Tokyo Olympics 2020: More COVID-19 tests, no 14-day quarantine in updated rules
The Playbook for athletes is to be updated on Wednesday, with Playbooks for media and others unveiled on Friday. A final edition of all Playbooks will be published in June.

Japan National Stadium is slated to host the opening and closing ceremony for the Tokyo Games scheduled for 23 July. AP
Tokyo: Tokyo Olympic organisers and the IOC are to unveil new plans this week to explain how 15,400 Olympic and Paralympic athletes can compete in Japan when the games open in three months in the midst of a pandemic.
The rollout of the second edition of the so-called "Playbooks" — an IOC guidebook explaining how the games can be pulled off — comes as Tokyo, Osaka and several other areas have been placed under a third state of emergency as coronavirus cases surge.
Japan, which has attributed about 10,000 deaths to COVID-19 , has also been slow with local vaccination with about 1% so far getting shots.
Organisers are expected to announce daily testing for athletes. They are also expected to drop a 14-day quarantine requirement, allowing athletes to train when they arrive. Athletes will be required to stay within a "bubble" consisting of the Olympic Village on Tokyo Bay, and venues and training areas.
Japan's Kyodo News, citing unnamed sources, said athletes and staff will have to be tested twice within 96 hours before leaving home. They will also be tested upon arrival in Japan.
The Playbook for athletes is to be updated on Wednesday, with Playbooks for media and others unveiled on Friday. A final edition of all Playbooks will be published in June.
Resistance to the Olympics in Japan is still running high with 70-80% opposed in recent polls. Fans from abroad have already been barred, and organisers have put off until as late a June a decision on having any fans at all at Olympic venues.
Taro Kono, the minister in charge of vaccination in Japan, suggested earlier this month that empty venues was a probable option.
IOC President Thomas Bach last week said his plans to meet the torch relay in Hiroshima on 17-18 May are still not confirmed.
Bach's arrival would be just days after the latest state of emergency ends on 11 May.
Opposition lawmakers in Japan's national legislature have suggested Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga scheduled the state of emergency to accommodate Bach.
The government and the International Olympic Committee have said the precautions are in place specifically for Japan's "Golden Week" holiday, which begins on Thursday.
The torch relay, which began on 25 March in Fukushima in northeastern Japan, has been detoured several times this month and was forced to run in an empty city park in Osaka. It was also rerouted in Matsuyama City Ehime prefecture.
It will be banned altogether this weekend on the Okinawa island of Miyakojima. The small island has only one hospital. The relay will run through other locations on Okinawa.
The heavily sponsored relay is a caravan of more than a dozen cars and other vehicles festooned with advertising from major sponsors like Coca-Cola and Toyota. Torch runners — there are 10,000 in total — typically bring up the rear amid blaring music and banter from DJs.
The relay is scheduled to end at the National Stadium on 23 July for the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Games.
also read

India Open badminton tournament postponed indefinitely after recent COVID-19 surge
The India Open badminton tournament, slated to be held at the Indira Gandhi Stadium in New Delhi from 11-16 May, has been postponed owing to rising COVID-19 cases in the city, BAI announced on Monday.

Tokyo Olympics 2020: Doctors not IOC should decide Games' fate, says Hayley Wickenheiser
Wickenheiser, a Hockey Hall of Fame inductee, knows after training for years to compete, she would do anything to go, so athletes, and the IOC, shouldn't make the final choice on the Games' fate.

Tokyo Olympics 2020: Will Japanese athletes be vaccinated ahead of the public?
Will Japanese athletes be vaccinated before Tokyo 2020? Will there be local fans in venues? All that and more answered