Skip to comments.
Athletes Behaving Badly: What Happened to America’s Olympians?
Breakpoint with Charles Colson ^
| March 6, 2006
| Charles Colson
Posted on 03/07/2006 5:57:37 AM PST by Mr. Silverback
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-42 next last
To: r9etb
The egregious NBC coverage of people like Bode Miller was positively fawning.This is what has ruined the Olympics for me. The events are replaced with a sickening schmaltzy stories that bring almost nothing to the table. Here's a hint NBC, Everytime you glorify Bode Miller, you are NOT showing me an Olympic event.
Plus NBC's stranglehold on the Plympics means if I am not landing on NBC, I don't even know the Olympics are even going on. And if you do land on NBC, you get to see one event every hour and I get so bored with the in-between stuff that I turn the channel and never come back.
21
posted on
03/07/2006 6:25:29 AM PST
by
SengirV
To: Hegewisch Dupa
"..that Weir weenie.."Oh, sorry, didn't see your post.
22
posted on
03/07/2006 6:26:00 AM PST
by
Designer
(Just a nit-pick'n and chagrin'n)
To: SengirV
"And if you do land on NBC, you get to see one event every hour and I get so bored with the in-between stuff that I turn the channel and never come back."
Not to mention the commercials.
23
posted on
03/07/2006 6:30:48 AM PST
by
JZelle
To: Mr. Silverback
To: Mr. Silverback
Self-fulfillment. That certainly rings a bell. Isnt that the very same idea that so many American parents and teachers have been instilling in their kids from their earliest days? We have been telling them, in effect, that life is all about doing whatever will make them happygo after their own desires, unmindful often of what happens to other people. This idea of exalting the self has so permeated our culture that now even some of our most disciplined and hardest-working citizensour athleteshave fallen prey to it. The old Olympic ideals we once took for granted now seem like a foreign language to much of this generation. Lyrics (partial) from: 'What Have We Become?" by DC Talk
What have we become?
A self indulgent people
What have we become?
Tell me where are the righteous ones?
What have we become?
In a world degenerating
What have we become?
this chorus is wispered in the background - any guesses on the wisperer?
Speak your mind, look out for yourself
The answer to it all is a life of wealth
Grab all you can cause you live just once
You got the right to do whatever you want
Dont worry about others or where you came from
It aint what you were, its what you have become
25
posted on
03/07/2006 6:38:33 AM PST
by
70times7
(An open mind is a cesspool of thought)
To: Mr. Silverback; OrthodoxPresbyterian; Dr. Eckleburg
Self-fulfillment. That certainly rings a bell. Isnt that the very same idea that so many American parents and teachers have been instilling in their kids from their earliest days?
There is nothing wrong with competition or following your dream.
What's wrong is not recognizing one's abilities as a gift. One has, then, a responsibility to the Giver of the Gift.
26
posted on
03/07/2006 6:50:36 AM PST
by
xzins
(Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It. Pray for Our Troops!)
To: SengirV
This is what has ruined the Olympics for me. The events are replaced with a sickening schmaltzy stories that bring almost nothing to the table.NBC is just following the lead of ABC Sports -- the network that created the template for Olympic coverage. You may not recall, but back during the Cold War Days the US didn't exactly light dominate Olympic competition. The sidebar stories were a way to distract from the fact that the Soviets, East Germans and (in boxing) the Cubans regularly kicked our butts. In the Winter games we might only net a half-dozen medals, total.
NBC did, however, show a lot of sports on their cable feeds. That coverage was pretty good. I generally avoided the prime time network coverage for the reasons you stated.
27
posted on
03/07/2006 7:00:31 AM PST
by
Tallguy
(When it's a bet between reality and delusion, bet on reality -- Mark Steyn)
To: Mr. Silverback
I agree that a lot of this was overblown, mainly because the U.S. athletes have received far more coverage here in the U.S. than their foreign counterparts.
This kind of nonsense isn't unique to U.S. athletes. In fact, the biggest "negative" story out of the recent Olympics should have been that bizarre case involving the disgraced coach of the Austrian ski team, who -- in a scene that sounds like something out of a Cold War spy thriller -- was chased out of the athletes' quarters during a pre-dawn raid, fled the city, and was later arrested while sleeping in his car on the side of the road in some mountain pass in the Alps just across the border in Switzerland or Austria.
To: Mr. Silverback
Team spirit? Speedskaters Chad Hedrick and Shani Davis...their very public bickering.I disagree that both of them were at fault.
Hedrick skated in a team event, Davis did not. Davis was not a team player.
I wrote a note to the U.S. Olympic Committee asking them to not invite Davis back.
29
posted on
03/07/2006 8:23:24 AM PST
by
Designer
(Just a nit-pick'n and chagrin'n)
To: Mr. Silverback
Tell me where the prime stuff was.
I was spoiled by the 64 and 68 Olympics coverage of ABC and hosted by Jim McKay I believe. It seems that the coverage was live for about ten hours a day. Not much of the personality profiles. Those get bland very fast.
30
posted on
03/07/2006 8:24:56 AM PST
by
em2vn
To: Bommer
31
posted on
03/07/2006 8:26:14 AM PST
by
Dante3
To: Mr. Silverback
There was more than enough good to balance out the bad.
Completely agree! Unfortunately, NBC's agenda was to highlight the bad.
Way too much coverage on "Bode" and the "fued" between Hedrick and Davis was overhyped. They had too many hours to fill for their compentence level, and it showed.
Lot's of really good stuff, much of it already mentioned - Joey Cheek, Apolo Ohno, Shawn the flying tomato, the men's curling team.
The men's hockey team has been unfairly criticized, as well. The games they lost, they could have won, and they were all against the top medal contenders. They weren't blown out or embarassed by anyone. For the most part, they played great defense (a few breakdowns as exceptions).
IMO, they played better than we had any right to expect. The best players were on other teams. Could we have done better? Absolutely. Should we have? I don't think so. Canada was the team that didn't live up to it's potential.
The best two teams played for the gold.
Enough about hockey, we had over 200 athletes who competed in these games, and unfortunately, a few bad apples has allowed the media to paint the whole team with a bad brush. Totally uncalled for. And, unfortunately, some of us here have bought into it.
To: Mr. Silverback
A class act that hasn't been mentioned is Michelle Kwan. She was very gracious in her speech when she stepped down, and she made her decision soon enough that Emily Hughes was able to participate.
33
posted on
03/07/2006 4:03:20 PM PST
by
Rocky
(Air America: Robbing the poor to feed the Left)
To: Designer
Sorry, I disagree with you on this one -- Davis told his team captain all along, from way before the Olympics, that he did not want to compete in the new team event, just his individual event, and the team captain put his name down for the team anyway, depriving some other guy of a chance to go to the Olympics, hoping he could shame Davis into changing his mind.
To: .cnI redruM
The team finished 2nd in total medals and absolutely dominated at at least of the venues. It sort of reminded me of the coverage of the last Summer games. The US team won an absolute avalanche of medals only to be ignored because a bunch of stupid NBA thugs got schooled by Puerto Rico in the prelim rounds. We won a bunch of medals in stupid X-style "sports" that we invented. If it wasn't for those, we would have been buried by Latvia (or similar).
4 or 8 years from now, the countries that can afford to coddle its children to do crap-sport stuff will start edging us, just like we have lost the edge in Basketball.
35
posted on
03/07/2006 6:40:49 PM PST
by
freedumb2003
(American troops cannot be defeated. American Politicians can.)
To: Mr. Silverback
I thought the Olympics were great.
As for folks complaining about 'pro' athletes competing, each and every athlete started out as an amatuer and worked their way up to the top. If they are the best at the sport then they deserve to be at the Olympics.
Also, I liked the fact that the gal snowboarder had the guts to try and give a little extra show for the crowd. The fact that she fell because of it just made the games more fun to watch - at least she tried to push the envelop (besides it was snowboarding -- )
To: r9etb
I didn't watch any of the coverage this year. I did watch some of the coverage of the winter olympics 4 years ago. Back then I enjoyed some of the individual performances of athletes from different countries.
What's missing for me is the competition the American teams had years ago. While this may not make much sense, I used to love watching the winter olympics simply because the US had very little chance at winning. When the US did win, it made the win all the sweeter.
Back in the 'olden' days there would be news pieces about how the Germans or the Russians or whatever country had training facilities supported by the government of their respective country's. The American athletes were at a distinct disadvantage because they were very definitely amateurs and had to rely on using (as an example) the local skating rink or local coaches, etc. Even though you kind of knew the American's were going to lose it still was great fun to watch what we could do given what we had to work with as far as training went. On the rare occasion the US would win it would be a really big deal because we didn't have the fancy training facilities or the specialized coaches, etc.
Yeah, I know, I'm weird.
37
posted on
03/07/2006 7:05:06 PM PST
by
Sally'sConcerns
(Native Texan now in SW Ok.)
To: Mr. Silverback
|
|
All things considered, I thought the curlers were quite dignified. |
38
posted on
03/07/2006 7:15:23 PM PST
by
Fintan
(Did you really think I could post such insightful replies if I actually read the article???)
To: brownsfan
Your point is valid, but I wasn't excusing bad behavior. The fact that there are so many thugs and idiots in the NFL and NBA does not in any way excuse any pathetic crap perpetrated by Olympians.
But what is truly indisputable is that Warren Sapp sucks. A lot.
39
posted on
03/07/2006 8:57:16 PM PST
by
Mr. Silverback
(GOP Blend Coffee--"Coffee for Conservative Taste!" Go to www.gopetc.com)
To: Designer
Are you refering to Johnny "Weird"? Yep.
40
posted on
03/07/2006 9:04:38 PM PST
by
Mr. Silverback
(GOP Blend Coffee--"Coffee for Conservative Taste!" Go to www.gopetc.com)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-42 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson