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Japanese baseball, soccer aiming for April restarts

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AP Tokyo

On a day when Japan's prime minister admitted postponing the Tokyo Olympics may be unavoidable, medical experts suggested it could be possible for the top-flight Japanese baseball and soccer seasons to resume by the end of next month.

Nippon Professional Baseball Organisation and the J.League received advice Monday from medical experts during the fourth meeting of the joint panel that was formed to assess impacts of the coranavirus pandemic.

Mitsuo Kaku, a professor in infection control and prevention at Tohoku Medical and Pharmaceutical University, said the sports officials should be targeting a start date at the end of April.

There's one month until then, so I would like them to prepare as much as possible while looking at the situation," Kaku said.

 

Both leagues have been targeting a return at the beginning of April, but now it seems like they need to push it back further.

NPB Commissioner Atsushi Saito said the revised timing would be OK if the situation stays the same and our preparation is fully ready."'

J-League chairman Mitsuru Murai said soccer officials would have another meeting later in the week.

"It is difficult to forecast for the long-term because the situation is constantly changing, Murai said. If we decide it is difficult to resume matches at the beginning of April during the meeting, we will simulate dates in two weeks interval such as on April 18 and May 2."

Earlier Monday, Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told a parliamentary session that a postponement of the Tokyo Olympics would be necessary if the games cannot be held in a complete way.

Abe was speaking hours after the the International Olympic Committee said for the first time that it was considering a postponement of the games, which are scheduled to start July 24.

Olympic officials from Canada said they would not send a team unless the Tokyo Games were delayed by 12 months, and the Australian Olympic Committee advised its athletes to prepare for the games to be staged in 2021.

Worldwide, nearly 340,000 people have been infected and more than 14,700 have died from the virus that first emerged in central China late last year.

As cases in China ebbed, the dangers to Europe and the U.S. have grown exponentially. As of Sunday, Japan had 1,719 confirmed cases of the virus, with 43 deaths.

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First Published: Mar 23 2020 | 3:50 PM IST

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