• The Register/Advertiser
  • The Vanguard
  • The Sou'Wester
  • The Digby Courier
  • The Coastguard
  • The Advance
  • The Hants Journal
  • The Spectator

What’s all the fuss about winning medals?



Published on August 21st, 2008
Published on January 30th, 2010
 

Latest News

See All Articles

Regional News

See All Articles

Topics :
Canada , Beijing , Nova Scotia

There was a lot of grumbling the first Olympic week about Canada’s relative lack of success in Beijing. I, for one, think it’s terrible.

All the grumbling, that is.

One headline got me really steamed – in our Nova Scotia daily paper, of all things: “they have Phelps, we have flops,” a reference to American swimmer Michael Phelps, the eventual winner of a record eight gold medals.

Not exactly a ringing endorsement – and from their own country, no less – for a group of athletes (in this case, the Canadian swim team) clearly doing its best in an increasingly-competitive world.

Canada’s Michael Brown placed fourth in the 200-metre breaststroke, just 0.09 seconds out of third. To me, that was a tremendous performance; the headlines suggested, for Brown, it was “0.09 seconds between victory and agony.”

What a crock! The man had just finished the swim of his life, and on the world stage. I’m sure he was disappointed to have missed a medal by so small a margin, but he’s fourth in the world! When did that become something to be ashamed of?

The rest of the Canadian team was also coming in for its share of criticism from a nation that has obviously lost the meaning of competition.

We need to remember – and a lot of people seem to have forgetton – is success is a relative thing.

I have to think I’ve covered enough sports to know doing your best is what really matters. If you end up winning, that’s a bonus. For what it’s worth, a lot of really successful local athletes – golfer Laura Harris, for one – have told me that very thing.

As former Acadia hockey coach Tom Coolen once told me (after a disappointing loss), you win with class and you lose with class. Maybe I’ve got it all wrong, but it’s gotten me this far and I see no reason to change my perception.

The attitude of Canadians to our Olympic performance really ticks me off. Despite having among the lowest-funded athletes from any competing country, Canada is all of a sudden expected to keep up with 300 million Americans and more than a billion Chinese, to name just two larger countries; and bring home a cartload of medals.

If we don’t, we’re somehow a failure? Give me a break! It’s never happened before - not at the Summer Games or at the Olympics in general. Why, for heaven’s sake, should we expect to be world-beaters now, when we never have been?

It’s a bit hard to take when much smaller countries like Azerbijian, Togo and Mongolia had won medals and we hadn’t but, at the time I’m writing this, Canada had broken through and won seven medals, including a pair of gold, in a two-day span.

The Games still aren’t over, and who’s to say we won’t have many more medals? That’s supposing winning a medal – an arbitrarily-engineered and totally imaginary line of success, over which we are somehow successful and under which we are somehow a failure – is all that important anyway.

I’d like to think I have as much national pride as the next person; I admit to a rush of emotion anytime I hear O Canada played at an international competition. It’s great to cheer for our Canadian athletes, but support has to be tempered by commonsense. It’s not wrong or a cause for national shame if an athlete does the best he or she can and ends up fourth, or fifth, or even 10th in the world.

Because it appears to be the measure of success, I hope Canada wins more medals, and reaches its pre-Olympic goal of 16 medals and a top-16 finish overall. If nothing else, it might shut up all the critics. But, if we don’t, it’s not – and shouldn’t be – the end of the world.

Submit a Comment

Submit a Comment

This form is NOT used for emailing the article to a friend. Please use the "Send to a friend" link at the top of the page for that purpose.

Nova News Now is not responsible for posted comments. Please be polite and confine your comments to the subject of the posted story. If you have an account, please sign on to it..

(we keep all emails private)
Agreement

We ask that users remain courteous. You may not post insulting, discriminatory or inappropriate content, which may be removed at our discretion. We are not responsible for user content and opinions. Use of this site as well as content submission & ownership are governed by our Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.

Member organizations should be non-profit in nature, and promote legal activities. Any organization found promoting illegal activities or commercial products or services will be deleted from the site.

I agree with these conditions.

Advertising

More

  • No available services

Newsletter

Please enter your email to receive our free newsletter

Subscribe to news alerts

Advertising