The Olympics is great, but could be much better

By thebigcode / Roar Rookie

The Games of the XXX Olympiad are just around the corner, and there is a familiar buzz in the air. There’s a sense of excitement and anticipation for what many promote as ‘the greatest show on earth’.

People are talking about the big stories that will emanate from London in July and August.

They are talking about the men’s 100m final and whether Usain Bolt will defend his crown, or will his fellow Jamaican Yohan Blake usurp the king?

They are talking about whether Michael Phelps can bag another swag of gold medals in the pool, and whether the Great Britain team can bag a few more golds than usual at home.

But they are also talking about David Beckham, who was left out of the British football squad for the Games. This begs the question, if one of the biggest stories less than a month out from the Games is about a celebrity who is these days better known for fashion than football being overlooked for selection, then is the Summer Olympic Games in need of a revolution?

The Olympic Games should be about the best athletes in the world coming together every four years to achieve their life goal – winning a gold medal. It should be about athletes reaching the pinnacle of their sport. Is that what the Olympic Games represents today, or is it in need of a refresh, a reload, a revolution?

Football, or soccer, is the logical place to start this thought process. There is little doubt that football is the biggest sport in the world. It is played in almost every country and is followed by more people across the globe than any other sport. But does this popularity alone mandate its inclusion in the Summer Olympics?

To help answer this question, lets go right back to the very first Olympic Games in Olympia, Greece in the 8th century BC. People from all around the Greek Empire came to compete in athletic events and represent their town, village or city. They also competed in the nude, but that is not the kind of revolution we need these days (sports clothing is a good revolution, especially for weightlifting). The warriors back then were the best athletes their cities and villages had to offer, competing for the only glory on offer on at the time.

Fast forward to the first ‘modern’ Olympic Games, in Athens in 1896. Fourteen nations competed in 41 events, from athletics and swimming to gymnastics and wrestling. The Games grew stronger and stronger from 1906 onwards until it became the massive corporate sporting event it is today. Over 11,000 athletes from 204 nations competed at the Beijing Games, with roughly the same numbers estimated in London this summer.

Somewhere along the line, as the Games became a corporate juggernaut, something was lost. Back in the 8th century it was the best athletes coming to the biggest event in the world.

From 1896 through much of the 20th century, it was the best of the best representing their country at the highest level. This is the essence of the Olympic Games – the best athletes, representing their country, at the highest possible level. But that ideal has been slowly corrupted by sports being included at the Games that don’t deserve to be there.

Back to football and our friend Beckham. Football is the biggest sport in the world has its own event (the FIFA World Cup) where the best players from all around the globe represent their country at the highest level. This should disqualify the sport from the Olympics.

The evidence is clear. FIFA, football’s world governing body, actively ensures that their World Cup is the only game in town when it comes to truly worldwide international football by stipulating that only three players over the age of 23 can represent their country at the Olympic Games. Fair enough, that’s their prerogative – so ditch it from the Olympics. This would enrich the Games, not detract from it.

Young footballers the world over grow up dreaming of representing their country at the World Cup. They don’t dream of winning Olympic gold, they dream of lifting the trophy like Pele and Maradona before them. That’s fine, great even, but that culture should disqualify the sport from the Games.

This is the criteria that should be used to determine sports to be played at the Olympics:

a. Is the sport popular in enough countries and with a significant amount of the world’s population? These terms may be difficult to adequately spell out, but lets roll with it for now; and

b. Is winning the gold medal at the Olympic Games the pinnacle of the sport?

If the answer is no to either of these questions, the sport does not qualify for the Olympics. Thank you linesmen and thank you ball boys.

Which is a nice segue to tennis, another leading candidate to be booted from the Games. Tennis players dream of winning Wimbledon, the US Open, the French Open and the Australian Open. They even have an international tournament where they can represent their country in the Davis Cup. No one cares about the Olympic gold medal. Tennis is gone. Can anyone name who won the men and women’s gold medals in 2008 without looking it up?

There are others too which should fall by the wayside to allow for the revolution and a more streamlined Games. Synchronised swimming wouldn’t make it past the first criteria, and in that group you could probably lump one of taekwondo and judo. Do we really need both Asian martial arts in this new, revolutionised Games?

This is without even mentioning wrestling, which is at least a traditional Olympic sport (and tradition should always count for something).

So far we have eliminated five sports from London’s list of 26. The number 21 has a nice ring to it, however we need to look to the future and the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro to see the real problem. Two new sports have been added to the Games of the XXXI Olympiad – rugby sevens and golf.

Rugby sevens is a great sport, one that is on the rise and gaining in popularity, particularly in Asia. But unfortunately it falls into the same category as soccer, and falls down in the second leg of our criteria. Rugby sevens is still rugby, and all the players on the field would take winning the Rugby World Cup over winning gold at the Olympics.

Golf, too, would not pass the second test. Golfers not only strive to win one of the four major tournaments across the world, but also have international tournaments in the Ryder and President Cups. The Olympic motto is: Citius, Altius, Fortius, or Faster, Higher, Stronger. Not ‘a longer drive’.

The inclusion of these sports devalue the credibility and spirit of the Olympic Games. We want to see athletes who have dedicated their lives to winning gold. Those who have been driven to the pool by their parents since they were six and swum endless hours and kilometres looking at the black line.

We want sprinters who have spent their professional lives at the track, working meticulously on their start and hours in the gym building their power. We want long jumpers and high jumpers, shooters and archers, gymnasts and cyclers.

These athletes don’t have World Cups, professional tournaments and leagues that are watched by millions around the world every year. The Olympic Games is their time to shine. When was the last time you watched cycling in a velodrome?

When was the last time you watched a 4 x 100m relay on the track? When was the last time you watched a marathon, a weightlifting event or a long jump competition?

An Olympic gold medal should be the pinnacle, it should mean everything. It’s not just another trophy to add to the cabinet.

If a revolution can sweep through Olympics, then it would truly by the greatest show on Earth.

The Crowd Says:

2012-11-21T12:26:19+00:00

Realist

Guest


The IOC needs FIFA more than FIFA needs the IOC! 'Nuff said.... Go ahead and boot football from the Olympics if you want but know the Olympics will be the bigger loser in the long run!

2012-07-29T06:55:07+00:00

Johnno

Guest


chess boxing is a new and exciting sport i'd love to see that in the Olympics..

2012-07-29T06:43:33+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


You might enjoy one of Spiro's old pieces: http://www.theroar.com.au/2010/01/29/scrabble-is-a-five-lettered-sport/

2012-07-29T06:12:47+00:00

JH

Guest


I'll probably be shot down big time for this but I'd like to see a 'Mind Sports' section at the Olympics. Chess, Scrabble, Draughts maybe as well. I admire the athleticism and skills shown in sports but to see the best in the world lock minds is equally fascinating. I had the oppurtunity a few years back to watch a bit of the World Scrabble Championship in India. It wasn't so much the word knowledge that fascinated me, it was the way, they could squeeze words into spots and come back from 130 points behind to win. The tactical side of it was amazing. I think that Chess would be equally fascinating. It will never happen though, as there is no money in any mind sports (except perhaps Poker). Anyway, for me the Olympics is about watching some sports that I don't usually get to see (especially team sports). I love handball, indoor volleyball and hockey. Table Tennis and Badminton are fascinating to watch at the highest level and Water Polo can be awesome too. To be honest, I am more interested in the Paralympics. Now that is a true sporting festival

2012-07-27T03:28:31+00:00

Johnno

Guest


-Greco roman to say ditch boxing i don;t agree with. Olympic boxing has a colourful and controversial tradition and a rich history. As does wrestling and judo. And greco-roman wrestling, all fine athletes too. And to say boxing should be ditched over wrestling and greco roman wrestling and judo i have 2 things to say to you. -The Olmypics are now about modern history and tv ratings and capitalism and money making $$$$, not ancient history and the ancient olympics. -And boxing i think generates higher tv ratings than any of the forms of wrestling and judo. So therefore Olympcis is about money and capitalism and want the fans want. then if anything wrestling and judo should be cut, as money making is no 1 greco roman. Don't believe me , all the stadiums have to be paid for by the tax payers a lot of them and the high tv ratings sports help pay for the whole shebang of the 2 week sports event called the Olympics.

2012-07-27T02:27:27+00:00

GrecoRoman

Roar Guru


"Wrestling/boxing should be MMA cage fighting." - I agree in dropping boxing, but Wrestling needs to stay, MMA is about winning the UFC at the moment. The Olympics should be the pinnacle event of your sport.

2012-07-27T02:23:06+00:00

GrecoRoman

Roar Guru


You may not be aware, but Judo and Wrestling are two quite large international participation sports. We don't really have a strong history of participation in this country so inevitably you 'exclusion list' is biased to some degree. There are all sorts of different games and sports, but only the various forms of wrestling are indigenous to every culture in man's historical development. The wrestlers and Judokas at the Olympics are some of the finest athletes on the planet. The Olympics is their pinnacle event and millions of people around the world will be watching their country's participants in these 2 sports just as closely as we in Australia follow the swimmers, runners, hockey players, etc.

2012-07-27T01:41:14+00:00

kid

Guest


Sellout or not ball sports is not what the olympics should be about. It should be limited to events where a single person competes for a single skill that can be measured in distance or time. Here are a few suggestions. Swiming should have only freestyle as it should measure who can swim the fastest not who can swim the fastest while imitating a frog. Diving should be who can jump from the highest point, not who can look the silliest while risking their life. Wrestling/boxing should be MMA cage fighting. Walking should be held in the olympic stadium grandstand after drinking 3 pints at the start of the opening ceremony and having to hold on until it finished to be able to go to the toilet. Of course dual goldmedalist will have also sculled their pints the fastest placing the empty cups on their head. gymnast should be made to contort their body into a ball and roll down a hill the fastest. which makes me wonder why cheese rolling is not an olympic sport. Equestrian should be 1200m down the ascot straight, (go black caviar!). Any others?

2012-07-22T17:04:45+00:00

James

Guest


so are you suggesting MV Dave that Synchronized swimming is more of of a global sport than Rugby? what are you smoking? Rugby world cup i the 3rd biggest sporting event. Its there like football to draw the numbers. There are over 20 countries competing in rugby 7s. Baseball is only popular in the US, Japan and Cuba. Its a minority sport in many countries.

2012-07-19T03:16:05+00:00

Jocelyn McLennan

Roar Guru


A walking race is like trying to see who can whisper the loudest!.

AUTHOR

2012-07-18T15:49:13+00:00

thebigcode

Roar Rookie


It's a good point, one I have heard before. I understand freestyle, breathstroke and backstroke are all unique strokes that require different skill. E.g., breathstroke is more aerobic than freestyle, which is mostly aerobic. Breahstroke is a survival stroke, freestyle is getting from one point to the other. Breathstroke is to swimming what hurdles is to running....maybe. But butterfly should be ditched. It serves no purpose. It is a variation on freestyle that looks stupid. We could improve the IM by having it bookended with freestyle so it goes freestyle-backstroke-breathstroke-freestyle. Same for the relays.

2012-07-18T07:01:39+00:00

DanMan

Guest


Nah the 3 other strokes are stupid. there is no 100m hop, 800m skip etc. There is walking tho . . . sport????

2012-07-18T06:45:59+00:00

cg26

Guest


It would be fine if only the same people didn't win medals in several different strokes. You don't see the same people winning sprinting & hurdling races over the same distance, but clearly you can be good at all the swimming strokes at once and there is no point awarding so many gold medals to the same people.

2012-07-18T06:43:13+00:00

cg26

Guest


AFAIK they are not scrapping the world tour, just removing the 'World Cup' label from one event. They could very drily call it the Corinthian Games or something! At the same time would be fine... just not adding to the medal count.

2012-07-18T04:46:39+00:00

DanMan

Guest


Swimming needs to be trimmed. Cannot understand why we have 4 different ways to get from one end of the pool to the other, 3 ways clearly inferior to the other.

AUTHOR

2012-07-17T14:25:22+00:00

thebigcode

Roar Rookie


I like it CG26. Maybe we can call it the 'Money Games'. It can run before or after the Olympics (or maybe the same time) and people can just watch on TV... As for Rugby Sevens, they still have the world sevens tour, which is a great even that includes the Hong Kong Sevens. It would be a shame if this had to be scrapped in order for the sport to compete in the Games - so the alternative of not including it in the Games seems better to me!

2012-07-17T11:43:06+00:00

Tom Callaghan

Guest


THE BIGCODE Thanks for your replyBIG. I'm lost for words! The magnanimity of your reply has quite disarmed me.......

AUTHOR

2012-07-17T11:34:59+00:00

thebigcode

Roar Rookie


I love a good rant WoobliesFan. I am sure you're not alone in your cynicism. As I said above, if we allow doping then what's the point of sport? It crosses the line in my opinion, and we should never stop trying to purge it from sport. There is some evidence now that this is happening - but hopefully it doesn't come out in a decade that everyone is now doping. The IOC is an absurd bureaucracy that is too big for its own boots. Jacques Rogge is the current president (Juan Antonio Samaranch stepped down after Athens I believe) but things haven't really changed. This is a problem with all big international sports organisations: FIFA, UEFA, IRB etc. People in the highest echelons of sports administrations seem to be more interested in golden handshakes and money under the table than anything else...

AUTHOR

2012-07-17T11:28:40+00:00

thebigcode

Roar Rookie


Morning Tom! That remark about whether or not GB will win more medals was just an introductory one. I would have said it about the hosts no matter which country was hosting. So thanks for your psychoanalysis but I think you jumped the gun a little. The article was about something else entirely, and in fact didn't mention Australia's sporting prowess at all! GB had an awesome Beijing Games, especially in the velodrome. Their cycling team will be expected to do brilliantly again, among plenty of others. Having said that, your post shows why Aussies enjoy beating England (not so much the other Home Nations) so much, and here's hoping we finish above them on the medal tally!

2012-07-17T07:43:40+00:00

Tom Callaghan

Guest


THE BIG CODE Morning Biggo! I understand that you are a 'rookie'. Biggie, your article exudes rookiness! You say that home advantage wiill allow GB to win more golds than usual. In a sense this true. GB is likely to surpass the total of 19 golds won at Beijing, which was good enough to gain fourth place on the medal table, but I suspect that your remark is evidence of unfounded Australian condescension towards British sport. Lack of home advantage in Beijing did not prevent Britain finishing above major sporting nations such as France and Germanyin addition to Australia which has been on the retreat in sporting terms since Sydney in 2000. I understand that sporting statisticians throughout the world expect GB to surpass the number of golds gained in Beijing and possibly finish third on the medals table. This will be a highpoint in the rising graph of sporting success enjoyed by British sport since the low point of Atlanta in 1996: three Ashes series,the attainment of number one status in test cricket and T20, a rugby world cup won on turf where the Australian team might be expected to perform better than usual,high placings in a variety of worldand European sporting medal tables including boxing, swimming rowing, athletics,modern pentathlon, taekwando,triathlon etc:even the under performing football team is ranked fourth in the world by FIFA.. The ability of Australians to cling to a belief in special sporting prowess in face of overwhelming sporting evidence to the contrary never ceaes to amaze me. I remember that it was only a few months ago that contributors to the Roar were congratulating themselves that it would 'take an earthquake in the stadium to stop Sally Pearson gaining gold in the 100 metres hurdles'........

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar