Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games “To Hold Or Not To Hold?”

When Tokyo, Japan won the bid to host the 2020 Summer Olympic Games after the 2016 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Olympics, no stretch of imagination could have foreseen the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games being held without spectators.

The games were postponed from 2020 to 2021 because of covid-19. However, “2020 Olympic Games” was maintained as the name in 2021. Indeed, until the eleventh hour, it was still not certain if the Games would be held. For the first time in Olympic history, the games are being held behind closed-doors.

While the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games generated excitement among thousands of cheering Japanese spectators, Tokyo 2020 had less than one-thousand spectators in the sixty-thousand capacity stadium.  A Japanese interviewed described the opening ceremony as “surreal” as it was done in an empty stadium.

Opening Ceremony

On 23 July 2021, Emperor Naruhito opened the Games with Japanese tennis star Naomi Osaka lighting the cauldron with the Olympic flame.

 For the first time in forty-nine years, there was a one-minute silence held in honour of the eleven Israeli athletes who were murdered by members of the Black September Movement of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) at the Olympic Village during the 1972 Munich, West Germany Olympics.

As the opening ceremony took place, protests were held outside the stadium demanding the games be stopped considering the increasing risk of the Delta variant of covid-19.

World Health Organisation (WHO) President Tedros Gebreyesus however described the Opening Ceremony as a “Celebration of Hope.”

I remember our national excitement in 1964 when Ghana’s football team beat host-nation 3-2 in the opening match. This was before TV arrived in Ghana. Nonetheless, ace commentators Festus Addae/Joe Lartey/William Opare brought proceedings vividly to our homes through radio.

Ghana in Olympics

Ghana is presenting a 14-member team in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics hoping to improve on our total medals won of only four in all the Olympics so far.

Ghana’s first Olympic Games was in the Rome Olympics of 1960. She also won her first Olympic medal when Clement “Ike” Quartey won a silver in the boxing light-welterweight division.

However, earlier Ghana, then Gold Coast participated in the 1952 Helsinki, Finland Olympics.

In the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, Ghana won a bronze medal through welterweight boxer Eddie Blay.

Middleweight boxer Prince Amartey also won a bronze medal in the 1972 Munich, West Germany Olympics. Incidentally, it was at the Olympic Village in Munich that eight members of the Black September Movement of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) murdered eleven members of the Israeli Olympic team.

Outside boxing, Ghana’s forth medal so far was won by the Football Under-23 Black Meteors which won a bronze in the 1992 Barcelona, Spain Olympics.

Ghana boycotted the 1976 Montreal, Canada Games in protest of the participation of New Zealand which maintained sporting links with then apartheid South Africa.

Again in 1980, Ghana was one of sixty-five countries which joined the American-led boycott of the Moscow, Union-of-Soviet-Socialist-Republics (USSR)/Soviet-Union Games. This was in protest of the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union.

Conclusion

In the 1958 Commonwealth Games in Cardiff, Wales, Ghana’s first and only medal, a bronze was won by Robert Kotei, later Maj Gen REA Kotei.

In the 1960s, Ghana showed great potential in sports under the legendary Sports Director Ohene-Djan, particularly in athletics, boxing and football. At Commonwealth Games, Ghana and Uganda dominated as the strongest boxing nations. Of the fifty-seven medals we have won in Commonwealth Games so far, fifteen have been Gold, 18 Silver and 24 Bronze.

At the 1962 Perth, Australia Games, Corporal Mike Ahey won Gold in the Long Jump.

The 1966 Kingston, Jamaica Games saw SF Allotey win Gold in the 220 yards (now 200metres) with a new record. He later led the Ghanaian quartet of JA Addy, ECO Addy and BK Mends to win Gold with a new record.

 Unfortunately, we have not been able to translate our talents in winning Commonwealth Games medals into winning Olympic medals.

A new event to be hosted for the first time in Tokyo will be baseball. More interestingly, for the 2024 Paris, France Olympics, Break-dancing will feature as an Olympic sport! Perhaps, this might be a good opportunity for a young Ghanaian to win gold.

As we pray for our 14-member team, we all unite in saying “Go Ghana! Go Ghana! Go Ghana!” in our quest to add more to the four medals we have won so far at Olympic Games.

Leadership, lead!

Fellow Ghanaians, WAKE UP!

 

Brig Gen Dan Frimpong (Rtd)

Former CEO, African Peace Support Trainers Association

Nairobi, Kenya

           
Council Chairman

Family Health University College, Accra

[email protected]