Tokyo Olympics: Two Pole Vaulters Out With COVID In Fresh Scare For Tokyo Olympics
Two pole vaulters were ruled out of Tokyo Olympics after testing positive for COVID-19 and Australia's track and field team were briefly forced into isolation.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: July 30, 2021 01:14 am IST
Highlights
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Two pole vaulters were ruled out of Olympics after testing COVID positive
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Australia track and field athletes have been put under isolation
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Athletes will undergo testing procedures in line with team protocols
Two pole vaulters were ruled out of the Tokyo Olympics and Australia's track and field team were briefly forced into isolation on Thursday in a jolting reminder of the risks facing athletes at the coronavirus-hit Games. On the eve of the athletics competition, 2016 bronze medallist Sam Kendricks and Argentina's German Chiaraviglio suffered heartbreaking disappointment when they both tested positive. Kendricks' case triggered a panic in the Australian team, which went into precautionary isolation for more than two hours before all but three close contacts were released.
America's Kendricks, a two-time world champion, and Chiaraviglio are both in isolation and will miss the pole vault competition when it starts on Saturday.
"We knew this Olympic Games was different and with different rules, and here I am, it's my turn," Chiaraviglio wrote on Instagram.
"Living through this is very difficult, but it will also pass," he added.
Preparing for the Olympics has been tough in the pandemic and athletes are under extra pressure at the pandemic-delayed Games with strict biosecure measures and the constant threat of Covid.
Athletes' wellbeing has been a running concern and the women's all-around gymnastics went ahead without superstar Simone Biles, who had withdrawn because of fears over her mental health.
Eighteen-year-old American Sunisa Lee took gold, succeeding Biles as champion, with Brazil's Rebeca Andrade taking silver and Russian Angelina Melnikova bronze.
Earlier, US swim star Caeleb Dressel grabbed his second gold of the Games in the showpiece men's 100m freestyle to stay on track for a potential haul of six.
The 24-year-old, heir apparent to the great Michael Phelps, powered to the wall an Olympic-record 47.02sec to dethrone Australia's Kyle Chalmers.
Medal joy
Dressel said he was proud to claim his first individual title after two relay golds in Rio and another this week in Tokyo.
"I didn't want to admit it but now I did it I can admit it, it's a lot different," he said.Â
Robert Finke won another gold for the United States in the men's 800m freestyle, while Australia's Zac Stubblety-Cook claimed the men's 200m breaststroke gold in an Olympic record 2:06.38.
China's Zhang Yufei won the women's 200m butterfly and China turned heads when they smashed the world record to win the 4x200m women's freestyle relay ahead of USA and Australia.
At a sweltering Ariake Tennis Park, world number one Novak Djokovic swept aside home hope Kei Nishikori 6-2, 6-0 to reach the semi-finals as he targets his first Olympic title.
The Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon champion, on course for the first men's Golden Slam of winning all four majors and the Olympics, will face Germany's Alexander Zverev in the last four.
Switzerland's Belinda Bencic beat Elena Rybakina 7-6 (7/2), 4-6, 6-3 to reach the final, and was overcome with emotion to secure a medal.
"I don't feel pressure right now. I just feel joy to have a medal," Bencic said.
Unheralded Austrian Sepp Straka was the surprise leader after a storm-interrupted first day of the men's golf, while Denmark's Viktor Axelsen and Taiwan's Chou Tien-chen were among the men's badminton contenders to safely reach the quarter-finals.
After Japan denied China a fourth straight table tennis team sweep by winning the mixed doubles, they reasserted their dominance when Chen Meng beat Sun Yingsha in an all-Chinese women's singles title.
Aaron Wolf won the -100kg judo for Japan as the hosts finished the day on 15 golds, the same number as China, with USA just behind on 14.
Meanwhile organisers announced a daily record of 24 new Games-related infects, three of whom are athletes, taking the overall number of positive cases to 193.
The rising figure coincides with record numbers of new cases in Tokyo and nationwide. But the International Olympic Committee said there was no link with the Games.
"As far as I'm aware there's not a single case of an infection spreading to the Tokyo population from the athletes or Olympic movement," spokesman Mark Adams told reporters.