U.S. officials confirmed that Kendricks was ruled out
https://www.reuters.com/
article/olympics-2020-ath-idAFL8N2P50GX of the Games due to a positive test,
prompting members of the Australian athletics team to briefly
isolate in their rooms.
Swedish world record-holder Armand Duplantis told reporters he had
not been in contact with his American rival.
"I have been super lucky just not to have come into contact with
him," he said. "All the pole vaulters are pretty spooked out right
now."
Argentina's Chiaraviglio confirmed on social media that he was out
of the Games as well, and was isolating in a hotel.
In Tokyo, where pandemic restrictions are mostly voluntary outside
the "Olympic bubble", daily infections hit a record 3,865, up from
3,177 a day earlier.
Daily cases nationwide topped 10,000 for the first time, domestic
media reported.
FIRST GOLD
China gained their first gold
https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/
sports/swimming-late-surges-
bring-gold-us-australia-2021-07-29 in the Tokyo pool with Zhang
Yufei winning the women's 200 metre butterfly. She returned to the
pool shortly afterwards to help her team beat the fancied Americans
and Australians to win the 4x200 freestyle relay, setting a world
record along the way.
The relay victory put China ahead of the United States on the gold
medal rankings
https://graphics.reuters.com/
OLYMPICS-2020/EXPLAINER/gjnvwnlwgpw/
index.html#section-medals and triggered cheers from Chinese
journalists in the media centre.
It capped a morning of thrilling athleticism in the pool on the
sixth day of the Games, which have been rocked by Simone Biles
pulling out of gymnastic events and the early tennis exit of Naomi
Osaka - moments that put the focus on athletes' mental health
https://jp.reuters.com/article/
olympics-2020-biles-support-idCNL4N2P428D - and dogged by the
worsening infection figures in Tokyo itself.
Japan led the medal tally with 15 golds to China's 14, while the
United States has 13.
The surprise world record by the Chinese women's freestyle relay
team provided a swift answer to the double gold for U.S. swimmers
Caeleb Dressel in the 100 freestyle and Bobby Finke in the 800
freestyle.
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"I wasn't worried about
anything at all," Dressel said after pipping
defending champion Kyle Chalmers of Australia by
six hundredths of a second. "It means a lot, I
knew the weight was on my shoulders."
'CLEARER, STRONGER MESSAGE'
Members of the Australian athletics team briefly isolated as a
precaution after Kendricks' infection was announced. They were later
cleared to return to their regular routines.
Games procedures state that athletes who are contact-traced and have
not yet competed are isolated from the rest of their squad. They
then have to be tested six hours prior to their competition and
return a negative result in order to compete.
Japan's top medical adviser urged the government to send a "clearer,
stronger message" about the growing risks from the pandemic,
including to the medical system.
"The biggest crisis is that society does not share a sense of risk,"
top medical adviser Shigeru Omi told a parliamentary panel. "I want
the government to send a stronger, clearer message."
The hospitalisations and infection spike add to worries about the
Games, which are taking place under unprecedented conditions
including a ban on spectators in most venues.
Only 26.5% of residents of Japan are fully vaccinated, and the
rollout has hit supply snags recently. More than 60% of Tokyo
hospital beds available for serious COVID-19 cases were already
filled as of Tuesday, city data showed.
Many Japanese are worried that the influx of athletes and officials
for the Games will add to the surge, while experts have warned that
holding the high profile sports event sends a confusing message
about the need to stay home.
Olympics organisers have reported 193 COVID-19 cases related to the
Games, a miniscule number given the tens of thousands of people
involved in the event.
Athletes, staff and media have to follow strict rules to prevent any
spread of the virus from inside an "Olympic bubble".
(Reporting by Simon Evans, Mitch Phillips, Linda Sieg and Kioyshi
Takenaka; Writing by David Dolan; Editing by Stephen Coates, Shri
Navaratnam and Hugh Lawson)
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