[Shotimes] RE: OT: Saddest thing at the Olympics today
Ron Porter
ronporter@prodigy.net
Sat, 18 Feb 2006 14:06:44 -0500
As the VOD says.....she blew it herself. She had the gold locked up and
decided to showboat.....and screwed up. Hopefully, it will be a good "life
lesson" for her.
And yes, there have been other failures in the Olympics that I had some
sympathy for, when folks did honest mistakes from their extreme effort.
Throughout the games, there have been comments by Shaun White and others
about the sport, and having to contend with coaches for the Olympics (that
they don't normally have), etc. The sport is fun to watch, but I suspect as
the years go on, and other countries introduce more disciplined training
into snowboarding that the American kids will accept, the USA will start to
get it's butt kicked.
Regardless, I like Shaun White (he was on the Tonight Show the other
night.....surprised he was back home so quickly.....but I assume that he
goes back for the closing ceremonies), especially when he told one
interviewer that he listens to AC/DC's "Back In Black" on his iPod when he
does his runs!!
Ron Porter
-----Original Message-----
From: shotimes-admin@autox.team.net [mailto:shotimes-admin@autox.team.net]
On Behalf Of Donald Mallinson
Sent: Friday, February 17, 2006 11:43 PM
To: 'v8sho'; SHOtimes
Subject: [Shotimes] OT: Saddest thing at the Olympics today
Did you see the finals of the ladies snowboardcross today (Friday).
American Lindsey Jacobellis had it won easily and showboated on the next
to last jump. She fell and was lucky nobody was close, because she was
at least able to salvage Silver.
But that wasn't the saddest thing. What was, was watching it all sink
in as her competitior celebrated just a couple of feet in front of her.
Jacobellis stood there, hands down, head drooping, stock still, facing
her competitor. People swarming around the winner, happy, and joyous.
Through the dark goggles and all that baggy clothing it was so clear
that her heart was breaking. NOBODY came to comfort her or celebrate
winning silver. She was more alone at that moment than I have ever seen
anyone.
Like a lot of people I was a bit annoyed with her for blowing it like
the football player that celebrated and was denied the touchdown, but as
I watched her literally meltdown, I knew I was watching something very
intimate, something supremely sad. A moment that was lost on the people
at NBC sports.
Later NBC reviewed the run, over and over, showed her when she removed
her goggles, her eyes were sad, she had cried tears, she said the right
things, and she had come to terms at least a little with the reality.
I am a former broadcaster though, and the image of her standing just
inches from the celebration that should have been hers was the real
money shot for the broadcasters. Maybe it is best they haven't realized
what they have. It might not be as special if we were to watch it even
one more time. Moments like that should not become fodder for the
opening of a sports program.
Don Mallnson
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