You are not logged in. Please register or login.

Tommie
 Rep: 67 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

Tommie wrote:

I keep a log of when womens beach volleyball will be on....its damn near porn.

PaSnow
 Rep: 205 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

PaSnow wrote:

^ I saw a little of the indoor before going to work. Poland vs China. Man, them thin Polish chicks were pretty f'ing hot. .

Neemo
 Rep: 485 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

Neemo wrote:

been watching a lot..the chick who won womens fencing was anoying every time she scored a hit she screamed 16

canada sucks as usual...no medals to date 17

Communist China
 Rep: 130 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

Fuck the French! Bragging pieces of shit got their asses humiliated by the US men's swimmers.

Backslash
 Rep: 80 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

Backslash wrote:

I don't understand the CBC.  They'll air a random women's beach volleyball game between Cuba and the Netherlands when Canadians are participating in other events.  Not that I was complaining when it was on last night.

buzzsaw
 Rep: 423 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

buzzsaw wrote:
Backslash wrote:

I don't understand the CBC.  They'll air a random women's beach volleyball game between Cuba and the Netherlands when Canadians are participating in other events.  Not that I was complaining when it was on last night.

It limits the humiliation factor.  Canadians can only handle so much.

PaSnow
 Rep: 205 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

PaSnow wrote:

No way some of those Chinese gymnasts are 16. That one girl looks like 11.

James
 Rep: 664 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

James wrote:
PaSnow wrote:

No way some of those Chinese gymnasts are 16. That one girl looks like 11.

Yeah, and those 11 year old kids stomped our asses.


BEIJING -- The night before the showdown with the Chinese, the U.S. women's gymnastics team gathered in Shawn Johnson and Nastia Liukin's room in the Olympic Village and watched the movie Miracle, which tells the story of the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team's miraculous gold medal run.

It was supposed to get them into a we-can-do-anything mode. And for a while it seemed to work. The U.S. came out on Wednesday morning and took an early lead over the favored Chinese in the first apparatus of the team finals by more than half a point, with Bridget Sloan, Alicia Sacramone and Johnson all landing good, clean vaults.

They followed that up with three solid routines on the uneven bars: Chellsie Memmel starting it off with a solid 15.725, Johnson following with a steady 15.350, then Liukin reeling off a stunning 16.90. The Americans were six for six in hitting their routines, and the pressure fell squarely on the backs of the young Chinese.

And we do mean young. Their passports are issued by a Chinese government that is very, very interested in winning lots and lots of gold medals, so while they may say they're 15 or 16, five of the six team members have the appearance of pre-pubescent children. "The little babies," is how U.S. coach Martha Karolyi refers to the Chinese gymnasts when speaking to her team, and they certainly are little. Li Shanshan (16) is 4-foot-9, 79 pounds. Yang Yilin (15) is 4-foot-11, 77 pounds. He Kexin (16) is 4-foot-8, 73 pounds. Jiang Yuyuan (16) is 4-foot-7, 71 pounds. But the prize goes to Deng Linlin (16), who's listed at 4-foot-6 and a strapping 68 pounds. She could take a nap in Yao Ming's sneaker. Poor thing's also missing a tooth. Please, someone send baby food.

But can they ever fly from the uneven bars! The baby-faced trio of Jiang, Yang whirled around the bars like little acrobats, switching hand holds, spinning backwards, flipping left and right. After Jiang's 15.975, Yang put up a roof-raising 16.80 which was then trumped by He's 16.85. The resulting total of 49.625 put the Chinese ahead of the Americans by a solid 1.125 points with only two rotations left.

It didn't look good, but Cheng Fei, the one member of the Chinese team who competed four years ago in Athens, gave the U.S. hope when she fell off early in her beam routine and scored just 15.15. Li and the tiny Deng, though, followed that up with strong beam routines, leaving the Americans with no room for error.

Sacramone, 20, first up for the Americans, made short work of the suspense, falling as she tried a front pike mount off a springboard onto the beam. Afterward Karolyi explained that Sacramone had lost her focus after twice being forced to wait by beam officials after her name had been announced.

"They put her name up with a stop sign," an animated Karolyi said. "She couldn't go once, she couldn't go twice, and in my opinion it was intentional. Alicia's a little bit too emotional. I told her, 'They tried to break your focus, and you let them do it.'"

Long delays while the judges deliberate are not uncommon in gymnastics, and in any event, the gymnasts are supposed to handled any eventuality, regardless of the situation. Liukin and Johnson, dependable as ever, followed Sacramone's 15.10 routine with two great beam performances, scoring 15.975 and 16.175, respectively, to enable the Americans to narrow the gap slightly. So with the floor event remaining, the U.S. trailed the host country by exactly one point.

It wasn't a good situation to be in, since the Chinese had outscored the U.S. in the floor during the preliminaries. But it certainly wasn't an impossible deficit to overcome. Sacramone, the team captain and its spiritual leader, again was first up. But she hadn't put the fall off the beam completely behind her, and again she committed a fatal gaffe, under-rotating an Arabian on her second tumbling pass and falling backwards. "I don't know what happened on floor," she said afterward, fighting back tears. "I thought my feet were under me on that Arabian, and the next thing I knew I was on my back."

She stepped out of bounds on her final pass, but the damage had already been done. Sacramone's 14.125 on floor eliminated any realistic hopes of a comeback. Liukin and Johnson also stepped out during their otherwise solid floor routines, but those small deductions only mattered in determining the final margin of the Chinese victory. Afterward, in a touching moment, Johnson slipped her arm through Sacramone's and laid a consoling head on her shoulder. Then she said something that made Sacramone laugh, no small trick at that juncture.

"Usually it's Alicia who's keeping everyone else up," Liukin said. "So it was kind of different for us to be doing it to her this time. She kept telling us she was sorry, so sorry, but we still love her. And we still have a silver medal, which is great. China had fewer mistakes than we did. It was their day to shine."

And shine they did, to the delight of the 19,000-some pro-Chinese crowd that packed the National Indoor Stadium, roaring at every tumbling pass of the final three Chinese gymnasts. The final margin of victory over the U.S. was a comfortable 2.375 points, 188.90 to 186.525. The bronze went to Romania, which scored 181.525.

So the Chinese women have their first-ever Olympic team gold medal. Good for them. But their prize will always be viewed under a cloud of suspicion -- prior to these Games, several publications, most notably The New York Times, found evidence that at least two of the Chinese gymnasts were only 14, two years younger than the Olympic minimum -- and to some extent the image of gymnastics has suffered a black eye. The Olympics is, above all else, based on the principles of fair competition, and the promotion of healthy bodies through sport. There is something mildly discomfiting about the sight of such tiny youngsters weighed down by the hopes of a nation, even after the gold medals are hanging around their feathery necks.

Saikin
 Rep: 109 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

Saikin wrote:

15 and 16!?  My girlfriend has a dog that weighs more than all of those girls!  16

Anyone seen the vid of the guy dislocating his elbow during weight lifting?  It was on youtube 15 minutes ago but has been deleted.  It is almost unbearable just to watch it.

Tommie
 Rep: 67 

Re: The 2008 Olympics thread

Tommie wrote:

Pictured: The horrific moment Olympic weightlifter turns his elbow back to front

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 12:53 PM on 13th August 2008

This is the moment Hungarian weightlifter Janos Baranyai's first Olympics ended in agony when he dislocated his right elbow in the ugliest moment yet of the Olympic weightlifting competition.

Baranyai was trying to snatch 148kg in his third lift in the men's 77kg division, when his elbow popped out of its socket.

No longer able to support the weight of the barbell, his right forearm bent backward. The 24-year-old Hungarian fell to the floor in shock, shaking and crying out in pain.

Hungary's coaching staff and competition officials rushed to Baranyai's aid as he lay trembling on the floor, his arm limp and twisted out of position.

article-1044235-0242568200000578-317_468x573.jpg
Going wrong: Baranyai loses control of the barbell twisting his left arm

article-1044235-02424D1300000578-830_468x314.jpg
Impact: Baranyai's legs buckle as his arm bends around the barbell

article-1044235-02424D0700000578-546_468x344.jpg
Agony: Baranyai screams in pain

article-1044235-02424D1F00000578-492_468x286.jpg
Pain: Baranyai crumbles to the ground

Baranyai was carried off the platform on a stretcher and taken by ambulance to a local hospital for evaluation and treatment, said Benny Johansson, a technical controller at the event.

It was not immediately clear how serious the injury was.


More...

    * Tears of joy for British cyclist after she scoops Team GB's SEVENTH Olympic medal
    * ITV journalist arrested and 'roughed up' in China at Free Tibet protest

'It looked really awful,' Johansson said. 'If the ligaments are damaged then it could take several months to heal."

He said elbow and knee injuries are the most common injuries in the sport, 'but the number of injuries are quite small in comparison with the number of athletes. You cannot even compare it with football for example.'

article-1044235-024273AC00000578-551_468x396.jpg
Stricken: Baranyai grimaces on the platform after dislocating his right elbow

article-1044235-02425DB600000578-380_468x286.jpg
Horror injury: Baranyai's elbow clearly faces the wrong way as he lies on the ground

article-1044235-02426BAB00000578-429_468x327.jpg
Help: the Hungarian is treated by doctors

A former judo wrestler from Oroszlany, Hungary, Baranyai was competing with the so-called B-group of lifters in the 77kg division.

Hungary's lone lifter in the Olympics, he was ninth in both the snatch and clean and jerk in the European Championship earlier this year and placed 33rd in last year's world championship.

He cleared his first snatch attempts at 140kg and 145kg before loading up the bar at 148kg - a relatively modest weight in top-level competition. The world record in the snatch is 173kg.

In the snatch, the bar is pulled overhead in one continuous motion as the lifter settles into a squat, then rises with arms extended.

Baranyai was in the squat position when his elbow popped.

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB