calder said:The Cuba/Canada semifinal in baseball was just heartbreaking. To be leading by a run, then the nightmare 8th inning that just seemed to go on forever, then Canada in the 9th comes within *INCHES* of a game tying homerun in their last at bat after almost completing an amazing comeback for the ages.
And now instead of a very winnable bronze medal game against the Aussies we get a pissed off Japanese team.
Yeah!In their infinite wisdom, the IOC has publicly denounced the practice of keeping Olympic Journals. I say, poo-poo on you, IOC, but thanks for throwing us this big party every four years. The IOC's argument has something to do with controlling broadcast rights that sponsors have paid millions to attain. Check out the article. One of the best parts of the Olympics is the comraderie, the coming together of nations in a peaceful gathering. What's wrong about sharing that with friends, family, and even strangers back home? Wouldn't the fostering of the Olympic spirit through a personal website bring more attention and adulation to the movement as a whole? I say, pass this link on to as many people as you can so they call all share in the 'illegal' American practice of free press and democracy. I shall not be silenced!
Good job, Artistic Gymnastics is completely finished. God must love you.belgurdo said:C'mon, NBC, stop making 90% of your Olympics broadcasts gymnastics. If I want to see little girls twisting and flipping and then crying afterwards, I'll go rent an Asian porno or something.
Stele said:The transient dominance of the Japanese Men's team three decades ago doesn't waver the overall Soviet ascendency and of its its satellites (East Germany, etc.) at all, and it did so for both genders. It's no coincidence U.S. took its first women's team gold only after the Unified Team splintered.
DopeyFish said:there was a huge uproar from canadians about mens vaulting (gymnastic) where the dude who won gold on the mat ended up taking a good jump and hopped but that's it. then the next dude does a vault does a good jump but when landing he falls to his hands and goes out of bounds then gets a higher score resulting in a bronze medal getting completely robbed from Canada. I figured it wasn't that bad but when I saw the footage, Canada got a medal completely STOLEN. Maybe they should stop dope-testing the athletes and start testing the judges.
...in Barcelona, and they competed for the CIS. Splintering of the Soviet gymnastic program and a weaker fiscal backing had little effect on gymnastics? By your logic, if Microsoft was fragmented, they would still have a stranglehold on the OS market. I think you need to stop playing devil's advocate.marsomega said:The down fall of the Soviet Union had little effect on the gymnastics as the gymnast still competed under Russia instead of their respective countries. ( Svetlana Boginskaya, Vitaly Sherbo, and Ivan ivankov all from Belarus still competed for Russia ).
LakeEarth said:Wasn't able to comment on this earlier cause I didn't have internet access for a while, but this really pissed me off. The guy slipped, hopped, stepped, stepped not only out of bounds, but OFF THE ENTIRE MAT! Not only that, his scores were like 9.0, 9.1, 9.1, 9.45, 9.5, 9.5 ...it's like... how can the judges vary like that?
Oh wait, the 9.5's are all from judges from the athletes home country and surrounding countries...nope, no bias there, no way!
"Everyone always talks about the 1992 team, but you look at the 1996 team, the centers were (Hakeem) Olajuwon, Shaq (Shaquille O'Neal) and David Robinson, and the power forwards were (Charles) Barkley and (Karl) Malone, and I imagine every referee knew those guys. Now you look at our team and it's a lot different. The only one of the big guys they look at and probably say 'Hey, wow' is Timmy Duncan, and I don't see him getting a lot of respect."
You're not serious, are you? This really happened...I shouldn't be surprised if this is actually true. That's insane.Archaix said:I've already hoped that a synchronized swimmer would drown because the dumb bitch killed people when driving after drinking, and her sentence was postponed because the judge didn't want to ruin her chance at the olympics.
bishoptl said:You're not serious, are you? This really happened...I shouldn't be surprised if this is actually true. That's insane.
As the teams left the court, Brown and Spanish coach Mario Pesquera were pointing angrily at each other and had to be separated by their assistants.
Ripclawe said:WOOOOOOOOOOO! BRING THE HATE!
What bothers me most are the charges that Iverson and Co. aren't trying and don't care. First and foremost, they do care and they are trying.
As much as Pesquera had a reason to be angry, he is a bit of a crackpot himself.
He used the postgame press conference to rail about the officiating, even though U.S. was whistled for 10 more total fouls.
He whined that his previously undefeated team was now out of medal contention, like he never heard of a single-elimination tournament.
He saved the best for last. "I think we were the stronger team," he said.
Hey, coach, your team just got drummed. Spare us.
Guileless said:I do not understand why the Spanish coach could be so angry about a timeout being called. What the hell is so offensive about a timeout? Anyone? And bitching about the officiating when you have a clear advantage on fouls against is absurd. This guy is a complete ass. He's such an ass that I'm going to start rooting for the US team again to make this guy look like even more of an ass.
No Grizzly fan is surprised that Pau looked great early in the game and then disappeared in the 4th quarter. That's what always happens.