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WHAT WILL BE THE FUTURE OF HIGH COMPETITION SPORTS?



WHAT WILL BE THE FUTURE OF HIGH COMPETITION SPORTS?


According to the statistics offered by medical and government agencies at the international level, as of today, January 17, 2022, half of the population is inoculated by the drug temporarily authorized by both the FDA and the EMA.


This balance is approximate since there are countries whose figures have not been COMPLETELY revealed, such as the Vatican, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Venezuela, Kosovo, Croatia, Romania and many others whose sum populations are well below 50 percent. referred percent, such is the case of Haiti, with less than 1 percent of its population inoculated.


This background, referring to the fact that 50 percent of the world population rejects this temporary medication, raises several questions.


What effect has the novel Djokovic had on the uninoculated or half-inoculated population in Australia?


How successful will this year's edition of the Australian Open be?


The approaches become valid, if we also take into consideration the episodes that players have experienced in the classifications of the first open of the year, where several have been left with poor controls in relation to Covid-19, such is the case of the Australian Bernard Tomic, or of the Slovenian Dalila Japukovic, who had a coughing fit in the middle of the game, due to which she had to leave the game.


But beyond what has happened in Australia, now France joins the veto to those players who refuse to apply the usual inoculation with temporary authorization, and that so far has resulted in 22,000 deaths in the United States alone, according to figures from the National Vaccine Information Center, in addition to thousands of reports of side effects, which leads us to raise the third question, is it that we are witnessing the disappearance of highly competitive sport?


Raul Alberto Diaz

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