No fans will hit jumpers hard in Tokyo, says Rutherford
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[July 15, 2021]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's former Olympic long jump champion Greg
Rutherford says the absence of crowd atmosphere at the Tokyo Games
will have an adverse effect on some athletes but he still expects
some mind-blowing action over the 17 days of competition.
The troubled Tokyo Games begin on July 23 -- a year later than
scheduled after the COVID-19 pandemic forced it to be postponed.
With Tokyo in the grip of the virus, there will be no fans allowed
into venues, including the Olympic Stadium that will host track and
field.
"It's going to be eerily quiet in the stadium," the 34-year-old told
Reuters.
Rutherford won gold at the 2012 London Games on the so-called Super
Saturday when a huge crowd roared him, Mo Farah and Jessica
Ennis-Hill to track and field glory within the space of a magical
hour.
"I remember in Rio they didn't use the top tier in the athletics
stadium for whatever the issue was and the crowd did feel a little
bit less and I remember talking to others and saying it felt a bit
more like a Diamond League rather than Olympic final, it didn't have
the same buzz," he added.
"But athletes in Tokyo would kill for that level of support compared
to what they will have."
Rutherford feels that the field event athletes could be especially
disadvantaged by no crowd "energy".
"The interaction with the crowd in the jumps is massive,"
Rutherford, who will be covering track and field as part of
Discovery’s on-screen team for Tokyo in the UK and Ireland, said
during the launch of the channel's innovative virtual reality Cube
studio.
"People ask would I have won without the crowd in London, and I
don't really know how I would have responded.
"But there were definitely moments during the final when the crowd
helped raise my game. No fans will effect things a lot."
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Britain's Greg Rutherford in action
during men's long jump Action Images via Reuters/Peter Cziborra/File
Photo
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However, he says that despite what
will be a "weird" stadium and village, the athletes will still
produce the goods.
"One thing we can bank on is that athletes will be desperate to
compete," he said. "We have seen some mind-blowing performances this
year and the women's 100m will be unreal.
"Then with the tech wars with the shoes we will see some crazy times
in the middle distance races. The Games will be remembered for
fantastic performances but also as the pandemic Games. I just hope
that's it's not a one-hit for some and that they come back in Paris
(2024) and experience what an Olympics is supposed to be about."
Rutherford had hoped to compete at Tokyo 2020 but retired in 2018
because of injuries. No British male long jumper qualified for
Tokyo.
"It's awful, I'm genuinely disappointed," he said, describing
Britain's track and field team as a mixed bag which will provide one
or two shock medals.
British eyes will all be on sprinter Dina Asher-Smith although
Rutherford said it is a shame that she will have to shoulder so much
of the burden.
"It's sad that for the last two Olympics, there were multiple
athletes who absorbed that pressure. In London there was Mo and Jess
and obviously I came through as well.
"Now it's all on Dina. But she is a big game performer as we saw in
the worlds. I don't fear for her that it could get too much. She
loves the big events.
"But it's unfair if people assume she will win three medals. If it's
one gold, or two silvers, or one gold and a bronze it would be
unbelievable."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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