BEIJING — All the necessary precautions were taken. All forms were filled out properly, and there are confirmations to show we entered China safely.
My health status was updated daily on an app, created just for the Olympics, for 14 days before even getting on a plane for Beijing.
When we landed in Beijing early Tuesday morning, we were greeted by staff members covered head to toe in protective gear. It was time for an unpleasant test in which my throat was swabbed and my nostril was used as an entry point to drill for brain matter.
We were in the "closed loop" by then, an environment designed for media to cover the Olympics — and nothing else. Guidelines allow us to move around the hotel, bus to the media center, then travel to the sporting venues. We can't check out the Great Wall of China. The Forbidden City is forbidden to us. This all was designed to allow us to cover the Games in a country attempting to enforce a zero-tolerance COVID policy.
But my coverage has been interrupted, just as it was getting started.
Team USA rallied to beat Australia in mixed curling Wednesday night Beijing time. I was scheduled to attend the match and opine about being at my first Olympic event. Instead, I was back at the hotel waiting for results of an unscheduled test.
I have not tested positive for COVID-19, but the person who sat directly behind me for four hours on a Japan Airlines flight from Tokyo to Beijing did.
That makes me a "close contact." And that has landed me in protocol.