One man's memories of the London 2012 Olympics – For the third time, the capital of Great Britain
hosted the Olympics. In 1908, the modern Games were just starting out.
In 1948, they were dubbed the "Austerity Games" since much of the world
was recovering from a war.
This, then, was the chance for the city to show itself in full – a
combination of a thriving metropolis that was deeply rooted in history.
It's the kind of setting where you could tour a church built in 960,
walk over to beach volleyball and then dine on authentic Indian food.
It was also about the gathering of the world's best athletes and best
story lines, everything from NBA multimillionaires to marathon refugees
who didn't even have a country to represent.
It was the London Olympics, and here is some of what stood out (American-biased version).
Michael Phelps
He arrived with 16 medals, including 14 golds, already in his
possession. So Phelps said his sundae was complete; he was just here to
see how many toppings he could pile on.
It was an interesting statement, one designed to take the pressure off
winning gold in all of his seven events. It also made it sound like he
wasn't fully committed, and so when he finished fourth in his first
event, the 400-meter individual medley, that was part of the narrative
out of the Aquatics Centre.
It was ridiculous, of course. "Crappy race," Phelps called it and it was
more aberration than trend. If anything, he should've skipped the
grueling 400 IM. That he went for it said he was taking these Games very
seriously.
Four golds and two silvers later, and Phelps' sundae was buried in
toppings. He left London as the most decorated champion ever and forever
in the argument as greatest Olympian of all time. His presence lifted
the interest in all swimmers and made Ryan Lochte, among others, into
bigger stars just for beating him.
His impact on swimming will continue for years to come. No one will ever question his competitiveness, either.
The Fierce Five
The U.S. women's gymnastics team churned on, this time delivering team gold
for the first time since Atlanta, an all-around champion in Gabby
Douglas for the third consecutive Olympics (Carly Patterson, Nastia
Liukin), and what turned out to be an actual close-knit group of
friends.
"This is a real team," said director Martha Karolyi, declaring it America's best ever.
Douglas, with her big smile, may be the breakout star, but the rest of the group – McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman, Jordyn Wieber
and Kyla Ross – are right there with her. If anything, it showed the
machine that Martha and her husband, Bela Karolyi, built in this
country. They took one golden moment produced by Mary Lou Retton against
boycott-reduced competition at the Los Angeles Games in 1984 and now
have a super power on their hands.
Bela Karolyi, for one, looked at the dominance of Douglas, the first
African American to win the all around, and hoped it was a springboard
to bringing a more diverse group of athletes into gymnastics. He
believed Dominique Dawes in 1996 led to Gabby Douglas in 2012. So what's
coming down the road?
"I've always wanted to get the African Americans into this sport -- so much potential," he said.
The five medalists say they'll be back for Rio in 2016, but history says
age isn't kind to gymnasts. For the USA, it shouldn't matter. There is
another group undoubtedly coming. Perhaps even better, deeper and more
diverse than before.
Usain Bolt
He said he came to become a legend and, of that, there can be no doubt.
The Jamaican sprinter defended his 100-meter, 200-meter and 4x100-meter
gold medals, the last in world-record time. No one has ever done such a
thing.
Bolt did it against incredible competition, the fastest group of humans
ever assembled. In the 100 meters, the silver and bronze medalists ran
personal bests and never stood a chance. In the relay, the silver
medal-winning Americans ran a national best and tied the previous world
record and still finished five meters behind Bolt, who ran the anchor
leg for Jamaica.
There
was nothing else like him at these Games. Sprinting is our most basic
and primal sense of competition. You just line up and run, and the world
has never seen anyone like him – 6-foot-5, muscular, and with a stride
that no one can match. He brought a showman's flair to the track and a
willingness to hit back at anyone suggesting performance-enhancing
drugs.
He was the biggest star of these Olympics, causing track tickets to soar
in price on the secondary market and prompting stars from every other
pursuit to come out and see him.
He was the Lightning Bolt, and he was the Legend of London.
Dwight Howard
He wasn't an Olympian, but his mid-Games trade from Orlando to Los Angeles
overwhelmed the men's basketball tournament as the NBA became the talk
of the Games. It shouldn't surprise. Commissioner David Stern wanted to
turn the Olympics into a platform for his league to sell itself to
global audiences and, judging by the frenzy wherever Team USA went, it
has worked.
Perhaps too well.
This could be the end of the 20-year-old Dream Team concept. Stern and a
number of NBA owners want to stop the IOC from profiting handsomely off
their employees. There are proposals and plenty of momentum to turn the
Olympics into a 23-and-under tournament, much like men's soccer. Then
the NBA could team up with FIBA to stage a "World Cup of Basketball"
featuring all the great players.
That money would find its way to the NBA.
It's smart in a strict dollars-and-cents way. The IOC may be without its golden goose in 2016.
The Royals
The queen was in a video for the Opening Ceremony. Prince Charles and
Camilla, the Duchess Kate and the guy she married and his brother kept
showing up at all sorts of events to root the Brits on with great glee –
all with the cameras on them, of course.
It was clear the royals were using these Olympics to up their popularity
by selling themselves as just regular people. They even OK'ed all the
events that took place near their palaces and residences.
Maybe it worked. Who knows? It's a puzzling group. Kate Middleton would
be photographed wearing three and four different outfits in a single
day. It seems like they exist to sell copies of the Sun and the Daily
Mirror.
So considering the state of the newspaper industry, maybe the royals could move to the United States.
The Horse Guards Parade
Part of the legacy of the London Games will be its ability to incorporate so many incredible historic sights and legendary venues.
They played tennis at Wimbledon. They played soccer at Old Trafford.
Archery was at a 200-year-old cricket grounds. The park that held
equestrian events was laid out in 1427. The marathon began at Buckingham
Palace.
It was incredible, with the perfect mix of modern sport and the rich history of London.
Perhaps nothing combined it better than the beach volleyball venue,
which was tucked in next to the Horse Guards Parade, a glorious royal
building just steps from No. 10 Downing Street, where the prime minister
works. The visuals each night were glorious, this near castle lit up as
a rather modern sport was played in front of it. The cheers of the
crowd often roared out and washed over the changing of the guard
ceremony on the street above.
And when Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh Jennings won gold for the third consecutive time, the noise on these ancient grounds made it the most memorable of all their victories.
The Brits
At the 2004 Athens Games, Great Britain combined for just nine gold medals and 30 overall. This was not a sporting powerhouse.
When the nation was granted these Olympics, the government invested in
infrastructure and training, and suddenly there were times it felt like
no other nation stood a chance. The United States
and China still finished first and second in the medal standings but
"Team GB," as it was hailed, was a respectable fourth in total medals
(65) and third in golds (29).
Moreover, a nation that sometimes struggles for a bit of national pride –
or even revels in its grumpiness – was overcome by the performance and
personality of stars such as Jess Ennis, Bradley Wiggins, Heather Stanning, and so many more.
London itself is one the most, if not the most, diverse cities in the
world, a symbol of the incredible immigration into Great Britain. The
athletes of the team represented that and, importantly, were hailed with
equal joy and pride. The scene of a roaring, wild Olympic Stadium
cheering on Somali-Brit Mo Farah in his gold-medal 5,000-meter run was
one of the moments of the Games.
There's a lot more here than just symbols of the past and some duchess.
Katie Taylor
The 26-year-old didn't just electrify the Irish, giving them their only gold medal and offering a moment of relief to a nation in deep recession. She also assured that the IOC's decision to sanction women's boxing was a booming success.
Taylor brought an otherworldly charisma with her, and thousands of rowdy
Irish fans to boot. The women's boxing sessions were sold out at the
10,000-seat ExCeL Center, and the noise, passion, and enthusiasm spilled
over into everyone's bout. It made it the place to be for a sport that
plenty of elitists still felt uneasy about.
Mind the Gap
London has an extensive underground subway system, land rails that run
all over the region and the country and even a bullet train that took
people from Central London to Olympic Park in six minutes flat (opposed
to a 45-minute drive). The rail infrastructure made these a simple
Olympics to get around, alleviating the need for buses and taxis.
There was just one puzzling part. At every station, someone reminded the
passengers to not fall in between the small sliver of space between the
train and the platform. "Mind the gap," the voice reminded. Was this
really a problem?
The women's Games
For the first time ever, each nation had at least one female participant, although for certain countries such as Saudi Arabia, this wasn't celebrated and was merely done so the IOC – and potentially FIFA – wouldn't ban them from male competition.
Still, the gesture was at least something and increasingly it didn't
matter what the gender was for fans to rally behind the performance.
Men's and women's sports were mostly met with equal anticipation, ticket
prices, crowds, and television ratings.
And for the United States, it was the women, particularly our dominant
track team – Allyson Felix had three golds and a world record – that
drove the country to the top of the medal standings. If the American
women were their own country, they would have finished third in the
medal standings.
Guor Marial and Oscar Pistorius
The Olympic spirit is an overused term, but it exists. It exists in the
moments when all of the world's people come together to salute an
athlete regardless of his or her nationality. Mostly, it's when someone
shows the power of the human spirit far from any chance at the medal
stand.
Oscar Pistorius,
the double-amputee 400-meter runner from South Africa dubbed the "Blade
Runner," was one of them here. A Paralympic champion, he qualified for
the Olympics and showed up to inspire the world, although he kept reminding that wasn't why he came.
"I just wanted to do my best," he said. "I'm a competitor."
Guor Marial
was another. As a child born in war-torn Sudan, he saw 28 of his family
members killed, including eight of his 10 siblings. He was beaten,
enslaved and only escaped by running, literally, to his freedom.
Now immigrated to America but not yet a citizen, he competed here in the
marathon, only not for Sudan. He refused that. A new nation, South
Sudan, has been formed, but it had no Olympic committee. So Marial was
allowed to come under the IOC flag – to compete as a citizen of the
world and force the rest of us to remember the mountains some have to
overcome just to have a chance.
"The Olympics," Marial said, "reminds you of a world which has nothing
to do with killing each other. It is about a world of living
peacefully."
This article originally appeared in : One man's memories of the London 2012 Olympics : Sun, Aug 12, 2012 3:38 PM
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