandemic.
"Nobody has ever organized a postponed Games before," he said.
POP MUSIC
In Paris, pop music blared out as Tokyo medalists Teddy Riner and Clarisse Agbegnenou bounced on stage. Plans to fly a giant Olympic flag from the Eiffel Tower were abandoned because of strong winds.
France promises a 2024 Summer Olympics "for the people" after the pandemic-hit Tokyo event. In a sign that those days are far from close, though, public entry to the fan zone was permitted only upon presentation of a vaccine certificate or negative COVID-19 test.
Public anger over the pandemic response and a slow-to-start vaccine roll-out have badly damaged Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga's standing. Public opinion polls showed most Japanese opposed holding the Games during the pandemic.
In a nod to diversity, a victory ceremony was held for the first time for both the women's and men's marathon event. The Kenyan anthem filled the 68,000-capacity stadium twice, for gold medalists Peres Jepchirchir and Eliud Kipchoge.
Still, organizers appear to have prevented the Tokyo Games from spiraling into a COVID-19 superspreader event, notable given that some 50,000 people came together amid the pandemic.
In a sign of the measures, winners accepted their prizes from trays, putting the medals around their own necks, although social-distancing protocols preventing hugging, for example, were largely ignored throughout the Games.
While the bubble--the set of venues and hotels to which Olympic visitors were largely confined--appeared to hold, elsewhere some things fell apart. Fuelled by the Delta variant of the virus, daily infections spiked to more than 5,000 for the first time in Tokyo, threatening to overwhelm its hospitals.
Japan's record medal haul also helped to take out some of the sting for organizers. The United States finished top of the tally with 39 gold medals, one more than rivals China at 38 and Japan at 27.
Japan will hand over the Olympic baton to the next host city, Paris, at the ceremony.
COLD WAR AND ‘TWISTIES’
After a year's delay and often against the backdrop of cavernous, nearly empty venues, the Games themselves provided plenty of high drama.
That culminated with the defection of Belarusian sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya who, in a moment more reminiscent of the Cold War, refused to board a flight home after she was taken to the airport against her wishes.
She has since sought refugee status in Poland.
U.S. superstar gymnast Simone Biles shocked the world when she pulled out of five of her six events, including abruptly abandoning the women's team final after attempting just one vault, citing concerns for her mental and physical health.
The 24-year-old spoke with candor about struggling to deal with the weight of expectation placed on her and made the world aware of the "twisties," a mental block that prevents gymnasts from performing their gravity-defying skills.
Biles ultimately came back to win the bronze on the balance beam in the final event of the women's gymnastics program, a moment of triumph that crystalized her transformation from Olympic champion to advocate for mental health.
In athletics, Italy provided a different kind of shock with their amazing run. Their wins included a stunning gold in the men's sprint relay, taking their athletics gold tally to five.
In swimming, the United States were without 23-time Olympic gold medalist Michael Phelps for the first time since the Atlanta Games in 1996 and, while their gold count slipped, they still ended the meeting on top of the medals table with 30 in total.
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