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Yoshiro Mori, president of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Organising Committee, speaks in Tokyo on July 17, 2020.ISSEI KATO/Reuters

The Tokyo Olympics next year will use the same venues and follow an almost identical competition schedule as the one originally planned for this year before the event was postponed owing to the novel coronavirus pandemic, organizers said Friday.

However, organizers told an International Olympic Committee session that it was too early to give details on coronavirus-prevention measures during the Games, or on whether events would be in full or partly-full stadiums or behind closed doors.

The IOC and Japanese government decided in March to postpone the Games until 2021, and organizers have been working to rearrange an event almost a decade in the making.

The Olympics had been set to begin on July 24 this year.

“Today, we are able to report that we have confirmed both the competition schedule and the use of all venues originally planned for this year, including the venue for the athletes village and the main press centre,” said Toshiro Muto, Tokyo 2020′s chief executive.

The new schedule means women’s softball will get competition under way in Fukushima on July 21, two days before the Games officially open, with all events taking place a day earlier than the 2020 schedule.

There have also been some minor changes to session times.

The Games are set to be the biggest ever in terms of events, with a record 339 medals available before the closing ceremony on Aug. 8, although organizers say they will be simplified.

Muto said all of the 42 venues have been secured, overcoming one of the biggest hurdles for organizers, as many had already been booked for 2021.

This means the marathon and race-walking events will remain in the northern city of Sapporo after being controversially moved out of Tokyo because of anticipated scorching summer heat.

One of the biggest questions concerns how many people will be able to travel to the Games and watch the events.

“This is, of course, one of the scenarios we have to look into because this has to do with travel restrictions and quarantine, and it’s too early to tell,” said IOC president Thomas Bach, speaking from the organization’s headquarters in Lausanne.

“We would like to see stadiums full of enthusiastic fans to give them all the opportunity to live the Olympic experience [and] support the athletes, and this is what we are working for,” added Bach, who earlier said he was prepared to stand for re-election next year.

“We cannot address the details yet. ... There cannot be a solution today, this is asking too much.”

John Coates, the head of the IOC’s co-ordination commission, said that securing the venues had been a “massive” task.

“We are talking about venues in different ownership,” he told the session.

“We are talking also of securing the Olympic village, which has been constructed by a consortium of 11 different companies, who have agreed to put back the date when they will be able to hand over the apartments to the public.”

The next challenge for Tokyo organizers is developing measures to help prevent a COVID-19 outbreak during the Games, and how much the delay will cost Japanese taxpayers.

Muto said decisions would be made on these issues in the fall. “We will be having a full-fledged discussion over COVID-19 countermeasures,” he said.

“But, as an example, the topics and themes we may discuss are immigration control, enhanced testing structures, and the establishment of treatment systems and measures against COVID-19 in the areas of accommodation and transport.”

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