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Commentary
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The
statements, opinions, or views in the articles may not
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Post Winter Olympic
Reflection.
From website
www.55pga.com
| By :Norman Da Costa
It was reminiscent of a massive tidal wave crashing
ashore and sweeping everything in its path.
This surge of red covered every nook and cranny from
coast to coast and united Canadians like at no other
time in our history. Sports has a way of igniting
fervour even among the many who do not care about
sportsmen or their achievements. Countless argue that
supporting athletes is a waste of taxpayers’ money. But
even these diehards waved the white flag in surrender
this time and, for once, threw their unstinted support
behind our Canadian athletes at the Winter Olympics in
Vancouver.
In my 34 years in this country I have never witnessed
such unbridled patriotism. Why didn’t this happen
before? Canada has competed in the Olympics for decades
and hosted the Summer Games in Montreal (1976) and the
Winter Games in Calgary (1988), but there was never any
outright show of passion like the one displayed this
time.
Granted, we did not win a gold medal in 1976 and 1988,
making us the laughing stock of the world. But after
Alexandre Bilodeau nailed our first gold ever at home,
the floodgates opened and we finished on top of the
podium on 14 occasions – the greatest haul of gold by a
host nation. For me it wasn’t the glitter of gold that
made me proud of being Canadian. It was the
never-before-seen positive attitude and a new-found
resolve that stepping on the podium was of paramount
importance. I have been fortunate to be with Canadian
athletes at the summer Olympics and at the Pan Ams and
what continually surprised me was that the majority of
the athletes had such low expectations of themselves.
Reaching the final of an event or achieving a personal
best was the highlight of their Olympic experience. I
found this mind-set hard to fathom and was convinced it
would never change because they always had a ready-made
excuse – “we are grossly under-funded.” The poor
souls. They get a monthly stipend from the government.
They have no idea that all the athletes from Africa and
in many other parts of the world receive are official
uniforms, training gear and meals. Yet, that doesn’t
stop them from winning medals.
I remember the great Kipchoge Keino once telling me that
the most financial assistance he received from competing
in Europe in the 1960s was a measly $21 a meet as he was
an amateur. That did not stop him from smashing world
records or winning Olympic and Commonwealth Games’ gold
medals. So what happened to the Canucks this time
around? What transformed their thinking? Thank Chris
Rudge of the Canadian Olympic Association. With the
government pouring in $117 million to fund the athletes,
Rudge coined the “Own the Podium” mantra.
After a slow first week our athletes hit their stride.
It was refreshing to see people spontaneously breaking
out into “O, Canada.” We rose above the political
differences that divide this country thanks to our
sporting heroes. Credit must go to CTV for its
excellent blanket coverage and the station must take a
huge chunk of credit for making all of us feel proud to
be Canadians. It is mind-boggling that 15 million that
watched the opening ceremony and records indicate that
98 per cent of our population had at one time or the
other tuned in to the Games coverage.
What is even most staggering is that 26 million had
their eyes glued to the set when Sidney Crosby’s
overtime goal gave Canada the gold medal over the United
States. That put a golden exclamation on Canada’s most
successful Games. Now let us hope our summer athletes
can do us just as proud in the summer of 2012 in London.
WORTH NOTING: Those born here identify themselves
with winter sport and that is understandable since we
are snow bound for four to five months of the year. So
it is natural that the majority of the sportsmen and
women competing were Caucasian since recent immigrants
find the expense of outfitting their kids for winter
sports prohibitive.
But that was no excuse for the scandalous decision by
the Games’ CEO John Furlong of excluding everyone of
colour from the opening ceremony. I couldn’t
believe this would happen in a country that preaches
diversity. How could Furlong and his cronies forget
Lennox Lewis, who struck Olympic boxing gold for Canada,
or the great Oakville sprinter Donovan Bailey, a
two-time gold medallist. I know they are summer
Olympians, so what? They still got basketball’s Steve
Nash to light the flame and also called on Formula One’s
Jacques Villeneuve to carry the Olympic flag. Not that
there was anything wrong with those two world-class
stars, but why no Bailey or Lewis? It was disgraceful to
say the least, since Furlong, I believe, is also an
immigrant and landed here from Ireland.
Norman Da Costa was sports editor with the Daily
Nation and later an assistant sports editor and soccer
columnist with the Toronto Star before opting for early
retirement two years ago after 27 years with the
newspaper. |
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