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clacson
02-26-02, 11:36 PM
Earlier, someone posted a little blurb from the NY Post's Page Six about George and the Olympics.

Here is a more detailed article from the LA Times:

[http://www.latimes.com/sports/olympics/other/la-oly-020902power.story]

By George, U.S. to Show Its Medal Now
By RANDY HARVEY, Times Staff Writer

SALT LAKE CITY -- Even before the collapse of the U.S. team at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Canada, was complete, desperate U.S. Olympic Committee officials called on George Steinbrenner.

Asking him to turn his attention from beating the American League East to beating the world, they appointed him to chair an Olympic overview commission. The mission was to ensure that U.S. winter athletes would never again be as unprepared as they were in Calgary, where they would win a mere six medals.

One year later, Steinbrenner's commission released a report calling for a streamlined USOC, more accountability from the governing bodies for the winter sports and increased funding for athletes.

The report, much of it paid for by Steinbrenner, concluded that "winning medals must always be the primary goal."

"By Lillehammer in 1994 and Nagano in 1998 and wherever the Games are in 2002, I think you'll see some real differences," Harvey Schiller, then USOC executive director, said later.

The year is 2002, the Winter Olympics are in Salt Lake City, and USOC officials indeed are eagerly anticipating some real differences. They predict U.S. athletes will win 20 medals, seven more than ever before in the Winter Games.

They are so committed to that number that Lloyd Ward, who became the USOC's executive director last year, said bonuses for the Colorado Springs-based staff are tied to its realization.

But, according to estimates from various media outlets, the USOC's number could be conservative. Predictions for U.S. medals range from Sports Illustrated's 22 to the Associated Press' 33.

In any case, the outlook is optimistic enough for Sandra Baldwin, USOC president, to declare this "the best U.S. Winter Olympic team ever. We are psyched."

Looking back to that day in Calgary when Steinbrenner, a public-sector member of the USOC who later would become a vice president, was summoned, USOC spokesman Mike Moran said this week: "The Olympic overview commission was, in retrospect, the most important initiative we have ever undertaken. It established a path for our future that we are still following today."

It has taken 13 years since the Steinbrenner report was adopted for the results to materialize.

The United States made strides in the medal count in the three Winter Olympics between Calgary and Salt Lake City, winning 11 medals in 1992 at Albertville, France; 13 in 1994 at Lillehammer, Norway, and 13 in 1998 at Nagano, Japan, but factors beyond the USOC's influence were largely responsible.

One was the new world order established after the collapse of the Eastern Bloc.

East Germany was one of two Winter Olympic superpowers and, as expected, unified Germany is even more dominant, although there are signs that could change in the future. The Germans won 29 medals in 1998 and are expected to again lead the medal standings here with as many as 34.

But athletes from republics of the former Soviet Union are more challenged as the sports structure that had been controlled and heavily funded by the government deteriorates.

First participating in the Winter Olympics in 1956, the Soviet Union finished first in the medal count in seven of nine Games in which all of its republics competed under the hammer and sickle. The Soviets won a high of 29 medals in Calgary, 23 more than the United States.

Competing as the Unified Team in 1992, the republics combined for 23 medals. Under their own flags, they won 31 in 1994, led by Russia's 23. That number decreased in 1998 to 24, including 18 by Russia. Projections are that the number will drop further this year.

A larger factor in the United States' improved medal totals, however, was the increase in medals available as sports such as snowboard, freestyle skiing, short-track speedskating, curling and skeleton have been added to the program. In Calgary, 138 medals were awarded. In Salt Lake City, the number is 234.

U.S. athletes won five more medals in Albertville in 1992 than they had won four years earlier in Calgary, but four of them came in sports that weren't on the program in 1988. So it's not necessarily accurate to say that the United States improved much immediately after the Calgary Games.

Percentage-wise, the United States had its best Winter Games in 1980 in Lake Placid, where it won 8% of the medals available. The percentage dropped to an all-time low of 4.3% in Calgary, rose to 6.4% in Albertville, rose again to 7.2% in Lillehammer, then dropped again to 6.3% in Nagano.

But if the United States wins 20 medals this year as predicted by the USOC, the leap to 8.5% will be significant.

Moran said that the United States is finally beginning to reap the benefits from the funding program called for in Steinbrenner's report that enables athletes to earn substantially more money than they did before 1988.

Until 1989, the most that any athlete had received in one year from the USOC was $2,500. In the last four years, through an $18-million USOC program called Podium 2002, eight athletes on this year's Olympic team earned more than $100,000—with a high of $140,000—and 20 others earned between $60,000 and $90,000. Members of the U.S. women's ice hockey team, trying to defend the gold medal they won in Nagano, have earned an average of $106,000.

The USOC also has a job-opportunities program through its sponsors that enables athletes to earn extra income.

U.S. medalists here will receive $25,000 for gold, $15,000 for silver and $10,000 for bronze, up from $10,000, $7,500 and $5,000 when the USOC began the incentive program in 1992.

That is on top of money provided by the USOC and its various sports governing bodies for coaches, trainers, psychologists and, in the case of figure skaters, choreographers and costume designers. Also provided are funds for travel, housing and health insurance.

As a result of the money available, Ward said that U.S. athletes are able to remain in their sports longer, creating more experienced Olympic teams. This is the oldest U.S. Olympic winter team ever, with an average age of 26.

"We're only doing the minimum," Ward said. "Some of our elite athletes are receiving a substantial amount of money, but I'd like to see us spread it out more so that we can take care of more athletes. That might enable us to be more competitive across the board."

The United States is traditionally strong in figure skating, Alpine skiing and speedskating. This year, it could win medals in men's bobsled for the first time since 1956 and Nordic combined for the first time. It also has hopes in ski jumping, in which it hasn't won a medal since 1924. But it still has no contenders in biathlon or cross-country skiing.

"We're going to have some advantages here from the home field, like we did in 1980, Norway did in 1994 and Japan did in 1998," Baldwin said.

"The challenge is to keep that going after Salt Lake City."

Steinbrenner thought of that too. In order for Salt Lake City in 1991 to earn designation as the U.S. candidate in bidding for the 1998 Winter Olympics, it had to promise the USOC that it would build world-class winter sports venues—win or lose. It lost that time to Nagano but honored its commitment by beginning construction. It won the international bid four years later for 2002 and had most of the facilities completed by 2000.

"The Olympic overview commission was very smart to ask, 'How can you be a winter sports power if you don't have the facilities?'" Baldwin said. "Now we have a major training center in the West for our athletes in a major city, easily accessible by air, with jobs and more than one university. Salt Lake City fills all of our needs.

"I'm not saying we're a winter sports power yet, but we're here to let the world know we're getting better."

Bozidar
02-26-02, 11:46 PM
wow.. George did a great job. Maybe someday we'll get our medal total up to the level of WS championships that the Yanks have ;)

Jersey Yankee
02-28-02, 10:18 PM
From the NY Daily News, Mon 02/25/02:

By George, the U.S. Shows Who's Boss (http://www.nydailynews.com/2002-02-25/Metro_Sports/Olympics/a-142582.asp)

It wasn't about Derek Parra, or Chris Witty, or Bode Miller, or the U.S. hockey team. It wasn't about bringing the world together, or mending the scars from the Salt Lake City bribery scandal.

Well, maybe it was a little about all that. But mostly, the 2002 Olympics were about winning medals and about George Steinbrenner.

We were reminded about that again yesterday by the U.S. Olympic Committee, hours before Christina Aguilera reminded us at the Closing Ceremonies that America is also about winning platinum records for bad music.

"We worked on this for years," said Sandra Baldwin, president of the USOC. "This is not serendipity. A dream has to have a plan."

The plan, according to Baldwin, was simple enough: Win more medals! And that plan was really hatched after what she termed "the defeat in Calgary."

The defeat in Calgary '88 was not as bad as our defeat in Vietnam, but apparently it was pretty bad. We only won eight medals, which nearly sent our economy into free fall and our self-esteem into the toilet. You may recall walking around from 1989 through 1991 feeling as if the world had just collapsed, and that our bobsledders were never, ever going to make you feel good again about your job.

"As Americans, we like to win," Baldwin said.

Which is why we needed to capture 34 medals here — topped off yesterday by the hockey silver — just to show everybody that, yes, we are the very best at nearly every weird sport played predominately by white people on the face of the earth.

After Calgary, Steinbrenner, then a vice president of the USOC, threw a major tantrum and chaired the Steinbrenner Commission. This was made up of George's Olympic People, not to be confused with Gene Michael and Lou Piniella.

His Olympic People put into works a program by which American athletes and coaches would receive more financial and training support, over the long-term. Facilities were built. Elite athletes received bigger stipends and coaches were retained through incentive programs.

Also, we started to add many new events that only Americans play. This helped a lot.

In any case, it all worked for Steinbrenner. Twenty-six world championships. Now, 34 Olympic medals in Salt Lake City.

There is no salary cap at the Olympics, no luxury tax to keep the U.S. from outspending the rest of the world on luge runs.

"I feel like a proud mother today," Baldwin said. "Look at these beautiful young athletes who I think of as my children."

Yes, they were beautiful children, and champions, too. Baldwin, one of Steinbrenner's Olympic People, had finally become a successful hockey parent.

The question, inevitably, was whether such American success had really done the Olympics any good. On one hand, more U.S. medals meant higher ratings for NBC, which will eventually translate into more money bid by the network to the International Olympic Committee for future Olympics.

But there were several nations that felt a bit bullied here in Salt Lake City, beginning with the country formerly known as the Evil Empire.

The poor Russians were holding another press conference yesterday, saying they would appeal their latest drug suspensions and that the rules had been applied indiscriminately against themselves, the Koreans and the Chinese. The Russians had been trampled early in these Games by Scott Hamilton, and never really recovered.

The more evidence to come out of Skategate, the more apparent it is that Jamie Sale and David Pelletier should not have been awarded a second gold medal. The French judge says she was pressured by the Canadians and a Brit, not by the Russians. She just didn't report the overtures, which is hardly reason to give a gold to our Canadian cousins.

In the end, the Olympics of Salt Lake City worked, despite the hard feelings, the protests and American hoarding. They may even have been worth the bribes and free scholarships.

These weren't the most gorgeous Games, not by a long shot. The mountains, up close, were dreary, the snow slushy. The buses ran on time, however, and journalists will forgive lousy scenery anytime as long as they get to the press center to beat deadline.

These Olympics weren't nearly as bad as Atlanta's, a comparison which became the true slogan of Salt Lake.

"We put America's best foot forward," Baldwin said. "The Atlanta Games were not as gracious as they should have been, and too commercial. This increases the chances that we'll be able to get Games back here in 2012."

Hey, New York, Sandra's talking to us. We, too, can become the hosts of an Olympic slapdown of unprecedented proportion. Invite the world, then drub it on NBC.

The Boss will be proud.

clacson
03-01-02, 12:02 AM
Okey, this isn't really about George but some stuff in the above article posted by Jersey Yankee has set me off!

I'll grant the Russians a point on the whole skategate flap. Call me a cynic, but had Elena and Anton been Canadian and Jamie and David Russian, I don't think NBC and the media would have championed their cause.

But they get nothing else. To wit, 3 of the things the Russians complained about:

Cross Country athletes getting booted for failing drug tests: US STINKS at Cross country ski events. Why, pray tell, would there be some "North American" conspiracy to screw the Russian cross country skiers? And in case they missed it, a NON Russian athlete (Johann Muelberg from Spain) was tested and tossed out of the games and stripped of one of his 3 gold medals and now has his other 2 medals seen in a bad light.

Men's Hockey: Nor do the Russians get anything from the semi-final hockey game. 6 penalties for the Russians and 4 for the US is not crazy, not like the US/Canada women's final where Canada had 13 penalties to 6 for the US. What cost Russia that game was a failure to PLAY in the first 2 periods!

Women's Figure Skating: Yeah, maybe Irina deserved to win the short program, but she was absolutely overmarked on her long program and did not deserve the gold. Why don't the Russians ask their own judge why she marked Irina so high and Sarah so low after their long programs? BTW, the US judge was pretty fair all around.

I think the Russian complaining has more to do with a breakdown of their sports programs and the reality that they aren't sports super power right now due to financial reasons. Many Russians train in the US because facilities in Russia are so bad, ie. Elena and Anton and Alexei Yagudin.

As for the Koreans, I understand short-track is their life, but unless Australia recently became a US state (head ref who has final say is Australian), I fail to see an conspiracies there. Whether or not you want to argue the strength of Kim's blocking of Ohno, there was evidence enough for the ref. Lord knows the US coulda protested the results of the 1000 meters where the Aussie won the gold but they kept quiet. (PS, I don't know if there would have been a case for the US as I don't know the rules on rerunning races but lack of a legitimate case has never stopped a protest before!)

And what's China's beef?

Also have another gripe. I think people engaed in too much American bashing in these Olympics. Everyone says Salt Lake will be remembered for scandal and jingoism. Why? Sydney had just as much scandal and just as much jingoism. Why was it OK for Aussies to boo Americans? Why was is USAUSAUSA seen as bad and jingoistic but Aussie, Aussie, Aussie, Oy, Oy, Oy seen as OK? I think that if these Olympics had been in another country and the exact same events had happened (Skategate, drug tests, Ohno and Kim etc.) people wouldn't have been focusing on them as much and would have been praising a competition that saw some great competition and some great accomplishments and a well-run Olympic games. But because they were in America, everyone focuses on the scandal.

NEWSFLASH: Scandal happens AT EVERY Olympics!

I'm not a rabid USAUSAUSA person. I know that the US can whine just as loud as Russia and Korea have and I know we can get in your face with flags but other countries do the EXACT same thing and get away with it while we get singled out.

Humph!

Oh yeah, NBC's coverage was ................ as usual but that's for another night.

JeanC
03-01-02, 01:15 AM
George Suceeds again! One thing I admire George for is his interest in young people & sports! This man is very generous with his time & his money when it comes to just that!

Wow and the Venues at Salt Lake the stadium for one was just beautiful!
Especially seen at closing ceremony time!

:D

Jersey Yankee
03-02-02, 11:48 PM
clacson, I'll try posting a few articles which don't set you off in the future. :lol::D;)