Archive | February, 2006

Blogging, Athletes and web sites – to be continued …

So, as Boris pointed out, the IOC has told athletes not to particpate in journalistic activities, which to them, means blogging.  This is good and bad. Bad cause i want to read the personal notes of the athletes rather than the contrived emotion and occasionally inane interviews.  In some ways this ban is GOOD because it shows that the whole citizen as journalist/artist/communicator trip is on the radar of the “grey suits” who run the IOC (and of course control the world ;-) ).

This is lame because many athletes use blogging as a means to stay in touch with family, friends and supporters.

A few examples of web stuff i’ve come across:

Kari Traa - the (uhh sorta hot) Norwegian mogul skiier keeps a “gossip” section on her site which she blogs about “controversial” content like where she is sleeping at the village (big screenshot on Flickr).  However, the IOC has decided that her actions are verbotten (big screenshot on Flickr).

Kari Traa - No blogging allowed

Why is this?  In thinking it over, the IOC feels that athletes blogging either a) infringes on someone’s rights; or, b) has potential to be imflammatory or otherwise contrary to the Olympic ideals, or c), am i missing something.

Torino Conversations – With athlete’s blogging is not allowed, corporate sponsor (err sorry, … Olympic “family”) blogging is allowed as demonstrated by a certain sugar-laden, artificially-colored beverage company’s attempt at promoting citizen journalism.  It comes across as amateurish, not amateurish like, “ahh these kids are making it themselves” but amateurish like an ad exec said, “hey billy, you like that Internet, go make find kids and do some of that bloggin stuff my kids talk about”  While the kids who are getting the trips are stoked, and the result is just lacking in any sort of insight or cutting-edgeiness.

Off the Podium is IOC’s official site seems to be geared towards USA disenchanted youth apparently.  They spent a lot of money on this Flash-o-mania site with moving shit and popping up console windows.  Mostly bios on athletes and explaining why said athletes are “cool.”  Seems like there is some good content here, just so buried in the endless container (egads, frames) that it isn’t worth the brain-strain.

TV coverage is starting back up so this is all you get for now.  Enjoy!

More later on Begg-Smith spam-antic, more websites, and hockey blather, and oh yea, i haven’t forgot about the SLC Flashback series but i am still putzing away at it – thanks for caring.

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Canadian Trail is a freeway today ~ Olympic Notebook for Feb. 16th

Dropping in with some thoughts, comments, … coming in briefly cause so much going on!

Skating away with medals

The Canadian Men and Women both earned Silver in a brand-new event – Long-track Speed-skating Team Pursuit relay.  Two teams of 3 skaters start at opposite sides of track and race around 5 times or so.  The clock stops when the third skater crosses so some team dynamics, drafting come into play.

The Women (3 skaters per race, but may alternate through 5 team members during heats) lost to the strong Germans led by the legendary Claudia Pechstein (this is her 8th Olympic medal), along with Annie Freisinger and Daniela Anschuetz Thoms (sniff and i knew her when she was just Daniela Anschuetz).

The men went down to a Italian team skating on mission in front of the home fans.  Cool event and did anyone even notice Canada does well at new sports in the Olympics (freestyle, short track, …)?

Last night (or yesterday it is too hard to tell), Short Track Speed skater (the affable) Anouk Leblanc-Boucher won a bronze in a gutsy race in which she started in the outside and battled Chinese skater for position and stood strong against her body checks.  The Silver medalist (Evgenia Radanova of Bulgaria) lifted her skate while going over the line so may be DQ’ed in which case, the Canadian in 4th place will move up a notch after the challenge is reviewed.

Also on the short track, the Men moved on to the Finals in the 5000m relay.  They led throughout and, when the Korean team went down, pulled away from Germany.  The Koreans went super-speed and made up most of their lost time passing Germany for 2nd place and a spot in the finals tomorrow (4 teams, 3 of them get medals – US and China are the other 2).

Hey, even figure skater Jeffery Buttle (who had perhaps the least froofy costume) came away with a bronze to pad Canada’s stats.

We Canadians are Sliders too

Mellisa Hollingsworth-Richards won the bronze medal in Skeleton (see another new sport). Heck Lindsay Alcock finished 10th – i smell a sweep in 2010.  but really, this is a sport which Canada will improve in from the 2010 legacy since athletes won’t have to go to Alberta to try being a Sketathlete.  I want to try once (perhaps on a padded course ;-) ).

Hockey Upsets and Canada Rolling

Canada did not take Germany lightly and came away with a strong win over an German club much inproved since SLC. They still play a conservative style but no where near as slow and plodding a game as the match in Provo in 02.  Some great play but Canadian forwards but still losing a lot of one-on-one battles that will cost goals against more talented teams.  The team is sending lots of long passes and tricky pasing plays in deep which will hopefully get the squad in a ryhthm as the tourney heats up.

Finland rolled over Italy 6-0 making that 2 straight shut-outs (beat Swiss 5-0 yesterday) for the pesky Finns.  Selanne had a couple of beauties and Italy seemed (from the brief high-lights i saw) out of jam from yesterday’s bout with Canada.

Sweden was killed by a Russian team likely embarraessed by yesterday’s loss to the Slovaks.  5-0 was the final if i recall correctly.  Curious to see how Sweden responds after a strong win in their first game vs the Kazakhs followed by a crushing loss in second- could be tough for a team looking for positive emotion to build on. BTW, both Sedins scored in game 1.

The big news (besides Latvia tying the USA) is The Swiss (led by great goal-tending by David Aebischer) beat the mighty Czechs 3-2.  This will just wake the Czechs up after likely losing Hasek for the tourney.  Vokoun struggled and the team was simply outworked when it mattered (esp PK) and  despite being very outshot, came away with the biggest win in that country’s hockey history.

Finally, the Slovaks beat Latvia in what appeared to be an exciting game.  Slovakia got uip early but Latvia kept clawing back but finally the offessive stars of the Slovak squad got enough pucks at Irbe that the little big man was beat with a final of 6-3.

Remember that goal-differential is the tie breaker so right now Finland with 11 GF and 0 GA would beat Canada’s identical 2W 0L record and their 12 GF but 3 GA.

Bertuzzi, Nash, Richards and Sakic particularly caught my eye and Lounogo seemed a little unsteady (besides that crazy out of net play).  Major ups to Wade Redden for the big save and big goal – he is smiling all day i bet.

The Swiss are next for the Canucks after a day off (they’lll probably go watch curling).

Oh yeah Steve Moore, you are *really* helping yourself with the Valentine’s day lawsuit.  Any sympathy the public had for your whining has run out now, have a nice life.

Olympic Outsider Podcast Feed

I’ve stuck the Olympics Outsider Podcast into the Canucks Outsider feed so to subscribe, just stick http://feeds.feedburner.com/canucksoutsider in your podcatcher or subscribe in iTunes. 2 episodes for ya so far.

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Street Hockey in Torino, Italy

Street Hockey in Torino, Italy

KK and Scales in Italy at the British Columbia Canada Place watching ad-hoc street hockey Canada vs Italy…

Posted in Culture, Fans, Featured, Torino 2006, Videos0 Comments

Origins of Canadian/Australian Gold Medalist Begg-Smith’s fortunes

So apparently this Gold medalist in Moguls today (born in Vancouver, competes for Australia) is an Internet hotshot millionaire who keeps and apartment in Vancouver and drive a Lamborghini living the rock star life.  Word is that he and his brother own a software biz but i dunno which one.  All very shady it seems ;-) rather spammish, ergo:

Begg-Smith is a business mogul off the slopes. At 13, the entrepreneur founded an online marketing company that he says has grown to the third-largest in the world. Begg-Smith originally started the Vancouver and New York-based company, which designs search engines and pop-up window blockers for about 5,000 websites, to fund his ski career. Thirty employees work directly for Begg-Smith.

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Canadian Men Open With Win! ~ Olympic Outsider podcast #2

Bleary-eyed after waking for the 4AM face-off, Dave Thorvald discusses the opening game of the Olympic hockey tournament in this 9:24 long podcast. Canada beat Italy 7-2 – After a slow start, Canada turned on the jets versus a hardworking and speedy, but overmatched host squad. Bertuzzi, Iginla and St. Louis had particularly nice games.

In other hockey news, Slovakia (thanks to 2 late golas by Marian Gaborik) beat Russia, Czech beat Germany (though uber-goalie Dominik Hasek sustained an injury) and mid-way through the 3rd period, Latvia and USA are tied at 3. Go Latvia!

Download: Canadian Men Open With Win!
Olympic Outsider # 2 (.mp3, 9:14)

Dave O and Lord Stanley's Cup

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First Few Days of Torino 2006 ~ Olympic Outsider podcast #1

Olympic Outsider podcast features audio discourse and chatter the Turin 2006 Winter Olympics sports with emphasis on Team Canada athletes. Host Dave Thorvald is joined by Mark Sommer to discuss recent noteworthy performances and remarks about the TV and other media coverage. Topics include: Women’s moguls and half-pipe, Chinese figure skaters, Latvian fans, Long-track speed skating and then all about the Men’s hockey tournament including bold predictions.

Download: First Few Days of Torino 2006
Olympic Outsider podcast # 1 (.mp3, 51:11)

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Weekend Result Round-up ~ Olympic Notebook for Feb.13

20Km W’s Cross-country Skiiing

Estonia’s Kristina Smigun opened the medal count for the former-Soviet, Baltic countries with a Gold in 15km pursuit Cross-Country (the race in which Canada’s Beckie Scott finished 6th).  Katerina Neumannova from Czech Republic took Silver finishing about a second behind while Russia’s Evgenia Medvedeva-Abruzova scored the Bronze medal.  Beside Beckie’s 6th, Canada’s Sara Renner of Canmore, AB., finished 16th in a discipline which saw numerous competetitors already suspended for 5 days for high blood hempglobin levels or something.

Men’s Single Luge

Latvia answered their Estonian neighbors with Martins Rubenis winning a Bronze in Men’s single Luge, an event won by Italy’s Armin Zoeggeler to the thrill of the local crowd, while Albert Demtschenko of Russia took the Silver.  Jeff Christie finished a respectable 14th while teammates Sam Edney finished 19th and the third Ian Cockerline Canadian DNF’ed.

Also notable on the luge track, the legendary luger, Georg Hackl of Germany did not reach the podium for the first time in his Olympic career denying him his amazing sixth Olympic medal – he’ll likely retire after this event.

20Km Biathalon

The Games’ opening event, the 20km Biatholon was won by Germany’s Michael Greis over the Ole Einar Bjoerndalen of Norway who has basically owned the event for in recent history (he swept all 4 gold medals in 2002).  Another Norweigian, Halvard Hanevold finished hard to beat Russian Sergei Tchepikov for the bronze.

Normal Ski Jump

Norwegian Lars Bystoel’s second jump of 103.5 metres vaulted him from 6th to Gold in the “Normal” Ski Jump.  Finnish jumper Matti Hautamaeki won the silver another Norweigian Roar Ljoekelsoey won Bronze..

Canadian Stefan Read didn’t make the 2nd round of the Top 30 jumps joining defending Gold-medalist, the affable, Harry Potter-lookalike, Simon Ammann of Switzerland on the sidelines.  Finnish Ski Jumping stars Janne Ahonen of Finland and Jakub Janda of the Czech Republic also failed to medal.

M’s Half-pipe Snowboard

In Bardonecchia, Italy, American Shaun White won the gold Sunday, in Men’s Snowboarding Half-pipe.  Another American Danny Kass took the silver, and Finland’s Markku Koski won bronze.  The only Canadian, Crispin Lipscomb of Whistler, BC, finished 11th.  The red-headed White, only 19 years old, boarded to AC/DC’s Back in Black and had sealed the deal before his second run so treated the crowd to some hi-jinks before a jublilant celebration.

Downhill Skiing

Already partially mentioned in a previous post … Frenchman Antoine Deneriaz shocked and thrilled the crowd by winning the Men’s downhill ski event at warp speed.  Reigning World Cup downhill champ Michael Walchhofer of Austria took home the silver after likely thinking he had the gold in hand before Deneriaz beat his time by 0.72.  Bruno Kernen of Switzerland took the Bronze and both the hot-shot Americans (Bode Miller 5th and Daron Rahlves 10th) and venerable veterans (Hermann Meier -AUT 6th, Marco Buechel -LEI 7th, and Kjetil-Andre Aamodt – NOR 4th) missed out on medals.  Defending 2002 gold winner, Fritz Strobl of Austria settled with 8th skiing with a broken hand. Erik Guay of Mont-Tremblant, Que., Canada’s top downhiller, didn’t compete due to a leg injury but he may go in the Super-G on Feb. 18th, but his teammates all finished in the top 30 boding well for 2010 results.

Short Track Skating

I am watching this right now so not  much to tell except both USA’s Apollo Anton Ohno and CAN’s Darren Tucotte did not advance and the Koreans are on a mission.  Women’s relay coming up next.

Women’s Hockey

Besides the shellacing the Canadian Women handed to the Italians and Russians, USA Women beat Germany 5-0.  Remember the tie-breaker is goal-differential to determine “home” team advantage meaning second line changes and second stick in on face-offs as well as choice of jersey.  Canada plays Sweden next in round-robin play.

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Snowboard, Facilites, Biathlon, Luge, Curling ~ Olympic Notebook for Feb. 13

I watched bits and pieces of coverage today and catching up tonight, so here are few notes along the way, …

Snowboard Half-pipe

Watching replays of Shaun White’s snowboard run and also watching video of him on skateboard half pipe, I am very impressed by the athleticism, imagination and enthusiasm displayed by the young, gangly redhead.  Kudos also to two-time medalist Danny Kass who scored his second Silver.

Markku Koski of Finland took Bronze while another Finn, world champion Antti Autti dropped to 5th.  Finland may be the best per capita Winter Olympians, – maybe.

The best Canada could muster was 11th with 2 other not making it past qualification. Now, I can’t do *anything* like those tricks, but 11th?  Seems Canada would do better considering the succes in related freestyle skiing disciplines and the prolifieration of snowboard culutre in Canada. Comments?

The American women carried the Snowboarding mojo into today with Gold (the funloving Hannah Teter) and Silver (the saucy Gretchen Bleiler) and SLC Gold Medalist finishing in 4th after a wee fumble on her 1st run and a crash on her 2nd run after enormous airs.  The rolling Norweigians scored another medal with Kjersti Buaas winning Bronze.  note: Maybe it is the Norweigians who are the best Winter Olympians?  Someone needs to do some math here.

This sport has evolved so fast since debuting in 1998, the riding is so good now and the bar is raising so fast.  17ft walls of pipe, 18th ft airs, linking 720, 900s, reversing 540s – form, style amplitude in spades – really unbelievable how much the sport improves each Olympics. Canadian women finished scattered in the 20s up to 15th.  This event was one my faves to watch in SLC 2002.

Like White, 19yr old Teter got a real-time victory lap to whatever they want as they ride down to claim the Gold Medal.  Whoa, can you write a funner ride?  What a thrill for those youngsters with so much in front of them (Tony Hawk is still an innovative skateboarder in late-30 so White could be doing both for decades still). Unbelievably, Hanah Teter rode so loose and smooth and high that she almost accidentally scored a higher score than her first run.

Long Track

Jeremy Jeremy Jeremy, … and even worse, 9th in the 500m (by the way, ESPN has Wotherspoon listed as USA) not even close and then an smiley American wins – couldn’t it have been veteran Shimizu or anyone?  Argh.  I dig the event and think doing the 2 races (the event is determined by the combined time of 2 runs) in one day is sensible though the racers may not like it.  Who’s the Canadian hope for 2010?

Biathalon

What a wild sport! and very popular in Europe.  Looks totally fun, like aerobic-paintball – the Russians dominated the women’s event though there are a lot of medals in this sport with different lengths and variations.  A Canadian Woman finished back in the pack with 3 penalties (i believe this means a missed shot requiring an extra km or so of skiing) – I’ll learn more about this sport.

Facilities

After much pre-games negative blather about not being finished in time, the facilities look great on TV – in particular the downhill ski hill was beauty and long track speed skating oval and cross country ski areas too.  I think being on the ground before hand, it is easy to see all the stuff not finished.  But, only the parts which appear on TV is *really* important (heh) and the rest of the “uncompleted” parts are draped over with bunting and decoration.

News Coverage

A note for my Olympic Flashback file: Once you are there, and the events are on, you are running on adrenaline and excitement and are just focused on the amazing sports in front of you and hardly aware of the rest of the commotion – you are in the center of the universe and the rest of the world is just taggin along.

That being said, I found the “big news stories” for Canada in 02 didn’t hit the street buzz as fast as it did the TV coverage.  Examples are both the Sale/Pelltier issue and the Wayne Smackdown – we were so caught up in events  that we didn’t know what was up for a day or two when the buzz got so huge and strangers stopped us to tell us how upset they were about the incident and we were like, “what?”, and then the Wayne incident was the buzz at the next game.

But, we were only catching a little bit of grating Bob Costas in the US-centric delayed coverage in the evening wrap up.  This time maybe different with more communiation abilities but who knows, public may travel faster on the ground.

The newsmedia doesn’t seem to like to create controversy, but sure likes covering any hullabaloo going on.  As such, the sensational story of the day is (duh) covered to death – like is the case the alleged Gretzky gambling conspirisy which is being blown WAY out of proportion.

I say, shut up already, let the courts do their business and the athletes tend to theirs and move on already!  Seeing Wayne being grilled by the same stupid questions over and over after he politely explains the situation and asks for questions about Team Canada Men’s Hockey and nobody can muster a hockey question, instead another inane gambling-related question.  Ashamed, these reporters should be ashamed and obliged to turn in their hack credentials and find a new profession with nothing to do with hockey, or interpersonal relations for that matter.

Luge

Women Luge too, several luges crashed which looks really unpleasant terrifying really. The sport would be fun for amateurs with some kind of easy-luge for beginners.

The track is tough with harsh corners and hard ice.  Really the sliding sports are better on TV then in person as the luges move so incredibly fast that you can hardly process what is going on and before you can blink they are rumbling down and around the next turn.

Some Canadians representing – Red Deer’s Regan Lauscher 25, Meaghan Simister 19, from Regina, the cool and tough Alex Gough 18, from Calgary. But the event is tense and ugly after a few wrecks and trouble in general.  Go Alex Gough!

Curling

The Curling tourney got underway today and I saw breifly…

- the Shannon Clyde Rink losing a defensive battle against Norberg of Sweden in a good game despite missing a team member to illness.

- the Newfoundlanders representing Canada curled well and beat Germany after falling behind 2-0 early.

These may be replayed in full later …

All for now,

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