News Archive for 2010 Olympics

Canadian Women’s Hockey Hits Olympic Low Note With Celebration

Friday, February 26th, 2010

The Olympics are supposed to be a time of for national pride combined with a display of sportsmanship and respect for the sport.  Apparently the Canadians missed the memo as another gross display of behavior shone itself on the ice following the Women’s Hockey gold medal game.

The Canadian women played their best of hockey of the Olympics, shutting down the American offensive juggernaut with a 2-0 shut out.  To celebrate their victory, the ladies broke out cigars, popped champagne bottles and began chugging beer on the ice to enjoy the victory.  It was a display that even the Cincinnati Bengals’ Chad Ochocinco might have blushed at.

What were these ladies thinking?

Regardless if this took place 30 minutes after game, it just had no place at the Olympics.  This is an amateur sporting event where athletes make sacrifices in their lives, both social and financial, to reach the goal of being best in the world.  While celebrations are condoned and encouraged, they need to be done with sensibility.

Where were the Canadian Olympic Team officials on this one…sleeping at the wheel?  Did they not see the alcohol brought into the locker room pre-game?  Did they not have the courage to go out on the ice and demand the cigars and beer be put back in the locker room or better yet the garbage.

Steve Keough, a spokesman for the Canadian Olympic Committee, confirmed that the COC did not provide the alcohol nor did they plan the party.  Keough shared, “I think Canadians understand it’s quite an emotional moment for our team. It was not our intention to go against any IOC protocols.”

Then, to put the icing on the cake that the COC didn’t mind the behavior, Keough stated, “In terms of the actual celebration, it’s not exactly something uncommon in Canada.”  Bravo Mr Keough, bravo.

Unfortunately, this is now the third egregiously poor display of sportsmanship and sports etiquette during these Olympics by athletes.  Canada’s Jon Montgomery celebrated his gold medal victory in the Skeleton by parading through the streets of Whistler guzzling from a pitcher of beer.  American Scotty Lago, celebrating his bronze medal partying it up with locals and having his picture taken while a female fan kissing his medal while strategic placed in his groin area.

The poor behavior even has made its way into the stands of the arenas.  During the women’s curling match between the Netherlands and Canada, the Canadian fans whooped it up during the Netherlands release of stones to mess up their concentration.  Like tennis and golf, curling has a standard of fan etiquette to provide silence during key parts of the match.  The behavior of the fans caused a poor release of the stone by the Netherlands captain and keyed a victory for Canada.

Just three more days of events.  Lets hope we can get through them without another gross display that stains the spirit of the Olympics.

The Lindsey Vonn Show Growing Stale

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

She came into the Olympics the darling, but after two weeks appears to be heading out the devil.  Lindsey Vonn once again proved the drama queen, stealing headlines with her fall in the giant slalom.  This time her antics were more critical, as she cost her teammate a medal in their signature event.

Vonn was coming down the slope yesterday amidst the fog and snow when she took her second spill of the Olympics while knocking herself out of the event with a DNF.  The Olympic organizers setup the event to have a staggered start which placed multiple skiers on the hill at the same time.  Right behind Vonn was USA teammate and reigning Gold Medalist in the giant slalom, Julia Mancuso.

After falling and being sent flying into the safety fence, Vonn once again played it up for the cameras in an effort to stay face forward in the Olympic spotlight.  Despite just an injury to her pinky finger, Vonn was unable to extricate herself for the course to allow Mancuso to complete her run.  As a result, Mancuso was flagged and had to start over.

Unfortunately for Mancuso, her time was among the leaders when she got pulled.  She was send back to the top of the mountain and had to wait for 13 more skiers.  By that point, the weather and mountain had deteriorated and Mancuso ended up 18th after her run.  Mancuso rebounded on her second run, but was only able to get up for 8th place.  If not for Vonn’s mishap, Mancuso likely brings home a third medal.

Not all the blame should go to Vonn on this, but she deserves a heaping portion size.  The IOC should be ashamed of their actions by not giving every skier an equal chance at success.  They have to take into account falls as well as prima donna behavior when they schedule.  To have an Olympic race result disrupted like this in a terrible situation.

But Vonn is not off the hook, as she does deserve a lot of the blame.  Her incessant desire to get camera time and cash in for big endorsement dollars is getting pretty disgusting in her attempt to be the next Michael Phelps.  The difference between Vonn and Phelps is that Phelps got the job done before putting himself out there and Vonn is scrambling for dollars and not delivering.  Its just plain icky.

Fault her husband Tom, the architect of the Lindsey Vonn brand.  Every camera shot seems staged and Vonn’s emotions seem rehearsed.  From stealing the show at the Team USA press conference over a minor injury to needing Tom to “come to the top of the mountain to ease her nerves” to having the it setup for them to hug and cry right in front of the cameras after her gold medal run…I am starting to grow weary.

Perhap Vonn’s estranged father had it right that her husband Tom was steering her poorly.  His feelings on the subject are now on full display for the world to see.  Should Vonn continue skiing after these Olympics, first order of business needs to hire a real manager and have Tom sit where he belongs…in the stands with the fans.

Ice Dancing Gold Brings Judging Controversy

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

It just seems you can never get through an Olympics without at least one judging controversy which draws scrutiny to the results.  The international governing body then takes action and rules get changed.  But despite the ever changing rules, we still get controversy.

Canadians Capture A Questionable Gold

Russia’s Evgeni Plushenko tried to bring a spotlight on judging after his defeat to American Eric Lysacek, but it kind of went on dead ears.  Plushenko was ungracious in receiving the silver medal, calling Lysacek out for not attempting a quad and correlating his routine to ice dancing.

Had Plushenko hit his moves, perhaps his complaints may have resonated, but the guy struggled on every jump in his routine.  Figure skating is about flawless execution of the moves you attempt tied to the difficulty of the moves.  If Plushenko wants risk alone rewarded, he is advised to pick up a snowboard and hit the half pipe as he was trying to create controversy where none existed.

The complaints on figure skating judging needs to placed squarely on the Ice Dancing competition.  While judging changes have leaned towards giving artistry equal weight to jumps in the overall score in the other figure skating disciplines, Ice Dancing has gone the other direction scoring technical more heavily than ever before.  As a result, we were awarded an Ice Dancing champion that struggles to dance and would be more fitting to the pair competition.

Canada’s Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir took the gold in front of a roaring hometown crowd in Vancouver, snatching away a victory that appeared to be in the grasp of USA’s Meryl Davis and Charlie White.  The Canadian ice dance team posted the highest free dance scores in the world for the season, getting a personal best of 110.42 for a combined score of 221.57, a personal best.  The free skate allowed Virtue and Moir to easily outdistance the Americans who scored a personal best 107.19 in the free skate and a combined 215.74, also a personal best.

Needless to say, the personal best scores were being handed out like complimentary gifts last night.  And the Europeans were none to pleased.

“When you compete in your home country the crowd goes crazy and it can help the skaters,” said Italy’s Massimo Scali, who placed fifth with his partner Federica Faiella. I hope that it does not affect the judges.  I don’t agree with the system. They [Virtue and Moir] are not real dancers. They are very technical and don’t really ‘dance’ on the ice.”

Harsh criticism for the new Olympics champions.

“We skated the best performance and we have a bronze medal,” Russia’s Maxim Shabalin said. “What can you do? We did everything we could.”

So, was it home cooking judging or is this just sour grapes?

It really gets down to what you expect to see from Ice Dancing.  Italy’s Scali really nails it on the head, it is supposed to be about dance interpretation melded with skating technique.  If not, then it is just a pairs competition.  Virtue and Moir’s interpretation of Mahler’s Fifth Symphony was substantially weaker than other competitors in the final group.  While their technical capabilities were superior, their skills didn’t mesh with the music as well as other skaters…which is the whole point of Ice Dancing.

Ice Dancing for years has been criticized for choosing its champions years in advance, making the results on the ice just a show for audiences rather than a true competition.  Unfortunately, this didn’t change last night.  It was clear that the judges had made the decision to award North America with medals and to signal an end to Russian dominance.  The judges behavior was at best embarrassing and at worst deplorable.

Take this in.  We saw the two best Ice Dancing performances of the year within the course of 30 minutes.  What was the possibility of such an occurrence?  Pretty good when the judges made their decision before the event started.

It began back at the 2009 Trophee Eric Bompard, when Virtue and Moir demolished the field, coming in first place for all three skates.  The replicated their 2009 Skate Canada International and topped it off with the first ever 10.0 under the new ISU scoring system.  The delivered the same dominating results at 2010 Canadian Figure Skating Championship.

So, in less that a year, a team which couldn’t place first in the compulsories, original or free skate portion of any international event became unbeatable.  Are we really supposed to believe this?

The reality on the ice last night was the Canada’s Virtue and Moir were the fifth best team in the final group.  While they skated admirably in the first two rounds, they didn’t deliver last night and another robbery occurred in Olympics figure skating competition.

While graceful in defeat last night, USA’s Davis and White should take a few pointers from the Russians and Italians about voicing their displeasure of the results.  They put on unquestionably the best performance of the evening, bested the Russians and are headed home with a silver.

Apolo Ohno Seeks Record Medal, South Koreans Await

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

The matchup between Apolo Ohno between the South Korean skaters is like the Yankees and Red Sox rivalry of the sport of short track speedskating.  The skaters will bump, push, shove and cut each other off one more time this evening as Ohno looks for USA Winter Olympics legend status as he seeks his seventh Olympics Winter Games medal.  The South Koreans will look to make Ohno wait another day.

Ohno Clashes With South Koreans Again

Ohno comes into the 1000m competition having collected two golds, two silvers and two bronzes in his Olympic career, along with the famous disco ball trophy from Dancing With The Stars.  Ohno has three more chances to medal at these games, including the 500m and 5000m relay.  Getting the record-breaking seventh medal is going to happen, its just figuring out which event.

South Korea will throw the kitchen sink at Ohno to delay the inevitable with its podium-sweeping threat of Lee Ho-Suk, Lee Jung-Su and Sung Si-Bak.  The same triumvirate were in position to sweep the medals in the 1500m event only to see Ho-Suk and Si-Bak tangle up their skates on the final turn, taking each other out and handing the silver and bronze medals to Ohno and fellow American J.R. Celski.

Anti-Ohno sentiment is sweeping the country of South Korea.  After the 1000m race, so many emails were sent by angry South Korean fans that the USOC’s email servers crashed.  The emails were in response to fouls that South Korean fans feel Ohno made during the race that should have resulted in his disqualification in the event.  As the race neared its end, Ohno nearly crashed as he was engaged by Si-Bak, sticking his right arm out to fend off the pass and keeping himself upright as he began to stumble.

“The Korean had put his left hand over and blocked me, and that’s how I lost a lot of my speed,” Ohno declared. “If it wasn’t for that, the outcome would’ve been much different in the race if I hadn’t gotten impeded on.”  Ohno felt that a disqualification should have been considered for Si-Bak and that the bump allowed his South Korean teammates who were trailing at the time to catch up.

“Ohno didn’t deserve to stand on the same medal platform as me,” gold medalist Lee Jung-Su told the Yonhap News Agency. “I was so enraged that it was hard for me to contain myself during the victory ceremony.”

Well…them there sound like fightin’ words partner…so let’s get it on!

Is Evan Lysacek Ready For Plushenko Showdown?

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Evan Lysacek nailed the best short program of his career on Monday night, scoring a 90.30.  It was good enough only for second place.  Once again, Evgeni Plushenko stood in the way, scoring an Olympic record 90.85 to garner the lead heading into the long program.

It begs to question whether Plushenko is even beatable?  Lysacek will soon find out as the two skaters battle it out for the gold in the Men’s figure skating final.

Men Battle It Out For Gold In Figure Skating

Plushenko is the reigning Olympic champion who has dominated the sport over the past decade.  In addition to the Olympic gold, he also has a silver medal from the 2002 Winter Games and is a three-time world champion.  With a victory in the final, Plushenko will become the first back-to-back men’s Olympic champion since USA’s Dick  Button (1948, 1952).

Just being present at the Olympics was in question for Plushenko after his extended hiatus from the sport.  Shortly after the 2006 Winter Games, Plushenko disappeared from the figure skating scene.  He didn’t begin training again until March 2009 with his first competition in October 2009.   Since his return, he has been dominant, easily winning the Rostelecom Cup, the Russian Championships and European Championships.  His victory at the European Championship was the sixth of his career.

While Plushenko has been on the sidelines, Lysacek has emerged as the heir apparent.  After battling through the flu to gain a fourth-place showing in the 2006 Torino Winter Games, Lysacek has grown in both skill and maturity.  After a hard luck withdrawal from the 2008 World Championships due to broken skate accident that put his arm in a cast, Lysacek rebounded in 2009 to claim the gold medal at the 2009 World Championships.

What makes this final interesting is that Lysacek usually puts himself in a rut in the short program and comes firing back in the free skate.  This will not be the case entering the Olympic final.  Plushenko typically has a comfortable cushion entering the free skate, and will have not only Lysacek but also Daisuke Takahashi breathing down his neck for the gold.

The final will air in primetime on NBC on Thursday night.

Lindsey Vonn Strikes Olympics Gold In Downhill

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Lindsey Vonn was a woman on mission in Vancouver.  Looking to make up for the unfortunate mishap that injured her during the 2006 Torino Winter Games, Vonn raced down the mountain in today’s women’s downhill event, capturing the gold with relative ease despite fighting a injured shin.  Vonn finished the race in 1:44.19, ahead of silver medalist and fellow American Julia Mancuso by 0.56 seconds.

Vonn Captures Gold

Vonn arrived in Vancouver as the darling of the Winter Games, hoping for a breakthrough that rivaled Michael Phelps in the most recent Summer Games.  Vonn’s face has been everywhere, as well as her uncovered body in Sports Illustrated’s Swimsuit Edition.  Competing in five events during these Olympics, Vonn was dominating on the World Cup circuit before an injury in her final prep race.  Vonn revealed the injury at a press conference last week to the surprise of skiing insiders.

The schedule delay clearly played to Vonn’s favor, as her race was pushed back due to the inclement weather that has disrupted the skiing events in Vancouver.  Vonn registered the fastest qualifying run earlier this week and backed it up when it counted.

Julia Mancuso’s silver medal finish was a big surprise, as she was not expected to be a serious contender in the downhill.  Mancuso’s specialty is the giant slalom and competitors better take notice if she was this good on the downhill course, she is going to be tough to beat later on in the Olympics.  Getting the bronze medal was Elizabeth Georgl of Austria.

Vonn’s close friend and toughest competitor, Maria Riesch of Germany faltered on the course coming in eight.  Riesch was the only female skier to have defeated Vonn on the slopes this World Cup season.

For those of you that thought you missed the race, don’t worry.  NBC shows nothing live if it ends up with a Gold medal for an American.  You can witness the race with everyone else in the USA this evening in primetime.  It will air right after the McDonalds commercial that reminds you that they serve the breakfast of Olympians.

Lindsey Jacobellis Seeks Olympics Redemption

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Lindsey Jacobellis delivered the most memorable moment of the 2006 Torino Winter Games.  Unfortunately for Jacobellis, she is remembered for a embarrassingly immature decision that cost her an Olympic gold medal.  Four years later, Jacobellis finally has a chance to redeem herself.

Jacobellis Seek Upgrade To Gold

With a seemingly insurmountable lead in the Women’s Snowboard Cross, Jacobellis was coasting to victory in 2006 after her competition wiped themselves out earlier in the race.  With the raced locked up, Jacobellis entered to final jump of the race.

Instead of playing it safe, Jacobellis showboated by performing a trick.  That trick landed her on her backside as Switzerland’s Tanja Frieden flew by her in the final meters to snatch the gold.

Jacobellis’ behavior became the poster child of America’s next generation of kids.  She had the race won, but wasn’t satisfied with a simple victory.  ESPN’s continual focus on showboating and immaturity during their highlights often sent her the wrong message.  Jacobellis fell into the trap to make the highlight show and forfeited her gold medal when she landed on her keister.

Immediately after the mishap in 2006, Jacobellis was interviewed and in front of the cameras.  Jacobellis responded, “Snowboarding is fun.  I was ahead.  I wanted to share my enthusiasm with the crowd.  I messed up.  Oh well, it happens.”

Yes, Lindsey it does happen, but it didn’t have to happen.

Jacobellis has had a long time to absorb what she did.  She squandered a gold medal like nobody before her and it follows her everyday.  Her contagious smile is just a front, because losing a gold is difficult enough.  Losing it in this fashion in front of the world has to be just a terrible moment to live with.

Her chance at redemption occurs this afternoon.  The snowboard cross qualification run begins at 10:00AM PST and the medal round starts at 12:15PM PST.  As the overwhelming favorite and one of the big stories of the Olympics, the world will be watching with eyes wide open.

No trick this time Lindsey, just bring home the gold.

Tucker Fredricks Looks To Deliver Gold Medal Performance

Monday, February 15th, 2010

Tucker Fredricks took up skating at the age of 10 with a desire to become a hockey player.  Routinely winning the “fastest skater” ribbons, Fredricks soon realized that speedskating might be a better direction.  Given his small stature at 5′6″ and 147 pounds, being checked into the boards by Sidney Crosby wasn’t in the cards for a future career.

Tucker Fredricks Seeks The Medal Podium

Bursting onto the scene in 2002, Fredricks captured a bronze medal at the 2002 World Junior Championships and won gold the following year.  He immediately found success on the senior-level circuit, earning a spot on the 2006 USA Olympic team at the age of 21.  Since that experience, Fredricks has been growing in leaps and bounds.

During the course of the 2008-2009 season, Fredricks consistently delivered Top 10 finishes in World Cup events, culminating in a bronze medal in the World Cup 500m Final.  Things have only gotten better this season, winning a gold, a silver and two bronze medals in the four World Cup competitions he has entered.

Fredricks may be peaking at just the right time.  But standing in his way are the South Koreans and one of Canada’s own.

South Korean skaters Lee Kang-Seok and Lee Kyou-Hyuk have been the dominant forces at this distance for the last 18 months.   With back-to-back 1-2 finishes at the World Championships and World Cup in 2009, they are the favorites for today’s races.   Also lurking is Canada’s Jeremy Wotherspoon, the all-time winningest male speedskater in the history of the sport.   A 1998 Olympics silver medalist, Wotherspoon has won everything you can possibly achieve in the sport, except for an Olympic gold medal.  The rink will be rocking when the home country favorite takes the ice.

Race 1 for the 500M events starts at 3:30pm PST, followed by the Race 2 final which begins at 5:30pm PST.  The final runs will air live on NBC.

Lodwick and Demong Look To Break Olympics Drought in Nordic Combined

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Ask the average American what is the Nordic Combined and more than likely they will be stumped.  Ask an avid Winter Olympic Games viewers and you are likely to see many still get it wrong.   After today, that may change as the USA is poised to capture its first ever Olympic medal in the event…perhaps even two.

The Nordic Combined is an event that combines the disciplines of ski jumping and cross-country skiing into a decathlon-like event that takes place by air and land.  The competitors will start with an Individual Normal Hill ski jump where everyone get one attempt.  Using what is called the Gunderson Method, the ski jump scores are converted into times for a staggered start in a 10K cross-country pursuit to complete the event.

Lodwick and Demong Shoot For Olympic Gold

Introduced at the 1924 Winter Games, the Nordic Combined has been dominated by the Eastern Europeans and Scandanavians.  Norway leads all countries with 11 Golds and 26 total medals.  Finland is a distant second with 4 Golds and 14 total medals.   The United States has never earned a place on the medal podium.

That could change today.  “We are not just medal hopefuls,” Todd Lodwick said. “We are medal contenders.”   Lodwick and Bill Demong are considered two of the heavy favorites entering today’s Nordic Combined event.

Lodwick is preparing for his fifth Olympic team and appears to be reaching the peak of his career.  Despite being a perennial Top 10 World Cup finisher throughout his career, Lodwick had never broke through on the big stage.  He came closest at the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Games when he came in 4th in the 4 x 5km team event and 5th in the 7.5km sprint event.

In 2006, Lodwick retired from competition at the age 29 before returning to competition in 2008.  Since his return, Lodwick has been on fire.  Lodwick finally made his breakthrough at the 2009 World Championships, earning two gold medals in the 10km Individual Normal Hill and the 10km Mass Start events.  As the reigning World Champ in today’s event, Lodwick is the man to beat.

The guy primed to give Lodwick his top competition is fellow American Bill Demong.  A member of three USA Olympic teams, Demong has also failed to deliver on the biggest stage.  Demong’s best individual Olympics finish was 14th in the 7.5km event at the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Games, along with being a team member with Lodwick on the same 4 x 5km team.

Since the 2006 Torino Winter Games, Demong has blossomed into a world-class competitor.  Like Lodwick, Demong has consistently placed in the Top 10 at World Cup events and made his breakthroughs at the World Championships.  In the 2009 World Championships, Demong won Gold in the Individual Large Hill 10K discipline and a Bronze behind Lodwick in the Individual Normal Hill 10k discipline.

Both events take place during the day, but given NBC’s penchant for tape delay of medal victories, don’t be surprised if the events are aired in primetime.  Beware of spoilers, but also stay glued to the TV this afternoon for some Olympic history for Team USA.

Can Hannah Kearney Erase Torino Memories and Capture Gold?

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

Hannah Kearney arrived at the 2006 Torino Winter Games a freestyle moguls wunderkin on the verge of stardom.  At just 19, the young lady from Vermont was on the short list of the gold medal contenders after winning gold at the 2005 World Championships.  Kearney pushed her way out on the slopes, stumbled very early and was never able to recover.  The bumpy ride landed her in 22nd place, not even making it out of the qualification runs.

Hannah Kearney May Get First USA Gold

Kearney is back to make amends.  She takes the hilltop today four years older and wiser.  Gold is on her mind.  And she is peaking at the right moment.  Kearney ended the 2009 World Cup campaign as the overall points leader and ripped through the U.S. Olympic Trials in December.

Standing in Kearney’s way is some steep competition with experience and talent.   Her most formidable challenge will come from reigning Olympic champion Jennifer Heil of Canada.  Heil has the weight of her country resting on her shoulders as their best shot at Olympic gold.  Canada has twice hosted the Olympics, the 1976 Summer Games and 1988 Winter Games and shares the distinction of not winning a gold on home soil with Yugoslavia.

Also seeking a spot on the medal podium will be fellow USA teammates Shannon Bahrke and Heather McPhie.  Bahrke was a silver medalist in the event at the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Games.  McPhie has been on a recent tear, closing the World Cup season with two second place finishes that earned her spot on the US Olympics team.

The women’s moguls event will begin with qualifications Saturday afternoon at 4:30 PM PST and finals are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. PST.

Prediction

Gold – Hannah Kearney
Silver – Heather McPhie
Bronze – Jennifer Heil