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Organisers wanted sports already popular with Japanese youth to save on building costs{Ever-Kind} |
Squash fails to make the shortlist as organisers present five new sports they want at the 2020 Olympics.
Baseball/softball, karate, skateboarding, sports climbing and surfing
have been recommended by the organisers of the Tokyo Olympics for
inclusion at the 2020 Games.
Under the proposal, a total of 18 new medal events, nine each for men
and women, would be contested by an extra 474 athletes at the Games.
Olympic host cities can now hand-pick sports they want to see
contested at the Games, although the final decision rests with the
International Olympic Committee, which will vote on the 2020
recommendations next August.
Bowling, squash and wushu had also been short-listed for inclusion in Tokyo but were left off the final recommended list.
"This package of events represents both traditional and emerging,
youth-focused events, all of which are popular both in Japan and
internationally," Tokyo organisers said in a statement.
"They will serve as a driving force to further promote the Olympic
Movement and its values, with a focus on youth appeal, and will add
value to the Games by engaging the Japanese population and new audiences
worldwide, reflecting the Tokyo 2020 Games vision."
Organisers wanted sports already popular with Japanese youth so new
venues would not need to be built and add to ballooning costs.
Baseball and softball, united under the World Baseball Softball
Confederation (WBSC), were previously on the Olympic programme but were
dropped after Asia last hosted the Summer Games, in Beijing in 2008.
Karate has never been contested at the Olympics. Judo, another
martial art founded in Japan, first joined in 1964, when Tokyo last
hosted the Summer Games, and has been included on every programme since
1972.
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