Skip to main content

A car could be the star of Japan’s Olympic torch relay

Japan has finally arrived at the sad realization that it will have to postpone the 2020 Summer Olympics due to the coronavirus chaos, though it hasn’t given up on the idea of starting the torch relay on time later this week.

Recommended Videos

But in an unexpected turn of events, the Tokyo Games organizing committee now says it plans to transport the flame inside a car instead of having athletes, celebrities, and local heroes run with it as per tradition, according to Kyodo News.

The idea is that sticking it in a car will keep the crowds off the street as few people will want to head to the highway to see it whiz by at 70 mph. It’s thought this will help to reduce the number of infections of the coronavirus (formally known as COVID-19), which, at the time of writing, doesn’t appear to have taken hold in Japan in the same way that it has in some other countries around the world.

Of course, carrying an open flame inside a closed car would be a logistical nightmare, and probably result in the vehicle arriving at its destination on fire. That’s why the Olympic flame will be carried not with the torch but instead inside a small lantern, with the car transporting it along each of the 47 relay routes across the country.

It’s not yet clear what kind of car will be taking the flame on its historic cross-country drive. At one end of the scale, it could be a Japanese electric supercar, while at the other end it might be a more modest, locally built Kei car. We hope it’s the latter, though it’s likely to be something in between.

As you might expect, the place at the end of each route has a special event planned to welcome the flame. But it’s not certain if these will go ahead as thousands of people would likely show up, just as they did for the flame’s first public appearance in the country last weekend — hardly what you want if you’re trying to avoid more virus infections. But then, if there’s no torch running, and no torch events, there would seem little point in driving the flame across Japan.

Continuing with the relay events would at least ensure that various places along the route will still gain publicity through local media as Japan uses them to throw the spotlight on different parts of the country. Indeed, carrying the iconic flame across the nation in a car may end up bagging the relay more attention than expected.

If they have to abandon human participants this time around, you’d have thought the committee would’ve brought Honda’s humanoid robot out of retirement, giving the organizers a chance to show off some of Japan’s technological prowess. But then again, the spectacle of Asimo running along while holding aloft the Olympic flame would surely bring chaos to the streets, and more chaos is something we could all do without just now.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
COVID-19 may already be causing new car sales to fall
road rave subscription direct sales threaten traditional car dealers dealer showing brochure to young couple in showroom

The global spread of COVID-19, commonly called coronavirus, already has car shoppers abandoning showrooms. While states and municipalities only implemented social distancing measures fairly recently and are continuing to do so unevenly, the effect is being felt in showrooms, according to Edmunds.

With six days left in March, Edmunds predicts that 1,044,805 cars and trucks will be sold in the United States. That represents a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of 11.9 million, according to Edmunds. SAAR is a metric used in business that attempts to remove seasonal variables from data. The predicted SAAR for March 2020 represents a 35.5% decrease in sales from March 2019 and a 23.4% decrease from February 2020.

Read more
Fiat Chrysler swaps cars for masks in huge production effort
A doctor in a medical suit and mask.

Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) is swapping cars for face masks at one of its factories as part of efforts to help frontline medical professionals in North America during the coronavirus outbreak.

Officially known as COVID-19, the virus is continuing to spread in the United States, putting growing pressure on hospitals and other healthcare facilities throughout the country.

Read more
Comcast considers options as Tokyo Olympics edge toward postponement
Tokyo 2020

It's the last thing NBC and other major backers of the Olympics will want to hear, but Japan’s prime minister has finally admitted that the Tokyo Games may have to be rescheduled in light of the global disruption being caused by the coronavirus, formally known as COVID-19

Shinzo Abe’s comments, which came on Monday, March 23, followed an announcement several hours earlier by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in which it said it would analyze the situation over the next four weeks before making a final decision on whether the Games can be held as planned.

Read more