The BulleTin • Friday, March 26, 2021 B5 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY SATURDAY TONIGHT HIGH 59° LOW 31° Sunshine Clear to partly cloudy MONDAY 68° 42° 64° 25° Mostly sunny and warmer Mild with periods of clouds and sunshine ALMANAC TUESDAY 42° 24° WEDNESDAY 53° 24° Cooler with times of sun and clouds TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 48° 53° 75° in 1960 36° 29° 13° in 1996 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.75" in 1975 Month to date (normal) 0.09" (0.60") Year to date (normal) 1.18" (3.22") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29.85" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Sat. Sun 6:57am/7:25pm 6:56am/7:26pm Moon 5:05pm/6:22am 6:23pm/6:50am Mercury 6:26am/5:32pm 6:26am/5:37pm Venus 7:05am/7:22pm 7:04am/7:24pm Mars 9:50am/1:21am 9:49am/1:20am Jupiter 5:22am/3:31pm 5:19am/3:28pm Saturn 4:52am/2:33pm 4:48am/2:29pm Uranus 8:14am/10:13pm 8:10am/10:09pm Full Last New First High: 61° at Hermiston Low: 21° at Crater Lake Coos Bay 54/36 Cottage Grove 59/35 Bandon 53/39 Port Orford 55/44 Mar 28 Apr 4 Apr 11 Apr 19 Tonight's sky: Use the handle of the Big Dip- per to arc to Arcturus, speed down to Spica. Gold Beach 54/45 64/36 Ashland 60/38 Brookings 59/44 Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 3 5 5 3 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras of our passes, go to www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly sunny today. Fair tonight. Sunny and mild Saturday. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Sunshine today. Clear to partly cloudy tonight. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Sunny to partly cloudy, mild today. Fair and chilly tonight. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Abundant sunshine today. Clear to partly cloudy tonight. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Sunshine today. Clear to partly cloudy tonight. Sunny and mild Saturday. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Mostly sunny today. Mainly clear tonight. Sunny Saturday. SKI REPORT Beaver Marsh 54/24 Medford Hampton 53/25 54/25 Burns Fort Rock 57/25 Crescent 53/25 Roseburg 61/36 Grants Pass 66/38 La Pine Oakridge 57/33 Silver Lake 58/26 Chiloquin 58/28 Klamath Falls 58/25 Riley 55/25 54/27 Christmas Valley 56/26 63/31 Juntura 60/29 Jordan Valley 50/26 Frenchglen 53/28 Burns Junction 55/26 Rome 57/29 Paisley 57/31 Fields 53/29 Lakeview 54/27 McDermitt 50/25 Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 51/43/0.11 50/41/pc 52/41/s La Grande 45/34/0.01 53/29/s 63/39/pc Portland 55/44/0.01 57/39/pc 60/41/pc Baker City 51/34/Tr 56/27/s 62/33/pc La Pine 44/31/0.01 54/25/s 63/31/s Prineville 46/36/0.00 61/29/s 63/37/s Brookings 51/39/0.03 59/44/s 62/44/s Medford 53/39/0.01 64/36/s 71/41/s Redmond 48/37/0.01 59/25/s 68/35/s Burns 49/31/Tr 55/25/s 64/30/s Newport 50/43/0.03 50/35/s 54/39/s Roseburg 54/40/0.02 61/36/s 65/40/s Eugene 53/41/0.03 58/35/pc 63/39/s North Bend 51/37/0.13 53/38/s 58/41/s Salem 54/41/Tr 56/36/pc 61/39/pc Klamath Falls 47/30/Tr 58/25/s 67/28/s Ontario 59/36/0.01 62/33/s 65/35/pc Sisters 45/34/0.00 60/30/s 70/41/pc Lakeview 41/28/0.04 54/27/s 64/32/s Pendleton 53/40/0.02 59/38/s 65/44/pc The Dalles 58/44/Tr 59/40/s 66/40/pc Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday NATIONAL WEATHER -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the T-storms 70° 31° Partly sunny NATIONAL Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 69/44/0.01 Akron 71/48/0.01 Albany 67/48/Tr Albuquerque 52/23/0.00 Anchorage 32/25/0.22 Atlanta 77/62/0.23 Atlantic City 58/53/0.27 Austin 76/57/0.11 Baltimore 64/56/Tr Billings 48/34/Tr Birmingham 73/62/1.93 Bismarck 60/25/0.00 Boise 50/35/0.18 Boston 62/46/0.15 Bridgeport, CT 63/43/0.57 Buffalo 70/52/0.00 Burlington, VT 73/53/0.00 Caribou, ME 54/40/0.12 Charleston, SC 81/61/0.00 Charlotte 75/53/1.23 Chattanooga 67/57/2.63 Cheyenne 45/20/0.00 Chicago 50/44/Tr Cincinnati 65/48/0.43 Cleveland 71/45/0.06 Colorado Springs 51/21/0.00 Columbia, MO 48/42/0.36 Columbia, SC 84/58/Tr Columbus, GA 82/61/0.08 Columbus, OH 72/45/0.02 Concord, NH 67/46/0.02 Corpus Christi 88/65/Tr Dallas 68/52/0.43 Dayton 68/44/0.29 Denver 52/28/0.00 Des Moines 43/38/0.22 Detroit 66/44/0.02 Duluth 31/26/Tr El Paso 66/40/0.00 Fairbanks 31/15/0.10 Fargo 55/18/0.00 Flagstaff 38/25/Tr Grand Rapids 50/45/0.07 Green Bay 42/37/Tr Greensboro 69/49/0.62 Harrisburg 66/56/0.06 Hartford, CT 75/51/0.27 Helena 45/32/0.02 Honolulu 81/70/0.17 Houston 82/66/Tr Huntsville 72/59/2.35 Indianapolis 59/44/0.11 Jackson, MS 82/63/0.67 Jacksonville 88/57/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 81/54/s 58/43/pc 72/39/t 55/35/pc 29/15/pc 76/64/pc 73/53/c 84/62/s 80/49/pc 49/34/pc 75/60/pc 50/27/pc 57/34/s 65/45/sh 65/46/t 59/36/r 64/37/t 49/28/r 85/64/pc 83/54/pc 75/52/s 39/26/sn 53/44/pc 59/44/s 56/40/sh 49/30/c 61/50/pc 79/61/t 75/65/r 59/45/pc 67/40/r 81/69/s 78/56/s 58/44/pc 47/29/c 56/46/pc 56/33/c 36/28/pc 72/46/s 26/5/c 53/34/c 35/22/pc 48/32/r 49/32/pc 79/51/pc 75/51/pc 71/43/t 50/36/pc 82/72/s 82/68/s 71/52/s 57/44/c 77/65/pc 90/64/pc Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 58/39/sh 57/46/s 75/62/s 79/55/pc 96/82/pc 63/51/c 59/50/r 59/45/pc 65/50/t 60/36/pc 75/61/t 73/57/pc 64/47/pc 43/27/pc 86/77/s 46/34/pc 48/36/r 64/44/pc 75/62/t 77/72/s 46/40/r 54/42/pc 74/53/s 76/66/s 66/50/pc 52/37/r 67/43/pc 94/78/s Saturday Hi/Lo/W 80/50/pc 68/56/pc 55/40/c 57/35/sh 34/12/c 82/66/t 61/52/s 82/59/t 73/54/s 58/40/pc 80/67/t 52/25/pc 63/40/s 54/39/s 59/43/s 56/46/c 48/36/c 40/21/c 84/66/t 75/64/sh 75/64/r 43/28/s 66/40/r 72/55/pc 66/54/pc 48/29/pc 72/40/pc 84/67/t 84/64/t 71/57/pc 55/33/pc 85/70/pc 77/53/c 71/52/c 49/31/pc 58/33/c 59/48/c 39/24/c 65/44/s 25/-6/c 47/25/pc 48/22/c 62/38/sh 49/32/sh 74/61/sh 71/53/s 62/39/s 57/41/pc 82/70/s 83/68/c 74/65/r 71/47/c 82/68/t 89/65/pc City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 38/29/0.04 48/42/0.20 56/45/0.13 68/55/0.00 67/50/0.84 50/40/Tr 67/43/1.28 64/51/0.00 69/53/0.49 45/39/0.00 74/60/1.15 86/74/0.00 44/42/0.00 53/30/0.00 73/54/1.40 79/69/Tr 68/49/0.08 67/51/0.04 82/54/0.00 60/43/0.04 47/38/Tr 91/63/0.00 72/57/0.00 51/43/0.36 61/51/0.01 72/51/0.00 72/48/Tr 53/42/0.00 66/49/0.18 75/52/0.10 57/22/0.00 51/40/0.00 75/50/Tr 73/50/0.00 67/44/0.00 57/48/0.60 48/36/0.07 78/56/Tr 62/55/0.01 60/51/0.00 63/46/0.00 51/17/0.00 84/63/0.00 54/42/0.89 53/24/0.00 49/34/0.00 54/45/0.51 88/68/0.00 69/43/0.00 57/48/0.61 66/55/Tr 54/43/Tr 57/44/0.00 75/54/0.01 Today Hi/Lo/W 40/34/r 62/52/pc 51/31/sh 66/50/pc 60/43/s 57/44/c 72/51/s 68/50/pc 63/45/s 52/38/pc 71/56/s 86/74/s 50/38/c 53/41/pc 69/48/s 77/71/t 75/47/t 76/47/t 83/52/t 75/52/c 56/46/pc 91/66/pc 77/56/s 56/45/pc 79/48/t 63/49/s 60/44/pc 57/40/r 63/44/sh 84/53/pc 47/30/c 56/31/s 83/49/c 63/35/r 73/42/s 61/49/pc 49/33/sn 85/64/s 64/49/r 68/47/s 72/45/s 52/28/pc 89/65/pc 54/43/pc 57/41/c 53/33/pc 66/50/pc 85/70/pc 66/44/s 75/54/c 80/53/pc 71/46/c 64/35/s 69/47/s Saturday Hi/Lo/W 40/28/r 64/36/c 62/40/c 73/53/s 72/57/pc 58/32/pc 75/54/t 79/58/s 76/57/pc 55/33/sh 74/57/t 85/74/pc 57/38/sh 48/30/sh 73/61/r 84/71/t 65/49/s 67/49/s 69/57/s 71/44/s 56/32/c 90/67/pc 85/59/s 68/40/r 69/52/s 77/53/c 69/56/pc 51/37/c 60/40/s 77/64/pc 53/31/s 67/38/s 76/58/pc 53/42/c 76/45/s 77/44/pc 54/38/s 85/59/c 72/53/s 69/47/s 76/48/s 54/29/pc 88/66/c 55/43/pc 51/27/pc 56/41/pc 74/41/s 87/69/pc 71/47/pc 76/46/s 74/58/s 63/36/pc 66/37/pc 80/50/s 99/76/0.00 85/53/0.00 70/45/0.14 46/32/0.00 86/59/0.00 84/73/0.00 84/61/0.00 62/53/0.07 46/32/0.01 66/46/0.07 57/45/0.06 88/75/0.00 60/34/0.00 72/50/0.00 82/68/0.00 52/41/0.32 63/41/0.00 71/51/0.00 86/77/0.23 50/37/0.00 77/65/0.28 69/54/0.00 63/55/0.09 62/51/0.04 70/45/0.00 50/41/0.00 61/25/0.00 52/39/0.00 95/65/s 79/54/s 50/35/r 42/32/c 86/57/pc 84/72/s 90/65/pc 69/42/s 48/42/r 49/31/r 60/39/pc 86/75/s 61/47/pc 78/49/s 86/67/s 46/32/sh 67/45/c 71/61/pc 88/77/t 51/38/pc 71/62/sh 80/61/pc 64/53/sh 66/51/s 50/33/r 49/42/pc 62/39/pc 56/41/pc 94/64/s 81/54/s 46/36/r 41/30/pc 84/59/pc 84/71/s 94/68/pc 67/54/pc 45/33/c 48/34/pc 54/38/pc 88/76/s 62/43/pc 86/53/s 88/68/s 47/35/c 62/48/sh 68/57/r 89/78/t 50/36/sh 78/61/s 80/66/s 64/50/pc 64/58/c 51/40/pc 51/44/c 60/40/c 62/37/r INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 94° at Zephyrhills, FL National low: -2° at Gould, CO Precipitation: 4.14" at Rome, GA In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Base Anthony Lakes Mtn 6 0-78 Hoodoo Ski Area 2 0-98 Mt. Ashland 2 67-77 Mt. Bachelor 0 117-123 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 0-212 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 4 81-102 Timberline Lodge 9 0-192 Willamette Pass 0 0-45 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 3 57-80 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 75-120 Squaw Valley, CA 0 0-129 Park City Mountain, UT 0 55-70 Sun Valley, ID 1 48-70 63° 27° TRAVEL WEATHER Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. EAST: Milder Friday Astoria with sunshine and 50/41 Umatilla Seaside a few clouds. Clear Hood 64/40 50/42 and chilly Friday River Rufus Hermiston night. Sunny and mild Cannon Beach 54/41 64/41 59/40 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 50/43 Saturday. 62/38 56/35 57/39 52/28 Wasco 51/27 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Sunshine Tillamook 49/27 55/37 59/38 Sandy 59/40 McMinnville 51/36 Friday with a milder Joseph Heppner La Grande 54/41 Maupin Government 59/38 afternoon. Clear and 53/29 48/27 Camp 58/35 Condon 56/38 Union Lincoln City chilly Friday night. 54/33 43/34 53/29 Salem 51/36 Spray Sunshine Saturday Granite Warm Springs 56/36 Madras 59/31 Albany 51/28 with a mild afternoon. Newport Baker City 62/32 62/32 Mitchell 50/35 56/33 56/27 WEST: Turning out Camp Sherman 55/31 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity partly sunny and 58/31 59/25 56/35 Day Prineville 51/36 57/30 milder Friday. Clear Ontario Sisters 61/29 Paulina 54/31 62/33 and cool Friday night. Florence Eugene 60/30 Bend Brothers 54/27 Vale Sunshine Saturday 52/37 58/35 59/31 52/25 Sunriver 63/33 with a nice afternoon. Nyssa 58/29 OREGON EXTREMES YESTERDAY THURSDAY Abundant sunshine, pleasant and warmer Partly sunny OREGON WEATHER Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SUNDAY Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com 54/41/0.34 52/39/0.02 72/57/0.00 73/63/0.00 97/79/0.00 72/46/0.00 57/55/0.60 58/32/0.00 66/45/0.05 54/25/0.00 72/69/1.58 72/55/0.00 70/52/0.00 31/21/0.15 85/77/0.00 54/43/0.10 52/39/0.14 64/32/0.00 74/61/0.22 79/67/0.00 45/34/0.02 56/44/0.00 66/55/0.09 77/67/0.01 64/46/0.00 54/39/0.06 70/36/0.00 93/79/0.00 46/42/pc 61/48/s 73/64/c 68/48/pc 97/82/s 67/51/s 60/49/s 51/37/sh 65/49/t 62/42/pc 70/59/t 76/56/pc 68/51/s 53/36/pc 86/77/s 50/46/sh 50/43/sh 55/36/s 77/60/t 79/73/pc 51/41/s 53/41/s 76/53/s 77/68/s 72/52/s 52/47/pc 70/42/s 94/78/pc Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw MOTOR SPORTS | NASCAR TRUCK SERIES Marital bliss: Stewart and Jessica Friesen look to make history BY JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer Jessica Friesen will attempt to make her NASCAR national series debut at Bristol Motor Speedway for a potential show- down with her husband in the Truck Series race. Stewart Friesen is in his fifth full season of Truck Se- ries competition and his wife limits her racing to sprint car and modified divisions. Bristol Motor Speedway for this week- end has been converted into a dirt track — a surface suited for Jessica Friesen’s experience — so Halmar Friesen Racing entered a second truck for Sat- urday night. If she makes the field, Jes- sica and Stewart Friesen would be the first married couple to compete in the same NASCAR race since Elton Sawyer and Patty Moise in a 1998 sec- ond-tier series event. Jessica Friesen is slated to drive the No. 62 Toyota while her hus- band will be in his usual No. 52 Tundra. The buildup has been con- fusing for their 5-year-old son, Parker, who travels with his parents to their respective races. When Parker was diag- nosed on the autistic spectrum, Jessica Friesen scaled back her racing to care for him while also focusing on the family printing business. “He’s still very confused,” Jessica Friesen said of her son. ““He says, ‘No, Mom. Dad races the truck, you race the modified, and trucks don’t race on dirt, trucks race on the pavement.’ So he was just kind of getting his mind wrapped around all that.” The Friesens have competed in the same event before, in- David Duprey/AP file American Sprint Car Series driver Jessica Zemken, now Jessica Friesen, smiles during a rain delay at a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race in Wat- kins Glen, New York, in 2009. cluding a sprint car race in up- state New York two days after their 2014 wedding. They fin- ished first and second — but Jessica Friesen is looking to Sweet 16 Olympics Continued from B3 Continued from B3 “Things have changed. You could go somewhere else and you could have the opportunity right away to make an impact and create something that’s never been done before,” she said. “Those kids are different. They are special in their own right and they wanted to do something that has never been done before and I’m thankful to coach a group of them.” Arizona has made it back to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1998 when coach Adia Barnes was playing for the Wildcats. Some other things to know about this Sweet 16 field: “The torch of Tokyo 2020 will become a bright light for hope for Japanese citizens and citizens in the world and a light at the end of the tun- nel,” said Seiko Hashimoto, the president of the local organiz- ing committee and a former Olympian. Homare Sawa, the biggest star on the 2011 team, missed the ceremony. She is being treated for a condition affect- ing her inner ear and had to withdraw from the event. Fans were told to social-dis- tance along the roadside as the torch passes, and they were to refrain from loud cheer- ing. Organizers have said they will stop or reroute the relay if crowding becomes a problem during the four-month parade. Spectators cooperated in Naraha Town, just down the road from where the torch started its trip. A few hundred people stood on the roadside and were safely spread out. “At first I didn’t think much of it,” said 20-year-old Takumu Kimura. “But when I actually Inside the numbers For the first time since 2013 three No. 6 seeds advanced to the Sweet 16 with Michigan, Oregon and Texas all reaching the regional semifinals. Also, for the third straight tourna- ment all the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds reached the Sweet 16. Crowd noise For the first time in the tour- Eric Gay/AP Oregon’s Sedona Prince (32) shoots over Georgia’s Javyn Nich- olson (35) during the women’s NCAA Tournament in San Antonio on Wednesday. The Ducks are one of three No. 6 seeds to advance to the Sweet 16. nament the NCAAs will allow the public to attend games. That will be limited to 17% of the Alamodome’s capacity per game — which is roughly 4,800 tickets. “We’re in Texas, so, I feel like we’re going to have a lot of fans,” Baylor forward NaLyssa Smith said. change the results at Bristol. “It was ‘Stewart Friesen and wife ran one and two,’” she said. “I’m looking forward to changing that a little bit, those saw it, it felt like: — yes, it’s the Olympics.” Setsuko Hashimoto, a 63-year-old local resident, was emotional as the torch passed. “Ten years ago there was a nuclear accident so (seeing the torch) it felt like I could really look forward to something and live,” she said. “When you become my age, this is the last Tokyo Olympics and it’s here. It was very touching.” Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga chimed in from Tokyo with a statement. “The Olympic torch relay starting from today is a valu- able opportunity for the peo- ple to get a real sense of the Olympics and Paralympics that are approaching,” Suga told reporters. Organizers confirmed a bit of bad luck: the flame in the torch was blown out during one leg of the relay. As has happened in other Olympics, it was re-lit by a back-up lan- tern that also carries the flame that was kindled in Greece more than a year ago. Local organizers and the International Olympic Com- mittee hope the relay will turn headlines a little bit.” Jessica Friesen will have to qualify her way into the race via the four, 15-minute heat races before the Saturday night main event and the field is stacked: There are seven full- time Cup Series drivers among the 44 trying to make the 36-truck field. “This will be a story for our grandkids someday,” Jessica Friesen said. “No matter what happens at this race, we went and did this. We kind of went out there, had fun and hope- fully it turns out well. Hope- fully, we’ll see. Who knows what could happen. Stewart says no pressure, so I’m just going to keep having that men- tality.” Bristol has transformed its concrete surface with 20,000 truckloads of clay in order to host NASCAR’s first Cup race on dirt in 70 years and the sur- face has created multiple op- portunities this weekend. The day after the Truck Se- ries race, Stewart Friesen will make his first career Cup start, picked by Spire Motorsports to drive its No. 77 Chevrolet. Stewart Friesen has more than 330 career wins in dirt modi- fied racing and won the 2019 Truck Series race at Eldora Speedway. “It’s a dream come true to compete in the Cup Series,” Stewart Friesen said. “It’s the pinnacle of motorsports in North America. As a race fan myself, it has always been something I’ve dreamed about doing. There’s some stuff we can take from our dirt experi- ence with the truck at Eldora and apply to the Cup car, to hopefully be very competitive at Bristol.” public opinion in Japan in favor of the Olympics. Senti- ments expressed in polls in Ja- pan so far are overwhelmingly negative with about 80% sug- gesting another delay or can- cellation. The relay and the Olympics both stir fear that the events could spread the virus. There is also opposition to the soar- ing cost of staging the Olym- pics, now put officially at $15.4 billion. Several audits suggest it’s twice that much and a Uni- versity of Oxford study says these are the most expensive Olympics on record. The relay is a big test for the upcoming Olympics with fear among the public that the event could spread the virus to rural and more isolated parts of the country. Vaccinations have not been rolled out yet in Japan to the general pub- lic. About 9,000 deaths in the country have been attributed to COVID-19. About 10,000 runners are expected to take part, with the relay touching Japan’s 47 pre- fectures. After the postponement a year ago, there was early talk of eliminating the relay to save money. However, that idea was quickly dropped with the relay heavily sponsored by Coca-Cola and Toyota. The relay is a prelude to the difficulties the Olympics and Paralympics will present with 15,400 athletes entering Japan, along with thousands of other officials, judges, VIPs, media, and broadcasters. Athletes will be kept in a “bubble” like atmosphere in Tokyo and will be limited to the Athletes Village on Tokyo Bay, the competition venues and training areas. Most oth- ers will be outside the bubble and will be kept at a distance from the athletes. Organizers announced a few days ago that fans from abroad will be banned from attending the Olympics and Paralympics. Most volunteers from abroad have also been ruled out. Organizers are to announce the venue capacities in April. Ticket revenue for the Olym- pics was to be $800 million but will be severely reduced by the lack of fans. Japanese govern- ment entities will have to make up the shortfall.