Author Topic: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver  (Read 714 times)

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Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« on: January 25, 2010, 08:27:01 PM »
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/dave_zirin/01/25/vancouver/index.html?eref=sihp

Olympics and Super Bowl becoming similar? Sterile and corporate?

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #1 on: January 26, 2010, 09:23:06 PM »
http://74.125.155.132/search?q=cache:K8bPcztUmmIJ:web.unbc.ca/~chenj/course/project/Vancouver_2010_Olympics.doc+positive+impact+of+the+2010+Vancouver+Olympics&cd=2&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us

Montreal just paid off the debt for the 1976 Olympics recently.  Those BC residents got suckered into supporting the Olympics in the first place.

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #2 on: January 28, 2010, 02:15:06 AM »

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #3 on: February 09, 2010, 01:13:39 AM »
http://awfulannouncing.com/

your broadcasters for the Winter Games.

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #5 on: February 11, 2010, 05:23:01 AM »

Offline Blackshirts

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #6 on: February 11, 2010, 04:34:24 PM »
Those german jerseys are pretty bad ass

Offline architechguy

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #7 on: February 11, 2010, 08:15:27 PM »
Which German jersey do you like better, that one...

or this one...

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010_swimsuit/painting/sarah-brandner/10_sarah-brandner_1.html

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #8 on: February 11, 2010, 08:28:49 PM »
The Frau is the winner, or body paint is the winner.

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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« Last Edit: February 12, 2010, 11:13:44 PM by thedrUNKenLoper »

Offline architechguy

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #10 on: February 13, 2010, 02:35:33 PM »
The Canadian Olympic committee has some serious 'splaining to do.  When the news came out that non-Canadian athletes were not allowed to train at the Olympic venues beyond the minimum time set by the IOC, everybody grumbled about it but eventually just chalked it up to gamesmanship.  I believe they negligently harmed the competing athletes though, all in the name of their petty gamesmanship.  Before the opening ceremonies last night, they interviewed one of the USA luge coaches who said that he's been saying for months that the experienced riders, the medal contenders, weren't the ones at risk by the lack of training time.  It was the smaller countries with the first time competitors without the budget of the bigger name athletes who needed as much training time as they could get on what everyone agrees is the fastest track in the world and one of the most dangerous.

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #11 on: February 14, 2010, 01:59:04 AM »
agreed Archie, this is a black eye on these games from the get go that others weren't allowed to practice then you have this occur. If only the worse thing of day one would have been the Olympic torch not functuing right inside the BC Place.

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #13 on: February 15, 2010, 12:00:10 AM »
http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/vancouver/luge/news?slug=ap-lug-lugetrack-reaction&prov=ap&type=lgns

And after today there is now only one event in the winter games that the USA hasn't ever medaled in, any guesses?

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Offline architechguy

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #15 on: February 15, 2010, 01:02:26 AM »
Quote
“That home-track advantage? It’s basically gone,” Canadian women’s luger Regan Lauscher said.

Sorry, your home track advantage just killed a guy.  I think I speak for the rest of us when I say Go Eat a D!

Quote
“It certainly doesn’t help me,” Simister said. “I haven’t taken one run from down there until today. I trained for two years from the ladies’ start. The best part of luge for me is the start and that was ripped from my grasp.

“It’s tough,” she added, “but everyone has to do it.”

You trained there for two years, everyone else trained there for two days.

That one writer is correct, they intentionally asked the wrong question so that the right answer wouldn't come out.  It was poor taste to publicly state that his accident was his fault, even if it's true it's something that should stay unsaid for the sake of decency.  Moving the start was a good idea, putting the wall up is smart too but it should've been there all along.  This is the worst example of corporate arrogance and irresponsibility I've ever seen, I hope somebody sues the IOC just on general principle.

And after today there is now only one event in the winter games that the USA hasn't ever medaled in, any guesses?

Biathlon?  I think I heard earlier that our 9th place finish was the best ever for an American.

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #16 on: February 15, 2010, 01:15:28 AM »
That right Archie, after winning silver in Nordic Cross the Biathlon is the only sport the USA hasn't medaled in.

Offline architechguy

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #17 on: February 15, 2010, 01:28:20 AM »
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/david_epstein/02/14/luge.fallout/index.html

Quote
Canada invested $117 million in its Own the Podium initiative to attempt to top the medal count, and the program's CEO, Roger Jackson, said before the Games that he didn't mind the grumbling from other countries about course access. "I'm glad there's a little nervousness," he said. "That's exactly what we want." Cockerline added that complaints about access are the norm, and that maybe more training time should be granted, but "if we'd given everybody more runs, that's trouble, too. We might win less medals and there was a lot of money invested in that."

This quote is flat out sickening.  I really hope for that man's sake this was taken out of context, I'll give him the benefit of the doubt, but damn that's an awful thing to say.  Canadian athletes got over 250 runs on this course, others got about 40.

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #18 on: February 15, 2010, 03:11:26 AM »
Yeah, but Canada broke there drought tonight with a French Canadian coming in first in moguals a night after having an American deny them. Hopefully like you said its out of context.

Offline architechguy

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #19 on: February 15, 2010, 09:46:43 PM »
Someone finally said what needed to be said.  I'm amazed at the free pass the organizing committee has been given.  I hope that gold medal hits the spot, I hope it was really satisfying, somebody had to die for them to get it.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2010/feb/13/luge-death-winter-olympics-kumaritashvili

The Olympic juggernaut rolls on in Vancouver – a $6bn (£4bn) celebration of sporting excellence and Canadian pride that has been seven years in the planning and waits for no man, not even one who lost his life in pursuit of what organisers called "his Olympic dream", but which others suggested was a tragedy waiting to happen.

The glittering opening ceremony was dedicated to the memory of 21-year-old Georgian athlete Nodar Kumaritashvili, who was killed after losing control of his luge in practice on the final turn of the Whistler sliding track.

The crowd rose as the Georgian team, their national flag draped in black, made its entrance into the arena. "May you carry his Olympic dream on your shoulders and compete with his spirit in your heart,'' John Furlong, the head of the Vancouver games organising committee (Vanoc), told the athletes after they had taken their seats.

Stirring words, but as Furlong tried to frame Kumaritashvili's death in a way that appealed to the sentimental instincts of the global audience, a more prosaic expression of the Olympic dream was taking place on the hill, where organisers issued a statement announcing the men's luge event, in which the Georgian was due to compete, would go ahead as scheduled at 5pm local time.

"The technical officials of the FIL [International Luge Federation] were able to retrace the path of the athlete and concluded there was no indication that the accident was caused by deficiencies in the track,'' said the statement, before adding that changes would be made to the track at the spot where Kumaritashvili began to lose control of his luge.

When the mourning phase is over, no doubt lawyers acting on behalf of the luger's family will seek to find out why it was necessary to make alterations if the track had no role to play in his death. It will draw attention to complaints from other competitors about a facility that has stretched the boundaries of safety in what is already a dangerous sport. "We are not crash-test dummies,'' an Australian competitor said on Thursday.

Yet if these are issues for the lawyers somewhere down the line, more immediate questions may be asked by the Canadians of themselves, who, in pursuit of their own Olympic dream – 30 medals at least, with as many golds as possible – appear to have forgotten that national ­characteristic for which they are best known: politeness.

"Some say what defines us/is something as simple as please and thank you/and as for you're welcome/well we say that too,'' wrote Shane Kozycan in "We Are More", a poem he delivered during the opening ceremony.

In normal times perhaps, but in the run-up to these games, the hosts – or at least the Canadian Olympic Committee – seemed to have mislaid their manners. "Own the podium," it implored its athletes in an initiative aimed at ensuring the host nation finishes at the top of the medals table at these games. Money has been poured into training, while a hard-edged approach has been adopted in dealing with other teams, most noticeably in granting them only limited access to facilities such as the sliding track.

Such behaviour is within the Olympic rules, but it came across as distinctly un-Canadian at the time, and in the context of Friday's death it seemed like a terrible misjudgment. Steven Holcomb of the US bobsleigh team said: "This track is one of the fastest and most difficult in the world, so I think keeping it closed and not letting people have access… made it very difficult. Then you have Olympic ice, which is even faster. Little mistakes become big mistakes, and big mistakes end in tragedy.''

Kumaritashvili was one of those who had relatively limited experience on the track. He spent a week there in November during training, according to reports, and had gone down the track 26 times in total. He had crashed once, as had the double Olympic champion, Armin Zöggeler of Italy.

"It would be speculation if I said the time period of practice was sufficient or was not,'' said Georgia's minister of sport Nikolos Rurua, before defending the luger against suggestions that he was inexperienced – or simply not good enough – to be competing at Olympic level. Rurua said: "He was a very progressive, strong athlete. It was his wish to compete at the Olympics, and he underwent a rigorous qualifying process. He was 44th in world rankings."

Yet if the formalities of Olympic diplomacy required the minister to leave it at that, so sparing the feelings of the hosts, Holcomb felt no such compunction. "They limited the amount of access and training time we had on the track, while they let Canadians train on it as much as they wanted," he said. "There were smaller nations that have never been down here before. It is kind of unfair and now it is a tragedy.'' So much for the Olympic dream.

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #20 on: February 16, 2010, 02:02:09 AM »

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #21 on: February 19, 2010, 05:17:02 AM »

Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Offline thedrUNKenLoper

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Re: 2010 Winter Games: Vancouver
« Reply #24 on: February 19, 2010, 09:55:57 PM »