Mon. Aug 25, 2008
Beijing Olympics, Afterthoughts
When it only comes one every four years, seventeen days can pass awfully fast for someone like me. But the Beijing Olympics have come and gone, and while most of the feared events never occurred, we did learn quite a bit during this couple of weeks.
To me, the Olympics are about the athletes, and it has to be said that China provided first class facilities for the various competitions. I don’t recall a single athlete complaining about sub-standard conditions, and most said the opposite: that the facilities gave them the best chance of an Olympic caliber performance.
Sun. Aug 17, 2008
Olympics, Week One
I’d hoped to post more this past week, but the reality is that there was an overload of work, and I’ve spent many hours watching the Olympics, which has left no time to write about it.
Not that you need my input. In 1996, I may have been the only individual blogging the Olympics, but a dozen years later you can now read blogs by the athletes themselves (and peruse Olympics aggregators, too). Though I am in no way responsible for that, it does make me feel a bit like a great-great-grandfather (not something I need as I approach 50, but strangely satisfying nonetheless).
Mon. Aug 11, 2008
First Olympic Weekend
If you missed the Opening Ceremonies of the Olympics on Friday night, well, there are no words that can convey what you missed. There are some photos, like the 2008 Olympics Opening Ceremony via The Big Picture at Boston.com, and Best Picks Of Beijing Olympic 2008 Opening Ceremony Images. But, stunning as the photos are, they still do not do the event justice.
Fri. Aug 08, 2008
They're Coming, They're Coming, They're Here!
The Olympics begin tonight, stirring up a flurry of activity here on this site over the next 16 days. The Olympics have been near and dear to me since I was a young teenager. They’ve been a big deal on this site since I covered the 1996 Atlanta Games. Heck, there’s an entire category for the Olympics.
So I am very excited today. And very apprehensive, too.
Sun. Feb 17, 2008
Olympic Blogging Redux
They might be one of the slowest organizations to change with the times, but somehow, after the fiasco of four years ago, the International Olympic Committee is beginning to get a clue:
The International Olympic Committee is for the first time permitting athletes to write blogs.
The IOC has set out guidelines for blogging at the Beijing Games to ensure copyright agreements are not infringed.
Thu. Apr 14, 2005
Remembrance
Wednesday was a rather odd day for me. Eric Rudolph returned to Atlanta to plead guilty to three bombings in this city in 1996 and 1997. When I first heard he was coming, a part of me thought of going down to the Richard B. Russell Federal Building, where the plea would be made. But I quickly realized that wasn’t what I needed to do today.
Mon. Aug 30, 2004
Defrocked Priest Gets Pseudo-Justice
I hate to encourage profiling, but I’m afraid Irish dancers are going to get some extra scrutiny at future sporting events. People are going to want to look up their kilts, for sure.
Mon. Aug 30, 2004
Efharisto, Greece!
...these Games haven’t just provided me with a 16 day respite from stories of Swift Boats and Slow Candidates (though that has been refreshingly welcome). They recharge me. They literally refill me with hope for the human race. And I will take as much of that as I can soak up.
Sun. Aug 29, 2004
Institutionalizing Olympic Shame
The Olympic motto is “Citius, Altius, Fortius,” Latin for “Swifter, Higher, Stronger.” And of the 10,864 athletes from 202 nations who competed in 301 medal events from 28 different sports, 99.8% of them did their best to live up to that motto. But about 24 of them (at last count) had a different motto: “Decipio, Deludo, Circumvenio.”
Cheaters. These Olympics were sadly littered with egregious offenders. I think it’s time to get medieval on them, and restore another ancient Olympic tradition.
Sun. Aug 29, 2004
The End (of the marathon) Is Near
How could the Olympics be complete without the traditional drunken Irish priest bear hugging the leader of that marathon at the 23 mile point?
Fri. Aug 27, 2004
Wake Up, Dream Over
Beaten by a team that’s never won a medal. Beaten by eight points, never closer than six behind, not even fouling at the end to slow the clock and give them even a slim chance of comeback. Beaten like they had no heart. Simply beaten.
Fri. Aug 27, 2004
Subjective Sports
Early on in these Games, I said “One of the sideline sports at every Olympics is the ‘IOC idIOCy Competition.’ And I think we have an early favorite…” I was referring then to the fact the IOC was trying to ban blogging, which, though stupid, didn’t really impact the Games themselves. Well, we seem to have a new contender from slightly outside the IOC…
Thu. Aug 26, 2004
Political Games
The calendar confluence of the Olympics and the 2004 Election has created yet another forum for polarization, another vacuum to be abhorred, another void to be filled as quickly as crack-heads take over an abandoned house.
Thu. Aug 26, 2004
Color of the Games
Over the past week I’ve collected this small sampling of columns about the “color” of the Games, some of the tone, scenes, and smaller stories you don’t see on TV.
Tue. Aug 24, 2004
The Most American Race
Oh, I’m not biased. Not at all. The fact that I ran this event in my youth (back when races were measured in yards, not meters, and T-Rex regularly ate our pole vaulters) isn’t why I say the 400 meters is “The Most American Race.” The results speak for themselves…
Sun. Aug 22, 2004
Day 9, Speed versus Distance
It was 102 degrees at the starting line, followed by mile after mile of a hellish hilly course. 26 miles, mostly uphill. Steep hills. The very same course that killed a man of legend, in the original run after the Battle of Marathon. Yet, on Sunday the one who bested this course and field of the world’s finest was a mere 4’10” tall, 90 pounds in weight…
Sat. Aug 21, 2004
Thou Shalt Not Blog
One of the biggest surprises of these Olympics has been the lack of interest. The lack of attendance. The lack of excitement off the field. The IOC has long attempted to squeeze the life out of things before they even begin, and try to control things they don’t even understand. In the Information Age, they have so many more opportunities to step in it up to their knees.
Thu. Aug 19, 2004
Mid Week Olympic Impressions
Wednesday was the big glamour event. No, not the men’s all round gymnastics competition. I mean the first competition at Olympia since 394 A.D. Sport, returning to the place sport was born. At least, it was the big glamour event for me.
Tue. Aug 17, 2004
Security Breaches and Naked Solutions
We all knew it was coming. Some say it’s the reason there are so few spectators. They spent $1.5 billion on security to prevent it. But last night, it struck the Olympics anyway.
Mon. Aug 16, 2004
IOC Hyperlink idIOCy
One of the sideline sports at every Olympics is the “IOC idIOCy Competition.” And I think we have an early favorite…



