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  • Flame lights a Greek revival

    San Francisco Chronicle, CA
    Aug 14 2004

    Flame lights a Greek revival

    John Crumpacker, Chronicle Staff Writer


    Athens -- To rousing cheers of "Hellas! Hellas! Hellas!'' the
    442-member Greek delegation marched into the Olympic Stadium on a
    wave of emotion Friday night as the Opening Ceremonies of the Games
    of the 28th Olympiad reached a crescendo of sound and sentiment,
    silencing skeptics the world over who had doubted it could be done.

    Minutes later, sailor Nikolaos Kaklamanakis lit the Olympic cauldron
    to bring to a conclusion ceremonies that ran nearly 3 1/2 hours and
    touched upon Greece ancient and modern and upon the nation's unique
    role in the history of the Olympic Games.

    "This is the new Greece waiting for you to discover,'' said Athens
    2004 head Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, the woman credited with
    rescuing the Olympic bid from internecine squabbles and three years
    of mismanagement. "You will be revived. Greece is here tonight. We're
    ready. The Olympic Games -- welcome home.''

    Perhaps 2 billion people worldwide and 72,000 in person watched as
    the 35-year-old Kaklamanakis, familiar to Greeks for his sailing
    skills in the Mistral class, touched the Olympic flame to a
    needle-like device attached to a fulcrum.

    Upon being lit, the stiletto-like device was raised back into
    position by a huge counterweight. At that, fireworks went off to more
    cheers, and people slowly walked from beneath the stadium's stylish
    arched glass roof into a balmy summer night in this northern Athens
    district of Mousassi.

    "It was incredible,'' said U.S. middle-distance runner Alan Webb.
    "Just watching the flame being lit was well worth it. I thought that
    was the highlight.'' The cauldron will burn continuously for the next
    16 days, until the 2004 Summer Olympics conclude on Aug. 29.

    American archer Jennifer Nichols said the lighting of the cauldron
    "gave me a feeling of awe, like I can't believe I'm here.''

    During the ceremonies, a piece of the pyrotechnics lodged high in the
    latticework of a crane outside the stadium and remained burning as
    visitors exited to an acrid aroma.

    An equally familiar smell was noticeable inside the stadium, that of
    fresh paint. Outside, trees had been planted mere days before to
    brighten a tableau of dirt reflecting a frantic rush to complete the
    facilities in time.

    These are the Games that Athens had hoped to host in 1996 for the
    centennial celebration of the modern Olympics, which had been
    established after a hiatus of 1,500 years. But Atlanta won the bid
    instead.

    Greeks take almost perverse pride in their last-minute ethic in
    getting things done, and indeed they got things done on the most
    important day of the Olympics.

    But even as all of Greece celebrated the arrival of a sporting
    festival developed here in 776 B.C. as a paean to the gods and
    revived in 1896 under the precepts of fair play and sportsmanship,
    the potential of shame lurked: National hero Kostas Kenteris, the
    defending Olympic champion in the 200 meters, faced a possible ban
    for skipping two mandatory drug tests.

    Kenteris and sprinter Katerina Thanou became the big story Thursday
    night and early Friday morning after both missed tests and after a
    motorcycle accident in which they were said to suffer minor injuries.


    Their cases were being reviewed by an International Olympic Committee
    panel hours before the Opening Ceremonies were to begin.

    The artistic portion of the ceremony was constrained by time because
    the nearly 10,000 athletes from 201 nations had to wait to walk into
    the stadium. It was nevertheless classy as more than 2,400 volunteer
    performers referenced Greece from antiquity to the present day in
    stylized vignettes rolling by on floats.

    Greek civilization was presented as an evolution of art, science and
    mathematics under the heading "Clepsydra,'' described as "a dreamlike
    parade depicting stylized figures that look as though they have been
    brought to life from Greek frescoes, mosaics, sculptures and
    paintings.''

    The ceremonies quickly transitioned from art to athletes. Competitors
    from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe celebrated their time on the global
    stage in a slow gambol before spectators and a segregated section of
    dignitaries.

    Among the royalty, Queen Sofia of Spain attracted the most attention
    in her pale lime-green dress and her obvious bodyguards with
    earpieces. There was no Fidel Castro sighting, as in Olympics past.

    The parade of athletes is always a highlight for its very definition
    of human diversity. Attire ranged from ghastly Ward Cleaver-like gray
    suits for the men of Armenia to genuine leopard-skin loincloths for
    the men of Burundi. The women of Moldova wore silky pink slacks and
    pink halter tops above bare midriffs.

    Bermuda, true to tradition, sent out grown men wearing black blazers
    with red shorts and knee-high black socks.

    The U.S. delegation was the largest, with 538 athletes, not all of
    whom took part in the ceremonies because of imminent competitions
    today. The Americans were casual and well-behaved in their uniforms
    from Roots, a Canadian company that caused a marketing furor with
    berets at the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics in 2002.

    Despite Greece's relatively proximity to the continuing conflict in
    Iraq, the Americans received an enthusiastic greeting when they
    entered the stadium, putting them in the same league, ovation-wise,
    as Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and nearby Cyprus. Israel was met
    mostly with silence.

    In contrast to the U.S. delegation, sauntering in six abreast, the
    east African nation of Djibouti was represented by one athlete,
    tennis player Abdo Abdallah, who by necessity carried his country's
    flag.

    The most rambunctious country was Italy, its men specifically. A
    number of them mugged for the camera, kissed the lens and tarried to
    such an extent they had to be herded back to their delegation by
    black-clad production people acting as sheepdogs.

    The tallest flag bearer in Olympic history was someone familiar to
    U.S. sports fans. Basketball player Yao Ming of China, at 7-feet-5 or
    perhaps 7-6, led his country's delegation clad in cream-colored
    slacks and red jacket. During the NBA season, he plays for the
    Houston Rockets.

    North and South Korea marched in together, most athletes holding
    hands above their heads. Earlier in the day, International Olympic
    Committee president Jacques Rogge spoke of the possibility of the two
    Koreas forming one country as Germany did after the fall of the
    Berlin Wall.

    While Armenia was noticeable for its drab suits, easily the worst
    fashion statement of the evening was turned in by the athletes of
    Kyrgyzstan, who wore hats that can only be described as demented
    stovepipe Tyroleans, like the Swiss wear only much taller.

    In any event, it was hats off to Athens and all of Greece for an
    event seven years in the making, three years in the delaying and
    finally brought to fruition with frantic effort.

    For complete Olympic coverage -- including interactive guides to
    featured sports -- go to sfgate.com/olympics/.
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