| The United States Olympic & Paralympic 
				Committee (USOPC)reiterated that it would not require athletes 
				to get a shot to compete in Tokyo, but will encourage them to do 
				so, as Japan enters what appears to be a fourth wave of the 
				pandemic.
 Perry Baker, a 34-year-old rugby athlete who featured in the 
				2016 Rio Games, said after some initial doubts he was motivated 
				to get the vaccine out of concern not only for others' safety 
				but to help ensure his Olympic dreams stay on track.
 
 "All the hard work that we’ve put in after these last 10, 12 
				months and we don’t want to get there (and) we can’t play 
				because we haven’t been vaccinated or whatnot, whatever the case 
				may be," Baker told reporters. "So yes, I will be getting 
				vaccinated."
 
 IOC Vice President John Coates previously said that while 
				athletes will be encouraged to get vaccinated, they will not be 
				required, with Tokyo organizers barring international 
				spectators.
 
 Kara Kohler, who won bronze in the quad sculls in 2012 and will 
				make her single-sculls debut in Tokyo, said "quite a few" of her 
				U.S. teammates were sidelined after contracting the virus in the 
				early stages of the pandemic.
 
 "I'm always hesitant, I usually don't like to get, like, yearly 
				flu shots and stuff. But it seems like I'll be getting this one 
				because I don’t want to take the risk," said Kohler, 30. "I 
				don’t want to risk getting sick and having respiratory issues 
				and not being able to race."
 
 USOPC medical chief Jon Finnoff told Reuters earlier this year 
				that some athletes, like any segment of the general public, 
				simply may not be comfortable getting the vaccine, with some 
				raising concerns regarding its potential impact to performance.
 
 But Dana Mathewson, 30, a wheelchair tennis athlete who is next 
				traveling to Turkey to compete, said she had a vaccine 
				appointment set for Saturday and was looking forward to the 
				"peace of mind."
 
 "As much as there is concern about it being new and you’re not 
				really sure how you’re going to react to getting the vaccine, 
				I’d much rather have a slightly adverse reaction to a vaccine 
				than actually get COVID," said Mathewson.
 
 (Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
 
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