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Opinionopinion

Tokyo wins biggest Olympic race of all

The Olympics are about much more than just the Games themselves. They bring with them major repercussions in terms of the economy, culture and human rights.

Tokyo celebrates being awarded the 2020 Olympic Games

Seven years before the pizzazz of the opening ceremony and the years of training, blood, sweat and tears culminate on the winner’s podium, the first race for Olympic gold has already been won.

The candidates in last week’s vote were Tokyo, Madrid and Istanbul, and all three cities could have done with victory.

With soaring unemployment, Spain has become a poster boy of Western economic basket cases. Winning the Olympics would have been a shot in the arm for Madrid, in real terms and – just as importantly – as a feelgood factor.

The economic and political benefits that Istanbul would have enjoyed would also have gone far beyond the sports arena.

Turkey has long been a fulcrum between East and West – on the one hand trying to endear itself to the EU while at the same time attempting to secure a leadership position in the Middle East.

Holding the Olympics in Istanbul would have helped cement the recent economic progress the country has enjoyed while also acting as an incentive for the country to ditch some of its less forward-thinking policies on human rights.

Instead, however, the right to host the Games was won by a country that has been struggling with a stagnant economy and is still recovering from an enormous humanitarian disaster.

What has all this got to do with sport? Well, quite a lot, actually.