Track and Field In Gymnastics, the winner of the All-Around is considered the best athlete in the sport; in Swimming that title goes to the winner of the Individual Medley. In this sense, the winner of the Decathlon for men and Heptathlon for women is considered the best athlete in Track and Field. (“London Olympics:… Read more.
Archives for August 2016
USA Swimmer Ryan Lochte’s Olympian Tale of Robbery
After his less than stellar performances, USA swimmer Ryan Lochte found a way to upstage the marquee athletes at these Games, namely Michael Phelps and Usain Bolt. Two of the U.S. Olympics swimmers who were with Ryan Lochte when he was apparently ‘robbed’ in Rio have been hauled off a plane and prevented from leaving Brazil by the… Read more.
Rio Olympics: Day 12
Table Tennis Today was the final day of competition in this sport, which China dominates more than any country dominates any sport. Indeed, this headline in today’s New York Times speaks volumes about its dominance: At Least 44 Table Tennis Players in Rio Are Chinese-Born. Six Play for China To make it a little more relatable,… Read more.
Rio Olympics: Day 11
Track and Field With all due respect to the Men’s 110m Hurdles and Men’s High Jump, the Women’s 1500m was the premier event of the day. I was rooting for Genzebe Dibaba of Ethiopia based solely on my admiration for the way she has continued the winning ways of her older sisters: Ejegayehu Dibaba (34) won… Read more.
Rio Olympics: Day 10
Track and Field I became more mesmerized by Allyson Felix with each round of the 200m. If ever anyone could be thought of as a beautiful two-legged gazelle, it is she. I know the Jamaican girls seem poised to repeat their dominance, but I think Felix will be a spoiler in London in the 200m. (“US… Read more.
Rio Olympics: Day 9
Track and Field The feature race of every Olympics is the Men’s 100m for bragging rights as the world’s fastest man. The media spared no space hyping this one as a showdown – not only between a David and a Goliath nation, namely Jamaica and the United States, respectively, but also between a good and… Read more.
Rio Olympics: Day 8
Swimming This was the last day of competition. Michael Phelps insists it was his last too. Which constrains me to reprise what I wrote in this regard on the last day of competition at London 2012: He insists that he will now rest on his laurels, and who can blame him. But I fully expect… Read more.
Rio Olympics: Day 7
Rugby Sevens I was too caught up in the excitement unfolding at the Swimming and Gymnastics venues last night to watch, let alone comment on, anything else. But I won’t pretend to have any real fondness for or understanding of this game, which is so barbaric it makes American Football look effeminate. Apropos of which, women… Read more.
Rio Olympics: Day 6
Diving I indicated in my Day 2 commentary that there would be no reason to comment on this sport, unless a country disrupts China’s gold rush. Well, in the wee hours this morning, not one but two countries did just that in Men’s Synchronized 3m Springboard. Jack Laugher and Chris Mears of Great Britain won… Read more.
Rio Olympics: Day 5
Empty Venues I imagine nothing is more dispiriting to Olympic athletes than competing in practically empty venues. Hell, even I find it dispiriting just watching on TV. Unfortunately, this has become a quadrennial farce. Ironically, it originated at Beijing 2008, when empty seats betrayed all of the hype China had propagated about national interest in those… Read more.