<p>Athlete welcome ceremonies will be scrapped and flashy spectacles axed at a scaled-back Tokyo 2020 Games, organisers said Friday, but a senior Olympic official insisted the event "has to happen".</p>.<p>Fewer free tickets and savings on banners, mascots, and fireworks are among more than 50 cost-cutting measures agreed by organisers and Olympic officials, less than a year before the virus-postponed event begins.</p>.<p>Despite the complications and extra costs of the delay, and continued uncertainty about how the massive international event can be held safely, the International Olympic Committee vice-president John Coates said that the cancellation was not an option.</p>.<p>"It would have been very easy for you to say 'this isn't possible'," he said via videolink after a meeting of organisers and Olympic officials in Tokyo and elsewhere.</p>.<p>"But I think we all share the view that this has to be possible, this has to happen, because we cannot disregard a generation of Olympic athletes."</p>.<p>Documents released by organisers painted a picture of a less-than-opulent event, with the size of behind-the-scenes delegations reduced by 10 to 15 percent, and perks cut back.</p>.<p>The number of athletes will not be reduced, organisers pledged.</p>.<p>But officials, press and others involved with the Games will be given fewer complimentary tickets to the opening and closing ceremonies -- with changes to the usually dazzling contents of the events themselves under review.</p>.<p>"What was initially proposed (for the ceremonies) has been drastically changing," acknowledged Yoshiro Mori, president of the Tokyo organising committee.</p>.<p>"Maybe it will end up a bit more modest and simple, but I hope it will be something that gives joy," he added.</p>.<p>The 2020 Games were postponed earlier this year as the deadly new coronavirus spread around the globe, and are now set to open on July 23, 2021.</p>.<p>The latest budget is for $12.6 billion -- with costs set to balloon further as venues and transport must be re-booked, and staff retained for an extra year.</p>.<p>Other cost-cutting plans include giving athletes less time to train at venues, and consolidating security points, raising the possibility of longer queues for bag-checks.</p>.<p>Presentation ceremonies to introduce each sport should be produced in "bare-minimum quality and quantity", the documents said.</p>.<p>And welcoming ceremonies held for Olympic and Paralympic teams will be scrapped altogether.</p>.<p>Coates described the plans as a blueprint for "a new Games, fit for a post-corona world" that could be used in future.</p>.<p>"We're going to leave an important legacy which we're calling the Tokyo Model," he added.</p>.<p>There are signs that public enthusiasm in Japan is waning for the Olympics, however, after a recent poll found just one in four want them to go ahead next year, with most backing either another postponement or a cancellation.</p>.<p>Organisers and local officials are engaged in complex discussions about how to safely hold the Games if the pandemic is not under control.</p>.<p>Coates said measures including regular testing and mandatory vaccination -- if a vaccine is available -- were among the possibilities.</p>
<p>Athlete welcome ceremonies will be scrapped and flashy spectacles axed at a scaled-back Tokyo 2020 Games, organisers said Friday, but a senior Olympic official insisted the event "has to happen".</p>.<p>Fewer free tickets and savings on banners, mascots, and fireworks are among more than 50 cost-cutting measures agreed by organisers and Olympic officials, less than a year before the virus-postponed event begins.</p>.<p>Despite the complications and extra costs of the delay, and continued uncertainty about how the massive international event can be held safely, the International Olympic Committee vice-president John Coates said that the cancellation was not an option.</p>.<p>"It would have been very easy for you to say 'this isn't possible'," he said via videolink after a meeting of organisers and Olympic officials in Tokyo and elsewhere.</p>.<p>"But I think we all share the view that this has to be possible, this has to happen, because we cannot disregard a generation of Olympic athletes."</p>.<p>Documents released by organisers painted a picture of a less-than-opulent event, with the size of behind-the-scenes delegations reduced by 10 to 15 percent, and perks cut back.</p>.<p>The number of athletes will not be reduced, organisers pledged.</p>.<p>But officials, press and others involved with the Games will be given fewer complimentary tickets to the opening and closing ceremonies -- with changes to the usually dazzling contents of the events themselves under review.</p>.<p>"What was initially proposed (for the ceremonies) has been drastically changing," acknowledged Yoshiro Mori, president of the Tokyo organising committee.</p>.<p>"Maybe it will end up a bit more modest and simple, but I hope it will be something that gives joy," he added.</p>.<p>The 2020 Games were postponed earlier this year as the deadly new coronavirus spread around the globe, and are now set to open on July 23, 2021.</p>.<p>The latest budget is for $12.6 billion -- with costs set to balloon further as venues and transport must be re-booked, and staff retained for an extra year.</p>.<p>Other cost-cutting plans include giving athletes less time to train at venues, and consolidating security points, raising the possibility of longer queues for bag-checks.</p>.<p>Presentation ceremonies to introduce each sport should be produced in "bare-minimum quality and quantity", the documents said.</p>.<p>And welcoming ceremonies held for Olympic and Paralympic teams will be scrapped altogether.</p>.<p>Coates described the plans as a blueprint for "a new Games, fit for a post-corona world" that could be used in future.</p>.<p>"We're going to leave an important legacy which we're calling the Tokyo Model," he added.</p>.<p>There are signs that public enthusiasm in Japan is waning for the Olympics, however, after a recent poll found just one in four want them to go ahead next year, with most backing either another postponement or a cancellation.</p>.<p>Organisers and local officials are engaged in complex discussions about how to safely hold the Games if the pandemic is not under control.</p>.<p>Coates said measures including regular testing and mandatory vaccination -- if a vaccine is available -- were among the possibilities.</p>