The intimacy ban that had been in place for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics has been lifted for the 2024 Paris Olympics, and the Olympic village, where the athletes stay during the event, will be stocked with 300,000 condoms, Laurent Michaud, director of the village, told Sky News.

In an interview about the upcoming games, which will be held in the French capital from July 26 to Aug. 11, Michaud said they are preparing for 14,250 residents at the village and are aiming to have 300,000 condoms for the athletes.

Rules on intimacy went into effect for the 2020 Olympics that were held in Tokyo, Japan in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. To help prevent the virus from spreading, athletes were asked to limit their physical contact with each other, keeping about six and a half feet between them, except when necessary, like on the field.

Providing condoms at the Olympics has been a tradition since the 1988 Seoul Olympics, as an effort to raise awareness for HIV and AIDS, according to CBS Sports. In Tokyo, officials still handed out 150,000 condoms – even though the intimacy rules prevented any scenarios to use them.

  • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    This story is regularly run in the UK. The easiest is cycling, with some Olympians managing to go from zero to world-class within four years.

    Obviously, it’s not that easy, but if your dream is to run your way through the Olympic village, you’ll find a way.

    • philipp_
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      8 months ago

      That is just plain wrong. People that switch over to cycling and are successful within a few years are athletes from other disciplines. You can not build up the necessary cardio to be an olympic level cyclist in just a few years.

      • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Well, Chris Hoy, one of GB’s most decorated cyclists, switched to track cycling and was considered a medal hopeful within four years. That’s why I mentioned cycling.

        Besides…I’m not a olympic cyclist. It probably isn’t true, since it was written by a journalist and not a cyclist, but that’s what the UK rags always say.