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Americans
are poor hosts for the Olympic Winter Games
Two oclock
at night on NBC. Somewhere in this fabled land, a skeleton sledder
is hurtling down an ice chute at 80 mph with his chin two inches
above the surface. The mere suggestion that someone might get decapitated
in the name of athletic competition makes for good viewing, but
whats on the tube? Days of Our Children. All
My Lives. All My Days Of Our Children of Our General
Hospital Lives. Whatever. Which seems to reflect the attitude
of the host nation of the XIX Olympic Winter Games. We paraded our
colors out Friday night. We got the entire 1980 U.S. hockey team
to light the torch. We shoveled the pomp and circumstance as high
as a Utah snow drift. Then, we fell asleep, got up Saturday morning,
and poured over the comics at breakfast.
This isnt
the first week of the Olympics. Its the first week of the
football off-season. Most of our exposure to the Olympics is limited
to snippets of ESPNs Trey Wingo and NBCs Bob Costas
puttering on about the days events in wrap-up shows.
After Sept.
11, much of the world stood by us or at least voiced their support
for us in our hour of need. It seems we are having a hard time repaying
them in some small measure by being a courteous host for two weeks.
By courteous, I dont mean putting a mint on their pillow before
bed every night. I mean actually paying sincere attention to them,
even in sports like curling that Americans, on the whole, dont
care much about.
Incidentally,
if you want to see things like curling and cross-country skiing,
tune into a CBC station out of Canada. If you want to have a good
chance of seeing the Olympics outside of prime time at all, check
the CBC.
Thats
Canadian Broadcasting Company. As in not American. If you want a
true flavor of these games as international competition and not
just events that include American athletes, you have to go across
the border to get back into this country.
It wouldnt
be such a problem if the games were in Norway or Japan and most
events were taking place in the middle of the night local time.
But these are right in our backyard.
The prevailing
attitude seems to be to wake us up. If there isnt Tonya Harding
dirt, or at least dirty girls in short skirts, Americans seem to
yawn when it comes to Olympic competition.
These are athletes
living their dreams. Maybe the action isnt always fast-paced,
but the Olympics are two straight weeks of the culmination of athletic
careers. Every night, somebody reaches the pinnacle, or somebody
falls just short. The line between elation and tears is very thin,
no matter the sport.
Look at the
small sports, for your own benefit as much as the benefit of the
rest of the world. Hockey will come. Downhill skiing has started.
If its team sports and Picabo Street you want, youll
get them soon enough. If you want another Tonya Harding-type scandal
with back stabbing and betrayal, you might want to check NBC at
about 2 p.m.
Erik
Cassano is a columnist for The BG News at Bowling Green State University.
This column was distributed by U-Wire.
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