The best and worst of London 2012
I absolutely love sport and in particular the festival of
international sport that is the Olympic Games.
I’ve watched every Games since Los Angeles in 1984, admittedly with
varying degrees of interest. And while I’m
naturally cynical at the way in which the Olympics are rapidly becoming the
World Corporate Games – just another symbol of the strength of global
capitalism – undoubtedly they continue to inspire, entertain, thrill,
disappoint, create controversy, produce heroes and, most significantly, play
host to the highest level of competitive sport.
Unlike in previous years I have been able to remove
myself from the TV screen and have been privileged to have been able to
actually attend the Games. This provides
a new perspective and allows an insight into the organisation and delivery of
the Games as well as offering a taste of the public appetite. It was curious how quickly negativity
subsided once the games began and was replaced by an overwhelming sense of
national pride; also striking was the sense of expectation among visitors to
London that these Games would be memorable for all the right reasons. Travelling to the East End via the tube made
it impossible not to encounter sporting pilgrims from various corners of the
world, some more obviously patriotic than others but all carrying that
infectious enthusiasm and sense of anticipation that something historic was in
the making, as indeed it was.
I’m not going to attempt to meaningfully review the
extraordinary last two weeks. What I
will do is to share with you the moments to me that defined the Olympics – for better
and for worse. These were truly fantastic
Olympics but not everything I take away from them is positive and in the glow
of national pride it is easy to overlook both these negativities and the
supreme achievements of others.
Here are what I consider the best and worst of the London
Olympics:
The BEST
1. The incredible
performance of Manteo Mitchell, a US sprinter in the 4 x 400m relay. It is not unusual in high-intensity games for
athletes to pick up injuries and be forced to withdraw but what Mitchell
managed is quite incredible. Half way
into his run, Mitchell heard a “pop” and feared the worst but knew that
withdrawal would lose his team a place in the final so continued running with
what was later discovered to be a broken leg.
A truly heroic performance and one which helped his team-mates secure a
silver medal.
2. Another relay
performance, this time by the American women’s team in the 4 x 100m final. To beat arch-rivals Jamaica so convincingly
and in 40.82 seconds was sensational. To
shatter the 27-year old record set by East Germany in utterly brilliant fashion
was truly fantastic – and a historic step as it ensured the spectre of the
former GDR, at least in sporting terms, is finally put to rest.
3. Natalia
Partyka. I must confess to having known
nothing about this Polish table-tennis player prior to having the privilege of
actually watching the girl in action at the ExCeL Arena. She has no right hand or forearm, but
manages to serve effectively balancing the ball on her elbow. She came though her second round match
against the Dane Mie Skov in dramatic style, in less than an hour demonstrating
the triumph of ability over disability.
4. The crowd at
the women’s football final. The
newspapers might have chosen to ignore it, but anyone actually watching the
match will remember FIFA President Sepp Blatter being booed by the 80,000
people inside the ground. For someone
who represents so much of what is wrong with world sport, and who has been no
friend of women’s football, it was perhaps unwise for him to have made an
appearance at all, let alone presented the medals. Fortunately the Wembley crowd was on hand to
give him the treatment he fully merited.
5. David Rudisha’s
incredible run in the 800m final. Personally,
I admire 800m and 1500m runners far more than I do the 100m sprinters – it’s
just a shame that the media disagree.
Whatever the amazing achievements of Usain Bolt, it takes a superior
discipline and tactical awareness to run to 800m success – to do it, as Rudisha
did, so comprehensively and in such time, breaking the world record in the
process and in spite of his competitors posting impressive personal times, was
simply amazing. Seb Coe rated this as
the stand-out performance of the London Olympics and for once I wouldn’t
disagree.
6. People feeling
good about themselves. In austerity
Britain, the Olympics provided a rare opportunity to feel good about who we are
and what we can offer the world. Ok, for
most of us it was just the chance for a bit of escapism, to have a bit of a party and
enjoy a bit of sport. But surely that’s
the whole point of it? If the games were
a success, they should be measured as such not by the number of gold medals for
Team GB, nor the commercial and economic benefits or the efficiency with which
they were organised and delivered – but instead by how much the public enjoyed
them. We did, either at the games or
glued to our TV sets, cheering on performances in sports such as dressage that
no sane person would ordinarily even glance at.
Feeling good is priceless and it’s a long time since we have
collectively been able to.
7. Saudi Arabia’s Sarah
Attar, who became the first woman from that country to participate in the Olympic
Games . Admittedly she lives in the USA
and has dual citizenship but by choosing to represent Saudi Arabia she has
forced the Saudi authorities to reconsider the role of women on sport and wider
society and hopes to inspire women. Her time and performance were in a sense
academic as what was of greater significance was the moment itself – a moment
of inspiration, of defiance towards religious ultra-conservatism and of
championing equality: one of those rare moments when politics and sport become
intertwined in a positive way. The crowd
realised the significance of Sarah’s presence and awarded her with a standing
ovation.
These were the first Olympic games ever when every
participating team included female athletes, a statistic suggesting that a
corner has definitely been turned. That
there continues to be a huge mountain to climb to achieve genuine equality is undeniable
but the momentum now certainly lies with the progressives. I suspect Saudi Arabia will never again field
a male-only team, something for which we should be grateful to Sarah Attar.
8. Andy
Murray. Enough said.
9. Jade Jones’ stunning
victory in taekwondo. Team GB produced
some fine Olympian performances from Laura Trott, Mary King (at 51 years old
and in her sixth Olympics), Helen Glover and Heather Stanning, Greg Rutherford,
Mo Farah, Anna Watkins and Katherine Grainger (finally winning gold in the
fourth Games). But Jones was the pick of them all in my view,
not least that her impressive feat was entirely unexpected. The media and British taekwondo fans were
confident that Britain would secure a medal but were looking to Sarah
Stephenson, not the 19 year old from North Wales. Jones explained afterwards that “I’m still
making a lot of mistakes [and at 19] I’m not fully developed yet”. You really have to feel that the future of British
taekwondo has never been brighter.
10. The Opening
Ceremony. As a whole I found it unsatisfactory in some respects. I felt the notions of “Britishness”
it tried to communicate were narrow, stereotypical and based on a more than
inaccurate “feel good” interpretation of history. The section on the NHS was not only overly
sentimental but probably made very little sense to the millions around the
world watching. But there were brilliant
moments, not least the Queen jumping out of a helicopter, Mr Bean’s appearance,
the coming together of the Olympic rings; the arrival of the torch and the
lighting of the cauldron were brilliantly staged. There have been so many reviews of the
ceremony that to add to them seems rather pointless; suffice to say, Danny
Boyle is a creative genius.
11. A personal one
– Team Hungary finishing higher in the medal table than Australia. Who would have imagined it?
And now, the WORST...
1. Accusations that Chinese swimmer Ye Shiwen had been taking performance enhancing substances
dominated headlines on day 3 of the Games.
Of course if any athlete had been actually found using such substances,
or there was any evidence with which to back up the claim, it would certainly
have been a news story. But giving
credence to claims of opponents whose only basis for their suggestion was the
quality of her performances (she actually swam faster than Ryan Lochte and
women just, you know, aren’t supposed to do that) is not in the Olympic spirit and
represents poor journalism. Why should a
gold medallist have to defend themselves at a press conference, only for the
members of the press present to naturally run with the “drugs controversy” headline? The claim was petty and malicious, something
even Seb Coe suggested when asserting there was “no factual basis to
support...these insinuations”. Ye herself
handled the pressure well, stating that “in other countries people have won
multiple medals and people have said nothing. Why are they just criticising me?
I have absolutely not taken anything.” Of
course, she hadn’t – perhaps in future the British media will not be quite so
keen to play up the accusations of a bad sport ?
2. The Olympics
really did seem to bring out the worst in some people. These included sections of the media for whom
anything less than gold for British participants represented failure. After day two ended without that as yet elusive
gold medal being gained, the BBC’s highlights programme suggested that if the
following day yielded no such prizes then “serious questions would be asked”. Really?
Why not actually wait until Britain are participating in events that,
you know, they’re good at? It was
ridiculous, as was the media response to Mark Cavendish’s inability to win a
medal of any colour in the road race which prompted Cavendish to remark “why
the stupid questions? Do you know
anything about cycling?”
The worst treatment seemed to be reserved to the
inspirational and altogether lovely Rebecca Adlington who was unable to repeat
the double-gold winning feat of Beijing, in part due to the rising of a new
star of the pool, Katie Ledecky. The
fact that Adlington had become the most decorated woman in GB swimming history
was lost on many observers, who chose to focus on disappointment rather than
record-breaking achievement. It was
pitiful and disrespectful to an outstanding performer who deserved so much
better.
3. Vindictive
officials. There were some of them,
given one iota of power that they were determined to wield and who seemed bent
on destroying the Games for reasons unknown.
Take the case of South Korea’s Shin A-Lam who was denied a place in the
final on the basis of an honest counting mistake by a 15 year-old volunteer. Having the right of appeal, she used it –
however, in spite of her being technically correct, the referee refused to
reverse the decision. Cue boos and a
sit-down protest. Worse still could be found
in the velodrome in the women’s sprint semi-final when British duo Victoria Pendleton
and Jess Varnish were denied a place in the final due to a takeover error. Replays showed an infringement had taken
place but, as the rules allow for a little flexibility in application and the
girls didn’t actually gain an advantage from it the disqualification was
harsh. Nothing can excuse the commissar’s
verdict in the final however, disqualifying the Chinese team on the basis of an
apparently identical breach of the rules that scores of TV replays failed to
detect. The dictatorial official’s word
is final and doesn’t, it seems, require evidence. Sadly for China, the right to appeal in
Olympic sport does not yet extend to Cycling, something that should surely be
reconsidered in the light of this and the incident involving Pendleton and Anna
Meares in the individual sprint final.
4. French
accusations of cheating on the part of the Team GB cycling team. The French questioned every GB victory, eventually
expressing their collective frustration in the rather imaginative complaint that Chris Hoy et al were using “magic wheels”.
It was typically mean-spirited and shows how competitive sport can sometimes
cause logic to give way to paranoia and nastiness.
5. Attempts by SouthKorean, Chinese and Indonesian badminton players to fix matches by deliberately losing. Admittedly, the system devised for London –
replacing the previously straight-forward knock-out system at previous Games –
made this kind of action more likely and perhaps the consequences should have been
foreseen. But the actions of these
athletes was inexcusable, not least by the Chinese duo who had such disdain for
the referee that, when threatened with disqualification, they reportedly told him
that he had no authority to remove them from the next round of the competition
as they had already qualified and that they would be (obviously) happy to
forfeit the match in which they were playing.
The attitudes were as disappointing as the dreadful displays for which
spectators had paid to watch and the four duos were all excluded from later
rounds of the competition.
6. Lazy commentators. The football was particularly bad in this
respect, with viewers sometimes left wondering if those giving the verdicts
actually knew anything about one team or the other. There were some priceless moments, but what was frustrating was the constant inability to separate Team GB
from the entity that is the England National Football Team. This was most infuriating when, after Stuart
Pearce’s team was defeated on spot-kicks by South Korea, the commentators
declared “and so we go out on penalties again”.
AGAIN? When did Team GB last lose on penalties? This kind of remark – and there were more
like it – shows that the cynicism many felt towards a collective Team GB was
well placed.
7. Attempts to use
the achievements of GB athletes for political purposes. I have been absolutely appalled by the way in
which senior politicians, and indeed political activists, have sought to make
capital from the achievements of Team GB athletes. The SNP’s attempt to pick out “Scolympians”
was short-sighted and unnecessary, as were unionist attempts to claim that Team
GB demonstrates how much “better together” we are. The latter argument was particularly stupid as, if
sporting success is to be a key factor in determining a nation’s constitutional
future, it’s a great shame that China and North Korea had a particularly good
Olympics. The worst of this
politicisation of the Games was in the aftermath of Andy’s Murray victory when,
instead of concentrating on the impressive defeat of some Swiss guy many were
instead more interested in the fact that Murray appeared to mumble a few words
of the National Anthem and was draped in a Union Flag. Unionists grasped their opportunity to spin
this in the most crudely obvious of ways, while nationalists responded equally predictably. If the Olympics proved anything, it’s how
tribal Scottish politics have become.
Even the BBC’s Nick Robinson began speculating that Murray’s professional
behaviour as a member of Team GB might be “noteworthy” as far as Scotland’s
political future is concerned. How
responsible was that?
Politicians like
to play the patriotism card and they’ve been doing that shamelessly for the
last few weeks. That’s to be expected. Seeing unionists and nationalists exchanging
tit-for-tat insults is undignified and, to my mind, disrespectful to the
athletes themselves. What was notable in
that when Chris Hoy explained to the Channel 4 news that “I’m Scottish and British. I think you
can be both – they are not mutually exclusive” this was seized upon by politicians
and political commentators including former Prime Minister Gordon Brown. Unfortunately they failed to notice that,
during the same interview, Hoy explained that it is “frustrating because as an
athlete all you want to do is race and be best you can and not get dragged into
politics." Perhaps those professing
respect for the man should actually have listened to him and not “dragged him into
politics”?
Fortunately by the end of
the Games the SNP had abandoned their emphasis on “Scolympians” and Pete
Wishart MP was saying some very positive things about Mo Farah. However, the inescapable truth is that shallow
politically-minded people have seen fit to make mileage from others’ sacrifices
and achievements. As former councillor
Alex Dingwall noted on facebook, “I really wish all sides
would stop seeking to grab the success of athletes and spin it for their cause
- it's shameful for any politician to try to hijack the hard work and
dedication of our athletes in this way.”
Indeed – can’t we just celebrate sport for sport’s sake?
8. Aidan
Burley. There would have been no reason
why anyone outside the Westminster bubble would have heard of this pathetic man
if it were not for his outbursts on twitter in regards the Opening Ceremony,
which he seemed to think was the product of some far-left conspiracy. In particular he raged against “left-wing
multi-cultural crap” forgetting that the Olympics is actually a celebration of
internationalism and diversity. Given
his views on immigration, I’d like to know what he thinks of Mo Farah. (It should be noted that the fiercely Little
Englander Tory MP was born in New Zealand).
9. While it was
great to see Sarah Attar competing and the large number of British women medallists
at these games, another spectre of inequality cast its shadow over the London
Games. Research by the Sutton Trust and
statistics appearing in The Guardian show
that privately-educated individuals make up a disproportionate number of our
athletes and that in some sports, especially equestrianism, this is at
particularly high levels. Questions must
be asked about London 2012’s “inspire a generation” motto. Inspire it to do what? Gain a public-school education because that
is the surest way to sporting success? Will
action be taken to ensure greater access to, and involvement in, competitive
sport for all? Or will elite competition
continue to be dominated by those sufficiently privileged to have had an elite
schooling?
My personal view is that we cannot allow our success in London to obscure the urgent need for action. Regrettably, the likelihood is that Team GB's considerable success will mask the reality that progress needs to be made, and it will be business as usual for the foreseeable future.
My personal view is that we cannot allow our success in London to obscure the urgent need for action. Regrettably, the likelihood is that Team GB's considerable success will mask the reality that progress needs to be made, and it will be business as usual for the foreseeable future.
10. The media
derision of beach volleyball. Love it or
hate it, it’s now impossible to ignore it.
You might not have known that these games featured water polo, handball
or Greco-Roman wrestling because practically no attention was paid to these
sports by the BBC - but beach volleyball was on our screens quite frequently. The thing is, the media love the spectacle
and the culture surrounding it while simultaneously demeaning the game itself,
considering it a non-sport and trivialising the achievements of its stars. This is thoroughly depressing and must stop,
as I discussed here.
11. The hijacking
of the games by corporate entities. I
note that the main sponsors (Cadbury’s and McDonald’s) are not likely to
produce many products enjoyed by super-fit athletes on a regular basis. The worst example was the “deal” with Visa,
that only allowed for payments via Visa cards in the main venues. “We are proud to only take VISA” proclaimed
the signs. Proud? Proud to deny alternative forms of payment? What kind of pride is that? There were of course so many other examples
of rampant sports capitalism it seems wrong to single any particular example
out but (while I’m not opposed to sponsorship) when it comes to limiting the
choices of consumers in this way a stand needs to be made.
12. Finally, on a
personal note, I’d like to openly criticise the extremely poor baby changing
facilities at the ExCeL arena – where the only facilities in a male area were
being used as a store/cleaning cupboard and where I was forced to use a
women’s toilet. As well as making assumptions on the basis of gender this is unfortunate as the level of
organisation at the London Games was extraordinary and I am happy to praise the
Games Makers and the organisers for creating a public event that seemed to have
been considered to (almost) the smallest detail. I hope that in Glasgow in two years’ time
there is a little more recognition that there might be one or two men that have
babies who need changing...
Anyway, that was the Games that was. They were gripping, exhilarating, always interesting,
often entertaining and for the most part a positive showcase for international
sport. Long live what Aidan Burley calls
“multi-cultural crap”.
All that and no mention of the incredible Michael
Phelps. Amazing!
Comments
Really? Apart from the deplorably ugly portmanteau word, what exactly was wrong with Alex Salmond and others paying particular attention to Scottish athletes in the same way that, for example, Yorkshire politicians singled out competitors from Yorkshire. It seems there is something of a double-standard at work here.
Statements by Alex Salmond and others in the SNP which afforded special attention to Scottish athletes were absolutely no different in style and tone from the sort of things said by other politicians when encouraging or congratulating "local heroes". I say again, double standard!
Shin A Lam was my favourite moment. THe good news is this http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/19073420
It's difficult, Andrew, to know how we are supposed to support our athletes if Robinson puts a political spin on that support.
I don't know whether the SNP, or Alex, didn't know this or work it out, or whether it was something that came off the top of Alex's head, but it's a bad job when you can't, as the elected First Minister of a country, wish your athletes well without some little man at the BBC turning it into all sorts of things that it was not.
Alex and the government have welcomed and supported the London Games. Our sports minister was there; Alex was there trying to drum up business from some of the rich and famous who were in London.
When the torch made its way around Scotland, Shona Robison actually (somewhat over the top, I thought) said that it was a marvellous opportunity for us to feel a part of the Olympics.
In actual fact it really wan't, but it was the attitude that the government took to London's games.
The government has never once badmouthed or tried to make anything political out of the Olympics. Perhaps this is because it has its own games to run in two years time, or perhaps it really did support London 2012, or at least the sporting aspect rather than the politics that Cameron et al made of it.
The rest of your report was great reading.
Any sensible politician, not least someone connected with what is the slickest machinery in the political business, recognises the power of the media and generally tries to use that to their advantage. Let's be honest, the "Scolympian" idea really was never going to work was it? Perhaps if support for Scottish Olympic athletes had been expressed in a different way, preferably by not appearing so disinterested in the wider achievements of Team GB, it would have been less easy for the media to respond in the way they did.
Of course, as we know, the media reporting wasn't confined to Nick Robinson. I simply pick up on what particularly crass statement from him.
Sometimes the ramifications of an action are more more important than the rightness of the action itself. Yorkshire is not currently subject to the same political tensions as Scotland, so the comparison is in some respects an unfair one. Did the "Scolympian" interventions actually achieve anything positive? probably not.
I don't doubt the SNP supported the Games. No-one can seriously contest that. Unfortunately there remains the perception that the SNP did not support Team GB (other than its Scottish participants) - a misconception perhaps but one which the SNP should have been aware of and careful to avoid reinforcing.
That said, my ire is chiefly directed at the idiocy of others who have completely misrepresented the FM and the SNP, and have successfully used Team GB and its athletes to spark an unpleasant political "debate" on Scotland's future, demonising the other side as being unpatriotic. It demeans Scotland and her politics while disrespecting the achievements (and indeed wishes) of the athletes.
A useful bit of advice for those who wish to minimise their stress levels is to avoid fretting about the things over which you have no control. Save your energies for the things that you can influence.
I stand by my two carefully chosen words: "short-sighted" and "unnecessary" - not necessarily wrong. The whole sorry politicisation of the games may, just may, have been avoided with a bit more care. It's hard to know for sure of course given how keen the media are to play up relatively insignificant things such as athletes draping themselves in Union flags when, technically speaking, the Saltire is not permitted for use by participants at the Olympics. I don't feel the SNP should have said nothing but clearly a First Minister of a country soon to hold an independence referendum has to be a little more careful in how he comes across than a Yorkshire constituency MP.
Something along the lines of "We hope Team GB does well and we wish our home-grown Scottish athletes particular success" might have worked a little better. Perhaps, as you say, even that would have been seized on unfairly and used by the media and unionists alike. The thing is, perceptions stick - negative ones particularly. Whatever the rights and wrongs the media was able to paint the SNP in a negative light so what was achieved? In that sense I found it short-sighted.
I would defend the FM's right to say what he likes, but retain the right to be disappointed when I perceive that, in doing so, he has perhaps handed ammunition to his opponents or inadvertently contributed to entrenching the tribal nature of Scottish politics.
Of course in the long-run this probably won't matter a jot and in 2014 no-one will be thinking about the London Olympics never mind the shamelessly crude way some have tried to use them politically. By that point we'll have moved on to Unionist arguments that the Bannockburn commemorations and Commonwealth games are being cynically used by nationalists to advance the "Yes" vote...
Anyway, as you suggest, I'll save my energies for the battles whose outcomes I can influence!
because of the spin that the likes of Robinson have put on it.
You are right, Andrew. What people like Robinson say is what a fair number
of the population believe. And if Robinson, who is establishment through
and through (remember him being caught stamping on protestors' banners?)
spins it against the SNP, then it sounds like the SNP was against the rest
of the UK, which he was not, not just in sport, but in everything. It could
have been, indeed maybe was, damaging to our cause.
I wish that he has said it and that he had followed it up with 'and to
those in the rest of the UK'.
On the basis that our country was completing as part of GB (why was NI
excluded?) that would not have been unreasonable and it would have
prevented Robinson's petty and ill-informed vindictiveness.
I apologise if this is a repost. I had a"failure notice" for the last attempt.