Athletes to win their own Olympic medals in Tokyo to prevent the spread of the virus



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TOKYO – Athletes at the Tokyo Olympics will put their medals around their necks to protect against the spread of the coronavirus.

The “very significant change” to the traditional medal ceremonies in the 339 events was revealed on Wednesday by the president of the International Olympic Committee Thomas Bach.

“The medals will not be given around the neck,” Bach told international media on a conference call from Tokyo. “They will be presented to the athlete on a platter, and then the athlete will take the medal himself.

“We will make sure that the person who puts the medal on the platform does so only with disinfected gloves so that the athlete can be sure that no one has touched them before.”

The Olympic approach is different from football in Europe, where UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin has personally hung medals around players’ necks in competition finals in recent weeks.

Ceferin also shook hands with Italian goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma during the Euro 2020 medal and trophy presentation in London on Sunday. Donnarumma’s save in a penalty shootout saw Italy take the title against England.

Bach confirmed on Wednesday that in Tokyo “there will be no handshake and there will be no hugs during the ceremony.”

Olympic medals are usually presented by an IOC member or a prominent official in the governing body of a sport.

The IOC previously said medalists and ceremony officials should wear masks.

The Tokyo Olympics open on July 23 amid a state of emergency and a growing number of COVID-19 cases in the city.

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