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Lathum
02-01-2022, 11:33 AM
I don't think we have a thread yet. Curling starts tomorrow!

sterlingice
02-01-2022, 11:57 AM
So, I'm already confused about what's going to be broadcast.

Tomorrow morning, I could wake up and watching USA vs Australia curling... but on what platform? Do I have to pay for Peacock? Can I watch it on NBC's website?

SI

Edward64
02-01-2022, 03:19 PM
I read somewhere that Peacock is the one to get for Olympics.

jbergey22
02-01-2022, 07:37 PM
Gotta love curling season every 4 years. Them Canadians can curl.

henry296
02-01-2022, 09:08 PM
If you have cable then you can use NBC Sports app. If not then I think Peacock for streaming.

For the Curling tomorrow, it looks like it is tape delay tomorrow night at 6, but their next match is live at 8 PM tomorrow.

sterlingice
02-01-2022, 09:16 PM
If you have cable then you can use NBC Sports app. If not then I think Peacock for streaming.

For the Curling tomorrow, it looks like it is tape delay tomorrow night at 6, but their next match is live at 8 PM tomorrow.

I think the first USA game is at 6am tomorrow if I can figure out how to watch it (NBC website, hopefully)

SI

spleen1015
02-02-2022, 03:41 AM
2022 Winter Olympics: TV schedule, day-by-day viewing guide to the Beijing Winter Games (https://sports.nbcsports.com/2022/02/01/2022-winter-olympics-tv-schedule-day-by-day-viewing-guide-to-the-beijing-winter-games/)

spleen1015
02-02-2022, 03:43 AM
Dola,

Looks like you have to pay to watch on Peacock. $5 per month.

spleen1015
02-02-2022, 03:45 AM
Double dola,

Curling starts at 0705 this morning on Peacock.

sterlingice
02-02-2022, 06:58 AM
I was able to just pull up the website on my computer today and am currently watching curling on nbcolympics.com (not a Peacock subscriber)

SI

sterlingice
02-02-2022, 07:10 AM
US might have just screwed themselves with that shot

SI

sterlingice
02-02-2022, 07:26 AM
Huge shot to make up for the bad shot last end

SI

sterlingice
02-02-2022, 08:00 AM
Had to go drop off the kid at school so I missed the end. Will have to catch on replay tonight at 5

SI

sterlingice
02-02-2022, 07:31 PM
USA absolutely gifted the win against Australia. I'm sure the Australian skip (is there a skip in mixed doubles?) has hit a similar shot hundreds of times but just missed it today.

Unfortunately, USA just gave up 4 in the 2nd end to Italy in their 2nd game. Yikes.

SI

SirFozzie
02-02-2022, 08:21 PM
what a bizarre, anticlimactic ending to that end

Edward64
02-03-2022, 06:02 AM
Caught some curling. Seems like the best chance for me to ever qualify for the Olympics.

Not a lot of fans in the stands from what I can see.

sterlingice
02-03-2022, 07:02 AM
Caught some curling. Seems like the best chance for me to ever qualify for the Olympics.

Not a lot of fans in the stands from what I can see.

It's kindof like trying to qualify for bowling, if it were an Olympic sport. You don't have to be Usain Bolt or Michael Phelps fit but it takes a lot of skill and there's a ton of random so to make it through qualifying takes a ton of luck to get past similarly qualified players who have been doing this for 20+ years.

SI

sterlingice
02-04-2022, 06:38 PM
So we've started watching the DVR'd Opening Ceremonies. Inherently, there's Jingoism with every Olympics - cheer for your flag, etc. But, man, the USA broadcast is laying the animosity on thick in the intro. I mean, it's somewhat understandable, considering the geopolitics of the time - the only really contentious ones in my lifetime were when I was a little kid (1980/1984). I don't know what those were like.

SI

NobodyHere
02-04-2022, 11:20 PM
Caught some curling. Seems like the best chance for me to ever qualify for the Olympics.

Not a lot of fans in the stands from what I can see.

2018 Winter Olympics: Breaking down Elizabeth Swaney's ski halfpipe run | NBC Sports - YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKOlMUyOEDc)

Just be like her and show up enough to the qualifying events and you can be an Olympian too.

Which brings up the question why anyone should care about these games especially with the atrocities China is committing.

Edward64
02-05-2022, 09:00 AM
Which brings up the question why anyone should care about these games especially with the atrocities China is committing.

Because its sports and we all grew up watching the Olympics.

I'm okay with boycotting the Olympics in China. But we made a half hearted political boycott, not many joined, no momentum and ultimately, it was meaningless. It showed how weak we are.

Ultimately, the answer is to come up with a strategy (economic, political, military, technological etc.), play the long game. Until then, let me enjoy my curling guilt free ...

Edward64
02-05-2022, 09:01 AM
Peacock interface could be better. Give me a menu to get all live games going.

They have that menu but more often than not, the live game is done. Something is out of whack there

SirFozzie
02-05-2022, 09:36 AM
File under "we're all old".

Shaun white just announced that he is retiring after the Olympics.

That's not quite the we're old part. He's 35 years old. Where have the years gone?

sterlingice
02-05-2022, 10:23 AM
We just finished watching the Opening Ceremonies - I guess we now know what the Chinese equivalent of "I have black friends" looks like. Especially since the Uyghur skier was a co-torchbearer, the only time there's two torchbearers and not just one.

SI

sterlingice
02-05-2022, 10:59 AM
I get how you get started skiing or skating or hockey or curling. Even living in Houston, I've done all of those and there are easy beginner on-ramps.

How does one get started with, say, luge or ski jump? Are there like "bunny tracks" for sports like that so you don't die the first time out?

SI

Solecismic
02-05-2022, 11:01 AM
Because its sports and we all grew up watching the Olympics.

I'm okay with boycotting the Olympics in China. But we made a half hearted political boycott, not many joined, no momentum and ultimately, it was meaningless. It showed how weak we are.

Ultimately, the answer is to come up with a strategy (economic, political, military, technological etc.), play the long game. Until then, let me enjoy my curling guilt free ...

I remember 1980/84 quite well. Dueling boycotts, not sure any point was made other than screwing up the competition. And it led to violence in 1984 in Ann Arbor (perhaps in other places as well).

I was working for McDonald's that summer. It was my first job. They had spent millions on a promotional campaign surrounding the Olympics. The centerpiece was this elaborate set of scratch-off cards with names of US athletes in a gold, silver and bronze position.

The idea was if your card matched a gold-medal winner, you'd get a premium sandwich, maybe fries for silver, a coke for bronze. And then the Russians boycotted.

All of a sudden, a promotion with maybe one winner in dozens of cards... nearly every card won something. And the rules were you give one card with every purchase and people could ask for one free card per day.

The downtown Ann Arbor McDonald's was a strange scene. It was summer, so very few students around. And it was a very large restaurant - two floors of seating. So that's where all the teens in the area spent their days and evenings for a couple of weeks.

There was no way to cook enough food to meet the demand from the cards. Lines of kids demanding more cards. A couple of fights when employees declined to hand out free cards to kids who had already asked the same employee for a card earlier. Employees quitting. The police a constant presence.

I didn't normally work in that McDonald's, but the call went out after a few days that if you were a reasonably-sized male and wanted to remain employed where you were, you'd have to take night shifts downtown for the duration of the promotion.

Since jobs were impossible to find then (even at the minimum $3.35 per hour, don't even think about a raise), I did a handful of night shifts there. Talk about tension. Fortunately, by then they had pretty much worked out how to get enough Big Macs made to satisfy the crush and we were instructed never to say no. So we had incident-free shifts amid the tension and life eventually returned to normal.

Sports is supposed to be this refuge from politics. I don't know what we can or should do about the Uyghur camps in China. I doubt boycotting the games would have any effect. The "political" boycott was greeted with laughter over there, which should have been an obvious result to those making the statement in the first place.

You hold these games to try and bring people together. There's always going to be tension between Communist governments and Democracies. One can't become powerful without threatening the other in some critical way, and China, like the USSR before the Cold War ended, is becoming extremely powerful. But the games should be an opportunity to get people to see the other side as human rather than an opportunity to make ineffective and divisive political statements.

However, it does illustrate that there are places in the world where people are suffering far worse fates than we can even imagine over here. Hopefully, that strengthens our resolve to treat each other better and stop hating so much over relatively trivial issues.

sterlingice
02-05-2022, 11:11 AM
I get how you get started skiing or skating or hockey or curling. Even living in Houston, I've done all of those and there are easy beginner on-ramps.

How does one get started with, say, luge or ski jump? Are there like "bunny tracks" for sports like that so you don't die the first time out?

SI

Ok, I found out how to learn to luge! While my back may protest, I'm going to add this to my bucket list:
Muskegon Winter Luge Track - Muskegon Luge Adventure Sports Park (https://msports.org/muskegon-winter-luge-track/)

Can combine it with the CCC toboggan track in northern Indiana
DNR: State Parks: Toboggan Run at Pokagon State Park (https://www.in.gov/dnr/state-parks/parks-lakes/pokagon-state-parktrine-state-recreation-area/toboggan-run-at-pokagon-state-park/)

Now I want to make a little winter trip out of these two events. I know weather can do awful things to travel in the Midwest in winter and I will probably feel it afterwards and there's still a pandemic so it's not happening right now. But it's on the list for the future

SI

sterlingice
02-05-2022, 12:30 PM
What a great ending for the biathlon relay

SI

Jas_lov
02-05-2022, 09:45 PM
The US mixed doubles curling team dosen't seem like a top 4 team. Vicky is a good player. Hopefully Chris plays better in the team competition.

Edward64
02-06-2022, 06:59 AM
I've been watching some events in Peacock without commentary. Also watched some NBC (under Peacock) with commentary.

Commentary is definitely much better.

Edward64
02-06-2022, 07:58 AM
Anyone else think that wreath-panda bear thing looks a little scary?

(see middle of page)

https://nypost.com/2022/02/05/usas-julia-marino-wins-silver-in-slopestyle/

Lathum
02-07-2022, 06:01 PM
So I am watching the mens 1000M speed skating where it is the two brothers from Hungary. Odd sport where the race ends, they look at the tape, and literally rearrange everything so the host nation wins gold and silver but I am sure its just a coincidence.

sterlingice
02-07-2022, 06:26 PM
So I am watching the mens 1000M speed skating where it is the two brothers from Hungary. Odd sport where the race ends, they look at the tape, and literally rearrange everything so the host nation wins gold and silver but I am sure its just a coincidence.

All sorts of shady stuff in short track today. There was this gem, too

"Sportsmanship" shown by the Chinese skater in the Beijing Olympics : gifs (https://www.reddit.com/r/gifs/comments/smtt26/sportsmanship_shown_by_the_chinese_skater_in_the/)

Watch the Chinese skater toss the marker at the Canadian skater but make it look like the Canadian was who threw it. The Canadian behind was DQ'd for causing the crash.

Apparently, the Chinese skater has a history of this:
ISU releases images of infringements by China and Canada in the Ladies 3000m Team relay final : olympics (https://www.reddit.com/r/olympics/comments/7z3yxn/isu_releases_images_of_infringements_by_china_and/dulpok5/)

SI

JPhillips
02-07-2022, 06:48 PM
The way the Chinese were advanced into the final of the mixed relay was also shady AF.

sterlingice
02-07-2022, 06:53 PM
I would like to see someone do a figure skating routine to "What would Brian Boitano do?"

SI

bhlloy
02-07-2022, 08:28 PM
I would like to see someone do a figure skating routine to "What would Brian Boitano do?"

SI

This wins the thread. Gold medal.

CrimsonFox
02-07-2022, 11:37 PM
Chen is godlike!

MIJB#19
02-08-2022, 06:03 AM
C'mon, guys. No need for Chinese conspiracy theories here. The Hungarian short track skater Liu Shaolin Sandor deserved his disqualification in the 1000m. I thought he deserved to get disqualified twice, but that's technically impossible.

Edward64
02-08-2022, 06:16 AM
I'm split on Eileen Gu. I'm glad she was able to fulfil her childhood dream.

On one hand, it doesn't sit well with me that a US born Asian American has decided to represent China (if she gave up her citizenship, that would be a different matter). On the other hand, there are examples of other athletes, born in one country but representing another (either as naturalized or dual citizen).

I'm sure the US has benefited from such arrangements also. The question in my mind is ... did Eileen Gu give up her US Citizenship to represent China? China does not recognize dual citizenships. Apparently in a news conference, she hedged and did not answer. And the Olympics has long stopped being just for amateurs and guns for hire are not unusual.

Don't know. I think I lean towards being okay. Won't root for her but happy for her (we can only hope to be that talented), sad for the US, let it play out in future sponsorships, endorsements, court of public opinion etc.

bronconick
02-08-2022, 06:35 AM
All sorts of shady stuff in short track today. There was this gem, too

"Sportsmanship" shown by the Chinese skater in the Beijing Olympics : gifs (https://www.reddit.com/r/gifs/comments/smtt26/sportsmanship_shown_by_the_chinese_skater_in_the/)

Watch the Chinese skater toss the marker at the Canadian skater but make it look like the Canadian was who threw it. The Canadian behind was DQ'd for causing the crash.

Apparently, the Chinese skater has a history of this:
ISU releases images of infringements by China and Canada in the Ladies 3000m Team relay final : olympics (https://www.reddit.com/r/olympics/comments/7z3yxn/isu_releases_images_of_infringements_by_china_and/dulpok5/)

SI

Short Track is the "Whose Line is it Anyway?" Quadrennial event where everything is made up and the points don't matter.

sterlingice
02-08-2022, 07:07 AM
I'm split on Eileen Gu. I'm glad she was able to fulfil her childhood dream.

On one hand, it doesn't sit well with me that a US born Asian American has decided to represent China (if she gave up her citizenship, that would be a different matter). On the other hand, there are examples of other athletes, born in one country but representing another (either as naturalized or dual citizen).

I'm sure the US has benefited from such arrangements also. The question in my mind is ... did Eileen Gu give up her US Citizenship to represent China? China does not recognize dual citizenships. Apparently in a news conference, she hedged and did not answer. And the Olympics has long stopped being just for amateurs and guns for hire are not unusual.

Don't know. I think I lean towards being okay. Won't root for her but happy for her (we can only hope to be that talented), sad for the US, let it play out in future sponsorships, endorsements, court of public opinion etc.

This happens seemingly all the time for the Olympics. If you watch the parade of nations, a lot of the smaller countries that only have a couple of athletes - the announcers will talk about one of them and often they're from larger countries but compete for a smaller country where their parents are from or where they have dual citizenship with. I mean, cynically, it's probably something like "athlete X is in the top 20 in the world but not top 2 in the US/Russia/Germany/whatever so they can't make that local team in the sport but if they compete for another country, they can easily qualify for the Olympics". That seems fine to me, especially if it's a country where their parents are from. We want the best people in sports at the Olympics and they probably shouldn't miss out due to limits from top-heavy teams.

That doesn't mean there isn't some manipulation like the whole Elizabeth Swaney thing, but, generally, it seems fine.
Elizabeth Swaney - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Swaney)

SI

miked
02-08-2022, 07:54 AM
Plus, it's just the fucking olympics not war.

JPhillips
02-08-2022, 07:57 AM
It's partially, maybe completely, a business decision for Gu. She was going to make money in sponsorships even before she won gold, but now she's poised to be the face of winter sport in China. She'll make millions and most of that wouldn't e available to her in the U.S.

MIJB#19
02-08-2022, 08:18 AM
I'm split on Eileen Gu. I'm glad she was able to fulfil her childhood dream.

On one hand, it doesn't sit well with me that a US born Asian American has decided to represent China (if she gave up her citizenship, that would be a different matter). On the other hand, there are examples of other athletes, born in one country but representing another (either as naturalized or dual citizen).

I'm sure the US has benefited from such arrangements also. The question in my mind is ... did Eileen Gu give up her US Citizenship to represent China? China does not recognize dual citizenships. Apparently in a news conference, she hedged and did not answer. And the Olympics has long stopped being just for amateurs and guns for hire are not unusual.

Don't know. I think I lean towards being okay. Won't root for her but happy for her (we can only hope to be that talented), sad for the US, let it play out in future sponsorships, endorsements, court of public opinion etc.
Is it really fair to judge an 18-year old for picking a side (when she was 16) between the country she lives in and the country of her heritage? Aside from randomly being born into that situation, her additional bad luck is that there are political issues between the USA and China. Would the backlash be the same had her heritage been from another country?

At the same time, although she had to pick an NOC, it doesn't mean she turned her back on the USA as a country or as her home, she just made a decision of NOC, that to her felt to be the best for her ability to ski. And apparently it was the right decision for her.

MIJB#19
02-08-2022, 08:24 AM
It's partially, maybe completely, a business decision for Gu. She was going to make money in sponsorships even before she won gold, but now she's poised to be the face of winter sport in China. She'll make millions and most of that wouldn't e available to her in the U.S.Or that, in which case she made an even smarter decision to be able to make a living out of her sport. She created the chance to live the American dream while milking Chinese businesses. Donald Trump should be proud of her. :D

PilotMan
02-08-2022, 09:57 AM
The Olympics this year seem like a complete and total shit show. Perhaps they should have passed on this one.

Solecismic
02-08-2022, 10:55 AM
The Olympics this year seem like a complete and total shit show. Perhaps they should have passed on this one.

I blame Tanya Harding.

Not directly, more a butterfly effect of, well, shit show. That was the moment when the networks realized that they could be telling stories (which they do very well) rather than doing the legwork necessary to make pageantry out of sometimes difficult-to-understand sports in difficult places.

On nights when Tanya and Nancy skated, there were 38 commercial minutes per hour. Ratings were astronomical and CBS made a fortune.

There were 24 skaters in the final. How many of them did CBS viewers see perform? Maybe half, maybe less. The figure-skating long programs are one of the crown jewels of Winter Olympics. And how much did we see from other events?

Now, all you get is profile pieces for the telegenic US athletes, a handful of foreign competitors, the pageantry of the opening ceremony (interspersed with more profile pieces), incredible numbers of commercials. Sometimes you get to see a tiny piece of a sporting event that happened half a day earlier, but not enough of it to really follow it.

And curling and hockey on the side channels. Since those are team competitions with two teams, at least the networks know they have to televise them in full. But curling is never going to be more than ordinary people playing shuffleboard with brooms and granite slabs on ice. OK once every four years. And hockey still has to compete with odd start times.

It's not just skip this one. It's figuring out how to get back to what made the Olympics interesting in the first place.

cuervo72
02-08-2022, 11:26 AM
I don't know about making things interesting, but my wife said something I took note of the other night. It boiled down to all the "new" events, which mostly seem to have a lot of judging in them, vs "old" events where there is something measurable (time, distance). There's probably a fuddy-duddy instinct there (where I am probably with her; "shouldn't this be in the X-Games?") but I think there's also a bit of, "what the hell is going on?"

I mean, it's very simple to understand that bobsled A went down the track .015 seconds faster than bobsled B. It's not quite as easy to watch someone shoot off a ramp, flip and spin and twirl a bunch of times, and then have a score thrown at you. Like, I don't know what the hell they just did or why it was good or bad. It looks cool, but I am completely at the mercy of the broadcast saying why it was what it was and taking their word for it. It's not a race, there's no "go go go!"

(At the same time though, she likes watching skating. *shurg*)

cuervo72
02-08-2022, 11:31 AM
Regarding what nations athletes compete for, I've never been a real fan of mercenary athletes. "Oh, they are competing for Andorra because their great-grandfather..." Yeah, that's a bunch of crap. Compete where you come from.

With Gu, I'm trying to not feel irrational jingoistic anger. At the same time, part of me still whispers if you like it there so much....

JonInMiddleGA
02-08-2022, 11:38 AM
At the same time, part of me still whispers if you like it there so much....

I don't whisper.

They're all welcome to do as they see fit. But I don't want them coming back to the U.S. under anything other than the same rules that apply to any other foreign national either.

henry296
02-08-2022, 11:43 AM
I found the USA coverage to be pretty good in terms of showing everything. I'm pretty sure, if I wanted I could see every luge run, men's skating, slopestyle, big air and Mens super G skiing run (at least the top 25 contenders) over the past few days.

JPhillips
02-08-2022, 11:45 AM
Isn't the big problem that there just aren't very many American stars this year? There's the female skier, the male skater, and then the husk of Shaun White. Not much to interest an average American viewer.

RainMaker
02-08-2022, 11:47 AM
I wonder if the extremely aggressive copyright enforcement plays a role today. It's nearly impossible to build up buzz online when no one can post clips of what happened.

Then on TV, no other network is allowed to show video highlights. So unless you're watching a bunch of NBC, you're probably not seeing much of what's taking place.

Media coverage has been hampered by some pretty draconian rules. Seems a lot of outlets said fuck it and didn't send anyone to cover it.

20 years ago this works because you don't have a ton of options. But now, I'll just watch a few episodes of Reacher instead of trying to decipher what's going on in the Olympics. It's fine background noise but I don't have time for the secret club when so much other media out there just wants me to watch it.

JonInMiddleGA
02-08-2022, 11:58 AM
Isn't the big problem that there just aren't very many American stars this year? There's the female skier, the male skater, and then the husk of Shaun White. Not much to interest an average American viewer.

Eh, they tend to manufacture those when there's a shortage though.

Solecismic
02-08-2022, 12:04 PM
With Gu, I'm trying to not feel irrational jingoistic anger. At the same time, part of me still whispers if you like it there so much....

More than a third of the people in the entire world live in India or China. And until recently (and this only with China), Olympic sports wasn't a thing. The Chinese have developed figure skaters (often not in China) and the Indians for some truly bizarre reason really love cricket. Some people think cricket will soon become bigger than baseball, world-wide, and that's all about India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, etc. It won't catch on here - we're still struggling with soccer.

If you're training to be in the Olympics, there aren't that many places or coaches out there. It would be interesting to see how many top Olympic athletes (and tennis players) who really are native to other countries, pretty much live in the United States (or for skiing, the northern European countries).

I don't care that Gu wants to represent China. The China she sees and experiences is not the same China most of her new countrymen and women experience. The sacrifices she makes for the sake of enjoying that privilege aren't ones she'll ever know enough to understand, unless she's unlucky enough to go the Peng Shuai route.

Figure skating at one point was literally skating a figure. Judges got up close, noted your edge, and you skated repeatedly around a circle or an "8" on the ice. You lost points if your skate touched outside the figure or if you lost your edge. At some point they added the long program. If you jumped well or were graceful enough, you hoped to make up for a mediocre score on the figures. Gradually, the figures counted for less and less until they were dropped from competition. All except the name itself.

The judging more or less makes sense, though every once in a while you get someone who can rotate more than anyone else, somewhat land it, but looks like an elephant out there. I guess with the newer sports, we just have to get to a point where the elephants look like elephants. I don't think the kids doing it right now know, either. The judging seems far more about reputation than reality than the other judged sports - and they sure complain about it. But until the X takes (and it may never take), that's all they get.

sterlingice
02-08-2022, 12:12 PM
I found the USA coverage to be pretty good in terms of showing everything. I'm pretty sure, if I wanted I could see every luge run, men's skating, slopestyle, big air and Mens super G skiing run (at least the top 25 contenders) over the past few days.

This. The USA coverage on the weekend was so much better. At worst, for recorded stuff, you'd get all of the runs of the Americans and the medal contenders. For the live stuff, it's just live so they just roll it on out there for you to see. I found it to be so much more palatable than the NBC coverage. But it's not as "neatly" packaged as Prime Time where they pick the three to five biggest stories of the day and condense them for you so you know exactly which couple of hours to watch for max drama.

Also, I'm a DVR fiend for the Olympics. I just set it up to tape and then start at, say, 8:30 PM. That way, I can roll through the human interest stories, the commercials, and all the other fluff and just see the sports and be done about the time the broadcast ends.* Should I have to do this? No. But I'm also the guy who was watching Olympics all weekend so if I want to see it, this is what I have to do. It's only a couple of weeks every couple of years so I deal with it. I know others won't.

*I also have to keep reminding my wife that if she's manning the remote that you fast forward into things until you're sure it's something you want to see and then rewind if need be - if you just stop at everything that might be Olympics, you'll be there all day. She tends to stop at Olympic ads or all the incessant coverage of figure skaters warming up because she might miss the routine. The number of times they would come back from break, Tirico would say something, they'd go to some skaters warming up on the ice for two minutes, Tirico would say something else, and they'd go back to commercial is just maddening. Just give me my damn sports. You could have given me 5 more runs of slopestyle or luge or moguls or whatever in that time but, hey, some pairs figure skating team is skating across the ice warming up, not even doing tricks. That'll draw the eyeballs!

SI

sterlingice
02-08-2022, 12:16 PM
More than a third of the people in the entire world live in India or China. And until recently (and this only with China), Olympic sports wasn't a thing. The Chinese have developed figure skaters (often not in China) and the Indians for some truly bizarre reason really love cricket. Some people think cricket will soon become bigger than baseball, world-wide, and that's all about India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, etc. It won't catch on here - we're still struggling with soccer.

I kindof wonder when India will start becoming an Olympic power. It seems to follow about a generation after rising economic power so maybe we're 20 years away?

Also, for decades, the US has had one heck of a cheat code in the university system. How many times are you watching a broadcast of a sport and they're talking about how all of the athletes go to school in the US, even though it's 8 different people representing 5 different countries? That's not to say there isn't a Russian gymnastics program here or Chinese diving program there, but so many of these athletes train at American universities and the NCAA championships aren't that different than the world ones.

SI

cuervo72
02-08-2022, 12:49 PM
I don't care that Gu wants to represent China. The China she sees and experiences is not the same China most of her new countrymen and women experience. The sacrifices she makes for the sake of enjoying that privilege aren't ones she'll ever know enough to understand, unless she's unlucky enough to go the Peng Shuai route.

Or Jack Ma, or Fan BingBing, or Sun Dawu, or Zhao Wei...

If she is doing this because she thinks there's a better market for her in China (modeling, endorsements) to get rich/famous, she might want to be careful. China doesn't seem to appreciate anyone getting too much of either.

CrimsonFox
02-08-2022, 01:05 PM
Plus, it's just the fucking olympics not war.

olympics IS war!

bhlloy
02-08-2022, 01:24 PM
I’d also point out that I’m not sure the message was exactly the same when the US mens soccer team was digging up anybody they could find who was European but had an American parent for the better part of half a decade, but hey ho.

MIJB#19
02-08-2022, 06:14 PM
olympics IS war!Now would be the perfect timing for the media in the USA to finally adopt the medals tabulating method the rest of the world is used to, just to get the Russian OC pushed from the top.

SirFozzie
02-09-2022, 04:35 AM
Team figure skating medal ceremony at Beijing Olympics delayed over legal issue (https://www.espn.com/olympics/story/_/id/33249419/team-figure-skating-medal-ceremony-beijing-olympics-delayed-legal-issue)

wait, legal consultation? The only thing I can think of is citizenship or age (I think if it was Drug related, there wouldn't be that legal consultation), and the fact that four members of the Russian team didn't show up for practice... the only other thing I can think of is that they knew they had a COVID positive and still let them participate..

henry296
02-09-2022, 08:51 AM
Team figure skating medal ceremony at Beijing Olympics delayed over legal issue (https://www.espn.com/olympics/story/_/id/33249419/team-figure-skating-medal-ceremony-beijing-olympics-delayed-legal-issue)

wait, legal consultation? The only thing I can think of is citizenship or age (I think if it was Drug related, there wouldn't be that legal consultation), and the fact that four members of the Russian team didn't show up for practice... the only other thing I can think of is that they knew they had a COVID positive and still let them participate..

All of the articles I've read say "drug test", so I'm guessing the legal matter is either how it was collected or contaminated product.

JonInMiddleGA
02-09-2022, 08:57 AM
olympics IS war!

I think more accurately "it used to be". That's when the Olympics were interesting and fun.

Now?

"Our" athletes are often more unlikable than "their" athletes. I have no real interest in it because there's hardly anybody to root for at all at this point*.

Kills my interest same way I haven't watched NASCAR in years (after a couple decades of being able to name every driver/sponsor combination across three levels of racing)

edit to elaborate: And that lack of rooting interest matters a lot when you're talking about events I really have no interest in, as opposed to being able to at least have something like Oregon State vs Pacific college football on as background noise at 2am

cuervo72
02-09-2022, 09:17 AM
legal = "give them the medal or I invade Ukraine!"

bhlloy
02-09-2022, 07:37 PM
So one thing I don’t understand is how the Women snowboarders go so much smaller than the men in the half pipe… I get that men have an advantage in pure strength or speed but feels like this is an event as much about technique and maybe core. And it also doesn’t seem like as noticeable in the disciplines like big air for example.

bhlloy
02-09-2022, 07:39 PM
DOLA - also the failed drug test being the 15 year old star skater is just nuts on all levels. The backdrop of Russian state doping, her age and skill, the medication that nobody has ever actually used to cheat (but also doesn’t seem to make any sense for a 15 year old to take)… it’s going to get super ugly

RainMaker
02-09-2022, 09:12 PM
Maybe they should just ban the country doping 15 year olds instead of placating them over and over?

Edward64
02-10-2022, 06:33 AM
DOLA - also the failed drug test being the 15 year old star skater is just nuts on all levels. The backdrop of Russian state doping, her age and skill, the medication that nobody has ever actually used to cheat (but also doesn’t seem to make any sense for a 15 year old to take)… it’s going to get super ugly

And supposedly tested in Dec. Why so long?

The Associated Press reported that the sample was allegedly obtained before Valieva won the European championship last month in Estonia.

If the test were in fact taken in December, it raises questions as to why it took so long for the test to be reported. "That would be a screw-up on somebody's part if they're just reporting a December positive now in the middle of the Olympics," veteran sports lawyer Howard Jacobs told ESPN.

Top international sports lawyer Paul Greene also wondered how it could have taken so long to process, but pointed out there's no requirement that tests be reported within a certain period of time. "Sometimes these things get thrown to the lab and the lab sits on it for months, not through anybody's nefarious conduct, just through backups in lab testing, etcetera," he told ESPN.
But apparently someone can have taken it unknowingly ...
American swimmer Madisyn Cox successfully appealed a two-year ban that was reduced to six months after she proved that a vitamin supplement she had been taking was contaminated with trimetazidine.
Don't know what's going to happen but this doesn't seem to be a mass scale doping scandal (or at least not yet).

larrymcg421
02-10-2022, 07:45 AM
Really happy for Lindsey Jacobellis. She made a dumb mistake in 2006, costing herself the gold, and she finally gets her first Olympic gold this year.

Edward64
02-10-2022, 08:10 AM
Happy to see Nathan Chen and Chloe Kim happy to represent the US.

Still happy for Eileen Gu on a personal level for achieving her dreams but frak her. Certainly won't buy any Wheaties and like endorsed by her.

Still wondering why we don't know definitively if she gave up her US citizenship to represent China (as articles have said China does not recognize dual citizenships).

sterlingice
02-10-2022, 09:10 AM
Happy to see Nathan Chen and Chloe Kim happy to represent the US.

Still happy for Eileen Gu on a personal level for achieving her dreams but frak her. Certainly won't buy any Wheaties and like endorsed by her.

Still wondering why we don't know definitively if she gave up her US citizenship to represent China (as articles have said China does not recognize dual citizenships).

Were you going to before?

Considering all the other conversations in all the other threads across the board about a wide array of topics, and this is the bridge too far for an individual?

EDIT: Really not trying to be a dick, just trying to understand. Like to me, this doesn't seem like that big of a thing - she made a very, um, capitalist decision. It seems so very American, rightly and wrongly.

SI

Edward64
02-10-2022, 10:01 AM
Were you going to before?
SI

Not a Wheaties fan. But "and the like" include below. Unsure if these endorsements will continue but if they do, yeah forget Red Bull, forget Beats. Admittedly wasn't going to buy any VS or Cadillac.

According to the New York Post, Gu has sponsors in the United States including Red Bull, Cadillac, the Apple-owned Beats by Dre headphones and Victoria’s Secret, where she was announced as one of the new faces of the brand last year.
:
She is also the spokesperson for Luckin’ Coffee, the Starbucks of China.

Considering all the other conversations in all the other threads across the board about a wide array of topics, and this is the bridge too far for an individual?

Bridge too far is overstating it. But using the example of Chen being a spokesperson for Coke and Gu being spokes person for Pepsi, yeah I would go for Coke. If it was the other way around, I would have second thoughts about Coke (but Coke Zero will be hard to give up).

EDIT: Really not trying to be a dick, just trying to understand. Like to me, this doesn't seem like that big of a thing - she made a very, um, capitalist decision. It seems so very American, rightly and wrongly.

From what I've read, it was primarily to set an example for kids in China. I'm sure endorsements are also a factor but that is unsaid by her. I don't see it as a big thing all things considered just the principle.

Question for you ...

Should someone that has not changed citizenship (presumably) be able to represent another country (especially since we have tense relationships with), but yet reap the benefits of the one she has benefited from and figuratively left behind?

bronconick
02-10-2022, 10:12 AM
That's been going on in the Olympics and FIFA forever, so I don't see why not.

Solecismic
02-10-2022, 10:15 AM
EDIT: Really not trying to be a dick, just trying to understand. Like to me, this doesn't seem like that big of a thing - she made a very, um, capitalist decision. It seems so very American, rightly and wrongly.

SI

That's kind of how I view it. It just doesn't make my top ten things to be pissed off about today.

So, rightfully, she gets questions about China's human rights abuses and she deflects them as she's probably trained to do. She makes a fortune in China, gets to compete in a sport she loves, and we all move on.

It's not like she could say something and Xi would pause, reflect, and say, "you know, now that you mention it, maybe we shouldn't be a communist country and enslave minority people."

In the end, like with the NBA, it's kind of funny watching athletes avoid the questions. But you're right, that's how capitalism has always worked and probably should work.

Edward64
02-10-2022, 10:27 AM
That's been going on in the Olympics and FIFA forever, so I don't see why not.

Specifically for the Olympics, I don't think you can compete for China unless you are a dual citizen (not possible in China) or gave up US citizenship and became a citizen of China.

She's avoided the question about citizenship. Easy enough to answer. I infer from her hesitancy there is more to this story. If she has not renounced her US citizenship but somehow is representing China in the Olympics, then yeah, there's a principle here.

If she has renounced her citizenship and now is a Chinese citizen, great for her.

miked
02-10-2022, 10:31 AM
Do people choose between coke and pepsi based on who they endorse/endorses them? Maybe I'm just a normal person, but I base my food and beverage choices on whether I like them, not what person is on the cover.

I have a seriously hard time believing that you are researching who is endorsing what before you buy it, so let's cut the BS here.

JPhillips
02-10-2022, 10:48 AM
Specifically for the Olympics, I don't think you can compete for China unless you are a dual citizen (not possible in China) or gave up US citizenship and became a citizen of China.

She's avoided the question about citizenship. Easy enough to answer. I infer from her hesitancy there is more to this story. If she has not renounced her US citizenship but somehow is representing China in the Olympics, then yeah, there's a principle here.

If she has renounced her citizenship and now is a Chinese citizen, great for her.

I've explained this over and over and you still misrepresent this. Just like in the USA, a child of a Chinese citizen is given Chinese citizenship and there is no way to revoke that other than through petition. Gu, with both a Chinese and American parent, would be recognized as a citizen by both China and the USA. She doesn't have to do anything for that to be true and whether or not China or the USA recognize dual citizenship is irrelevant.

This is the status of my daughter, born in China to Chinese parents. She is and will always be a citizen of China. When we adopted, she was granted American citizenship, but that has no bearing on her status as a Chinese citizen. She will always be recognized as a citizen by both countries.

Edward64
02-10-2022, 10:49 AM
Do people choose between coke and pepsi based on who they endorse/endorses them? Maybe I'm just a normal person, but I base my food and beverage choices on whether I like them, not what person is on the cover.

I have a seriously hard time believing that you are researching who is endorsing what before you buy it, so let's cut the BS here.

I am not researching per se. But if it's front page news and there is someone (or principle) I don't support is endorsing something, yeah I'll try to avoid it.

CFA is a good example. If I was LGBT, I would seriously have second thoughts eating there.

Edward64
02-10-2022, 11:16 AM
I've explained this over and over and you still misrepresent this. Just like in the USA, a child of a Chinese citizen is given Chinese citizenship and there is no way to revoke that other than through petition. Gu, with both a Chinese and American parent, would be recognized as a citizen by both China and the USA. She doesn't have to do anything for that to be true and whether or not China or the USA recognize dual citizenship is irrelevant.

This is the status of my daughter, born in China to Chinese parents. She is and will always be a citizen of China. When we adopted, she was granted American citizenship, but that has no bearing on her status as a Chinese citizen. She will always be recognized as a citizen by both countries.

I get your daughter, she was born in China.

Eileen was born in the US to presumably parents who are naturalized US citizens (but can't find much info on dad). So you are saying a US born child of Chinese descent but naturalized US parents is considered a Chinese citizen? Can you share a source for this?

sterlingice
02-10-2022, 11:22 AM
I am not researching per se. But if it's front page news and there is someone (or principle) I don't support is endorsing something, yeah I'll try to avoid it.

CFA is a good example. If I was LGBT, I would seriously have second thoughts eating there.

I kindof wondered if this was where this was going to end up. I mean there's the whole "what your permit is what you condone" so... I'm not sure how "if I was LGBT" is part of the conversation. If Gu is tacitly condoning genocide by advertising for China (these athletes are basically national and product billboards in this case) then you eating a chicken sandwich at CFA or shopping at Hobby Lobby is condoning discrimination against the LGBT community, whether you're a part of the community or not.

Of course, this ignores how it's different by degrees. I mean, if you really want to wrap your head into knots, you can go:
Well, genocide > discrimination
But, directly funding > indirectly funding through sponsorship and advertising (?)
And then try to parse out what is worse or better or if both are below your personal tolerance level

Like I don't think Gu is providing money directly for the Chinese government to commit genocide but CFA/HL have actively given money to discriminate against the LGBT community. So, we're definitely into apples vs oranges or, like apples vs school buses. I don't think it's wrong to base your buying decisions on how ethical a business is - I wish we had more regulation and buying around that idea. And, of course, there are some products with limited consumer choices where there is no right choice - if you're doing home internet access, you have, at most, 2 choices, both of pretty awful corporations. Also, I think that on the list of things that, say, Coke has done - sponsoring Gu which indirectly funnels money and eyeballs to China, which is engaging in horrific genocide - probably doesn't even crack the top 50 of least ethical things Coke has done this year. For a company that is directly responsible for dead people, basically employs wage slaves, caused societal upheaval to save money, and whose product is one of the biggest causes of type 2 diabetes, this is moral accounting dust.

I want to assume you're actually making this discussion in good faith. But I could also buy that it was just fishing for a reaction to make another political point ("America good, China bad; see all these lefty hypocrites" when, of course, it's a lot more complicated than that).

SI

Edward64
02-10-2022, 11:28 AM
I want to assume you're actually making this discussion in good faith. But I could also buy that it was just fishing for a reaction to make another political point ("America good, China bad; see all these lefty hypocrites" when, of course, it's a lot more complicated than that).

SI

Consider it in good faith. I am an immigrant and greatly appreciate what the US has provided for me. I love this country, warts and all.

If this was another country that we don't have dual citizenship status with, I'd feel the same.

(I actually don't support dual citizenship per other discussions but Olympic rules does say citizen or dual citizenship for this discussion).

According to the Olympic Charter (Rule 40-41) Any competitor in the Olympic Games must be a national of the country of the NOC which is entering such competitor. A competitor who is a national of two or more countries at the same time may represent either one of them, as he may elect.

sterlingice
02-10-2022, 11:38 AM
Consider it in good faith. I am an immigrant and greatly appreciate what the US has provided for me. I love this country, warts and all.

If this was another country that we don't have dual citizenship status with, I'd feel the same.

(I actually don't support dual citizenship per other discussions but Olympic rules does say citizen or dual citizenship for this discussion).

Good deal - it's hard to tell on the internet sometimes. My bad.

I think a lot of us have different ideas of citizenship. For instance, I feel that it's part of my job as a citizen to challenge our country and leaders to be better and not offer blind loyalty. Others clearly disagree (not speaking about you - but it's clearly a prevalent sentiment in many countries, not just here).

I think the idea of being a citizen or having dual citizenship is an interesting one, but it's also a bit antiquated in a lot of ways. This isn't the ideal of being a Roman citizen anymore. It's also really, really difficult to get citizenship in another country - either you need to go through years of work with no guarantee you'll get it or be some special case and you jump the line over others, which also seems inherently unfair. However is it different for 20yo world class skier vs giving advantages to poaching software engineers from, say, Eastern Europe, India, or Brazil? I don't really have an answer to this one - it's not something I've really thought at length about.

SI

JPhillips
02-10-2022, 11:50 AM
I get your daughter, she was born in China.

Eileen was born in the US to presumably parents who are naturalized US citizens (but can't find much info on dad). So you are saying a US born child of Chinese descent but naturalized US parents is considered a Chinese citizen? Can you share a source for this?

From the LA Times:

The law says that a child who has one Chinese parent automatically receives Chinese citizenship, no matter where the child was born.

That's common and most countries recognize the citizenship of children born to citizens, regardless of birth location. That's how the US does it, too. If you're a citizen and give birth in China, that child is still recognized as a US citizen.

Solecismic
02-10-2022, 11:56 AM
It's interesting to think about what our jobs/responsibilities are as citizens.

What's core to each of us? What are our "moral values," not necessarily thinking of that as it pertains to a religion, but religion for some offers answers to those questions.

When and why do we speak? When and why do we challenge the government (something that's a lot harder to do in China than it is here). Do corporations have moral values, or is the responsibility of those running corporations to enrich shareholders and not take those positions?

How we answer those questions, which have many shades of grey (not exactly 50, thankfully) depends on our parents, the area we grew up in, our experiences and perhaps more randomness than we'd be comfortable admitting.

I am a dual citizen (of the UK, where I was born, and the US, since my parents were born and lived here - my mother didn't find out she was pregnant until my dad's sabbatical spent teaching at a British university was already underway). I don't think of myself as British, but should the worst happen, it's an option.

I think of the US as the greatest country ever, not in a MAGA sense, but in a "my great-grandparents would have been killed if not for how the US welcomes immigration" sense. We are a nation of immigrants, pulling together as best we can, hopefully. The words of the Founding Fathers are words I take seriously. And the US, warts and all, as Edward said, has my loyalty.

I don't understand Gu's decisions, but it's easy to accept that her combination of variables is quite different from mine, and led her to a different path than one I'd choose.

NobodyHere
02-10-2022, 11:57 AM
That's common and most countries recognize the citizenship of children born to citizens, regardless of birth location. That's how the US does it, too.

What if you were born in Kenya?

Edward64
02-10-2022, 12:07 PM
From the LA Times:

That's common and most countries recognize the citizenship of children born to citizens, regardless of birth location. That's how the US does it, too. If you're a citizen and give birth in China, that child is still recognized as a US citizen.

I would appreciate a more official source because I have not been able to find an "official" source to support it.

The distinction I'm making is her parents are presumably naturalized US citizens and therefore Eileen, born in the US, is not a Chinese citizen by default.

I think you are saying even if the parents were naturalized US citizens, just as long as they are of Chinese descent, the child is a Chinese citizen. Assuming that Eileen is Gen 1, how far does this go, Eileen's children, her grandchildren etc. I don't think so.

But taking your source, I would counter with this (admittedly, no idea how accurate it is).

Are children born in China automatically Chinese citizens if one parent is Chinese and the other a US citizen with an American passport? - Quora (https://www.quora.com/Are-children-born-in-China-automatically-Chinese-citizens-if-one-parent-is-Chinese-and-the-other-a-US-citizen-with-an-American-passport)
USA adopts jus soli as their basis of citizenship law, meaning the children who were born in USA and anywhere within USA jurisdiction territory are automatically granted US citizenship. But US citizenship law also states if at least one of your parents is a permanent resident or a citizen, your children will be granted a US citizenship as well

Whereas in China, it mainly operates on basis of jus sanguinis (right of blood) which means your children need to at least have one person who holds Chinese permanent residency or Chinese citizenship to acquire Chinese citizenship for your children regardless of where they were born, the place of birth is not relevant.

So I guess the question then is are Eileen's parent's US vs Chinese citizen or US vs Chinese permanent residency.

Again, simple enough question for her/parent/Olympic committee to answer. The lack of an definitive answer right now raises questions on why they are avoiding this. My cynical view is Eileen did not give up her US citizenship and has a wink-wink to represent China because the Olympics do not want to PO China.

Edward64
02-10-2022, 12:11 PM
I think of the US as the greatest country ever, not in a MAGA sense, but in a "my great-grandparents would have been killed if not for how the US welcomes immigration" sense. We are a nation of immigrants, pulling together as best we can, hopefully. The words of the Founding Fathers are words I take seriously. And the US, warts and all, as Edward said, has my loyalty.


Oh yeah baby!

FWIW. Although I don't support dual citizenship, I acknowledge that US citizens have benefited from it. I would love to have dual citizenship with an EU country so I can travel around the schengen.

JPhillips
02-10-2022, 12:12 PM
Her mother was a Chinese graduate student residing in the U.S. and her father was an American citizen of European descent. Gu has family in China and has visited and lived there on and off her entire life.

JPhillips
02-10-2022, 12:13 PM
What if you were born in Kenya?

That was always the dumbest part of the birther conspiracy. Even if he was born in Kenya, his mother was still a citizen and he would then be a citizen.

Edward64
02-10-2022, 12:15 PM
Her mother was a Chinese graduate student residing in the U.S. and her father was an American citizen of European descent. Gu has family in China and has visited and lived there on and off her entire life.

Oh good. Was not able to find much on the Dad.

Do you know if the mother is a US citizen or PR?

And is the below your stance?

I think you are saying even if the parents were naturalized US citizens, just as long as they are of Chinese descent, the child is a Chinese citizen. Assuming that Eileen is Gen 1, how far does this go, Eileen's children, her grandchildren etc.

JPhillips
02-10-2022, 12:19 PM
Eileen is a U.S. citizen, so her children will be U.S. citizens. Now if they are born in China they may not ever fill out the paperwork, but if they can prove they are a child of a citizen, yes, they get US citizenship.

sterlingice
02-10-2022, 07:44 PM
I don't necessarily agree with the editorializing here (tho it's a discussing we're having in this thread): Eileen Gu's citizenship status a focus after winning Olympic gold for China - Sports Illustrated (https://www.si.com/olympics/2022/02/08/eileen-gu-big-air-gold-medal-china-citizenship-status)

But, lol - I also didn't realize just how sketch some the circus around it was. Bach (IOC Pres) was at Gu's event and Peng Shuai (likely raped tennis star who magically recanted her accusation after she mysteriously disappeared for a couple of weeks) just happened to be there, too? Wow! What are the odds?!?

SI

JPhillips
02-10-2022, 08:17 PM
I'm curious about Hungary. They have a lot of athletes that have formerly competed for other countries.

bhlloy
02-10-2022, 08:44 PM
The US judge giving Hirano an 89 is sketchy as fuck

JPhillips
02-10-2022, 09:03 PM
The US judge giving Hirano an 89 is sketchy as fuck

But two others gave him a 90, so it wasn't out of line.

Edward64
02-11-2022, 06:26 AM
Thanks Shaun White.

sterlingice
02-11-2022, 08:25 PM
We're a couple of nights behind. I'm a big fan of Keegan Messing. He's from Alaska but skating for Canada as his mom is Canadian. First off, he doesn't look like tall, lithe figure skater - he's a bit more stocky. Second, he almost missed the Olympics due to COVID and he arrived about 24 hours before the start of the short program so he skated horribly jetlagged. Third, he was not using the traditional skating music so it was something different. Finally, his long program outfit was red and black flannel top with black pants. Flannel for figure skating. Rock on.

SI

JPhillips
02-11-2022, 09:17 PM
I'm pretty sure our male snowboard racer is really Will Ferrell.

MIJB#19
02-12-2022, 11:46 AM
C'mon, guys. No need for Chinese conspiracy theories here.So, about that... Some incidents can only feed the conspiracies...

There was a ghost false start on the 500m at men's speed skating, that disrupted the race between the top two favorites (Japan's Tatsuya Shinhama and Canada's Laurent Dubreuil). In almost 30 years of watching speed skating events, I've never before seen such a questionable false start. Sure, it didn't lead to disqualification, but in this distance it's usually enough to put both riders just to make them fail. Beneficiary of the incident: China's winner Gao Tinyu, another one of the favorites.

sterlingice
02-12-2022, 07:42 PM
So, about that... Some incidents can only feed the conspiracies...

There was a ghost false start on the 500m at men's speed skating, that disrupted the race between the top two favorites (Japan's Tatsuya Shinhama and Canada's Laurent Dubreuil). In almost 30 years of watching speed skating events, I've never before seen such a questionable false start. Sure, it didn't lead to disqualification, but in this distance it's usually enough to put both riders just to make them fail. Beneficiary of the incident: China's winner Gao Tinyu, another one of the favorites.

The tossed marker - how was that anything but deliberate? It would be a one in a million shot for that to be an accident

SI

Edward64
02-12-2022, 08:46 PM
So, about that... Some incidents can only feed the conspiracies...

The real conspiracy is it seems China and IOC are in cahoots to turn a blind eye when there is a non-citizen representing China. No, not talking about supposedly some pseudo dual citizenship via some Chinese ancestry/adoption blood-line ala Gu.

There may be an arcane rule that allows this. But I doubt it, if there were they would have presented it already.

Too late to do anything about it. And assume the US Olympic Committee doesn't care enough to formally protest. It will set the stage for interesting teams in future Olympics as other countries will bid on the top talent.

2022 Olympics: Team China, made in America (https://sports.yahoo.com/meet-the-american-made-team-china-011658456.html)
Eighteen of the 22 players who dressed for Thursday’s Olympic opener, including every member of the top two lines, were born and/or raised in the U.S. or Canada. They were, therefore, presumably not Chinese citizens. Olympic rules, however, require athletes to be nationals of the country they represent. And it’s unclear how, exactly, the Chinese government fulfilled this requirement.

Multiple players have indicated they were not asked to renounce their U.S. or Canadian citizenship. If so, either Chinese laws or Olympic rules were bent. Smith sidestepped the question Thursday, saying, “When I'm in China, I'm a Chinese. I'm supported by the Chinese, and I'm truly thankful for that. And when I go to America, I'm American.”

Several other North American players walked through the mixed zone and did not stop to answer questions. One, in declining an interview, said: “I don’t think we’re allowed to.”

cuervo72
02-12-2022, 09:10 PM
Hmm, I dunno. Get the feeling Bates is more into Chock than the other way around.

Also, brain keeps registering "women's monoboob."

JPhillips
02-13-2022, 09:24 AM
I think one of the German hockey players is named Cuntknuckle.

JonInMiddleGA
02-13-2022, 01:39 PM
I think one of the German hockey players is named Cuntknuckle.


Tom Kuhnhackle, veteran of 232 career games for the Pittsburgh Penguins

sterlingice
02-13-2022, 09:27 PM
I am in favor of the monobob - this is a fun idea

SI

bhlloy
02-13-2022, 10:04 PM
I'm just here for the hot taeks that the US Gold Winning bobsledder should give the medal back to Canada, or something

JonInMiddleGA
02-14-2022, 10:09 AM
Having read the latest decision(s) about dealing with the women's figure skating medal(s), the phrase "Hold our beer" comes to mind.

What a clusterfuck.

albionmoonlight
02-14-2022, 10:35 AM
Having read the latest decision(s) about dealing with the women's figure skating medal(s), the phrase "Hold our beer" comes to mind.

What a clusterfuck.

It was so clusterfucked that I couldn't really even follow it.

The IOC seems so corrupt and incompetent that it is hard to tell which decisions result from corruption and which decisions result from incompetence. As the old saying goes, they are hard to tell apart from the outside.

bhlloy
02-14-2022, 10:45 AM
Unless I’m not reading the full decision it seems like damned if they do and damned if they don’t no? Having a ceremony to give a gold to somebody who everyone knows is likely to have it stripped seems just as counterintuitive.

sterlingice
02-14-2022, 11:00 AM
Having read the latest decision(s) about dealing with the women's figure skating medal(s), the phrase "Hold our beer" comes to mind.

What a clusterfuck.

It was so clusterfucked that I couldn't really even follow it.

The IOC seems so corrupt and incompetent that it is hard to tell which decisions result from corruption and which decisions result from incompetence. As the old saying goes, they are hard to tell apart from the outside.

Dear Lord, yes and yes.

Unless I’m not reading the full decision it seems like damned if they do and damned if they don’t no? Having a ceremony to give a gold to somebody who everyone knows is likely to have it stripped seems just as counterintuitive.

Except, it sounds like they won't take it away because she's a minor so banned substances are protected... or something? Russia: "Very strange. All athletes who qualify this year are 15. Good luck for us."

SI

Edward64
02-14-2022, 11:57 AM
I can't imagine the physical and mental strain. Wish her the best.

Regarding below "her fellow athletes rushed to her aid", would/should a competitor, chasing her, stop and render aid and possibly give up their chance to medal? I imagine there were plenty of officials & non-competitors around to help but wonder if any competitors have faced this question before in other situations.

A Norwegian Olympic athlete collapsed from exhaustion seconds after a Eurosport commentator had inaccurately declared her the bronze medalist in the 10km biathlon, a sport that combines cross-country skiing and rifle shooting.

Just as she became on track to medal, Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold fell to her exhaustion. At first, she remained stationary, being passed by other athletes. Eventually, Tandrevold managed to begin skiing again, and was on track to be in 14th place just as she had her terrifying tumble right at the finish line.

When the 25-year-old hit the ground, her fellow athletes rushed to her aid. She was treated by medics on the snow before they carted her away.

Norway team doctor Lars Kolsrud told the press that Tandrevold was upset about what had occurred, and it was caused by exhaustion.

AnalBumCover
02-14-2022, 12:29 PM
I can't imagine the physical and mental strain. Wish her the best.

Regarding below "her fellow athletes rushed to her aid", would/should a competitor, chasing her, stop and render aid and possibly give up their chance to medal? I imagine there were plenty of officials & non-competitors around to help but wonder if any competitors have faced this question before in other situations.

I think in this case, she had collapsed immediately after having crossed the finish line.

[edited to clarify] They rushed to her aid when she collapsed at the finish line. I don't know whether she fell previously while on the course.

henry296
02-14-2022, 12:39 PM
However, I believe the IOC wants her to be ineligible. It is the Court of Arbitration of Sport (CAS) who said she can skate.

bhlloy
02-14-2022, 02:37 PM
Exactly - the IOC can't stop her skating, this sounds like usual procedure when an athlete is competing under protest. It would be just as messed up to give her the gold and have somebody off the podium as it will be to have the ceremony in a few months time with the right people anyway. Complete no-win situation for them.

Shitty organization run by idiots yes, but I'm missing something that they could have done different in this particular case.

Edward64
02-14-2022, 03:49 PM
Congrats to Norway. They are leading the medal standings (as predicted) and gold medals.

And curling is still going on. 3 weeks worth

RainMaker
02-14-2022, 04:37 PM
I guess the question is why is Russia even allowed to compete at the Olympics after about a decade of blatant cheating?

MIJB#19
02-15-2022, 01:52 AM
I guess the question is why is Russia even allowed to compete at the Olympics after about a decade of blatant cheating?Technically "Russia" is not participating, you won't see Russian flags anywhere. A collective of people from Russia in good standing (not suspected of doping abuse) with their respective international sports organizations are (the abbreviation "ROC" is used during these games and in several olympic sports).

I mean, your statement would imply (everybody from) the USA should be banned just because of the decades long substance abuse in athletics, baseball and cycling (to name the most obvious olympic sports) by some individuals or groups of people they were involved with. I've never seen or read any suggestions like that. And with fair reasoning, is it Michael Phelps', Simona Biles' and LeBron James' fault they was born and raised in the land of Marion Jones, Lance Armstrong and Barry Bonds?

But it's fair to "tomato or tomato" this, because several sports associations in Russia have been suspected of organized doping programs and those are still the ones sending their members to these games. Most of us do what you just did there: call "the people from Russia" "Russia".

MIJB#19
02-15-2022, 01:55 AM
The Dutch speed skating (long track) teams failed once again to bring home the two must win gold medals. Somebody will have to be fired for this, I'm sure.

sterlingice
02-15-2022, 07:14 AM
Technically "Russia" is not participating, you won't see Russian flags anywhere. A collective of people from Russia in good standing (not suspected of doping abuse) with their respective international sports organizations are (the abbreviation "ROC" is used during these games and in several olympic sports).

I mean, your statement would imply (everybody from) the USA should be banned just because of the decades long substance abuse in athletics, baseball and cycling (to name the most obvious olympic sports) by some individuals or groups of people they were involved with. I've never seen or read any suggestions like that. And with fair reasoning, is it Michael Phelps', Simona Biles' and LeBron James' fault they was born and raised in the land of Marion Jones, Lance Armstrong and Barry Bonds?

But it's fair to "tomato or tomato" this, because several sports associations in Russia have been suspected of organized doping programs and those are still the ones sending their members to these games. Most of us do what you just did there: call "the people from Russia" "Russia".

Kindof. However, you're being a bit glib, right? Russia was literally running a state-sponsored doping program so that's definitely not an apples to apples comparison. USA cycling team wasn't running Lance Armstrong's doping program, he was. There wasn't a state run program that was literally swapping samples - there were individual athletes using masking agents and trying to submit other people's urine as their own to get around the international programs. That /is/ a pretty big difference. Baseball was turning a blind eye and then put in a testing program after it was politically detrimental to them. This wasn't Bud Selig or one of his lieutenants straight up changing samples for Bonds or McGwire or Bonds of Ortiz, et al. It was a sin of omission not a sin of commission.

I mean, the thing with Valieva was that RUSADA didn't mark her sample as "urgent" so it didn't get processed in time. One would think that would be standard protocol, especially going into the Olympics. Considering their past, it's understandable to assume that wasn't exactly a clerical error. You think there are going to be any American athletes or, I dunno, Japanese athletes, or Dutch athletes whose positive steroid samples from a month or two ago are going to just happen to turn up positive around or after the games. I have no doubt there will be American (or Japanese or Dutch) athletes whose tests turn up positive during the games. There probably already have been. But, once you're at the Olympics, you're subject to international testing and higher scrutiny where everyone is playing by the same rules, submitting to the same tests.

SI

MIJB#19
02-15-2022, 08:09 AM
Maybe I wasn't clear enough: I'm against excluding everybody who just happens to have the same passport as somebody else that was a proven cheater, regardless of which institutions of organized crime are supporting them. What else can a 'clean' ice hockey player or skier or curler or whateverer born in Russia do to be allowed to go to the olympics? Move to another country and apply for a passport sounds like the only option. We've seen in this thread alone what kind of backlash that can give in your homeland.

Edward64
02-15-2022, 09:23 AM
Maybe I wasn't clear enough: I'm against excluding everybody who just happens to have the same passport as somebody else that was a proven cheater, regardless of which institutions of organized crime are supporting them. What else can a 'clean' ice hockey player or skier or curler or whateverer born in Russia do to be allowed to go to the olympics? Move to another country and apply for a passport sounds like the only option. We've seen in this thread alone what kind of backlash that can give in your homeland.

Just to be clear. My beef with Gu and apparently the China Hockey team is they were not asked to give up their passports or be dual citizens (apparently not allowed per press reports).

If China did make an exception for dual citizenship, that's fine but they've not been forthcoming. No problem with Zhu Yi who did give up her US citizenship to skate for China (wish she did better).

Solecismic
02-15-2022, 11:18 AM
Kindof. However, you're being a bit glib, right? Russia was literally running a state-sponsored doping program so that's definitely not an apples to apples comparison. USA cycling team wasn't running Lance Armstrong's doping program, he was. There wasn't a state run program that was literally swapping samples - there were individual athletes using masking agents and trying to submit other people's urine as their own to get around the international programs. That /is/ a pretty big difference. Baseball was turning a blind eye and then put in a testing program after it was politically detrimental to them. This wasn't Bud Selig or one of his lieutenants straight up changing samples for Bonds or McGwire or Bonds of Ortiz, et al. It was a sin of omission not a sin of commission.

I mean, the thing with Valieva was that RUSADA didn't mark her sample as "urgent" so it didn't get processed in time. One would think that would be standard protocol, especially going into the Olympics. Considering their past, it's understandable to assume that wasn't exactly a clerical error. You think there are going to be any American athletes or, I dunno, Japanese athletes, or Dutch athletes whose positive steroid samples from a month or two ago are going to just happen to turn up positive around or after the games. I have no doubt there will be American (or Japanese or Dutch) athletes whose tests turn up positive during the games. There probably already have been. But, once you're at the Olympics, you're subject to international testing and higher scrutiny where everyone is playing by the same rules, submitting to the same tests.

SI

We don't know the extent of doping in American sports before enforcement began. That's part of your point - what Russia did to evade existing rules enforcement. So it's another level.

But before we started caring about amphetamines and steroids and a host of other substances designed to give one athlete an edge over others, these were apparently handed out in locker rooms by trainers, knowing full well that they might cause harm in the quantity they were being consumed.

We will never know just how much MLB teams were complicit in the steroid age - just that it started becoming a big story when Mark McGwire had androstenedione openly displayed in his locker. Then, finally, people started asking about it.

The rules changed and the race to find substances that couldn't be traced began. Who knows what Barry Bonds did to make his head explode in his 30s and 40s? Or how he did it without teammates, trainers and coaches knowing. Do you think the Yankees cared when Alex Rodriguez traveled with what was apparently his drug dealing team? No, as long as he was playing at a Hall of Fame level.

Russia cheated... and they did so in such a clumsy manner that they got caught. What's the right punishment? This feels about right - continued scrutiny over testing, and an official-looking rebuke that doesn't punish the athletes who haven't cheated.

Maybe they're thumbing their noses at us, with the skater taking advantage of lesser punishments for underage doping. Maybe that rule needs to change. But I have a hard time getting mad about it when I know full well what athletes and teams in our major sports did when they could get away with it.

sterlingice
02-15-2022, 02:33 PM
We don't know the extent of doping in American sports before enforcement began. That's part of your point - what Russia did to evade existing rules enforcement. So it's another level.

But before we started caring about amphetamines and steroids and a host of other substances designed to give one athlete an edge over others, these were apparently handed out in locker rooms by trainers, knowing full well that they might cause harm in the quantity they were being consumed.

We will never know just how much MLB teams were complicit in the steroid age - just that it started becoming a big story when Mark McGwire had androstenedione openly displayed in his locker. Then, finally, people started asking about it.

The rules changed and the race to find substances that couldn't be traced began. Who knows what Barry Bonds did to make his head explode in his 30s and 40s? Or how he did it without teammates, trainers and coaches knowing. Do you think the Yankees cared when Alex Rodriguez traveled with what was apparently his drug dealing team? No, as long as he was playing at a Hall of Fame level.

Russia cheated... and they did so in such a clumsy manner that they got caught. What's the right punishment? This feels about right - continued scrutiny over testing, and an official-looking rebuke that doesn't punish the athletes who haven't cheated.

Maybe they're thumbing their noses at us, with the skater taking advantage of lesser punishments for underage doping. Maybe that rule needs to change. But I have a hard time getting mad about it when I know full well what athletes and teams in our major sports did when they could get away with it.

I guess I think that's a pretty broad and well defined line. In baseball, yeah, my dad (and many others) love to complain about steroid users and keeping them out of the Hall of Fame while he has no answer about how all of his "heroes" used amphetamines. Until 2004, MLB didn't even have testing in place. Technically, it was against the rules starting in 1991 but, with no testing, you didn't even have to skirt around any rules - it was just the honor system, which, really is not much of a system at all for something like this.

That's why I think this isn't a fair equivalence at all. And I'm not trying to define this so narrowly that "only X is the same" and X will never be the same because it's so specific. It would be equivalent if teams or MLB itself were actively changing samples or a team were actively developing new test-avoiding steroids or only testing players they knew were clean or only testing non-star players or warning players well in advance of getting tested or any number of things that would be actively trying to break the system. And, yes, MLB or teams would have to be the ones doing it - not just individual players trying to get around the system.

And, yes, I think that's significantly different than "we just aren't testing" and a 2-page "don't do drugs, kids" memo that was the only MLB policy in place from 1991-2004 (E-Ticket: ESPN MAGAZINE SPECIAL REPORT: WHO KNEW? (https://www.espn.com/espn/eticket/format/memos20051109?memo=1991&num=1)). And it was just in response to the 1990 Anabolic Steroids Control act of 1990 (Full Timeline of MLB's Failed Attempts to Rid the Game of PEDs | Bleacher Report | Latest News, Videos and Highlights (https://bleacherreport.com/articles/1667581-full-timeline-of-mlbs-failed-attempts-to-rid-the-game-of-peds)), which was part of the larger Crime Bill from 1990 (Crime Control Act of 1990) - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_Control_Act_of_1990)). It was more akin to saying "don't do something illegal on company property or you will be punished up to and including termination", which is kindof a "duh" statement of "yeah, if I killed someone at the office, I'd be in trouble but I'm not really worried about company policy at that point".

The state and the Olympic committee they are reporting to are very similar to what was doing that program in the past. I think the better remedy would be that they have to compete under the Olympic flag (like some refugees have done in the past, for instance) and they report to IOC figures and not anyone from Russia

SI

RainMaker
02-15-2022, 05:19 PM
Technically "Russia" is not participating, you won't see Russian flags anywhere. A collective of people from Russia in good standing (not suspected of doping abuse) with their respective international sports organizations are (the abbreviation "ROC" is used during these games and in several olympic sports).

They're participating. Just don't have the flag or their anthem. Everything else is the same and I don't think even the announcers are playing the little charade anymore.

A compromise would be allowing them to compete in individual events but not team events (if your country is banned as we are led to believe, how are you able to compete in a team event?).

I mean, your statement would imply (everybody from) the USA should be banned just because of the decades long substance abuse in athletics, baseball and cycling (to name the most obvious olympic sports) by some individuals or groups of people they were involved with. I've never seen or read any suggestions like that. And with fair reasoning, is it Michael Phelps', Simona Biles' and LeBron James' fault they was born and raised in the land of Marion Jones, Lance Armstrong and Barry Bonds?

But it's fair to "tomato or tomato" this, because several sports associations in Russia have been suspected of organized doping programs and those are still the ones sending their members to these games. Most of us do what you just did there: call "the people from Russia" "Russia".

Cheating has been an issue for some time, but I don't think we've ever seen such a concerted effort by a country. They built a tunnel underneath the testing facility to swap out dirty tests. There is zero remorse and no signs of ever stopping.

It is unfair for athletes who play by the rules to get caught up in it. But I'd it's also unfair to a bunch of figure skaters who have to compete against a juiced-up Russian skater this week.

If you're going to let one country repeatedly cheat, maybe ditch the rules and open it up for everyone. Maybe you wouldn't see the massive dropoff in interest from the public.

Edward64
02-15-2022, 08:11 PM
Okay, so it doesn't seem it was an accidental "oh, it was in my vitamin supplements I took or strange herbal team grandma gave me".

https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/beijing-winter-olympics-02-16-22-spt/h_d65d9e45e8171fb272b3c7d39b7d73b8
The document said Valieva tested at a "2.1 nanograms per milliliter level," which Tygart described as "not a trace level."

"It's certainly consistent with an intentional use," he added.

"The picture it paints is, you've got a 15-year-old. Does she have the wherewithal and the knowledge and the financial resources to find two drugs ... to use to increase endurance reduce fatigue? It's clear there was an effort to use substances and drugs to increase performance," Tygart added.

"I don't think for a second this young athlete had the financial resources or knowledge to take these three substances to increase performance, or where to even get these three substances."

Valieva tested positive for the banned substance trimetazidine in December, which is commonly used to treat the heart condition angina.

"It's using the three that showed the intent of trying three different routes that ultimately give the same impact on performance: increased endurance, reduced shortness of breath, tiredness," he said.

bronconick
02-16-2022, 02:25 AM
Slovakia stuns the Americans with a late goal to tie and a shootout win in Men's hockey

sterlingice
02-16-2022, 07:11 AM
Can we talk about one of the biggest disappointments of these games: Norway's curling team and their boring pants

SI

SirFozzie
02-16-2022, 03:41 PM
So the Men's curling is facing a win and in game against Denmark tonight, a loss and there's a five way tie (for one spot) that who knows who wins. Bad loss in their last game, but 5-4 will be enough to get them into the semis.

stevew
02-16-2022, 04:03 PM
I can’t believe they’re going to let Ben Johnson skate now that all this new stuff came out.

Jas_lov
02-16-2022, 04:28 PM
So the Men's curling is facing a win and in game against Denmark tonight, a loss and there's a five way tie (for one spot) that who knows who wins. Bad loss in their last game, but 5-4 will be enough to get them into the semis.

And Denmark isn't very good so it should be winnable, of course the Italy game was too. The top 3 men's teams might be hard to beat in the medal round but maybe they go on a run again. Women's team started 3-0 but finished 4-5 so they're done.

SirFozzie
02-17-2022, 12:02 AM
And US win it, so they'll be facing Great Britain in the semis.

JPhillips
02-17-2022, 08:26 PM
Well the figure skating sure brought the drama today.

stevew
02-17-2022, 09:45 PM
Every 4 years I discover for the first time that a set of curling stones is like $8000-$16000

sterlingice
02-17-2022, 10:50 PM
Every 4 years I discover for the first time that a set of curling stones is like $8000-$16000

Eek. There's a local curling club here and they're not a high budget outfit. I wonder how they do it. Also, curling stones are freaking heavy.

SI

miami_fan
02-18-2022, 07:20 AM
Well the figure skating sure brought the drama today.

At least CAS succeeded in preventing the skater from suffering irreparable harm, right? That is all that really matters.

CrimsonFox
02-18-2022, 01:52 PM
https://slate.com/culture/2022/02/olympics-figure-skating-free-skate-valieva-trusova-shcherbakova-sakamoto.html?via=rss_socialflow_facebook&fbclid=IwAR107gqHw5vVE9KnzJxVv6wXyd9dXcMdIBwm_HQ6Ndcy_aDxtNRWo6_zlsg

:(

sterlingice
02-18-2022, 09:20 PM
(We're still on DVR) I've come to really appreciate Weir and Lipinski for announcing figure skating. They were kindof rough last time out but they've hit their stride this Olympics. There's a certain joy that, especially, Weir just brings to the commentary - he really is excited to see these skaters and has positives for each of them - something that was lacking when Hamilton and Bezic, who, to me, came off as catty more than anything.

SI

Edward64
02-20-2022, 07:33 AM
Not really going to miss the Olympics. Maybe because this is first time I watched it on streaming and/or there is like 12-13 hour difference but it seemed underwhelming.

IMO 2-3 weeks of curling is stretching it out too long.

Lathum
02-20-2022, 02:13 PM
Winter Olympics: Finnish cross-country skier suffers frozen penis in 50km race | Winter Olympics Beijing 2022 | The Guardian (https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2022/feb/20/finland-remi-lindholm-frozen-penis-cross-country-50km-skiing-winter-olympics)

jbergey22
02-20-2022, 02:42 PM
Sadly, absolutely nothing memorable for me about this Olympics.

The time zone thing of course hurts but the coverage just seemed bad as well this time around. Where was the hype?

I dont know who many of these athletes are so I need the hype pieces to get me interested and involved in an event. I wasnt seeing much of this at all.

jbergey22
02-20-2022, 02:43 PM
Not really going to miss the Olympics. Maybe because this is first time I watched it on streaming and/or there is like 12-13 hour difference but it seemed underwhelming.

IMO 2-3 weeks of curling is stretching it out too long.

Curling and hockey were the only things I had the slightest interest in. No ramp up to the speed skating, skiing, bobsledding events this time around.

SirFozzie
02-20-2022, 03:22 PM
Yeah, at least with a more local time, you can sit and watch it as it happens, here it was mostly waking up "So and so has won the 1000m gold at the Speed Skating rink" and then you were like "Welp, there goes my desire to watch that."

bhlloy
02-20-2022, 05:00 PM
Times weren't so bad on the west coast, but yeah on the east coast you basically got close to a quarter of the events live if lucky?

And with regards to the hype, the US face of the games crashed out before she even got to the final run on more than half her events, the miracle on ice team of college kids got knocked out before the medal rounds... it was a weird Olympics. Arguably the story they spent the most time on was Valiyeva, but you can kind of see why right.

miami_fan
02-20-2022, 08:10 PM
Not really going to miss the Olympics. Maybe because this is first time I watched it on streaming and/or there is like 12-13 hour difference but it seemed underwhelming.

IMO 2-3 weeks of curling is stretching it out too long.

The streaming piece is interesting.

I feel like in previous years there was some buildup throughout a network's or multiple networks' programming leading up to the Olympics. Whether it was the sport's trials to see who made the team or just random events that served to reintroduce us to the sport and introduce the athletes. Those events usually pulled me in to at least casually watch.

That probably happened with this Olympics but it probably happened on the Peacock app. That means I had to go looking for it as opposed to just running into it when the college basketball game I was watching finished. I did not go looking for those events. I did not feel any pull to this year's Olympics at all.

sterlingice
02-20-2022, 09:04 PM
So we're watching the 2-woman bobsled from last night. It seems like the Germans have better bobsleds, more than they have better pilots. Whereas when everyone had to use the same bobsleds (monobob), the Americans cleaned up.

SI

Solecismic
02-20-2022, 09:14 PM
Winter Olympics: Finnish cross-country skier suffers frozen penis in 50km race | Winter Olympics Beijing 2022 | The Guardian (https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2022/feb/20/finland-remi-lindholm-frozen-penis-cross-country-50km-skiing-winter-olympics)

I guess that's one guy who is happy to experience the Olympics while streaming again.

JPhillips
02-20-2022, 09:30 PM
I don't know where the line is, but personally, 28th isn't worth a frozen penis.

GrantDawg
02-21-2022, 05:56 AM
I watched maybe ten minutes. I didn't watch much of the summer Olympics either. Streaming services have killed my interest in it. It was once a novel curiosity every four years at a time when there was nothing much else to watch. Now there are always too many options.

Sent from my SM-G996U using Tapatalk

miami_fan
02-22-2022, 01:46 PM
Olympics ratings: Beijing Games deliver smallest viewing audience ever - Sports Illustrated (https://www.si.com/olympics/2022/02/22/winter-olympics-lowest-ratings-ever-beijing-games-nbc)

Is this the silver lining of this story?

The Beijing Games did have the largest or second-largest streaming audience ever, with viewers on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com, the NBC Sports app posting an average primetime viewership of 516,000. U.S. viewers logged 4.3 billion minutes of Olympics coverage over 18 days across all platforms.

Streaming increased by 78% in terms of total minutes compared to the 2018 Olympics, with Peacock seeing its “best stretch” of usage since its nationwide launch 19 months ago.

miami_fan
07-23-2022, 12:18 PM
Has anyone been watching any of the track and field world championships?
Unfortunately it has mostly been on Peacock though I think it will be on NBC today. If you get a chance, check out the Women's 400m Hurdles. It reminded me of prime Katie Ledecky's dominance in swimming.

Edward64
01-30-2024, 05:36 AM
A post-mortem.

Why can't the Olympics require doping tests for 100% athletes (let's say) 2-4 weeks before the competition and then immediately after if they are in Top-5. I think it's random sampling now?

I have to believe there's technology out there to provide results back in a timely manner (and if not, get the $ to build the labs). I guess the appeal process also needs to be streamlined but they can figure out that process. It's weird to me that they haven't figured a way to beat doping yet.

Kamila Valieva ban: US figure skaters awarded gold for 2022 Beijing Olympics after Russian skater disqualified | CNN (https://edition.cnn.com/2024/01/30/sport/us-figure-skaters-olympics-kamila-valieva-intl-hnk-spt/index.html)
The United States Figure Skating team will receive a gold medal for their team event at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, after Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva was handed a four-year ban Monday over a long-running doping controversy.

Valieva, now 17, had led the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) to first place in the team event ahead of the US and Japan — before her doping test came back positive for performance-enhancing substance trimetazidine.

The ban is backdated to December 25, 2021, which is when the sample was collected. Valieva was only 15 at the time.

No medals had been awarded as a result of the doping controversy until the Court of Arbitration for Sport’s decision to disqualify Valieva of “all competitive results” achieved since her positive test.

In a statement posted on its website on Tuesday, the International Skating Union (ISU) confirmed that Valieva’s results were disqualified in both the singles – where the teenager finished fourth – and team event.

The disqualification of her results was accompanied by a re-ranking of medal positions in the team event where the ROC fell to third, with the US and Japan moving up to first and second respectively. Canada remained in fourth place, one point behind the ROC’s recalculated results.

CrimsonFox
01-30-2024, 06:37 AM
This is a stupid story. It's stupid it took so long but it's more stupid for the fact it was heart medicine

miami_fan
01-30-2024, 06:47 PM
A post-mortem.

Why can't the Olympics require doping tests for 100% athletes (let's say) 2-4 weeks before the competition and then immediately after if they are in Top-5. I think it's random sampling now?

I have to believe there's technology out there to provide results back in a timely manner (and if not, get the $ to build the labs). I guess the appeal process also needs to be streamlined but they can figure out that process. It's weird to me that they haven't figured a way to beat doping yet.

Kamila Valieva ban: US figure skaters awarded gold for 2022 Beijing Olympics after Russian skater disqualified | CNN (https://edition.cnn.com/2024/01/30/sport/us-figure-skaters-olympics-kamila-valieva-intl-hnk-spt/index.html)

I think the assumption is she was tested multiple times and was judged to be drug free right before and during the Olympics or we would have heard otherwise.

The test in question happened Christmas Day 2021 during the Russian Nationals. No one knew the results of that test until after the team competition was held and before the individual event. Then news broke that she tested positive. No one knows for sure why the test results were delayed at the lab for six weeks so they used the blanket excuse for everything from 2020-2022....COVID specifically Omicron. The Russian suspended her and then un-suspended her. Other countries appealed to CAS to stop her from competing but she was allowed to compete.

Here is where it gets tricky. Since she tested positive through her national organization, her national organization has to handle the appeal process. Also, because she was under 16 years old at the time, she has special rights under the world anti doping rules. There has to be an comprehensive investigation to see if she knowingly and intentionally took the banned substance or if she was forced to by her coaching staff, government officials etc. Once again, the Russians have to do the investigation. That is why CAS allowed her to compete in the individual event even after the positive test result news broke.

The Russians cleared her in 2023 saying she took it but not was not at fault. Everyone call BS and appealed the decision to CAS led to its ruling this week.

If she had tested positive at the Olympics or if she were 16+ at the time she tested positive, the process would have been shorter. I am not sure it would have stopped her from competing at the Olympics but she would have been suspended long before now.

miami_fan
02-17-2025, 11:28 AM
Attention all curling hipsters,

U.S. Olympic Team Trials for Mixed Doubles start tonight on Peacock.

Edward64
02-17-2025, 12:32 PM
Curling is the Olympic Sport that I always think ... "could'a been me" with a little luck and on the right (drinking) team (social club).