At Tokyo Olympics, Door Slams and Idle Chatter Fill in the Soundtrack – The New York Times

TOKYO This is the moment Olympic athletes have dreamed about, the one they have trained for relentlessly and rehearsed in their minds repeatedly since they were children. Finally, they are stepping onto the mats and courts and playing fields that together represent the biggest stage in international sports. And when they do, theyre hearing crickets.

Or rather, the drone of Japanese cicadas. And doors opening and closing, and trucks rumbling by on nearby streets, and even the idle murmuring of stadium workers.

Many Olympians bide their time for these moments, the quadrennial chance to compete in rousingly packed stadiums, to show a huge crowd their best, to bathe in its cheers and its applause. Instead, the ban on spectators at the Tokyo Games this summer has left some venues sounding as quiet as libraries. In others, the few people in attendance fellow athletes, team staff members, volunteers, dignitaries have taken on the uphill task of providing some semblance of ambience.

But the resulting soundscapes have been unlike anything in the modern history of the Games. These may be the Olympics, the pinnacle of sports, but they dont quite sound like it.

You go to a major tournament, thats one of the best parts, the buzz that you get, said Megan Rapinoe, a forward for the United States womens soccer team, adding that the quiet stadiums here had sapped some of her energy. It definitely changes the dynamic a lot.

Grunts of exertion echo inside empty halls. Public address announcements, clearly recorded in anticipation of packed stands, blare out pointlessly across a sea of empty seats. But at least that is a familiar stadium sound.

At the Ariake Tennis Park, the most unusual aural phenomenon has been the steady hum of cicadas a fixture of Japanese summers, but typically not of major sports championships.

They were actually kind of annoying, Paula Badosa, 23, a tennis player from Spain, said about the noisy insects. I want to talk to my coach about them. (It was unclear what Badosa thought her coach might be able to do about the persistent buzzing.)

For athletes who once envisioned themselves performing for hordes of buzzing fans, the hushed vibe has been a bummer.

Caroline Dubois, 20, a boxer from London, arrived in Tokyo with the sounds of the 2012 Games in her hometown still ringing in her ears. She recalled being dumbstruck by the ambience at a boxing match there featuring Katie Taylor of Ireland and Natasha Jonas of Britain.

They walked out and the crowd went absolutely mental, Dubois said on Tuesday, after a bout in a mostly empty arena where the sounds of punches were repeatedly supplemented by that of a hallway door slamming shut. The noise was unreal. I was just blown away by it.

The atmosphere aint really here, she added.

Still, some have been trying, in small ways, to create it. Matthew Deane, a television host from Bangkok who is producing content for the sports authority of Thailand, stood in an otherwise empty stand in the boxing arena on Tuesday waving the countrys flag. He wanted to make his presence felt, he said, but the fact that there were no other fans made him feel awkward about actually yelling or making too much noise.

Its so quiet, so youre actually a bit hesitant to go all out, because you dont want to throw them off, he said of the athletes. But you want to let them know theres at least a few people supporting them.

Aug. 8, 2021, 11:50 a.m. ET

Others privileged enough to be watching events expressed similar feelings of responsibility. At the basketball game this week between Nigeria and Australia, Olukemi Dare, the wife of the Nigerian sports minister, sat a dozen rows up from the floor, wearing a green track jacket and green shirt, waving a Nigerian flag with each hand.

After she spent the game as the only one cheering in the mostly empty 40,000-seat arena, she was asked if she thought the players noticed her.

I dont know, she said, laughing. but Im trying to cheer them up.

The sounds of these Olympics could not contrast more with those of the previous Summer Games, in Rio de Janeiro, where uniformly cacophonous crowds led officials and athletes in some sports to beg for a moments peace.

Athletes in Tokyo speak longingly of that hubbub.

In Rio, we had a full hall and it was really loud, said Liu Jia, an Austrian table tennis player, adding that she could hear someone coughing while she was playing this week. (Oh, that was me, a nearby team official said, with a smile.)

How does a lack of fans, and in some cases the absence of noise, affect athletes? It depends, experts say.

Fabian Otte, a sports scientist and goalkeeper coach for the German soccer club Borussia Mnchengladbach, mused that silence could benefit athletes in some ways, allowing them, for example, to better hear their coaches and teammates. On the other hand, he said, emotion plays a major role in performance, and athletes often say loud fans can inspire them to push past their normal limits.

Regardless, any major changes in auditory environments, Otte said, can have a huge impact on the big picture, and it can change performance in quite a drastic way.

The most vibrant arena a relative concept in these Games might be the Tokyo Aquatics Centre, thanks to the large volume of swimmers seemingly always on hand. Since they are allowed to attend while not competing, athletes and team staff members there have been organizing themselves into makeshift cheering sections, spouting off chants and using inflatable noise makers, even as huge swaths of the stands remained empty.

Some events have featured vestigial entertainment programming from prepandemic times, creating another sort of discordant soundtrack. At the convention hall where the taekwondo events were held, for example, an announcer animatedly invited crowd members to pantomime playing drums on the giant video screen. The only people in the crowd, though, were journalists and staff members of various national Olympic committees. (A few gamely obliged.)

In others arenas, organizers have been implementing simulated crowd noise to add a layer of auditory texture to the games. But these attempts have been notable mostly for their lack of sophistication.

On the opening day of mens basketball games at Saitama Super Arena, for example, there was ambient noise of some sort coming out of the speakers. But it did not sound much like a basketball crowd, more like the din of a restaurant at lunch time service. Some in the stands wondered, then, whether a hot microphone was broadcasting noise from somewhere else in the building.

Rapinoe sounded more distracted than energized by the fake, oddly soft crowd noise used for the soccer games.

I think there was noise on like level-1 volume, Rapinoe said after a game at Tokyo stadium, laughing. I was like, is that a fan, an actual fan, there?

Like Rapinoe, the biggest names at the Games have played in silence that belied their global standing. When Naomi Osaka one of the most famous athletes in the world and one of Japans biggest sports stars won her opening round match on Sunday in a 10,000-seat arena, five people clapped. All were seated in her player box. One was her coach.

It is hard not to imagine what a moment like that a national hero, notching a big victory only days after lighting the Olympic torch could have sounded like in a parallel, noisy universe.

Matthew Futterman, James Wagner and Tariq Panja contributed reporting.

Go here to read the rest:

At Tokyo Olympics, Door Slams and Idle Chatter Fill in the Soundtrack - The New York Times

Extraordinary moments from the Tokyo Olympics that outshined the competition – CBS News

With no fans in the stands due to the pandemic, the Olympics look a little different this year but the lack of spectators does not mean a lack of enthusiasm. Here are some of the inspiring moments that outshined the competition.

Lydia Jacoby was the first American woman to win a gold medal in the swimming events in Tokyo. The high school student dominated the women's 100-meter breaststroke, completing it in 1 minute, 4.95 seconds and when she did, her hometown went wild.

Footage from a watch party in Seward, Alaska shows friends and family jumping for joy after Jacoby, the first Alaskan to make the U.S. swim team, earned gold.

Australian swimmer Ariarne Titmus beat Team USA's Katie Ledecky in the 400-meter freestyle by two-thirds of a second Monday.

Titmus' coach Dean Boxall went wild after she won. Cameras caught Boxall hard to miss in a neon yellow shirt punching the air, shouting and pacing back and forth in sheer excitement. His celebration quickly went viral on social media.

Upon arriving in Tokyo, several athletes began posting "tours" of the Olympic Village on social media some, including Team USA skateboarder Nyjah Huston and Team USA track and field runner Paul Chelimo, showed off the odd cardboard beds.

The cardboard beds are made sustainably, out of "highly durable cardboard materials," according to the Tokyo Organizing Committee's pre-game report. "These will be turned into recycled paper after the Games."

Still, many athletes seized the opportunity to use the beds in fun social media posts, with the Team USA rugby women posting a tongue-in-cheek TikTok video about the seemingly stiff beds that has gone viral.

British diver Tom Daley made his Olympics debut at the 2008 Beijing games when he was just 14 years old. Fast forward to 2021, Daley is now a father and husband, and after years of trying, he finally brought home the gold.

Daley's husband Dustin Lance Black, and mom, Debbie, were watching together at home and their ecstatic reaction to the win melted hearts on social media.

Ukrainian gymnast Oksana Chusovitina has competed in eight Olympic games and recently announced that at 46 years old, Tokyo would be her last.

Chusovitina competed in the vault event on Sunday and after competing, the stadium gave her a standing ovation, honoring the history-making gymnast for decades of work in the sport.

Caeleb Dressel won a gold medal for Team USA in the 4x100-meter freestyle relay on Monday, and immediately tossed the medal to Brooks Curry, his teammate seated in the bleachers.

Curry helped Dressel earn the medal, as he was the swimmer who competed in the preliminary round. Dressel swam for the final and shared his win with the teammate who helped get him there.

Suni Lee became the fifth straight American woman to win gold in the women'sOlympicgymnastics all-around at the Olympics on Thursday.

When Lee, thefirstHmong-American Olympian, cinched the gold, 18-year-old's friends and family watching at home in Minnesota erupted in cheers including her dad, John Lee, who was paralyzed in an accident in 2019. "All the hard work all the broken bones, all the time you missed vacationing with us, it paid off," he said after his daughter's win.

South African swimmer Tatjana Schoenmaker looked astonished after she won gold in the 200m breaststroke, breaking a world record. Not only did her teammate Kaylene Corbett embrace her, so did Team USA's Lilly King and Annie Lazor.

Despite being on opposing teams, all four women had a group hug the pool, celebrating Schoenmaker's win.

As Team Colombia's Melissa Gonzalez ran in the qualifying race for the 400-meter hurdles at the Tokyo Olympics, she had a fan watching in the U.S.

Her husband, David Blough, a quarterback for the Detroit Lions, looked on with bated breath at a watch party with some of his teammates. The Lions set up a camera to catch the supportive husband's reaction.

About a week after Tom Daley won a gold medal for diving at the Tokyo Olympics and knit his medal a little homemade cozy he was seen watching other events in the stands, knitting.

Qatar's Mutaz Essa Barshim and Italy's Gianmarco Tamberi proved to be the top high jumpers at the Tokyo Olympics. The two tied in the event, and instead of having a jump-off to decide who scored higher, they agreed to share the gold medal.

Their epic celebration together after both winning gold went viral, showing the world what sportsmanship is all about.

Japanese-American surfer Kanoa Igarashi, who competed for Japan, lost to Brazilian Italo Ferreira in the sport's first Olympic appearance. He lost his shot at gold, but not his sportsmanship.

Igarashi, who knows Portuguese, translated a press conference question for Ferreira, who is learning English, the Associated Press reports. "Yes, thank you, Kanoa," Ferreira said in English after the silver medalist helped him.

Team USA's Isaiah Jewett and Botswana's Nijel Amos were competing in the 800-meter semifinals when they got tangled up and fell. The runners didn't get angry at the ruined race. Instead, they got up, wrapped their arms around each other and walked to the finish line together.

Team USA's Ryan Crouser won his second gold medal in the shot put competition at the Olympics on Wednesday. After breaking his own previous record, Crouser became emotional as he held up a piece of paper with a message on it.

"Grandpa, we did it," the sign read. "2020 Olympic champion." Crouser cried as he held the sign up for cameras to capture while family members watched from home.

Team USA's Allyson Felix and Quanera Hayes are fierce competitors in the 400-meter hurdles. In fact, Hayes who has called Felix her "idol" defeated her earlier this year at the Olympic trials. But there didn't seem to be bad blood between the competitors.

The two ended the trials by introducing their children, Demetrius and Camryn, both 2, on the track. The adorable moment of the toddlers hugging was shared during Olympics coverage as their moms competed together again.

See more here:

Extraordinary moments from the Tokyo Olympics that outshined the competition - CBS News