Winter Olympics veering closer to the edge with more dangerous sports
By Jim Litke, APFriday, February 12, 2010
What part of ’slow it down’ doesn’t the IOC get?
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Swifter, higher, stronger — and now deadlier, too.
No one should be surprised, least of all the International Olympic Committee. The Winter Games have been veering closer to the edge of sanity for the last 25 years, more than doubling the number of sports largely by adding those where the thrill is exceeded only by the risk.
On Friday, a young luger from the republic of Georgia paid the price with his life, crashing near the end of a course that common sense suggests was simply too fast.
When IOC president Jacques Rogge was asked whether that was so, just hours after the death of Nodar Kumaritashvili, he replied: “I would be ready to debate or to deliberate with you at the proper time, but I’m sorry, this is a time for sorrow. It is not a time to look for reasons that it happened.”
Wrong.
Is the proper time before the next luger flies off the 16-turn Whistler Sliding Center track, or after?
Rogge took only four questions before beating a hasty retreat from a news conference that lasted seven minutes. As a result, he and the people in charge at the international luge federation (FIL) should have had more than enough time to figure out what to do with the track before competition begins in earnest Saturday.
Wrong again.
Late Friday, FIL officials blamed the crash on human error, but said the walls would be raised at the exit of curve 16 and the ice profile changed to prevent “such an extremely exceptional accident” from happening again. They also said lugers would get two full training runs before the actual competition begins.
That sound less like a solution and more like doubling down on an already bad bet. What the luge federation should have done was obvious, so much so that we’ll spell it out for them:
S-L-O-W
I-T
D-O-W-N.
It’s not as if everyone couldn’t see this coming. When the Whistler track opened, one of the earliest runs produced a speed of 95.65 mph — 153.937 kph — about 6 mph faster than any slider had ever recorded. “It makes me worry,” FIL president Josef Fendt told The New York Times, and he was hardly alone.
Lugers told reporters they gave the nickname “50-50″ to curve 13, because they figured those were the odds they’d get through it without crashing. Curve 11 was dubbed “Shiver,” which needs no explanation. You probably couldn’t repeat what they said about the course when no one was listening.
On Thursday, after a wobbly training run, Australia’s Hannah Campbell-Pegg asked, “To what extent are we just little lemmings that they just throw down a track and we’re crash-test dummies? I mean, this is our lives.”
Later the same evening, Mark Grimmette, a five-time Olympian and the U.S. team’s flag bearer, worried that the Whistler track was threatening the boundaries of safety.
“We’re probably getting close,” he said.
Crashes have been almost as common as scraped knuckles, and not just by second-tier racers or the inexperienced. Kumaritashvili was the 44th-ranked luger in the world, and his speed was estimated at 89 mph at the time of the crash. But Italy’s Armin Zoeggeler, who owns four Olympic medals and five world championships, wrecked earlier the same day, and while former great Georg Hackl praised the course as “outstanding and fast and a new quality of speed that we’ve never seen before,” that’s probably because he doesn’t have to race on it.
Rogge said the federation and the IOC would await the results of an investigation before deciding a course of action. Judging by their relative inaction, they didn’t learn anything new.
So here’s another suggestion: Put IOC members on sleds and send them down the track. It would be the only way they could begin to understand what their handiwork has wrought.
In a bid to juice TV ratings and pull in the risk-loving demographic that advertisers covet, they’ve added sports that make Evel Knievel’s jump-the-fountain stunt at Las Vegas seem routine — since 1984: freestyle skiing (notably aerials and ski cross); most snowboarding events; short-track speedskating; skeleton (returned after decades), and Super-G skiing.
And they’ve tricked up the venues — infusing water to make the Alpine course as slick as an ice pond, for example — to ratchet up the risk.
At the news conference after Kumaritashvili’s death, Vancouver organizing committee CEO John Furlong fought back tears.
“We are heartbroken beyond words,” he said, and then paused. “I am so sorry to be in this position and to be reporting this to you. It’s not something I had prepared for, never thought I would need to be prepared for.”
Sadly, that may be exactly what a young Georgian luger realized in that blink of an eye before his sled careened tragically out of control.
Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org
Tags: British Columbia, Canada, Events, Geography, Luge, Nodar kumaritashvili, North America, Skiing, Sports Names, Sports Topics, Vancouver, Winter Olympic Games
February 13, 2010: 11:08 am
Shamefully, the event organizers now blame the dead athlete’s mistakes rather than their own course’s engineering. An athlete ranked 44th in the world in his sport can’t survive their venue, and they don’t think something is seriously wrong? I hardly know what to think of this now. |
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