USA Basketball Skipping Olympic Village Again

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As is tradition, the United States men’s and women’s basketball teams will skip the Olympic Village for alternate environs in Beijing, according to Xinhua. The Chinese news service says the men’s team hasn’t stayed in a Village since NBA players began appearing with the Dream Team in 1992.

Famously, the men’s team stayed on a luxury cruise liner docked in the Athens harbor in 2004. This time, it’s one of the finance district’s few five-star hotels. Meanwhile, the Village officially opened for business this morning, with Chinese Olympians setting up shop, and with the Cuban and Polish delegations expected to arrive soon. The Village also seems so mystical on TV, this odd spot where world-class athletes from all over the globe just walk around and play hacky-sack and shoot dice. It’s probably insanely crowded, crawling with security, and mostly unenjoyable to the layman, in reality.

NBA stars are obviously a bigger deal stateside than even the most notorious Olympic competitors (like Michael Phelps). I’ve always wondered how the factions interact, how a lunch featuring Carmelo Anthony and gymnast Morgan Hamm would go. But obviously, such interactions are limited. Forget NBA stars being separated from their fans. Fellow star athletes can’t even really get some face time.

(I do realize the sequestration has to do more with security than anything. It’s still odd. I mean, Yao Ming and Yi Jianlian are apparently holed up in the Village.)

 

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Is China Using Underage Gymnasts in Violation of Olympic Rules?

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International Olympic Committee rules are clear: To compete in Olympic gymnastics, athletes have to be at least 16 years old. No one born after 1992 is eligible.

But the New York Times documents strong evidence that host nation China is violating that rule. Specifically, He Kexin, a gold-medal favorite in the uneven parallel bars, appears to be 14, even though China is claiming she’s 16.

The Times reports:

The Times found two online records of official registration lists of Chinese gymnasts that list He’s birthday as Jan. 1, 1994, which would make her 14. A 2007 national registry of Chinese gymnasts – now blocked in China but viewable through Google cache – shows He’s age as “1994.1.1.”

Another registration list that is unblocked, dated Jan. 27, 2006, and regarding an “intercity” competition in Chengdu, China, also lists He’s birthday as Jan. 1, 1994. That date differs by two years from the birth date of Jan. 1, 1992, listed on He’s passport, which was issued Feb. 14, 2008.

The International Olympic Committee has shown no interest at all in doing anything that might anger this summer’s Olympic hosts, so I’m sure the IOC will do nothing with this information. But it should. Young girls shouldn’t be pushed into elite athletics, and the implementation of a minimum age rule was a wise decision. It’s a rule that no country should flout.

 

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Olympics: Allyson Felix on the Run

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Elie Seckbach, the Embedded Correspondent, brings his exclusive video reporting to FanHouse. Check back regularly for more videos.

In this exclusive video, we talk to one of the fastest people on the planet, Allyson Felix. Despite being a two-time World Champion, Allyson says she’s much more popular overseas than here at home. In the upcoming Olympics, Allyson will represent Team USA in the 200-meter dash, where she won the Silver last time. Around 1:50 into the video find out the five things she can’t live without.


Youtube link.

 

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L.A. Olympics Opened 24 Years Ago Today

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It’s the 24th anniversary of the Opening Ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics, so let’s take a look at some of the highlights:

The most striking thing to me is how low-tech it all was. In the most recent Olympics we’ve had pyrotechnics and laser light shows, and looking back at the above video, it seems almost quaint the way the announcers gushed over something as simple as fans holding up colored cards to depict the flags of the participating nations.

The Beijing Opening Ceremonies are 11 days away.

 

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China Breaks Promises on Internet Censorship, International Olympic Committee Does Nothing

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Journalists in China to cover the Olympics are unable to conduct the research necessary to do their jobs properly because China is blocking access to web sites that contain information about China’s human-rights policies. This violates a promise that China made to give Olympic visitors open access to the Internet.

And, of course, the International Olympic Committee is doing nothing about China’s broken promise, other than the IOC media boss saying he’ll look into the matter. And really, what can the IOC do? The Olympics are coming to China. It’s too late to do anything drastic. China made a promise, China broke the promise, and that’s that.

Really, about the only thing any of us can do is read the Amnesty International report that the Chinese government wants to prevent people from seeing.

 

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The Messi Mess: Why South Americans Care So Much About Olympic Soccer

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Barcelona FC is doing everything in its power to keep Lionel Messi out of Beijing.

Despite repeated reminders from FIFA that clubs must release players under the age of 23 for the Olympics, Barcelona is refusing to let Messi, 21, play for Argentina, claiming that Olympic soccer not a FIFA-sanctioned event and that FIFA has no right to demand any player’s release. The Spanish superclub plans to take its case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport this week while taking Messi with them on their American tour.

Barca isn’t the only one holding players back. Two German Bundesliga clubs, Werden Bremen and Schalke 04, are defying a FIFA order to release under-23 Brazilian stars Diego and Rafinha for the Olympics. They plan to go to the CAS as well.

By contrast, Liverpool was under no obligation to release Javier Mascherano, 24, for the Olympics, but they did anyway, and Messi has made it clear that he wants to join Mascherano in Beijing and win the gold for Argentina.

This begs the question: why do these Brazilians and Argentinians care so much about Olympic soccer, which certainly doesn’t have the prestige of a World Cup or even a Copa America? They care because, as the BBC’s Tim Vickery points out, it was the Olympics that put South American soccer on the map — and begat the FIFA World Cup.

After its first attempt at an international soccer tournament ended in failure, FIFA agreed in 1914 to oversee the Olympic soccer tournament. Ten years later, Uruguay arrived at the Olympics in Paris as complete unknowns and won a decisive gold medal. Bernard Joy, a famous English footballer and journalist, wrote of the Uruguayans:

[They] played first-rate football, combining speed, skill and perfect ball-control. By marrying short passing to intelligent positional play, they made the ball do all the work, and so kept their opponents on the run.

This was a revelation to the Europeans, who had never seen this style of play before. Expectations were high when the Uruguayans arrived at the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam. Argentina, however, stole the show, scoring a whopping 23 goals in three matches on their way to the final. Uruguay, however, didn’t disappoint. They toppled Holland, Germany and Italy before defeating Argentina in the final to win the gold. Dutch Olympic organizers received more than 250,000 ticket requests for that final. Everyone wanted to see how South America played the game.

Uruguay would not get the opportunity to defend its title in Los Angeles in 1932. Organizers dropped the sport out of the belief that Americans had their own brand of football and wouldn’t be interested in this football. As a result, FIFA president Jules Rimet announced plans to stage its first international football competition in 1930 in Uruguay and every four years thereafter in a different location. Uruguay defeated Argentina, 4-2, in the final of the very first World Cup.

South America built its footballing reputation on the Olympics, so that gold medal will always mean more to South American players than Europeans. That’s why players like Diego and Rafinha have defied their clubs wishes and gone to Brazil to train with their national teams. Perhaps those clubs would be better off letting them go. As Erik Kirschbaum of Reuters Soccer Blog points out:

How can anyone expect a brilliant player like Diego to get excited about playing in Bremen ever again if he is forced to miss the Olympics in order to take part in a pre-season Bundesliga training camp on the North Sea island of Norderney?

Could we expect Rafinha to have his heart in the Bundesliga’s first two matches when his compatriots were trying to win a first gold medal in China?

The CAS is expected to hear the clubs’ complaints later this week.

 

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Olympic Athletes Subject to Gender Testing

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It’s pretty well established that every Olympic athlete is required to submit to urine testing for recreational and performance-enhancing drugs. But I don’t think most Olympic viewers realize that some athletes will also be subjected to gender tests.

The Guardian reports that if the International Olympic Committee suspects that a competitor in a women’s event is not actually a woman, that athlete can be subjected both to blood testing to determine if they have two X chromosomes and to a physical examination by a gynecologist.

But the blood test and gynecological test are not the absolute arbiter: Men who have become women through sex reassignment surgery are permitted to compete as women, as long as they wait at least two years after the surgery. There are also millions of people around the world with chromosomal abnormalities — they have neither two X chromosomes nor one X and one Y chromosome — and the international sports community still hasn’t determined exactly how to deal with such athletes, other than to take them on a case-by-case basis.

One such person is Santhi Soundarajan, the Indian runner pictured above. Soundarajan lived her entire life as a woman and became an elite runner, winning a silver medal in the 800 meters at the 2006 Asian Games. But she was later stripped of that medal when a gynecologist, an endocrinologist, a psychologist and a genetic expert examined her and ruled that although she has the physical characteristics of a woman, she has the chromosomes of a man.

Soundarajan was humiliated by the result of that test and reportedly attempted suicide in 2007.

 

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China Confirms It Will Continue Internet Censorship Throughout Olympic Games

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Remember how the Chinese government promised not to censor the Internet during the Olympics? Yeah, that was a lie.

Yesterday it was reported that journalists in China to cover the Olympics weren’t able to access web sites that contained information critical about the host nation, and today China confirmed that journalists will not have unfettered Internet use during the Games.

Stunningly, the International Olympic Committee has OK’d the censorship. After years of promising the 20,000 journalists going to China for the games that they’ll be able to report freely, the IOC is now, like China, breaking its word, and siding against freedom of the press.

 

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South Korean TV Leaks Video of Opening Ceremony Rehearsal

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South Korea must want to test its missile defense system, or something. The TV station there apparently broadcast video taken from a rehearsal of the opening ceremony today. Chinese officials, according to The Guardian, have closely guarded all information regarding the ceremony. This doesn’t seem like an official release, and I can’t imagine Beijing organizers are very happy right now.

Thankfully, we’re not beholden to Beijing organizers. The YouTube of the Korean news report follows.

Watch out for those whales! Aah!

(Via Steady Burn.)

 

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Big Star, Small Ego: Meet USAB’s Michael Redd

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Elie Seckbach, the Embedded Correspondent, brings his exclusive video reporting to FanHouse. Check back regularly for more videos.

In this exclusive video we talk to NBA All-Star and USA Basketball member Michael Redd, one of the most down-to-earth stars in professional sports. Around 1:05 into the video we ask Michael what he can tell us about good friend Kobe Bryant that no one else knows. Redd also speaks openly about being a devout man of faith in professional sports.


Youtube link.

 

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