Unlike Tokyo's mostly empty stadiums, the Beijing Games will take place in front of crowds, albeit tickets will only be sold to people living in China
A worker in a protective suit sprays disinfectant during the 2021 Asia Open Figure Skating test event for the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics at Capital Indoor Stadium on October 15, 2021 in Beijing, China. Photo by Lintao Zhang/Getty Images
Beijing, which will host the 2022 Winter Olympics, is staging a series of test events—giving a strong taste of what the Games will look like and what coronavirus measures will be in place. AFP Sport takes a look at what athletes and spectators—only people living in mainland China are allowed to attend—can expect when the real thing happens on February 4-20 next year:
China plans to host the Games under what could be the strictest Covid-19 safety rules at a mass sporting event since the pandemic began, even compared to the summer's mostly crowd-free Tokyo Olympics.
Chinese officials say participants will stay in a "closed loop"—a strict bubble insulating them from spectators and the outside world for the whole Games.
Athletes will have to be fully vaccinated or undergo a 21-day quarantine on arrival in the Chinese capital. Athletes did not have to be vaccinated in Tokyo.