The $40,000 man: Olympic fan's world record dream shattered by Tokyo
spectator ban
Send a link to a friend
[July 09, 2021]
By Eimi Yamamitsu and Elaine
Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) - Kazunori Takishima's Olympic dream of setting a
world record - a plan that had cost him almost $40,000 - ended this
week when organisers said spectators would be banned for most of the
Games events.
Takishima had bought a hundred Tokyo 2020 tickets, saving and
scheming for years in the hope of attending the most Olympic events
ever.
"I stayed up until three in the morning with my mind completely
blank," Takishima said of his reaction to the decision to ban fans,
wearing a headband emblazoned with the national symbol of Japan. "I
was just really stunned by the news. I wish I had been able to cry.
That would have helped relieve my stress."
A Tokyo resident who runs a real estate office, Takishima, 45, said
that for most of his life he'd had no interest in sports.
A chance visit to a skating competition and the echo of blades
scraping on ice prompted him to attend the 2006 Torino Games, where
he saw Japanese figure skater Shizuka Arakawa take gold. At that
point, he was mesmerised by the Olympics.
"I gain so many things when I attend Olympic events," Takishima
said. "There are athletes who win a gold medal and other medals, and
athletes who couldn't despite their immense efforts. The tears these
athletes cry are authentic.
"When I see that, it makes me want to work harder at my job or make
more effort or enjoy life."
He has attended every Summer and Winter Games since then, putting
together elaborate schedules that sometimes only allow him four hours of
sleep a night. At Rio in 2016 he walked out of a stadium, collapsed on
the grass, and slept for an hour.
"There have been seconds where I myself wondered why I was doing this,"
he said.
[to top of second column] |
Kazunori Takishima is pictured before
the opening ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, August 5, 2016. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
Before Tokyo 2020, Takishima had
attended 106 ticketed Olympic competitions, and he had planned to
see 28 events over the 17 days of the Games. The Guinness World
Record stands at 128 and in May, Takishima started negotiating with
Guinness to register his record of 134.
With his family and friends, he spent 4 million yen ($36,386.79) on
100 tickets.
Then the coronavirus struck. Organisers postponed the Games, scaled
them back, banned foreign spectators and finally prohibited fans
altogether. Takishima will get his money back; officials say tickets
will be automatically refunded if there are no spectators.
"All the fun that I looked forward to was taken away, little by
little," Takishima said. "Banning fans from venues was the final
blow."
While he's hopeful of breaking the record at next year's Beijing
Olympics or at Paris in 2024, it won't be the same, he says.
Takishima is considering watching the opening ceremony on his phone
outside the National Stadium, but otherwise doesn't know what he'll
do.
Slowly scrolling through dozens of digital tickets on his phone, he
said, "Just looking at these makes me want to cry."
(Reporting by Eimi Yamamitsu, Elaine Lies; Editing by Karishma Singh
and Gerry Doyle)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|