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The championship tour had been scheduled to start in March in Australia, but never got underway because of the pandemic.
Surfing was poised for a monumental year in 2020 with its arrival on the Olympic stage. But the pandemic has not only caused a postponement of the Tokyo Games, it has now led the sport’s governing body, the World Surf League, to cancel the World Championship Tour this year and to revamp the next tour schedule.
The 2021 tour will begin later this year, an early start designed to provide leeway in case the pandemic worsens and causes schedule changes later in the calendar.
The 2020 championship tour, which had been scheduled to begin in March with the Corona Open Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia, never got off the ground because of the pandemic.
It was a jarring realization. If surfing — a sport that takes place outside, with physically distant competitors — couldn’t pull off competition safely, was there hope for any other sport?
As event after event was canceled, it became obvious that the surfing season could not continue amid coronavirus infections and the extensive international travel that the tour demands.
“When we entered into what we thought was a longer, more protracted hold, it became clear that this could be a transformative moment for the sport,” Erik Logan, the chief executive of the surf league, said.
So Logan, along with the league’s executive team and a round table of surfers, went to the drawing board. Corralling a group of stakeholders over Zoom was surely less complicated than it would have been to coordinate groups of pro athletes and executives as they bounced around the globe from Australia to Brazil to France.
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