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Old 02-13-2010, 02:45 AM   #1 (permalink)
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2010 Winter Olympics Thread

Didn't see one here, so I started it. The big event kicked off today, with a tragic morning as Georgian Nodar Kumaritashvili died during a trial run at a VERY fast Whistler luge track.

Quote:
High-speed crash on sliding course kills young Georgian athlete

February 13, 2010
DAVE PERKINS


WHISTLER, B.C.–The gruesome potential of high-speed sports became tragic reality when a 21-year-old Georgian luger died in a training crash Friday morning, instantly shattering the mostly joyous lead-up to the Vancouver Winter Games

Nodar Kumaritashvili, competing in his first Olympics, lost control of his sled on the finishing turn in his final pre-Olympic practice run at the Whistler Sliding Centre. He spun out of the final turn on to the braking straightaway, which rises gradually to slow racers, but he scarcely slowed and flew off his sled and over the railing, slamming back-first into the seventh of 20 steel poles that hold up a protective sun roof.
Gretzky lights the cauldron after a huge technical mishap strands the final torchbearers for over two minutes.


Quote:
Four Canadian icons officially open Games

LeMay Doan, Nash, Greene Raine, Gretzky light the flame

By Ian Mulgrew, Vancouver SunFebruary 13, 2010 1:14 AM

In the end, it required four indisputable Canadian sports icons, not simply a single hand, to light the Olympic flame and officially open the XXI Winter Olympiad in Vancouver.

Famed wheelchair athlete Rick Hansen carried the torch into BC Place, passed the flame to gold-medal winning speed skater Catriona LeMay Doan, who lit NBA star Steve Nash's torch, who lit gold medal skier Nancy Greene Raine's, who fired hockey great Wayne Gretzky's.

Doan, Nash, Green and Gretzky-- each carrying a torch-- then walked to the base of a cauldron seemingly composed of giant shards of ice that emerged from the stadium's playing field.

Together, the four were to use their torches to ignite the base, but only three did as one of the giant shards failed to emerge from the turf.


Protesters protest, as per usual in Vancouver

Quote:
Protesters march, chanting 'shame, Canada, shame'

By Allan Dowd, ReutersFebruary 13, 2010 2:12 AM

Anti-Olympic demonstrators marched yesterday through the streets of Vancouver to the Games opening ceremony chanting slogans such as "shame, Canada, shame" but were blocked from entering the event.

Although two people were taken into custody as police and protesters clashed outside the stadium, much of the march by several hundred people supporting anti-globalization and anti-poverty groups took place in a party-like atmosphere.

The downtown was also packed with tourists, many of whom looked confused as they passed the demonstrations. Others were seen having their photographs taken in front of the Olympic countdown clock as nearby speakers denounced the Games.


Any interest in the winter Olympics? I live in the 'burbs of Vancouver, so I have a pretty unique perspective on all the shenanigans if anyone wants more information.
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Old 02-13-2010, 04:44 AM   #2 (permalink)
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I heard on the bus the other morning about how one of the biggest problems of this year's games is keeping the snow from melting on the slopes, including packing the hills with ice packs, straw and other insulators, and trucking snow in from Washington state. Did anyone consider the logic in having the Winter Olympics in the warmest place in Canada?
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Old 02-13-2010, 06:37 AM   #3 (permalink)
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I watched the opening ceremonies last night. Good job, Canadians. The respect paid to the luger that was killed was very touching. The Canadian, and the Olympic flag brought to half-staff was a very nice touch. And the reception that the Georgian team recieved, during the Parade of Nations, was very dignified.

Too bad about about the cauldron malfunction, but, other than that, everything seemed to go off with out much of a hitch. I was very impressed.

Oh...and if it's snow that you guys are looking for, we have plenty of it down here...free for the taking. Just bring down some trucks and start loading it up, eh?
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Old 02-13-2010, 06:53 AM   #4 (permalink)
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I was thinking that this morning, Bill O.... Maybe North Carolina needs to bid for the Winter Games!
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Old 02-13-2010, 01:29 PM   #5 (permalink)
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I wish I could go to the Olympics. They are doing a great job showing it on TV for now however.
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Old 02-13-2010, 02:41 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lucifer View Post
I heard on the bus the other morning about how one of the biggest problems of this year's games is keeping the snow from melting on the slopes, including packing the hills with ice packs, straw and other insulators, and trucking snow in from Washington state. Did anyone consider the logic in having the Winter Olympics in the warmest place in Canada?
It's an El Nino year this year, which means warmer than average temperatures and low snowfall. In a normal winter, there would be plenty of snow for the Olympics.
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Old 02-13-2010, 07:33 PM   #7 (permalink)
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I love the opening ceremonies...especially the fiddler part, I could have watched that part all nite!!!
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Old 02-14-2010, 01:34 AM   #8 (permalink)
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The games and the ceremony are only airing on ESPN here. I don't subscribe to any sports channels, including ESPN. I tried to watch online but couldn't connect.

A Canadian, unable to watch.

Bah.
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Old 02-14-2010, 12:13 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Anyone know the general cost for a ticket to the Games? Does it depend on the event?
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Old 02-14-2010, 05:59 PM   #10 (permalink)
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I watched here and there, but I've been kinda busy this weekend. Next week though my TV is basically all-olympics-all-the-time.

Edit: YES! A Canadian finally wins gold at a Canadian hosted games!
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Old 02-14-2010, 06:19 PM   #11 (permalink)
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I've been watching it pretty much continuously.

I saw the opening ceremony (fantastic lighting artistry) and the mishap with the torch.
Gretzky and the others handled it well.

I was impressed by the utter silence when they called to have a moment of silence for the deceased Georgian luger.

As for the games themselves, I'm loving all that I've seen. Men and women's Biathalon, Women's hockey, Men's Nordic Combined, Men's speed-skating, Men's ski-jumping and Women's downhill mogul. (sorry, Canada, we stole your first home-game gold away from you)
We're watching Pair's figure-skating now.

All-in-all, I've enjoyed it so far.

I'm not digging the luge too much this year, but I guess that's understandable.
I'm in disbelief at how they could let such a huge flaw in the track's design go by so long without them modifying it. Everybody kept saying it was the fasted track.

Anyway, I'm bummed that the Jamaican bobsled team didn't make it this year.

Edit:
Why would anybody protest the Olympics?

Edit 2:
Canada's drought is over, Ace!
Alexandre Bilodeau from the Men's downhill mogul, won Canada's first home gold medal.
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Old 02-14-2010, 10:28 PM   #12 (permalink)
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The protests are over how Vancouver is paying for the Games. This has been a problem for multiple host cities both summer and winter. Denver was awarded the games for 1976 but the voters didn't pass the bond issues on the November ballot to afford all the construction that has to go into the games. There were protests over money at the Beijing olympics as well.

I thought the whales at the opening ceremonies were fantastic! I would have loved to see up close how they did that effect.
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Old 02-15-2010, 08:17 AM   #13 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Charlatan View Post
The games and the ceremony are only airing on ESPN here. I don't subscribe to any sports channels, including ESPN. I tried to watch online but couldn't connect.

A Canadian, unable to watch.

Bah.
I don't have cable either. I've watched everything streaming online at the CTV Olympics sites. Has been working superbly so far.

I was ecstatic to see Alexandre Bilodeau take gold. Not only because he is the epitome of an Olympian and the Olympic spirit, but he knocked off Dale Begg-Smith, a turncoat Canadian who renounced his citizenship to ski for Australia. Not only is he a giant douche and a turd sandwich rolled into one, but he runs an internet spam/adware/malware business that he has made millions off infecting people's computers.
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Old 02-15-2010, 01:07 PM   #14 (permalink)
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And the Aussies are crying already:
Quote:
Members of the Australian Olympic contingent believe their moguls skier, ex-Canadian Dale Begg-Smith, got shafted by the judges Sunday night and that the historic winner, Montreal’s Alex Bilodeau, may not have deserved the gold.

“I thought Dale won,” Australian coach Steve Desovich told the Aussie media after Sunday’s moguls race. “Alex is a good kid. I just thought Dale won.”

There was word on Monday that the Australians may protest the moguls final.

The Aussie camp felt Bilodeau, the first Canadian to win an Olympic gold medal on home soil, was given turn scores from two judges that were too high.

Three of the five judges awarded Begg-Smith, the 2006 Olympic champion, superior scores for his turns, but two judges, the Finn Pipsa Pohjavirta and a Norwegian, Morten Skarpaas, awarded Bilodeau higher scores of 4.8 and 4.9.

Turns are traditionally not Bilodeau’s strength.

The Canadian judge, Susan Verdier, gave the Australian a higher scorer, a 4.7, and only a 4.6 to Bilodeau.

“My own opinion is probably that Alex is not capable of a 4.8 or 4.9 for turns,’’ said Australian team high performance director Geoff Lipshut. “He’s just not capable.”

The Australians felt that the pro-Canadian crowd may have swayed the judges to some degree.

Lipshut added that Bilodeau was overscored for his turns, which make up about 50% of the final mark. Bilodeau scored 26.75 points to win the gold, followed by Begg-Smith in second with a score of 26.58. Bilodeau had a much faster time down the Cypress Mountain course, crossing the finish line in 23.17 seconds, to 23.72 for Begg-Smith and the Aussie camp acknowledged that Begg-Smith may have ultimately lost the gold on speed.

“Dale could have been quicker,’’ Lipshut told reporters. “That’s the bottom line, if Dale is three-tenths of a second quicker, Dale wins. You can say all the little things that you want, they are all small things. But you’re probably not going to win by that. He had to be faster.”

Bilodeau was second heading into the final and Begg-Smith fourth.
Aussies claim Bilodeau's gold tainted | Vancouver 2010 News | Vancouver 2010 | Sports | Toronto Sun
Now the thing that popped out to me in this article was this:

“My own opinion is probably that Alex is not capable of a 4.8 or 4.9 for turns,’’ said Australian team high performance director Geoff Lipshut. “He’s just not capable.”

His 'opinion', which some could say is tainted as he's an Aussie team member, and well, his opinion doesn't matter, it's the opinion f the judges that matters, and the judges gave the nod to the Canadian, not the former Canadian/spam master.

As for the 'pro Canadian crowd swaying the judges', sounds like sour grapes to me, the Aussies should just be grateful losers, and stop embarassing themselves with this display, they lost, suck it up and move on.
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Old 02-15-2010, 01:25 PM   #15 (permalink)
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That's silly. I was watching, and Bilodeau's run was clearly superior. Faster, cleaner, bigger aerials. I think it's just disappointment talking. Happens any time a front-runner gets upset.
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Old 02-15-2010, 01:49 PM   #16 (permalink)
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Agreed rat, it's always a coach or a director, never the athlete themselves, that's one thing I can give Begg-Smith credit for, he took his silver medal like a man, unlike his coach.

Found this as well, seems some UK papers are a bit upset with Canada's hosting of the games, and the death of the Georgian luger last week.
Quote:
Some British media are slamming Canada as being a bad Olympic host, with much of the criticism focused on its role in the death of the 21-year-old Georgian luger.

A headline in the Daily Mail reads: "Canada's lust for glory is to blame for this senseless tragedy." That's a reference to the death of Nodar Kumaritashvili, who was killed in a crash during a training run on the Whistler Sliding Centre in B.C.

“Canada wanted to Own The Podium at the Vancouver Winter Olympic Games. This morning they can put their Maple Leaf stamp on something more instantly tangible: the nondescript little box carrying the lifeless body of Nodar Kumaritashvili back to his home in Bakuriani, Georgia,” wrote Martin Samuel of the Daily Mail.

“Made in Canada, it should say. Made by the perversion of the Olympic movement for national gain; made by a culture of worthless aggrandizement and pride.”

Samuel also accuses Canada of cheating, complaining that Canadian luge competitors practised more than 300 times on the luge course while other countries' athletes had a lot less access.

An article in the Guardian picks up on the same theme, and under the headline "Athletes blame hosts for death of luge contestant" also points fingers at Canada for limiting access to facilities.

“More immediate questions may be asked by the Canadians of themselves, who, in pursuit of their own Olympic dream, appear to have forgotten that national omgcharacteristic for which they are best known: politeness,” the article states.

“In the run-up to these Games, the hosts —or at least the Canadian Olympic Committee — seemed to have mislaid their manners. Money has been poured into training, while a hard-edged approach — albeit one within the rules of the Olympics — has been adopted in dealing with other teams, most noticeably in granting them only limited access to facilities such as the sliding track.”

Lawrence Donegan, also of the Guardian, suggests the somewhat cold response by some Canadian lugers to the death of Kumaritashvili is "another blow against [Canada's] reputation as the kindest, gentlest member of the Olympic community."

Writing for the Times, sports writer Simon Barnes defends Canada from blame for the tragedy, but takes aim at the country’s Own the Podium slogan.

“Their highly unpleasant Own the Podium program, in which they seek to exploit home advantage to the last nanosecond has alienated the world they are supposed to play host to,” he wrote.

“Home athletes always have an advantage: getting ugly about it is neither necessary nor appropriate.”

One article in the Telegraph states that: "Canada has been trying so hard to please, it hurts.

Read more: CBC News - Arts - U.K. press slams Canada's hosting of Games
Now to blame the death on the Canadian organizers just seems like a cop out to me, with all due respects to Nodar Kumaritashvili his inexperience played a big part in his death, and well bad luck, those things happen in sport, especially in a sport like luge, where you're flying down and ice track with no pads, no safety equiptment, juts you, the sled and the ice.

Can't wait to see the 2012 Olympics and how the Brits handle them, I'm sure the shoe will be on the other foot then.
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Old 02-15-2010, 10:00 PM   #17 (permalink)
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That British article is appalling.
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Old 02-15-2010, 10:51 PM   #18 (permalink)
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Can't wait for mens' hockey... I have a feeling it's going to be quite the party. First game for Canada is Tuesday night versus Norway.
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Old 02-16-2010, 10:03 AM   #19 (permalink)
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Seems even Quebec is bitter, or at least one 'reporter'(and I use the term loosely)
Quote:
If arrogant nationalism were a sport, Canada would win gold
Why did Gretzky play role in ceremonies - he hasn't lived here for 20 years

The Olympics are supposed to be uplifting. So far, the Vancouver Olympics are anything but.

The problem starts at the very top: the Own the Podium initiative, that federally sponsored program that aims to overcompensate for the supposed ignominy of Canada's modest collection of medals at past Olympics by making this country the No. 1 nation in terms of medals won. That's right, No. 1. Arrogance, not the Olympic spirit, is what inspires Own the Podium.

Yes, let's not forget the Olympic spirit. It's that corny but terrific idea that, in the words of Pierre de Coubertin, "The important thing is not to win but to take part." That idea has become unfashionable in recent decades, but the organizers of these Games have consigned it to oblivion.

The symptoms of the new approach surfaced well before the start of these Games. As early as last September the New York Times reported that Canadian officials were going all out to exploit their home-field advantage for these Games. They were giving U.S. athletes, unlike their Canadian counterparts, minimal opportunities to become familiar with the luge track, speedskating oval and ski hill - the peculiarities of which can can greatly affect performance. The head of USA Luge understandably complained of "poor sportsmanship."

Certainly little sportsmanship was on display Sunday when the Canadian women's hockey team piled it on 18-0 against Slovakia. It was embarrassing. Pure humiliation. Never mind that the Olympic Charter says the Games should set a "good example" for upcoming generations.

Arrogance implies insensitivity, and you could see a lot of that at the opening ceremony. Although the organizers bent over backward to give an appropriate place to Canada's native people, their blind spot in regard to French Canada was staggeringly disrespectful. You'd almost think a sovereignist mole had staged the whole ceremony to stoke Quebec's resentment.

But it's not just the organizers' hubris that's dispiriting. It's also their clumsiness in staging the opening ceremony.

To be sure, the soirée included some gems - the snowboarder who sailed through the middle "O" of the Olympics' five-ring logo, the orcas, the giant illuminated bear, and k.d. lang's Hallelujah. The dedication of the entire soirée to the memory of the Georgian luger was also right.

But the show as a whole lasted way too long - the Mountie flag-carriers' slow-mo march, the youth floating over wheatfields, skiers and snowboarders yo-yoing up and down a mountain. Pure tedium. Almost every act could have been shortened by a third or half.

And then there was the lighting of the Olympic cauldron. Let's not dwell on the failure of an ice pole to rise: We all know about technology's whims. But it's the organizer's considered choice of Wayne Gretzky as the final torch-bearer that's more disappointing. He hasn't been a resident of Canada for decades. And, if his expression was any indication, he didn't seem too honoured

Lighting the cauldron is a symbolic role. It should belong to a person with some relationship to the Olympic movement's core of amateurism, much compromised though it is. Gretzky, for all his athletic prowess, is not remotely connected to those roots. He personifies professional sport and - as the head of his own clothing line and huckster for soft drinks, beer, fast food, watches, cars and oil - he also incarnates the commercialism that surrounds sport. When the organizers of the Vancouver Games chose Gretzky, they in effect gave an official stamp of approval to this commercialism as it affects the Olympics.

Most of the things I've criticized - nationalistic swagger, use of the home-field advantage, poor sportsmanship, insensitivity and an embrace of commercialism - have occurred in earlier Olympics. But if there were medals for taking these traits to new levels, Vancouver would truly own the podium.
Now if he doesn't know the answer as to why Gretzky carried the torch to light the cauldron, he's been under a rock for the past couple of decades, or he's just a moron. I guess he doesn't know it doesn't matter where one is a resident, but where one was born that makes them a Canadian, and Gretzky is one hell of a Canadian. To say 'his expression was any indication, he didn't seem too honoured', is bullshit, I saw his face, he looked quite happy to be there, what do they expect him to do, riverdance the flame down the road to show he's happy.

As for the women's hockey team blowing out opponents, if I'm not mistaken this tournament is run on a goals for and against system, so you have no choice but to keep putting it to your opponents, no bad sportsmanship at all, if they want games to not be blowouts, put a mercy rule in like they have in kids hockey so they don't get embarassed.

But I think I found the key behind this reporters pissing and moaning, in one little paragraph:
Quote:
Although the organizers bent over backward to give an appropriate place to Canada's native people, their blind spot in regard to French Canada was staggeringly disrespectful. You'd almost think a sovereignist mole had staged the whole ceremony to stoke Quebec's resentment.
They said things in French, what more do they want.
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Old 02-16-2010, 05:21 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by IdeoFunk View Post
Can't wait for mens' hockey... I have a feeling it's going to be quite the party. First game for Canada is Tuesday night versus Norway.
I was looking forward for hockey, until I saw Kypreos, Pang, and McGuire adding their two cents, fuckin bad hockey players and horrible coaches like McGuire always, always get jobs being analysts, hell Sportsnet bills Kypreos as a Stanley Cup chanpion, they neglect to tell viewers that he sat on the bench and got water for the real players, and McGuire, he just needs to be beaten I hate that bastard and his name dropping like the players actually care about him or what he thinks.

Thank god for the mute button, or else I may have to slit my own throat listening to these idiots.
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Old 02-16-2010, 07:26 PM   #21 (permalink)
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Haha I hear you, Pierre McGuire is the worst commentator of all time, hands down.

How about that game though? That was some awesome hockey, you can tell everyone on the team is playing with their hearts on their sleeves. I can't wait til Sunday.
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Old 02-16-2010, 07:37 PM   #22 (permalink)
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Totally agree worst of all time, when my old man used to hear me bitching about him he'd always say 'he coached in the NHL he must know what he's talking about', until I emailed him McGuires record of 23-37-7 before being canned. Also when you search his name and this is a suggestion "hate pierre maguire", it should tell his bosses to fire him. I keep hoping someone will shoot a puck into that rinkside seat he has and put him out, but no one seems to, I know if it were me playing, he would have been out with an injury years ago.
Hell he even has his own Facebook group for people who hate him http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2253701613

As for the game tonight, great show, a wee bit slow in the first, would have liked to see a nice hit to get the guys into the game earlier, they can't start out like that against the better teams or they'll be in trouble, but all in all a good effort, but I'm sure some reporter in Quebec will say they ran up the score as he said about the womens team, guess he doesn't get that goals for and against are big deals in tournament play.

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Old 02-16-2010, 08:07 PM   #23 (permalink)
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Oh man... you have no idea what bad announcing is until you watch Hockey being covered by the international feed that supplies highlights to our local channel. My wife, son and I just sat with our mouth open at how bad it was. Imagine a golf announcer doing hockey play by play as though it was golf.
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Old 02-17-2010, 06:56 AM   #24 (permalink)
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an oldie...but here's the gauntlet:



---------- Post added at 09:56 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:12 AM ----------

So, the Olympics are on. The el Nino weather isn't cooperating. There's a big-assed chain link fence segregating the Olympic flame from the masses. A poor soul loses his life in the pursuit of his dream. There seems to be a bitter-sweet pall hanging over these games. But because they are top of mind, the sharks are out to feed with some calling this the worst games ever:

Vancouver Games glitches get global attention
Games troubles mocked by international media as assertive Canadians lose niceness crown
February 17, 2010
PETTI FONG
ROBERT CRIBB

VANCOUVER–VANOC has problems and so does Sara Kneller, who is about to travel halfway around the world to get to Cypress Mountain.

VANOC's problems: wet weather; fog; concession stands breaking down; ticket cancellations; and criticism from the international media about poorly organized events.

Kneller's problem: She's one of the 20,000 ticket holders who just learned that VANOC has cancelled the spots where she can watch the competition next week.

"We're still planning to come over and we're hoping, hoping, hoping that somehow we can find a ticket," says Kneller, whose son Scott is competing in men's ski cross on Sunday for the Australian team. VANOC has cancelled all the standing-room seats for all the snowboard half-pipe, ski cross and snowboard parallel giant slalom events until the end of the Games.

And there were fresh concerns overnight, as several people were injured when a concert barrier collapsed at a free concert in Vancouver.

The barricade faltered when a crowd of Olympic partygoers surged forward during a set by Canadian band Alexisonfire. Nineteen people were injured and nine were taken to hospital. The concert and planned fireworks were cancelled, though organizers expected the venue to reopen Wednesday.

Meanwhile, construction workers used heavy machinery overnight to make modifications to the concrete barriers surrounding the plaza that hosts the Olympic cauldron. Visitors and Vancouverites have been sharply critical of the security fence that separate revelers seeking pictures from the Olympic flame, and even some IOC members have complained privately.

Earlier this week, VANOC cancelled 8,000 tickets for Monday and Tuesday snowboard cross events because warm wind and heavy rain melted the snow, leaving exposed the soggy hay bales on which spectators would have stood.

Caley Denton, the vice-president of ticketing for VANOC, says organizers could not find a way to make the area safe for thousands of spectators who paid $50 to $65 a ticket.

The tickets problems are just latest in a series of woes that have generated negative headlines around the world. "Vancouver Games continue downhill slide from disaster to calamity," wrote The Guardian's Lawrence Donegan, who mocked Canadian joy at Alexandre Bilodeau's gold by sniping: "What chance an enterprising Canadian carpenter is working on a commemorative wooden spoon?"

Okay, VANOC can't control the weather, Donegan wrote, but the transportation system goes from "sporadic" to "chaotic," the wiring on Cypress blew a fuse and there is a "growing sense that the 2010 Winter Olympics will be remembered as something substantially less than a triumph."

Meanwhile, the Daily Mail chortled about "heavy-handed security, a loss of civil liberties and traffic chaos."

During Tuesday's news conference, Olympic officials were in the unenviable position of having to defend themselves from British media suggestions that the Vancouver Games could go down in history as among the worst ever.

Take heart Canada – it's just part of the game of hosting the Games, say experts.

"Every country has been pounded like this when they hosted the Games," says Dr. Robert Hindmarch, general manager of Canada's 1964 UBC-based Olympic hockey team and former vice-president of Canadian Olympic Association. He's been to every Winter Olympics since 1960.

"Los Angeles was criticized for being too big. Mexico had too much poverty. It's been going on forever."

Canadians, long admired by the world as a quiet, polite and friendly people, also have been attracting an unusual amount of international outrage for our sudden and outspoken interest in actually winning medals and celebrating success with unabashed vigour.

"I think it is a little uncharacteristic," says Don Alper, director of the Center for Canadian-American Studies at Western Washington University in Bellingham, between Seattle and Vancouver.

"But at the same time, some of the toughest criticism is coming from within Canada. You're sensitive to the way the world is viewing you."

Dr. Harvey Schiller, former secretary-general of the United States Olympic Committee who worked on the 1996 Atlanta Games bid, says negativity is woven into Olympic hosting duties.

The Atlanta Games got rapped for security problems, including the bombing at Olympic Park, as well as for forcing the media to endure the indignity of porta potties.

But calling the Vancouver Games the worst ever?

"That's unfair. I wouldn't give it that label at all. You can't be held responsible for the weather," Schiller says.

And let's not forget the unspoken victory so far in these Games: security. "There hasn't been a single significant issue on that front and that's something that matters a great deal on this side of the border," Alper says.

And, if all of this isn't enough, it seems that American competitors have taken to mocking Canuck snowboarders for their Austin Powers-like apparel, claiming their hip-hugging aerodynamics breaches a gentleman's agreement to keep things nice and loose.

"We want to keep the cool factor in snowboarding, we don't want it to go speed suits," U.S. boarder Nick Baumgartner told one reporter.

File it all under the tempest-in-teapot category, says Guy Napert-Frenette, spokesperson for the Canadian Snowboard Federation.

"We win a gold medal yesterday and you want to talk about pants? There are no rules about that. They're high performance pants that keep us warm at all times and we're pleased to have them."

With files from Lesley Ciarula Taylor


Source:Toronto Star





Vancouver Games glitches get global attention - Vancouver 2010 Olympics - thestar.com

this one's just funny if you feel like linking:

http://www.vancouversun.com/sports/2...852/story.html
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Old 02-17-2010, 09:12 AM   #25 (permalink)
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And Quebec is still pissing and moaning, wasting more money by investigtaing if there was enough french in the opening ceremonies. Now how is it they can complain about this, yet if the anglophones complain about the lack of english signs in Quebec we're trying to get rid of their language? I heard french in the opening anytime english was spoken, it was also said in french, what the fuck do they want, big assed french writing everywhere?
Quote:
The office of Canada's watchdog for official languages is investigating several complaints that there wasn't enough French in the opening ceremonies of the Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

Due to the confidential nature of the investigation process, details of the complaints cannot be made public, Official Languages Commissioner Graham Fraser told CBC's Power & Politics Tuesday.

However, "one of the things that the complaints are expressing is the desire that the process of resolving these complaints will result in improvements in the closing ceremonies," Fraser said.

The issue highlights two quite divergent views of what constitutes linguistic duality in this country, he added.

"One view is that … the French language should be like the Victorian attitude towards children — seen but not heard and the other is that … for a language to fully live, it has to be spoken and heard."

The debate also raises the question of whether including both languages in ceremonies should be done out of obligation or because it represents how Canadians perceive themselves, Fraser said.

"We have seen some interesting comments from Anglophones saying that the presence of French in ceremonies is an important way in which they see the country."

Fraser said his office receives about 1,000 complaints a year that are dealt with in various ways, in part depending on what the complainant wants to see happen.

"There can be a formal process, which can lead to institutions being taken before the courts or there can be facilitated process of resolving the complaint which does not involve that same formal procedure."
That would be some interesting announcing Charlatan, too bad you have to listen to the games that way, we should swing a deal and send Mcgurire over there.
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Old 02-17-2010, 03:29 PM   #26 (permalink)
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You know, I've wondered this for a while, so I think I finally have to ask of all our Canadian friends out there: Is Quebec really worth it?
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Old 02-17-2010, 04:17 PM   #27 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by djtestudo View Post
You know, I've wondered this for a while, so I think I finally have to ask of all our Canadian friends out there: Is Quebec really worth it?
Short answer: yes
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Old 02-17-2010, 05:25 PM   #28 (permalink)
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Agreed Charlatan Rue Sainte-Catherine is enough to keep them around in itself haha.
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Old 02-17-2010, 09:55 PM   #29 (permalink)
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OK, Lindsey Vonn is smoking hot and everything, but her interviews are so annoying. She can't go more than a sentence or two without saying "umm" or "you know". If I had done a shot every time she said umm tonight I'd probably be in a coma by now. Julia Mancuso was so much more enjoyable to watch since she actually sounds coherent in her interviews.
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Old 02-18-2010, 06:19 PM   #30 (permalink)
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2-2 with 13 minutes left in the third against the Swiss, fuckin Canada's going to have to pull their heads out of their asses and play hockey pretty bloody soon.
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Old 02-18-2010, 06:26 PM   #31 (permalink)
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Is this another Torino?
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Old 02-18-2010, 06:42 PM   #32 (permalink)
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Almost looks that way Charlatan, pathetic performance on Canada's part, they should be embarassed with the 'talent' they have. Babcock better bust some heads before the next game against the USA, or else it'll be a bad result for us. I swear Mcguire would blow Crosby if given the chance, he's absolutely in love with the kid, he bats a puck out of mid air and he acts like he walked on water.

Edit: Well they won, although I don't know why the fans are cheering a shootout win over the Swiss.

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Old 02-18-2010, 11:30 PM   #33 (permalink)
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Hiller was solid, but it's true it was an all around bad game by Canada. Lot's of blatantly stupid mistakes that these guys shouldn't be making. And just out of curiousity why weren't Heatley and Iginla in the shootout? I can see Crosby, and I love Toews, but why Getzlaf? Even though he had a decent game I still think I would have thrown one of the two leading goal scorers in the tourny into the shootout.
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Old 02-19-2010, 06:04 AM   #34 (permalink)
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Didn't get any coverage of the game here, probably because everyone was sure it was going to be a blowout.

Here's hoping you Canucks play like that against the US.
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Old 02-19-2010, 07:41 AM   #35 (permalink)
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A nice bit of athleticism here with the women's 1,000-metre speed skating.

Not only did Christine Nesbitt win gold, but she did so despite lagging 8 metres and 6 skaters at the 600-metre mark. Incredible.

My brother and his family was in attendance.

Watch her finish her run here:
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Old 02-19-2010, 08:25 AM   #36 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by IdeoFunk View Post
Hiller was solid, but it's true it was an all around bad game by Canada. Lot's of blatantly stupid mistakes that these guys shouldn't be making. And just out of curiousity why weren't Heatley and Iginla in the shootout? I can see Crosby, and I love Toews, but why Getzlaf? Even though he had a decent game I still think I would have thrown one of the two leading goal scorers in the tourny into the shootout.
Iginla didn't see much ice in the third at all. I just hope it's not an injury.
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Old 02-19-2010, 11:08 AM   #37 (permalink)
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Iginla didn't see much ice in the third at all. I just hope it's not an injury.
Let's hope not, he got laid out pretty hard with that interference hit sometime in the second or third. And now that I've had a chance to read some post-game remarks, it looks like Babcock selected the order for the shootout based on who on the team had the best shootout percentages during the regular season, which is fair enough.

Anyone see Russia lose to Slovakia? Glad to see we're not the only one with problems.
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Old 02-19-2010, 11:16 AM   #38 (permalink)
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I caught that Russiak/Slovak game as well, Russia didn't look so hot either, they're lucky it isn't the old Red Army days, or they'd be running until their next game.

That was a great run BG, speed skating has always impressed me, they have some of the biggest thighs I've even seen, wonder how speed skating would translate into hockey, I mean get a kid to take speed skating lessons, may help the speed and technique in hockey.
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Old 02-19-2010, 03:20 PM   #39 (permalink)
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personally, I think it is hard to move past the shadow of the Luge guy who was killed by the course they set.

Yes, its a dangerous sport and everyone who does it know's the risk. But if you can afford a multi million dollar opening ceremony I think people feel like maybe you should be able to afford some crash barriers and padding on concrete struts on the fastest luge course ever built. I dont know enough about the sport to know if that really would have saved the guys life,but I think thats how people will feel.

Other than that,just reall want the American girl who fell over showing off on the last jump of the snowboard race last time out to take a gold this time. (Lindsey something?)...

I think an English Gold is too much to hope for, although I think there is a chance in the womens skeleton bobsleigh.
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Old 02-19-2010, 07:27 PM   #40 (permalink)
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It was a freak accident, inexperience and just well an accident, really doubt padding would have done that much flying out of there at 144KM/h. He told his father prior that the track scared him, and his father (a former luger himself) told him to use his feet to slow himself down, he didn't want to because he wanted to win or at least make a good showing, to let one tragic event overshadow and entire games is just foolish.

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