TOKYO -- The Tokyo Olympics have finally opened after a long journey filled with controversy, and an unprecedented one-year postponement because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The proceedings officially began with Friday's opening ceremony at the National Stadium, a mostly subdued affair mixed with joyous moments like a high-tech drone show, and capped by tennis star Naomi Osaka lighting the Olympic cauldron.
Key events to watch on Monday, July 26 (Tokyo time)
Tennis (second round)
Badminton (group stage)
Basketball (group stage)
Table tennis
Judo (day with medals)
Taekwondo (day with medals)
We're tracking the latest medal count.
Here are the latest developments:
Monday, July 26
12:20 p.m. Japanese tennis star Naomi Osaka wins her second-round match against Switzerland's Viktorija Golubic with ease, taking straight sets by a score of 6-3 and 6-2.
11:45 a.m. TV viewership for the opening ceremony averaged 56.4% in Tokyo and surrounding areas, Kyodo News reports, citing an audience ratings company.
Video Research says the preliminary rating for public broadcaster NHK ceremony coverage was lower than the 61.2% for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics opening ceremony.
11:15 a.m. Japan's Naomi Osaka is back in action, in her second-round match against Switzerland's Viktorija Golubic.
11:05 a.m. Tokyo Olympics organizers report 16 new Games-related COVID-19 infections, bringing the total since July 1 to 148.
Sunday, July 25
11:02 p.m. The U.S. men's basketball team loses to France 83-76 in a Group A preliminary round, ending a winning streak stretching back to 2004. The Americans, with their professional players from the NBA, had long dominated the men's side of the sport.
10:00 p.m. China's Lijun Chen wins the gold medal in the men's 67kg weightlifting.
8:45 p.m. As the first Olympic weekend wraps up, Tokyo reports new COVID-19 cases rising once again to 1,763 today. The number of infections fell on Friday and Saturday as Tokyo residents left town for the four-day weekend or stayed home to avoid Olympic crowds.
The International Olympic Committee, on the other hand, says it is relaxing COVID protocols at the Tokyo Games, allowing medalists to take off their face masks for 30 seconds on the podium to be photographed.
7:33 p.m. Japan's judoka Hifumi Abe wins the gold medal in men's under 66 kg category, defeating Vazha Margvelashvili of Georgia, soon after his younger sister Uta claimed gold at the Tokyo Olympics. It is the first time a Japanese brother and sister won gold on the same day in an Olympic competition.
7:00 p.m. Japanese judoka Uta Abe wins the gold medal in the women's 52 kg category at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics on Sunday, defeating Amandine Buchard of France in the final. Bronze medals went to Odette Giuffrida of Italy and Chelsie Giles of Britain.
5:00 p.m. South Korea wins a ninth consecutive gold medal in the women's team archery event.
4:10 p.m. Chinese pair Shi Tingmao and Wang Han wins gold in the women's 3 meters synchronised springboard.
1:45 p.m. Hometown favorite Yuto Horigome of Japan wins the first-ever Olympic gold medal in skateboarding, prevailing in the men's street final.
1:20 p.m. The International Olympic Committee says masks during medal ceremonies are a must, after swimmers were seen taking them off and hugging other competitors in violation of COVID-19 rules, Reuters reports.
"It's not a nice to have. It's a must to have," said IOC spokesman Mark Adams.
Chase Kalisz of the U.S. took off his mask on the podium after his gold medal performance in the men's 400 meters medley, hugging compatriot and silver medalist Jay Literland, who was also mask-less. Australian bronze medalist Brendon Smith also removed his mask. Other swimmers did the same later on.
"There is no relaxation and we would urge and ask everyone to obey the rules," Adams said. "It's important for the sports, for everyone involved and for our Japanese friends and it would send a strong message."
12:45 p.m. The world's No. 1 women's tennis player, Australia's Ash Barty, is knocked out in the first round by Spain's Sara Sorribes Tormo.
12:01 p.m. Australia wins the gold medal in the women's 4x100 freestyle relay at the Tokyo Olympics on Sunday in a world record time of 3:29.69. Canada wins silver in 3:32.78 and the bronze goes to the United States in 3:32.81.
11:23 a.m. Japan's Yui Ohashi wins swimming gold in the women's 400-meter individual medley in her home Olympics on Sunday. Ohashi, the national record holder for the 200m and 400m IM events, touched the wall first in 4 minutes, 32.08 seconds in the eight-swimmer final at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre. She delivered the country's second gold medal in the pandemic-delayed Olympics after judoka Naohisa Takato on Saturday.
10:30 a.m. Skateboarding made its debut as an Olympic event early Sunday, bringing a sport rooted in street culture into the mainstream.
U.S. skater Jagger Eaton told Reuters that it was "tough" to compete without fans, due to the COVID-19 protocols. "I always really get hyped by the crowd," he told the news agency.
Reuters notes that American skateboarding legend Tony Hawk, now a commentator, earlier marked the milestone on Instagram, writing, "As a kid that was mostly lambasted for my interest in skateboarding, I never imagined it would be part of the Olympic Games."
10:00 a.m. Not only are spectators banned from watching the Games inside the venues, the public has been advised not to stop and observe the second Olympic cauldron near Tokyo's waterfront, Japanese broadcaster NHK reports. The organizers made the request out of concern for coronavirus infections. The area around the cauldron is fenced off, but on Saturday people were taking pictures from outside the barrier.
9:30 a.m. U.S. broadcaster NBC's telecast of the Tokyo Olympics opening ceremony drew 16.7 million viewers, the smallest audience for the event in the past 33 years, Reuters reports, citing preliminary data from Comcast-owned NBCUniversal.
The figure was down 37% from 2016, when 26.5 million people watched the Rio de Janeiro Games opener, and 59% from 2012, when 40.7 million tuned into the London ceremony. The previous 33-year low for a Summer Games opening ceremony was for the 1992 Barcelona Games, at 21.6 million.
5:05 a.m. Rowing action scheduled for Monday has been moved forward to Sunday because of the approaching Tropical Storm Nepartak, which is bearing down on eastern Japan.
Rowing events are held at the Sea Forest Waterway in Tokyo's Minato Ward.
Organizing committee sources say preparations are also underway for rescheduling the men's and women's triathlon set for Monday and Tuesday at Odaiba Marine Park in Minato Ward.
Saturday, July 24
11:30 p.m. Several prominent Japanese athletes suffer setbacks in the first day of competition after the opening ceremony.
Leukemia survivor Rikako Ikee and fellow Japanese swimmers fail to advance in the women's 4x100 meter freestyle relay, finishing ninth. Ikee says the result left her feeling "a strong sense of frustration." Also in swimming, gold medal contender Daiya Seto misses a chance to reach the men's 400 meter medley final.
In men's gymnastics, past Olympic champion Kohei Uchimura's run for a medal in horizontal bars ends after a fall dashed his hopes to advance.
10:25 p.m. Panipak "Tennis" Wongpattanakit of Thailand wins a gold medal in taekwondo, earning the first gold for her country and for any Association of Southeast Asian Nations member at the 2020 Summer Olympics.
In other medal news, Indonesia's Windy Cantika Aisah wins bronze in women's weightlifting in the 49 kg class.
8:40 p.m. Japan's Naohisa Takato wins the first gold medal for the host nation, beating Taiwan's Yang Yung-wei in the final of the men's 60 kg judo. Takato, a bronze medalist at the Rio Games in 2016, cried after his victory in an empty Nippon Budokan, the legendary martial arts and concert hall.
8:30 p.m. Excitement, anxiety, apathy -- the Olympics have stirred mixed emotions in the host city. Nikkei Asia took to the streets of Tokyo in the days leading up to the opening and captured some signs of public sentiment on video. Take a look here.
7:10 p.m. Japan takes its first medal as the 2020 Olympics host -- a silver in 48 kg women's judo. Funa Tonaki falls to Kosovo's Distria Krasniqi in the gold medal match.
6:20 p.m. Tokyo's Metropolitan Police Department announces four COVID-19 cases among officers who worked as Olympics security personnel. The four and 15 others who were in close contact are self-isolating.
5:20 p.m. China is off to a quick start, taking its second gold of day one in women's 49 kg weightlifting. India took the silver. Meanwhile, South Korea has won its first gold in mixed team archery.
4:35 p.m. China has slammed U.S. Olympic broadcaster NBC over a map it showed during the opening ceremony. The map of China did not include Taiwan or the South China Sea, which "hurt the dignity and emotions of the Chinese people," according to the country's consulate in New York.
2:15 p.m. The IOC's executive director for the Games, Christophe Dubi, has asked Olympic participants to remind one another of COVID-19 protocols, such as proper mask wearing and regular hand sanitizing.
Several athletes were criticized for marching in the opening ceremony without masks. Dubi says wearing masks is a habit that many overseas participants are not used to. "Now, if you have blatant behaviors that are absolutely unbearable, we will definitely take action," he added.
Meanwhile, the Czech Olympic committee is investigating the cause of a COVID-19 outbreak among its team. Positive tests have already felled four Czech athletes from beach volleyball, table tennis and cycling competitions. Media reports indicate that infections could be traced to a charter flight on which passengers removed their masks.
Organizers earlier on Saturday reported 17 new Olympic-related infections overall, including one athlete, bringing the total up to 107. Over 34,000 people have arrived in Japan for the Games.
1:00 p.m. The International Judo Federation has suspended an Algerian judoka and his coach for withdrawing from the Olympics before his event started, after the draw put him on course to face an Israeli, Reuters reports.
Fethi Nourine and his coach Amar Benikhlef withdrew to show their support for the Palestinian cause. But the IJF said the move was "in total opposition to the philosophy of the International Judo Federation."
"The IJF has a strict non-discrimination policy, promoting solidarity as a key principle, reinforced by the values of judo," the federation said.
Athletes from other countries such as Iran have similarly shunned Israeli competitors in the past.
12:10 p.m. Tokyo 2020 says they failed to hand out PCR test kits to some athletes earlier this week at the Olympic Village due to a shortage. According to the "Playbook" guidelines, athletes are subject to daily tests. Organizers say that more test kits will be delivered today, and that there should not be a shortage from now on.
12:00 p.m. As Typhoon In-fa hits Okinawa in southwestern Japan, rowing competitions in Tokyo are rescheduled for Saturday and Sunday. Sailing and surfing events are still set for Monday. The weakening storm is expected to hit Tokyo on Sunday or Monday.
11:30 a.m. China has bagged the Tokyo Games' first gold medal. Yang Qian wins the hardware in the women's 10-meter rifle competition. Russian and Swiss athletes place second and third.
3:00 a.m. The opening ceremony notably included a moment of silence in memory of the Israeli delegation members killed by Palestinian gunmen at the 1972 Munich Games.
"We, the Olympic community, also remember all the Olympians and members of our community who have so sadly left us," an announcer said in the opening ceremony. "In particular, we remember those who lost their lives during the Olympic Games."
"One group still holds a strong place in all our memories, and stand for all of those we have lost at the Games: The members of the Israeli delegation at the Olympic Games Munich in 1972."
The families of the 11 killed had long asked the International Olympic Committee for a minute's silence at an opening ceremony but had been turned down until now.
"I welcome this important and historic moment," Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett tweeted. "May their memory be blessed."
Friday, July 23
11:45 p.m. Tennis superstar Naomi Osaka lights the Olympic flame.
Speculation that the four-time Grand Slam winner, the daughter of a Haitian man and a Japanese woman, could have a prominent role in the ceremony rose when Tokyo 2020 organizers requested that her opening match in the women's singles event be pushed back by a day to Sunday.
"Undoubtedly the greatest athletic achievement and honor I will ever have in my life," Osaka wrote in a tweet after the event. "I have no words to describe the feelings I have right now but I do know I am currently filled with gratefulness and thankfulness."
Other torch bearers in the stadium include baseball legends Sadaharu Oh and Shigeo Nagashima, who is helped on his walk by former MLB star Hideki Matsui; a doctor and nurse; Paralympian Wakako Tsuchida; and school students from the quake-devastated Tohoku region.
11:35 p.m. Jazz pianist Hiromi hammers the ivories as legendary Kabuki actor Ebizo Ichikawa performs on stage that represents Mount Fuji and the sun.
11:30 p.m. A very enjoyable performance of actors representing the sports at Tokyo 2020 in the style of the pictograms designed for the 1964 Tokyo Games.
11:18 p.m. Emperor Naruhito declares the Games open.
11:13 p.m. Time for speeches now. Tokyo 2020 President Seiko Hashimoto starts off by saying she hopes the Olympics will offer a moment of peace. She appears to be on verge of tears.
IOC President Thomas Bach says today is a moment of hope and expresses gratitude to the Japanese people for hosting the Games. He makes a special point of welcoming the refugee athletes.
10:50 p.m. In a stunning performance, 1,824 drones form a planet in the sky above the stadium, as a junior chorus sings John Lennon's "Imagine." Then, a video clip cuts to artists from all the world's continents singing the classic sequentially.
10:45 p.m. Four Japanese athletes read out the Olympic oath together, in a similar way to how representative students speak in unison at a Japanese school ceremony.
10:35 p.m. The entrance of Japan, led by NBA star Rui Hachimura and wrestler Yui Susaki, round off the 206 groups of athletes.
10:05 p.m. The orchestra is playing a medley of Japanese video game songs as the athletes come in. For the gamers out there, here's the set list:
Dragon Quest - "Overture: Roto's Theme"
Final Fantasy - "Victory Fanfare"
Tales of series - "Sorey's Theme - The Shepherd"
Monster Hunter - "Proof of a Hero"
Kingdom Hearts - "Olympus Coliseum"
Chrono Trigger - "Frog's Theme"
Ace Combat - "First Flight"
Tales of series - "Pomp and Majesty"
Monster Hunter - "Wind of Departure"
Chrono Trigger - "Robo's Theme"
Sonic the Hedgehog - "Star Light Zone"
Winning Eleven (Pro Evolution Soccer) - "eFootball walk-on theme"
Final Fantasy - "MAIN THEME"
Phantasy Star Universe - "Guardians"
Kingdom Hearts - "Hero's Fanfare"
Gradius (Nemesis) - "01 ACT I-1"
NieR - "Song of the Ancients"
SaGa series - "The Orchestral SaGa - Legend of Music"
Soulcalibur - "The Brave New Stage of History"
9:50 p.m. We are now roughly halfway through the athletes' entrance. The countries are entering in the Japanese alphabetic order.
8:40 p.m. As is traditional, Greek athletes are the first to enter the stadium. They are all wearing masks, and keeping their distance from each other. They are followed by the Refugee team.
Michelle Hà Bùi
Source: Nikkei Asia