Australian sport in disarray as the NRL 2020 season is cancelled and Australia pulls out of the Tokyo Olympics

·

The Australian sporting world has been hit by two of the biggest announcements yet. Not only has the NRL confirmed that the 2020 season has been suspended indefinitely, but Australia’s Olympic athletes have been told to prepare for the Games to be postponed to 2021.

NRL 2020 season shut down:

The suspension of the NRL 2020 season just two rounds in, came at a press conference this evening as ARL Chief Peter V’landys lamented a “deeply sad day” for the game.

“As we said from the outset, the paramount consideration in our decision-making process has always been the safety and health of our players,” Mr V’landys said.

“Unfortunately, that’s taken a dramatic turn today. Our pandemic and biosecurity expert have said that due to the rapid rate of infection, we can no longer guarantee the safety of our players to continue to play.

“Accordingly, we are suspending the season. We aren’t going to put a time period to the suspension, we are going to look at every available option to us to recommence the season… every option is still on the table.”

NRL bosses Peter V’Landys and Todd Greenberg said the situation had changed significantly in the past 24 hours. Source: AAP.

This decision will leave NRL clubs in crisis, with the competition and clubs facing financial ruin.

“It’s catastrophic. I don’t think we’ve ever come across a financial crisis like this,” Mr V’landys continued.

“We’re all affected. We’ve led by example by cutting our expenditure immediately and we’re hoping the clubs will do the same very quickly. We’ll sit down with the players in the next week to see how they’re affected.”

Australia will not send athletes to the Tokyo Olympics 2020:

The Australian Olympic Committee (AOC) held an emergency teleconference on Monday morning and unanimously agreed a team could not be assembled for the 2020 Olympics given the current situation at home and abroad.

AOC Chief Executive, Matt Carroll, said the decision was made without waiting for advice from the International Olympic Committee due to changing circumstances with the pandemic in recent days.

AOC Chief Executive, Matt Carroll, made the decision this morning.

“We’ve had to make a call now because of the situation here in Australia and other parts of the world. But the IOC is still working through their final decision-making,” Mr Carroll told reporters in Sydney on Monday.

“The athletes desperately want to go to the Games, but they also take on board their own personal health. We need to give our athletes that certainty and that’s what we’ve done.”

Carroll’s comments came after Canada announced it would not send its team to the Olympics and Paralympics in the summer of 2020.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

From crisis to compassion: Timos Roussos and his family’s mercy mission in war-torn Cyprus

When Turkish troops landed on Cyprus on 20 July 1974, six-year-old Timos Roussos was sitting on the floor of his family’s home in Lemesos.

A granddaughter returns: Georgia Georgiou retraces her yiayia’s occupied village in Cyprus

When Georgia Georgiou handed over her Cypriot ID at the border checkpoint to cross into occupied northern Cyprus, she felt an ache.

‘You never get over it’: A childhood shattered by the Turkish invasion of Cyprus

On a warm July morning in 1974, 10-year-old Anastasia Di Loreto (née Karatzia) was jolted awake by the sound of bombs falling on Kyrenia.

Cyprus: The paradox of tolerance and impunity for Turkey

The lack of a unified, systematic and practical strategy on the part of Greece has led the Cyprus crisis into national disarray.

Lost homes and lingering hope: Greek-Cypriots reflect on Turkish invasion and its aftermath

From hidden stories to haunting memories, two Greek-Cypriot men share what it means to carry the burden of Cyprus’ past.

You May Also Like

Passenger flight from Melbourne will take priceless Benaki Museum artefacts back to Athens

Priceless artefacts from the Benaki Museum on loan for the Hellenic Museum’s exhibition 'Gods, Myths & Mortals' will return home next week.

Irini Kassas’ journey growing Newcastle into one of Australia’s greatest cities

Despite being raised in a small Greek village, Irini Kassas has devoted her life to the development of one of Australia’s largest cities.

Kathleen Folbigg pardoned after twenty years in Sydney jail

After spending two decades in prison for the murder of her four children, Kathleen Folbigg has been granted a pardon and released from jail.