GM Hockey
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
GM Hockey

You are not connected. Please login or register

The death of Olympic hope: how Canada's games have gone awry

Go to page : Previous  1, 2

Go down  Message [Page 2 of 2]

PKC


All-Star
All-Star

Thirty-five.

That was the target in 2004.

After Vancouver was awarded the 2010 Olympic Winter Games that year, an independent firm was
commissioned to study the Own the Podium program.


They came up with 35 – the projected number of medals it would take to finish at the top of the medal
standings in 2010. It was a lofty number for a country that had never finished atop the medal standings in any Olympics.


They pressed on.
Enamoured with the number; preoccupied with finishing first rather than just improving.


This was the case of trying to run before they could walk. It was doomed to failure the day they set
the goal, the day the government said let’s pour as much as $120 million into this program and see how we do.


One week into the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Chris Rudge, chief executive of the Canadian Olympic Committee, conceded that the plan was a failure.

Not only had Canada failed to own the podium, they had in fact regressed – on pace for their worst
medal total since the 1994 Lillehammer games in Norway, when they finished the Games with 13 medals.


The failure to own the podium is unsurprising in itself: it was far too ambitious.

The regression in results has been the real stinger; a confluence of excuses adding up, creating a
breaking point.


The COC will not only have to review the Own the Podium program, but they might have to review their
entire Olympic program after 2010’s closing ceremonies.


The definitive reason for the step back lies in the overwhelming pressure to finish at the top. It’s
difficult enough competing against the best athletes in the world without the added pressure of knowing your country is expecting nothing less than a podium finish.


The program also failed when they believed that athletes from this country, whom rarely finished in the
top five of certain events – like cross country, luge, ski jumping and biathlon – would not only finish top five, but also finish on the podium.


It’s unfair to blame Canadian athletes for the dismal showing in Vancouver. Instead, blame the COC
for forgetting what the Olympics really stood for: excellence, friendship and respect.


By trying to manufacture an atmosphere that created unrealistic expectations from its athletes and demanded that Canadians win no matter what, the failures of these Olympics, whatever they may be, are solely on the COC.

While Canadians wanted Canada to win the Games by finishing atop the medal standings, most would have been happy to see our athletes make us proud. Today, the COC’s unfair modus
operandi has given us a reason to be ashamed.


Do you believe?

Not anymore. Our beliefs were compromised and it’s a sad day for Canada.



Last edited by PKC on Wed Feb 24, 2010 12:09 am; edited 1 time in total

Share this post on: reddit

Post Mon Mar 01, 2010 12:20 pm by Michael Fisher Portnoy II

I'm pretty certain the IOC determines the Olympic champion by total gold medals.

Michael Fisher Portnoy II wrote:I'm pretty certain the IOC determines the Olympic champion by total gold medals.

Yes they do... We owned the hell out of this Podium... The Americains may have won the most medals but we won the most events... Thats all that matters to me.

Cap'n Clutch wrote:Canada blew the old record for host nation gold medal count out of the water. New record is 14, also an overall new record, old record 10 by host nation.

Total medal count of 26, which is the most by Canada ever and good for 3rd overall.

We didn't win the total medal count but I still think we owned the podium.

We beat the record for gold medals period. Not only for host countries. No country had ever won more than 14 gold medals in a winter olympic before.

Cap'n Clutch

Post Mon Mar 01, 2010 3:39 pm by Cap'n Clutch

TheAvatar wrote:
Cap'n Clutch wrote:Canada blew the old record for host nation gold medal count out of the water. New record is 14, also an overall new record, old record 10 by host nation.

Total medal count of 26, which is the most by Canada ever and good for 3rd overall.

We didn't win the total medal count but I still think we owned the podium.

We beat the record for gold medals period. Not only for host countries. No country had ever won more than 14 gold medals in a winter olympic before.

That's what I meant by also an overall new record (I should have said for gold medal count)

Yeah, you said "Overall new record" but you followed that up by "old record 10 by host nation" which implies you're still talking about the host nation record. The point is that we won more gold medal than any country in one winter olympics; once you say that, the concept of host nation is irrelevant (it's a known subset of what was just stipulated) ... Wink

Cap'n Clutch

Post Tue Mar 02, 2010 8:33 am by Cap'n Clutch

OK here I'll spell it out like this. Razz

Old record for most golds in a Winter Olympics was 13 Canada beat that record which is now 14. Being that Canada was the Host nation for the 2010 Olympics it can and should be highlighted that it is also now a Host nation record.

Can I say that or is that still too redundant? Wink

It's two separate records though, much like an Olympic record and a world record. They just happen to be the same right now. If Canada had gotten 12 medals, we'd be talking about the host record, but not the overall record.

It's nice that we've unified the two though Smile

I guess this whole topic is moot now that it's widely considered that this was our best games, ever.

There is really no way to justify calling these games a failure in any way, shape or form. We just dominated. There is also no way anyone could have seen the U.S. win 36 (or whatever) medals.

Back to top  Message [Page 2 of 2]

Go to page : Previous  1, 2

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum