Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sometimes, Our Best Is Not Enough

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Sometimes, Our Best Is Not Enough

    SOMETIMES, OUR BEST IS NOT ENOUGH
    By Chris Cochrane, [email protected]

    TheChronicleHerald.ca
    Thu. Aug 14 - 6:10 AM
    Canada

    A GLANCE at the Beijing Olympics medal standings shows results that
    are obviously frustrating to our athletes, the Canadian Olympic
    Association and the millions of fans here at home.

    After Wednesday's competition in China, the Canadian team was without a
    medal. Even Armenia and Kazakhstan had a couple of medals. Kyrgyzstan,
    Togo and Uzbekistan each won a medal. Heck, even Tajikistan --
    I'll admit I thought Tajikistan was a region, not a country -- has
    a stinking medal.

    But nothing for Canada so far.

    Our Olympic brain trust was hoping for a medal haul in the
    mid-teens. Undoubtedly, medals will eventually come our way. Yet this
    has been, even by modest Canadian standards, a terrible start.

    Instead of talking about medals, most Canadian stories coming out of
    Beijing are about disappointing results. Many of them have to do with
    frustrated athletes who believe they weren't given proper funding or
    other means of support to reach their potential at these Olympics.

    That talk started early when Adam Trupish, the lone member of the
    Canadian boxing team, was blasted out of the Olympics in his first
    bout and quickly took his own verbal swipes at the Canadian Olympic
    Association. Trupish blamed a lack of financing and support for the
    woeful state of our boxing team, once one of the biggest contributors
    to Canada's summer medal haul.

    Veteran Canadian kayaker David Ford was kept from a medal only by
    what appeared to be a controversial deduction. Like Trupish, he wasn't
    happy with the way Canada operates its Olympic business. Under the new
    Canadian Olympic funding system, 41-year-old Ford lost his funding for
    training. Here's how a Canadian Press story relayed his situation:
    "Ford was given three reasons for the funding cut: He was too old,
    his performances over the past two years weren't good enough and his
    sport wasn't culturally significant enough in Canada.

    "I made the final and I finished sixth at an Olympics -- that's not
    bad but it wasn't why I came," Ford, the world champ in 1998 and ranked
    22nd entering the Olympics, said in The Canadian Press story. "Losing
    funding and things like that, I missed the last training camp here
    as a result and everyone ahead of me didn't, so you've got those
    questions in the back of your head. 'Did I do everything I needed to
    do to be prepared here?' I did what I could with the resources I had."

    Fencing medal hopeful Sherraine Schalm may eventually be best
    remembered for her colourful description of how it felt to lose at
    the Olympics, but she voiced similar complaints about the lack of
    funding and coaching help she received in preparation for the Olympics.

    Sometimes, our best simply may not be good enough. For example, a Sun
    Media story from Beijing noted that despite the lack of medals coming
    from the pool, where there were such high expectations for Canadian
    swimmers, the members of our swimming team had recorded 24 personal
    bests and established 17 new Canadian records. What that says is that
    our swimmers are performing better than they ever have before, but
    it's simply not good enough at an Olympic Games where other nations
    obviously are willing to prepare their athletes better.

    The new Road to Excellence program, which will see millions of dollars
    invested, is supposed to improve life for Canadian summer athletes
    and make our teams more competitive for the next Olympics, the 2012
    London Summer Olympics. Until then, I guess we'll have to accept
    complaints from disappointed fans and the frustrations of our elite
    athletes as understandable facts of life in a country that simply
    hasn't supported our Olympians at the same level as other nations.

    It's obvious that Canada will now be hard pressed to reach a medal
    count in the mid-teens. But all is not lost. With a strong second
    week maybe we can catch, or pass, powerhouse Tajikistan.
Working...
X