Newsweek - National News, World News, Health, Technology, Entertainment and more... | Newsweek.com
Full Post
Posted Friday, August 22, 2008 8:44 AM

IOC Should Butt Out on Bolt and Other Olympic Thoughts

Mark Starr

For journalists, the Olympics is a marathon, not a sprint. But today is my sprint version, touching briefly on 10 items of Beijing business that are on my mind.

1) What an embarrassment that the IOC president Jacques Rogge bashed Jamaican superstar sprinter Usain Bolt for over-celebrating. Bolt has been one of the most appealing and engaging athletes of the Games and nobody I talked to thought his style reflected any disrespect for his rivals. Why doesn’t the IOC pick on somebody its own size? Like China maybe. It couldn’t work up the same righteous indignation when the Chinese reneged on key agreements like dispersal of information. And now they have reluctantly taken up the matter of China’s transparently underage gymnasts, flagrant cheating that is the moral and practical equivalent of doping.

2) The Beijing Games may be the best competitive Olympics I have seen in my long tenure. And credit the Chinese with brilliant organization and execution. But the obsession with security and keeping the buses running on time has kept us in a cocoon. There are no casual intersections between reporters and real people from Beijing—unless you leave the sports arena and venture into the city. But when most of us venture out, it’s to the not-so-real city, the tourist places like the Great Wall and the Forbidden City. I loved how at the Sydney Olympics total strangers would beckon and say, “Buy you a beer, mate.” Here the Chinese who approach want only to take our picture—not even with them, but alone. We are simply curiosities

Advertisement

3) When I was a younger man, the winner of the medal count was the country that won the most medals. Somewhere along the way that switched and gold took on a primacy. Now the country that tops the charts is the one that wins the most gold. That will be China for the first time (and presumably forever now), though they probably won’t catch the United States in total medals. But the U.S. Olympic Committee today suggested a new, improved method of counting that would boost America’s standing: the total number of athletes who leave Beijing with gold medals around their necks. That new view is a reflection of the renewed strength of the United States in virtually all the team competitions.

4) The American softball team exited Beijing and the Olympics on a teary note. But the upset loss to Japan may come back to help them when the IOC considers reinstating softball for the 2016 Games. One of the complaints that led to softball getting booted from the Olympics in the first place was America’s dominance of the sport. With Tokyo and Chicago two of the four contenders to host the 2016 Olympics, that American loss could pay dividends when the IOC votes on softball’s future in the fall of 2009.

5) You couldn’t help but sympathize with the Brazilian women’s soccer coach, whose team had outplayed the Americans for the second straight Olympics and lost the gold medal in overtime for a second straight time. Brazil could have used a victory to bolster the support for the women’s game at home and perhaps throughout Latin American, where it is given short shrift. Still, he had nothing to be embarrassed about when it came to his team’s performance. The same can’t be said about Dunga, the Brazilian men’s coach. Brazil has not only abandoned its “beautiful game”, but it has adopted an ugly one, embracing the thuggish tactics of underskilled squads. Pele and others must be weeping as they watch.

6) The most frequent question we reporters are asked in correspondence from home is: What do you think of the NBC coverage? We see none of the NBC coverage so we have no opinions. If we see the Olympics on TV, it is on a private Olympic broadcast or on CCTV, Chinese television. CCTV has revealed to me the universality of sports broadcasting. Having watched so much sports on TV, I feel like I know what the Chinese commentators are saying based on the pitch of their voices.

7) The most pleasant surprise for the American team at these games is the indoor volleyball revival, with both the U.S. men and women reaching the gold-medal game. The biggest disappointment, without a doubt, is the track and field team. None of the biggest names on the team—Tyson Gay, Allyson Felix, Jeremy Wariner, Bernard Lagat, the shotput trio, Lolo Jones—took gold. And the performance in the 4X100 relay—dropped batons by both the men and the women was an embarrassment. It’s getting to be a bad habit. If U.S.A. basketball can command Kobe and LeBron to make a three-year commitment, can’t U.S.A. Track & Field stage a mandatory relay camp for its sprinters? The only consolation was that both teams spared themselves a whipping by Jamaica. As one press wag handicapped the men’s race, “For the U.S. to beat Jamaica, they would not only have to drop the baton, but lose it completely.” (Update: The Jamaican relay teams one-upped the Americans in every way. The women dropped the baton and, in their desperation, managed to collide with the British runners and knock them out of the race too; the men, however, held on and set a world record--a third world record for Bolt in one week!)

8) It’s been years now since Hollywood told us what all sports fans already knew: “White Men Can’t Jump.” But America’s black jumpers have come up short and low at this Olympics too. It would be bad enough that no American won a medal in the long jump, the high jump and the triple jump, events at which the country has long excelled. But no American even reached the finals. Are all our leapers going for the bigger money in basketball?

9) What the United States needs to catch the Chinese at future Olympics is more new “X” sports that were invented in America. Today was the debut of BMX and, while the American riders did not win a gold, they took three of the six medals. Can't do that in the longstanding Olympic cycling competitions. Where would the American medal count be, winter or summer, without the steady addition of non-traditional Olympics sports like half-pipe, short-track speedskating, snowboard cross and beach volleyball?

10) Sorry, boss. I have no idea who Michael Phelps may have been necking with at some party and—I know this comes as a shock—I couldn’t care less.

You must be a registered user to comment.  Click here to register.  Already a user?  Click here to login.

Member Comments

Posted By: 6cents (August 23, 2008 at 11:31 PM)

Ah! O ye sluggard, consider the ways of the ant that finds food in summer, and stores for winter. Mr. Rogge, you have just missed the biggest opportunity of the IOC's life, to transform a superstar with personality into a mass appeal machine for Track & Field. Go see what Tiger Woods has done to Golf, a most staid sport. Instead, Mr. Rogge criticised his best change agent that displays a most media-savvy personality that could bring back Tracks into the 21st century - to the burgeoning youth population. Mr. Rogge, are you special interest-motivated?


Posted By: nerakami (August 23, 2008 at 4:44 PM)

Mr. Rogge who is a part of an organization that represents so many countries in the world, ought to first familiarize himself with the cultures of these countries because if he did, he would never have made such silly comments. Jamaica is that same country that produced the prolific, indelible and rebellious music of Bob Marley, the butterfly dance which the American football players adopted as their signature move after a touchdown, the same country that its inhabitants have never seen snow in their lives but yet produced a bobsled team that captivated the world. You see Mr. Rogge, Jamaica is somewhat of an enigma but one thing is crystal clear, we are a nation of people who have danced and sang our way through the dark days of slavery through all our sadness and joys. If we dont dance, we can't live, it is like breathing to us... so what Usain Bolt demonstrated in Beijing is an intrinsic part of who we are... "yea mon" we love to dance and will do so into internity.... keep dancing Jamaica... our spirit lives through the dance...


Posted By: nerakami (August 23, 2008 at 4:44 PM)

Mr. Rogge who is a part of an organization that represents so many countries in the world, ought to first familiarize himself with the cultures of these countries because if he did, he would never have made such silly comments. Jamaica is that same country that produced the prolific, indelible and rebellious music of Bob Marley, the butterfly dance which the American football players adopted as their signature move after a touchdown, the same country that its inhabitants have never seen snow in their lives but yet produced a bobsled team that captivated the world. You see Mr. Rogge, Jamaica is somewhat of an enigma but one thing is crystal clear, we are a nation of people who have danced and sang our way through the dark days of slavery through all our sadness and joys. If we dont dance, we can't live, it is like breathing to us... so what Usain Bolt demonstrated in Beijing is an intrinsic part of who we are... "yea mon" we love to dance and will do so into internity.... keep dancing Jamaica... our spirit lives through the dance...