Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Lose Tunes Track 05

Today's edition of Lose Tunes is brought to you by Martin's V.V.O. scotch. I would link to the distillery's website if the distillery actually still existed. It's been out of business for decades. The Official Liquor Distributor of IN PLAY LOSE found a case of this stuff in his basement – I'm serious, he did – and this usquebae is actually pretty nice. It does wonders to ease my screwed up neck and back, which I am going to have my chiropractor declare war on here in 30 minutes or so. Christ, it hurts. All I have to say to everyone reading this is DON'T GET OLD, because getting old sucks.

Lose Tunes are not all morose and miserable songs by any stretch. Sometimes you just need a good beat that you can dance to. And it's good that I am drinking scotch, because Track 05 on the Lose Tunes is from Scottish DJ Lex Blackmore, aka Blue Boy. This song vamps on samples from a 1969 song called Woman in a Ghetto by Marlena Shaw, the chorus being a line referring to black nannies raising white children during the era of American segregation. A fair amount of American music has been based on the idea of taking shitty subject matter and making it sound groovy nonetheless, the idea being that art and expression can trump one's troubles and defeat oppressors in their own small ways. I think this DJ track is in keeping with that spirit.

This song is funky as hell.



Monday, February 24, 2014

Fool’s Gold


“I had a mile of ice to think about what just happened, and now I have four more years to wait.”

This quote came from American skeleton rider John Daly, who was in line for a medal until his final run, when this rather basic error happened at the start and his medal chances were shot. I was looking for a quote which would best sum up the Winter Olympics from the perspective of IN PLAY LOSE. There is your winner right there.

That was a shocking mistake in a sledding sliding (apparently they are to be called sliders and not sledders) sport – all three of which, while being interesting for the speed and the sheer insanity of the competitors, are usually surprisingly absent of drama. When the Canadian women rallied in the 4th run of the bobsled to win, it was something that had not happened in at least a decade. The Canadians kept getting in the way of American success in the Olympics this year, either by being better than them or occasionally through being worse:


Darn you Canadians! We are supposed to be friends!

The best way to think of the Winter Olympics is to start with Sayre’s Law, and extrapolate from there. Sayre’s Law states, in essence, that so much is made by so few over so little. There may be little to fight over, but what there is worth fighting over wildly increases in magnitude. In the case of every single sport that’s been played out in Sochi over the past couple of weeks, the Winter Olympic Games are the only event that matters. Seriously, no one cares if you win your 4th consecutive World Luge Championship in Igls, Austria, or prevail in a World Cup speed skating event in Almaty, Kazakhstan. No one cares. And everyone in the competition knows that, of course. The Olympics is what athletes dream of winning and what they prepare for, and the result comes to define their career.

And for those of us on the sidelines, looking at the Winter Olympics in total and seeing bombast and largesse, it’s easy to forget that. Most Winter Olympians toil in obscurity and do it primarily because they love what they do so much. The Olympics offer a stage they never get otherwise. And this giant spectacle is composed of a great many small sports. Very small sports, in the grand scheme of things. The Sochi Olympics saw several 6- and 7-time Olympians in their 40s winning medals. Their dedication is quite impressive and commendable, but the fact is that 40-somethings winning medals in their 7th Olympics does speak, to some extent, to a lack of a deep talent pool. The sports are generally desperate for growth in all areas: competitors, spectators, opportunities, facilities and finances.

When so much gets made of so little, the one event that can legitimately be labeled as SO MUCH will often bring out the worst in people. Part of why acts of class and sportsmanship such as this and this are heralded whey they occur in the Olympics is that they do not happen nearly as often as they should. You usually see a lot of bad behaviour associated with the Olympics. Sochi was surprisingly absent of antics, however. There were only a handful of doping cases, most of which were minor infractions and one of which, involving Swedish hockey player Nicklas Backstrom, seemed a bit strange and definitely came at a particularly bad time. I also heard a lot less whining than is the norm. This was a fairly well-behaved Olympics, which is something of a disappointment. There was, however, some juicy snippets of infighting and the periodic bursts of incompetence to keep things interesting, and the conditions were often unideal, leading to some additional challenges for the competitors. (The alpine skiing courses all looked brutally hard to begin with, and the icky snow made it worse, but it’s not like skiers are unused to wild and weird weather swings.) And mercifully, there were none of the sorts of large political distractions which seemed possible, and even likely, at times during the run-up to the Games. Putin et. al pulled it off, in the end. But at what cost? Well, we will get to that in a bit ...

The best way to sum up these Olympics from a North American point of view is that the Americans like going down hills in the snow and the Canadians like going across ice. As has been the case since the Winter Olympics started ‘modernizing,’ the North Americans were the big beneficiaries of all of the so-called ‘extreme’ sports – crazy stuff you do on skis and snowboards that is stunning to watch done well and terrifying to watch done badly. There was probably more whining in the snowboard events than in any others, which was very unbecoming of a supposedly mellow group that likes to hang out and shred and preach camaraderie. Yes, the halfpipe sucked, but it sucked for everyone equally, and conditions for the entire snow portion of the games were a little problematic. (This is what happens when you try to have winter sports in what’s basically a Mediterranean climate.) And there was a wee bit too much schadenfreude going on when Shaun White failed to medal. He has set himself up for that, of course, as he has always been entirely driven and focused upon winning this event, and also promoting himself in process – notions which supposedly clash with the ‘ethos’ of snowboarding. But as soon as you set up a pinnacle like the Olympics, guys and gals are going to be singly-minded to win it. It was inevitable a Shaun White would come to exist. And yeah, White made something of a dick move by pulling out of the slopestyle at the last minute – in taking a spot on the team in an event his competitors say he had no intention of doing, he had cost a spot on the Olympic team for another athlete – but the resentment of White seemed based upon jealousy more than anything else, since he makes $15m a year and everyone else is scrambling for table scraps. Bottom line is the guy has done more to make the sport relevant than any other person, but killing your idols has always been somewhat necessary, I suppose.

I still think the ‘extremists’ are out of their minds, but damn, some of the stuff they do is just phenomenal. The slopestyle event became a favourite of mine almost immediately, because the tricks and the twists and the flips were so jawdroppingly awesome to watch. At first, I thought it was weird that the slopestyle events had no actual criteria for judging – the judges simply awarded a score from 1-100 based upon the impression they got from the competitor’s run. But in hindsight, there is something refreshing about a sport whose judges just say, “we make stuff up.” At least they are honest about it. Judged sports have always bothered me in that the results are so easily manipulated. From a layman’s perspective, I watch the athletes and see the scores and it is impossible to understand why they are being given the scores they are given. It seems somewhat superfluous to have judges in ski jumping, since it pretty much follows form that if you fly the farthest, you get the most style points from the judges. (And by the way, who gets the ‘babes’ or the ‘dudes’ more than the ski jumpers? I mean, seriously here, THESE PEOPLE ARE FLYING! I saw people doing this in person while I lived in Steamboat Springs, where they have a so-called ‘normal’ hill, as opposed to a ‘complete lunatic’ hill. It is AMAZING.)

And it wouldn’t be an Olympics without a figure skating judging controversy, of course. I don’t know that much about the sport, but most of the people I know who do know something about the sport seemed to think the Russians were getting a few too many breaks from the judges. Far too many American sports media members that I read sort of missed the point in making arguments that it is natural for the home team to get the breaks. For one, this is not some home-and-home in the NBA. It’s not like there is another Olympics next week in which the breaks and the calls will even out. Since the event happens so infrequently, you can understand why athletes feel more cheated than the norm. And secondly, as I mentioned in my previous Olympic blog, cheating in the Olympics involved a lot of bureaucractic maneuvering over the years, nations getting judges and officials and administrators in positions to affect outcomes, which they would then do at the expense of home nations. Eastern Bloc judges were going with their guy whether the games were in Moscow or Munich or Montréal, Sapporo or Squaw Valley or Sarajevo. (And vice versa, I should add, but the Western judges were often simply outnumbered, having failed to play this particular political game well.) I have heard the term SWR bandied about to explain some curious figure skating results in Sochi. That term didn’t come from nowhere. (I’ll let you figure out what it means.) I think it is too simplistic to look at a judging panel, see their nationalities and assume who is ‘voting’ for whom – people were quick to assume judges from Estonia and Slovakia were tabbing Russians, and I feel pretty comfortable in saying Russians aren’t on the Best Dressed lists in either of those two countries. But we’ve been conditioned, after watching years of bogus results in the sport, to immediately go looking for conspiracies. The French sport daily L'Equipe made some news by breaking a story early on that the Americans and Russians had some sort of secret deal in place to help each other’s nations at the judging podium at the expense of those darn Canadians, a notion that seems ludicrous given the long history of mistrust and animosity between the two nations in the Olympic arena (nevermind in far larger and more important arenas). If anything, it was most likely a planted story intended to try to knock some skaters off their games, a curious sort of tact playing upon the worst that the sport has to offer.

But in the case of figure skating, the politics are both the best and the worst the sport has to offer. We expect it to be corrupt and sleazy and shambolic by now. The drama is one of the most compelling acts within the sport. The ISU has attempted, since the judging scandal of Salt Lake City in 2002, to change the judging system by doing such things as making the judges votes a secret. How a sport supposedly becomes more transparent by becoming more opaque is beyond me, but this is the same governing body that allowed the wife of the Russian skating federation president to be a judge during the Sochi Olympics. (No, there is no potential for conflict of interest there or anything. None whatsoever.) They’ve attempted to create a scoring system in figure skating much like that in an equally politically motivated sport, gymnastics, which is based upon start values and rewarding skaters for elements. The problem with this is that the benefits of attempting a trick far outweigh the penalties for not doing it very well. Diving has degree of difficulty as a multiplier, but you still have to do the dive right. 0 x 3.2 is a whole lot of zero. Instead, figure skating has start values – basically, one routine is worth more than another before it even begins. It just seems weird to me that the field is not all beginning at the same starting line. (The only sport I know of where you start with a handicap is polo, but at least there the better team starts with the deficit and has to play catch up.) It seems to me that if you are going to try and do something on the ice, no matter the value, you had damn well better do it right. But in figure skating, it’s almost as if you’re getting points for falling down.

It certainly seemed that way watching the men skate, which produced more carnage than short track speed skating. Guys were falling down everywhere. Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan fell twice during his long programme, and this is the guy that won the event. And I have no doubt that what he was doing was damn near impossibly hard for 99.999999% of humanity, but guys winning gold medals in the Olympics shouldn’t be falling on their asses twice. That cheapens the sport, which is intended, in part, to be a presentation of both skill and grace. (The failure of Patrick Chan to capitalize on his Japanese rival making so many errors produced the greatest tweet of the Olympics from Canadian figure skater Joannie Rochette. For our English speaking audience: “He had the gold on a silver platter. He took the platter.”) The judging system creates a fundamental disconnect – no one knows what they are watching, so no one really knows who is actually winning. Hell, the athletes do not even understand the system. The sport would probably be better served with a scoring system that was genuinely transparent and made some sense, but I am not sure the governing body of the sport wants it that way, to be honest. Without all the controversy, there wouldn’t be nearly as much interest. Trust me, they’re well aware of that fact.

[EDIT: speaking of figure skating, a watchful reader has pointed me to a jewel of an online rant posted by American skater Jeremy Abbott in the wake of his Sochi performance, which was notable for his terrible, and somewhat frightening, fall in the short programme, which is something he has done before in big competitions. He does not much care for the ‘choker’ label he has been saddled with:

“I just want to put my middle finger in the air and say a big ‘F-you’ to everyone who has ever said that to me because they’ve never stood in my shoes and they’ve never had to do what I’ve had to do. Nobody has to stand center ice in front of a million people and put an entire career on the line for eight minutes of their life when they’ve been doing it for 20-some years. And if you think that that’s not hard, then you’re a damn idiot.”

Well, it is true that I have never stood in his shoes (or skates, for that matter). I have never had to face that pressure. I think what he attempted to do is incredibly hard. And I also think that quite a few of the other competitors put in the same time and efforts, faced the same pressures, and DID NOT wind up faceplanting repeatedly on the biggest stage. But I appreciate the defiance. If you are going to go down, you might as well do it swinging.]

I cannot say that I thought the Russians were getting that many breaks from the judges (some others sure thought so, and in more than one instance), but Russia experienced the usual home bounce on their way to capturing a total of 33 medals. The Russians had a terrible go of it in Vancouver in 2010, but they were certain to rebound. Along with some natural home field advantages came a few built-in ones – the Russian sledders sliders, for example, all trained on the course extensively, whereas their opponents were not nearly as familiar with it, and familiarity makes a big difference when flying at 85 mph down a sheet of ice that is trying to kill you. The Russians also used one of the time-tested methods of finding top talent so as to improve their national performance at the Olympics, one which dates all the way back to the city-state days in Ancient Greece: they went out and bought it. Among the 13 gold medals awarded in Sochi and accompanied by the Russian national anthem were three won by a Korean speed skater and two more in Alpine snowboarding won by Vic Wild, who hails from White Salmon, Washington.

In the case of Wild, it was a coming together of interesting circumstances. He married a Russian, and even though he was near the top of his game, it was a game no one at the U.S. Ski Federation cared about any more, as they eliminated his program – which, in hindsight, looks kind of dumb, now doesn’t it? (And this aptly-titled article does well to express what it’s like when you lose your aegis.) The lack of greater outside financing structures, combined with the hierarchical structure of the Olympics – basically one giant collection of sports federations – makes it such that the federations essentially control the purse strings, which means they have all the power to make or break the career of an athlete. And being this good at anything does not come cheaply. Wild really had no other choice if he wanted to continue to hone his craft than to seek another nation, and the Russians were more than happy to oblige. Wild will reportedly earn $250,000 from the Russian government for each of his gold medals, a windfall impossible to achieve in the sport in any other way. Choosing to pursue success in one of these sports is rarely rewarding, and often maddeningly disappointing. It is part of what makes the event so appealing to me, being someone who truly appreciates the efforts of the athletes and someone who also sympathizes with the failures (and the crushing consequences of failure.)

As for the Korean speed skater I mentioned above, Victor Ahn – formerly known as Ahn Hyun-Soo – he won three gold medals in Turin in 2006, got hurt, missed the 2010 games, got into a spat with the Korean Skating Union, was told he was no longer in their national team plans, and went out and actively offered his services to another country, including the U.S. (Ahn was also a part of this melee in Salt Lake City, which is probably the signature moment in the history of short track speed skating and also the greatest tortoise-and-hare moment in all of sports. Apparently Aussies have made gold medalist Steven Bradbury part of the language as a result of that, which is definitely a badge of honour.) Come 2014, Ahn turns up wearing Russian colours, as does a promising Ukrainian skater as well, and suddenly the nation becomes a short track speed skating power – although some of Ahn’s competitors at the European Championships in Dresden were not too happy to see him there:


The LOSE sees nothing wrong with this sort of recruitment, by the way, believing that sport mirrors life and that, in life, all people should have the freedom to move wherever they wish for whatever reason they wish. To the people in Korea, Ahn turning into a speed skating mercenary was more a condemnation of the Korean skating federation than it was of him. It just seemed a little odd that Ahn actually signed a contract to be a Russian, complete with an apartment in Moscow and a coaching job when he retires. Sort of a strange deal, but we live in strange times.

As for the angry Dutchman in the photo above, Sjinkie Knegt, he also medaled in Sochi in short track, and that is about the last angry picture of a Dutchman on skates you are going to see for years, because the Dutch dominated the ice the way the Dream Team opens a can of whoopass on Angola. The Dutch won 23 of the 36 medals doled out in speed skating on the long oval. It was a surprise but it probably shouldn’t be, given the rabid interest in the sport in the Netherlands (which is backed up by an infrastructure to match no other). The real surprise may be that full-fledged Dutch dominance of speed skating hadn’t happened sooner. The supposedly second-best team of speed skaters on the planet, meanwhile, were another story entirely. In fact, the U.S. speed skaters pretty much showed everything that is wrong about the Winter Olympics over the course of two weeks. So, of course, this was far more interesting to me than anything else going on in Sochi.

The U.S. won zero medals in a sport where it has won more than any other in Olympic history. Not only did they win zero medals, but they were never even close. The defending Olympic champions and World Record holders composing the American team all looked like they were skating through wet cement. What the hell was going on? And with the bad results, of course, comes a pipeline of sludge spewing forth and spilling everywhere, most of which centered on the racing suits they wore, which is a vital piece of equipment in the sport.

The Americans showed up in Sochi wearing shiny new suits from Under Armour, the American federation’s major corporate backer. Under Armour set forth with Lockheed in 2011 to create the sickest, slickest racing suit in history, which they presented to the American skating team six weeks before the Olympics, claiming they were state-of-the-art threads. The problem being, of course, that they had not tested the suits in any sort of competition, and this report from the Associated Press pretty much shows where everyone’s head was. It would appear that secrecy was far more important than anything else, fearing that some other nation (read: the Dutch) would get their hands on this secret technology and exploit it for themselves.

Read this graf from that AP story again:

For the men’s 1,000 on Wednesday, one U.S. skater — Haley wouldn’t say who — skated in a slightly different version of the new suit, essentially for testing purposes. There was no significant improvement in the time. Davis finished eighth, ending his bid to become the first male speedskater to win the same event three straight times.

Wait a minute. Why are you testing the suit at the Olympics? Don’t you think you should’ve done this, like, at one of those World Cup races the Americans kicked ass in all year, or maybe at some domestic dog-and-pony show of a competition you just throw together in Salt Lake City or Milwaukee ostensibly to give the suits a go? If Under Armour is going to put this much time and money into developing a suit, they could certainly put up a little more scratch for such an enterprise. You can test all you want on a mannequin in a wind tunnel, but mannequins don’t skate. Humans do! And humans have to like the feel and performance and respond positively. Why was this such a difficult concept to grasp? This sort of hubris seems akin to a Hollywood production company that thinks all along they are making a great film, instead of actually going about making one.

Indeed, some of the design ideas Under Armour came up with were apparently thought of, tried, and deemed to be bad ideas by Dutch designers in the past. The other athletes were baffled that the Americans would show up with new outfits that had no proven ability to help the skaters. And while blaming the racing suits may seem like a ready-made excuse for failure, there is probably something to it if an entire team of world-class skaters suddenly, collectively seems to forget how to skate.

U.S. head coach Ryan Shimabukuro then offered up this gem of a defense when asked about the racing suit controversy: “I’m not going to criticize them (Under Armour), even if I was allowed to. They’re a great partner. And it’d be stupid to criticize a company that has backed us completely.” Aah, so let me if I have this straight: the company who signs your paycheques apparently has carte blanche to fuck everything up for your skaters in the most importance races of their lives. OK, got it. When guys like this have your back, the worst is behind you.

Seriously, if you are an American speed skater, how do you not feel like you got sold out here? This is the biggest event of your life, and you are done in, in part, by a bunch of empty suits of the pinstripe variety who clearly didn’t have your best interests at heart? (Apparently, some of the skaters do feel that way.) The team quickly shifted to different racing suits, but by that point the distractions were immense and morale was non-existent. Good luck trying to compete at that point. And then came some finger pointing about training regimens – why is a team prepping on a rock-hard outdoor surface in the Italian Alps for a competition indoors at sea level, where the ice will be soft? – and other administrative bickering, and the whole thing was revealed to be a big clusterfuck.

Now, you can understand the need to partner up with big corporate dollars. Speed skating in the U.S. is a minor sport. The American success at it over the history of the Olympics has been somewhat remarkable, in fact, given that the sport has almost entirely been a rugged and determined individualistic pursuit with little financial support or windfall. (Especially considering the spawn of state sports systems American athletes found themselves facing for decades.) But clearly, some people at US Speedskating need to get their priorities straight. Then again, they promptly reupped with Under Armour, so one wonders if they really get it. Under Armour is now promising to underwrite US Speedskating for another 8 years, which is about how long it is likely to take to undo all the damage from this debacle. It is unfortunate, since it is a sport which has never been appreciated in this country to the extent it should. The rewards have not been in keeping with the results. It is a powerful and beautiful sport to see done well, even if the actual competitions seem a bit dull to me, as they are going 2-by-2 and just racing the clock instead of each other. Perhaps my Dutch relatives can explain to me the appeal from the live spectator standpoint. I assume there is beer involved. Actually, given that the Dutch are famous for throwing the best parties at the Olympics, I am certain there is beer involved, and probably a lot of vodka this year as well, since this was going on in Russia.

And nothing drove the Russians to drink more than their hockey team. The Russians had a big Olympics, but since they lost in hockey, they probably do not care very much. That really was the only medal that country, as a whole, cared about. But I looked at that roster full of a few too many KHLers and wondered what was going on. The shootout loss to the U.S. in the prelims was a great game and a memorable one, but my thought when I watched it was, “you know what? The U.S. is better than they are. They should win this game. They have better players and they play together better as a team. There is no way that Russian team is winning a gold.”

And the U.S., of course, wound up on the bitter end of defeats to those damn Canadians on both the men’s and women’s sides. The women’s gold medal game was excruciating, frustrating, fluky and somewhat incomprehensible. Blowing a 2-goal lead in the last 3½ minutes seems like it should be classified as a choke, but it did not really look or feel like a choke. And it did not surprise me too much that the U.S. men phoned it in during the bronze medal game after their 1-0 loss to the Canadians in the semis. For all intents and purposes, that semifinal with Canada was their gold medal game. After losing it, the players found no collective value in coming in third. And I can certainly understand that. I have played in consolation games at tournaments before. They suck. You lost the game that really mattered. You do not care. Nobody cares. Whomever cares the least in the consolation game winds up losing. Winning a medal of any sort mattered a lot more to the Finns than it did to the Americans, which I think is actually in keeping with the nature of the tournament. For the North American players, participating in the Olympics is a big deal, but it is an even bigger deal to the Europeans.

The NHL periodically threatens to pull its players out of the Winter Olympics, but the players always block it in the CBA. NHL owners do not like the Olympics, basically, because they do not make any money off of it. Whatever other reasons they offer up are bullshit:

• Other leagues don’t take two weeks off in the middle of season.
Well, actually, pretty much every soccer league other than the EPL does that in the dead of winter, and it has no ill effect. It’s not like they cancel the games – they just get shuffled around a bit.
• There’s the greater risk of injury.
Well, there is always the risk of injury every time you step on the ice, but the risk is no different whether you are playing at the Olympics in Sochi or playing some pre-season slugfest in Saskatoon. (Honestly, injury is probably more likely in the latter.) Furthermore, having two weeks off during the season likely does wonders for healing injuries to the rank and file players who aren’t playing in the Olympics.

Bullshit, bullshit, bullshit. The Olympics should be free P.R. for the NHL, because any Olympic game involving two of the élite national teams in the sport showcases the game being played at the highest level, but the NHL screws it up, of course. The NHL has always had this curious bent to it, this strange notion that the needs of the marginal outweigh the needs of the skilled. The league ultimately doesn’t like the fact that so many new Olympic-made hockey fans then tune in for some mid-season drudgery between Columbus and Phoenix and are disappointed by the sorry product they see. The league wants to trot out some World Cup of Hockey concept again, so we can watch a guys who aren’t in game shape skating around in September. I hope the players continue to push back on this, because the Olympics really do matter to them. 1980 ultimately taught everyone who plays the game of hockey, on both sides of the Atlantic, just how magical and important the game can be. So long as memories of 1980 in Lake Placid and 2010 in Vancouver are still in players’ psyches, I suspect the NHL will be sending reps to Winter Olympics. I hope so, anyway. It would be a shame if that were discontinued. What would all of my Canadian friends fixate upon and obsess over at that point?

I kid, but I must also give props. The LOSE is a friend to all Canadians – I speak excellent Canadian, I have been to Tim Hortons more than once, I love poutine, and I have engaged in a uniquely British Columbia form of self-torture for 30+ years by permitting the Vancouver Canucks to get my hopes up. I must now give it up to my many good friends living in this continent’s cool upstairs apartment for their national team’s two victories in hockey in Sochi. Well done. But I have to say though, I cannot for the life of me understand their national fascination with curling. They say it is ‘chess on ice.’ I say it is shuffleboard on ice, and my interest in shuffleboard will only ever materialize if I am on board a cruise to the Caribbean. But being a dutiful correspondent, I made it a point to watch a little of every sport offered in the Winter Olympics. I tried to watch curling with an open mind and was completely baffled at what I was watching, as baffled as I have ever been watching any sport. Apparently this is bad if you are the yellow team:

 
The Americans were the yellows and they gave up a 7 here, which is really bad. I asked my assorted Canadian correspondents about this and they said it was the result of extremely bad curling. We apparently suck at curling in this country. I must be honest here, I am not that concerned about our lack of curling prowess.

Americans won 28 medals in Sochi, down from 37 in Vancouver, which really wasn’t that bad. It’s just that some of the name athletes people knew of – the Shaun Whites and the Shani Davises and the whole concept of the U.S. women’s figure skater – didn’t manage to win. Those names and/or concepts are somewhat familiar to people who watched four years earlier. We collectively do not know anything about skeletons and bobsleds and slopestyle skiers. The American media coverage necessarily gravitates towards that which is familiar, but every athlete reaches a point where they are past their prime. Given the spots in their respective careers, skiers Bode Miller and Julia Mancuso achieved quite a bit in winning medals, but the alpine ski team was perceived as somehow struggling early on, simply because the medals won in Sochi did not match the colours of medals won in Olympics past. The real stars of contemporary American skiing, Ted Ligety and Mikaela Shiffrin, sort of got pushed to the back burner, even though they both completely dominated their events. In the case of the 18-year-old Shiffrin, she will almost certainly be the #1 American Olympic poster child four years from now, but considering she came out and said her goal was to win five gold medals in Pyeongchang, she is not exactly shying away from the limelight.

And anyone who thinks American media is overly jingoistic and American-centric should get out of the bubble and watch some feeds from other nations. It is just as jingoistic and nationalistic, and sometimes even moreso. And people who complain about nationalistic coverage of the event miss the point. The connection a viewer has to an athlete from the same nation is far more likely to be based on being from the same place than it is from sharing interest or ability in the same sport. If we were all truly interested in biathlon as an event, we would have better biathletes in this country. Amazingly, we are not any good at that sport, given that two components of the sport – snow and guns – are things we have in abundance. Whenever you miss a shot in biathlon, you have to go over to a penalty course and essentially ski a lap of shame. It seems like you could liven up the event by having a gallery that boos and heckles the competitors when this occurs ... but then again, the competitors have guns are are not in a good mood at that point, so maybe that is not a good ideal after all ...

The LOSE was impressed with the Sochi games, in the end. The organizers somehow pulled it off. It does not change the fact, however, that I am staggered by the costs. $51,000,000,000 for all of that, a large amount of it almost certain ended up being poured down ratholes of corruption and inefficiency. Now, I can see some of the bigger picture issues at play here, some of which get lost from time to time. Putin wanted to present a showcase for the reimagined Russia, make the case that it is back as a global player. Putin also wanted to take this opportunity to transform Sochi into a major resort destination. And a good way to raise your mid-sized city profile is through sport. This has been shown to be successful in places like Indianapolis. Sochi already has a Formula 1 race planned for 2014, and the Olympic Stadium will be used during the 2018 World Cup, as well as serve as the sort of year-round football grounds and training facility the Russian national team has always desperately needed. All of those sorts of efforts will prove to be useful in the long run. Sochi does seem primed to reap some longer-term benefits.

That being said ... $51,000,000,000 for all of that? That figure is absolutely staggering. And while a good number of those sports facilities will be salvagable and serviceable from hereon, not all of them will be much use. (Speed skating ovals are particularly large white elephants – the buildings are cavernous, and the participants have very little long-term use for a facility such as the Sochi oval for training, as it is a low-altitude venue where the ice can easily turn into a slurpee.) And gussying up the city for a couple of weeks doesn’t make all of the other problems go away, of course. The Olympics are often rather naïvely viewed by activists as an opportunity to bring awareness to their particular issues and/or grievances, but once the Olympic flame is extinguished, the world turns it’s collective interests elsewhere. All which became familiar to us for a couple weeks disappears again into the woodworks.

And for a great number of the athletes, of course, a great deal of soul-searching goes on when the games are over. Is it worth it to carry on? Is it worth it to still be broke, to be perpetually injured, to be constantly at the whims of dumb politicos, to be spending too much time looking for funding and not enough time working on their game? One of the more interesting phenomena I noticed throughout the 1990s and into the 2000s was the number of leftover East German athletes who were still participating in the Olympics for a unified German team long after the country which had produced them had ceased to exist. A lot of them seemed to be continuing on (and doing so quite successfully) in part because they had no idea what else they would do. Sport was what they knew. They were, in a sense, bred to do it. I certainly admire their dedication, as I have never been dedicated enough to accomplish anything, but it also seemed to be tinged with an unintended hint of pathos. Winning the gold medal may be the crowning achievement, but what is ultimately the true value of spending a lifetime pursuing a sport and never achieving it, that dream having turned out to be made of fool’s gold? I suspect it is a stunningly empty feeling, one which would take quite a long time – maybe even a lifetime – to overcome.

I am not really sure, and it is easy not even to think about that kind of thing once the spectacle is over and the games go away and the bulk of the athletes disappear again into obscurity. But every time the Olympics come around, I am certainly going to watch. It is the most compelling, exciting, crushing, and occasionally tragic theatre piece we have ever invented on this planet. It’s irritating that a group as smug and selfish as the IOC knows this, of course, but for all the excess and the swindling and politics and bad behaviour and cronyism in the run-up to the games, those who participate in the games continue to save the IOC from themselves, and make the event impossible to ignore.

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Lose Tunes Track 04

This edition of the Lose Tunes is brought to you by the bottle of Ridge 2006 Grenache that we had at the office on Friday afternoon. Yes, we drink wine in the office on Fridays and you do not. Sucks to be you.

Today we are featuring the best thing from Cincinnati since Ken Griffey Jr. and Skyline Chili. Away from the stage, the members of The National are some of the funniest, most engaging, most congenial musicians out there. But this song pretty much wrecked me the first time I heard it, both because of the innate beauty of the song and the greater, pervasive sense of sadness and loss. It is a crusher. And it would not crush so much if it were not such a beautiful song.


Friday, February 21, 2014

Quick Misses

Many thanks to IN PLAY LOSE British Columbia Bureau Chief Jesse Matthews
for passing along this cartoon to me. All it's missing is a panel reading, “and the refs sucked.”

This is a new feature of IN PLAY LOSE called Quick Misses. There is always time for more lose, of course, but not always enough time for The LOSE to write about losing. As you may have noticed, I tend to write long form on this blog, but if I put off writing about failure-related topics until I have more time to write, I wind up never writing at all. Quick Misses are intended to fill in the gaps between essays. I’m going to try to keep these short(ish) here, and try to cover a decent amount of ground.

So, on with the buzzard points:

• I worked in the squishiest, most PC office in the history of the world, one where they referred to these as ‘dot points’ instead of bullet points because they didn’t like the violent connotation of the word ‘bullet.’ This was one of the damn stupidest things I’d ever heard and I’d steadfastly refused to participate in that nonsense, because the word bullet, like just about every other word in the English language, has multiple meanings and multiple contexts – and in the context of text and design, that little round thingie at the start of this graf is called a bullet. Nicknames, however, are intended to be representative of specific ideas. Abe Pollin renamed the Washington Bullets in 1997, saying he didn’t like the violent connotation of the nickname and doing so in the aftermath of the assassination of his lifelong friend, Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin. And I can understand that – but the Wizards isn’t much better. Indeed, given the context of the term ‘wizard’ in American history, an argument can be made that choosing Wizards for a sports team is even worse. (Although it’s probably cooler now in the post-Harry Potter world.) The best solution to me for D.C. seems to be to merge the two names together – the Washington Buzzards! Given the carrion and the carnage left behind at the end of an NBA season in Washington, buzzards won’t go hungry. In that spirit of absurdist compromise, I present you the buzzard point.

• If I’m the owner of the Miami Dolphins, I’m firing everyone. I’m firing the entire organization. This is a good start, but it isn’t enough. The Ted Wells Report outlining the behaviour patterns within the Dolphins clubhouse are absolutely disgraceful. Locker room culture certainly can be boorish and sophomoric at times, and sometimes the lines between what is and isn’t appropriate can get blurred. That does happen. It’s not OK, per sé, but it is understandable. But what went on in Miami speaks to a total lack of leadership on all levels of the club. That a culture as toxic as what developed in Miami came to be is the fault of the coaching staff who set such a tone, the players who let it persist in the locker room, and the management who assembled this cast of characters in the first place. All of them failed. Get rid of them all. I’d live with a 2-14 season if it means ridding myself of this lot.

• That segues nicely into my opinion about Michael Sam and whether or not it will be a ‘distraction’ that an openly gay player is on an NFL team. Given that they won the SEC Eastern Division this past fall, Sam coming out to his teammates at the University of Missouri before the season obviously wasn’t that much of a distraction. Sam was the SEC Defensive Player of the Year last year, and is thought to be something like a 3rd round NFL pick owing to the fact that he’s something of a tweener size-wise – an undersized defensive lineman – but there have been lots of anonymous whispers from unnamed NFL front office sorts saying that him coming out and admitting he is gay will hurt his draft status, saying that it will create a ‘distraction.’ Bullshit. If you and your team are ‘distracted’ by this, then your team sucks. When you’re a public figure (which athletes are), you live under a microscope whether you like it or not. You have reporters and camera crews and agents and P.R. lacqueys and the like milling about you all the time. YOUR WHOLE LIFE IS ONE BIG DISTRACTION! Again, it’s a question of leadership. The organization that cares about winning, first and foremost, won’t give a damn about one guy’s sexual preferences. If he can help the team, then a team with clue will do whatever is necessary to let him do that. And a decline in his draft status may hurt him upfront (where you get drafted determines your starting salary, after all), but if he can play at the next level, the potential is there to make it all back and more. If you can play, you’ll eventually get paid. In the immediate, it’s also a pretty nice source of motivation to be downgraded in the draft. It gives you something to prove. As you may recall from this past season, a team which started two 5th round picks and a 6th starting in their secondary, a 3rd rounder being grossly underpaid at QB, and two receivers who the club spent all of $26,000 to sign sure had a nice season. They played with a chip on their shoulder almost as large as the final margin of their victory in the Super Bowl. The potential is there for Sam to have a nice NFL career, and if/when that happens – I say “if” not to doubt his abilities, but to speak to the uncertainty of a long career in a game as violent as football – no one will really care much about his orientation anymore.

• New NBA commissioner Adam Silver ripped a page out of his predecessor’s book in addressing the media during the NBA’s All-Star break in New Orleans, using his most lawyerly of skills to skillfully avoid answering a question about the large number of teams which appear to be tanking this season:

“My understanding of tanking would be losing games on purpose. And there’s absolutely no evidence that any team in the NBA has ever lost a single game, or certainly in any time that I’ve been in the league, on purpose. And, to me, what you’re referring to I think is rebuilding. And I’m not sure it’s just a function of the collective bargaining agreement; I think there’s a balance with any team of the need to look out to the future and at the same time put a competitive product on the floor.”

Lies lies lies lies lies! No one accuses the players who take the court of deliberately attempting to throw games. Players aren’t that dumb. They play hard. They play to win. They push that rock up the hill in a most Promethean of fashion, trying to fight fate, because they know damn well that their jobs are potentially on the line. None of us who speak of NBA teams tanking insinuate players aren’t trying. We do, however, insinuate that their bosses – the owners and the GMs of their franchises – are purposefully, deliberately setting their teams up to fail. And when your GM dumps every asset of your team to get under the cap, that is EXACTLY what you’re doing. Hell, the Boston Celtics have traded so many players for so many draft picks that they may run out of players. I can hear the announcer in Gah-den now: “starting at center (center-center-center-echo-echo-echo), the protected 1st round pick in 2018 ...” No actual player, mind you, just the abstract concept of a draft pick. Blowing up the franchise in the interest of creating cap space has been a time-tested strategy of incompetent NBA GMs, as it staves off having to answer for your own idiocy for a little while. They’ve also been given even more rope to ultimately hang themselves with CBA inventions like the Amnesty Clause (you basically pay a guy to go away but don’t have it count on your salary cap), which gives them a chance to come clean and admit they didn’t know what they were doing when they handed $50m to a 33-year old center with bad knees and limited offensive skills. But you get outed as a fraud eventually, as Chris Grant found out in Cleveland recently.

• That was very Stern-like of Adam Silver, sneaking around a double screen to avoid giving a serious answer. It remains to be seen if he has/will learn from the Little Napoleon’s mistakes. A lot will depend on the nature of the league’s next series of television contracts, negotiations for which are starting soon. The league may get a financial boost from this, simply because some network or another will be dumb enough to pay up. That doesn’t mean the product is any good. And that doesn’t mean it’s bad, either – it’s just that it should be even better than it is, in my opinion, and quite a few franchises are doing their best to make the product as bad as they possibly can, no matter if you call it ‘tanking’ or ‘rebuilding.’

• Wow, I really hate the NBA, but seeing the Lakers and the Celtics battling it out in a race to see who can be as bad as possible does my heart proud.

• Speaking of Cleveland, they’ve had a rough go of it this winter, with huge organizational shakeups for both the Cadavers Cavaliers and the Browns, a franchise whose weirdness knows no bounds, but we’ll deal with Cleveland in a later post. The Mistake by the Lake is worthy of far more ink than this.

• I hope that Adam Silver watched the Super Bowl parade in people, saw 750,000 fans in the streets of Seattle, and thought to himself, “wow, that is a lot of people who hate my product and hated my former boss. I have some work to do on that front.”

• I do feel inclined to gloat about the Super Bowl, and how much the Seahawks completely dominated the hapless and pathetic Denver Broncos, but I don’t want to beat a dead horse. Well, maybe I do just a little ...

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Lose Tunes, Track 03

Our edition of Lose Tunes today is brought to you by The Kraken, a rum made in that bastion of sun, palms, swashbuckling and rum-running ... Indiana. Good stuff though, a rum as black as your soul with a nice vanilla overtone as well. Drinking this stuff is making it easier for me to get through all of this work I am doing tonight.

This tune is a natural choice for the Lose Tunes, simply because of the name. This is a Danish electronica band named When Saints Go Machine and the song is Fail Forever. It would likely be on this playlist in spite of the name, since the song pretty much hops:


And here is a bonus remix track version of the Saints by Chilean DJ Nicholas Jaar, which is pretty remarkable:


Thursday, February 6, 2014

Gold, Silver and Lose

The Olympics are here.

Be still my foolish heart.

It goes without saying that sports’ greatest spectacle is rife with failure. But the Olympics go far beyond just winning and losing. With both their sheer stature and their structure, the Olympics present The LOSE with a veritable gold mine of storylines, as a fair amount of the worst aspects of human nature surface during the course of such single-minded pursuit of winning. Cheating, whining, swindling, politicking, corruption – the Olympics has it all. It simply gets no better (or worse, depending on your point of view).

Now, the over-the-air broadcasts will do their best to gloss over all of the seedy stuff, portraying the Olympics as a bastion of all the best that humanity has to offer – talent, sacrifice, dedication, tenacity, desire, commitment to excellence. All of which is true. The #1 reason that you should watch the Winter Olympics for the next couple of weeks – indeed, it’s pretty much the only reason – is that the athletes are incredible. Just incredible. They will do things which most of us can’t even imagine, much less attempt to do. They will showcase small facets of human potential nearly perfected, elevated to levels seemingly unfathomable only a few years ago. And that’s pretty awesome. Anyone doing something that well is worth my attention, even if I think the particular sport is stupid. I’m likely to think the sport is stupid no matter what, but I can certainly appreciate the toil and the effort required to reach the highest level.

And this is the Winter Olympics we’re talking about, of course, which means that not only are the Olympians incredible, but they’re all completely crazy. Everything in the Winter Olympics hurts. It’s all subject to harsh conditions which seem unnatural – most of us can barely walk on ice and snow – yet here are people strapping skis and blades to their feet, or climbing into various sledding contraptions, and they’re throwing themselves down hillsides or whooshing across a frozen plane. Failure in the Winter Olympics can hurt really badly, and no matter what happens, you wind up feeling cold. And if there is a sport in the Winter Olympics that seems sissy – let’s take the classical form of speed skating, for example, where two people race the clock and just make a series of left turns – the organizers just come up with a new variation specifically for crazy people – which is how you wind up with short track, which is speed skating mixed with demolition derby. (The LOSE appreciates speed skating, by the way, but the deviant in me always wonders what would happen if you surprised all the competitors and made them race in the opposite direction. They’d probably all fall down.)

This year, the Winter Olympics are taking place in a country synonymous with winter: Russia, where the winters are among the harshest of anywhere on the planet. The winter conditions in parts of that enormous nation boggle the mind. However, this isn’t exactly what comes to mind when you think of either a) a Russian winter, or b) a winter sports paradise:


Welcome to Sochi, which is a summer resort on the Black Sea.

In order to host a Winter Games, the Russian government has basically had to manufacture a ski industry in the nearby mountains, along with creating all of the infrastructure to link ski and sea together. The cost of this endeavour, all told, is estimated to be somewhere around $51,000,000,000. That is a lot of zeroes.

It could be argued that choosing such a location is a case of the Winter Olympics being a victim of its own success. (The cynic might say a victim of its own largesse. I’ll leave that for you to decide.) For years, the Winter Olympics was held in quaint little mountain hamlets like St. Moritz and Chamonix and Lake Placid, and was a cute little sideshow, a teaser for the grand summer spectacle that was the Summer Olympics which would happen later in the leap year.

But the International Olympic Committee made a decision to split off the Winter Games beginning in 1994, allowing them to become a show all to themselves. Since then, the games have grown really big, really fast, and all you have to do is look at a map to figure out where the problem lies. There just aren’t enough cities big enough in mountain locales to host this sort of event. The IOC now has to be creative when it comes to awarding the Winter Olympics, as the event is far too big for the mountain ski resorts of the world: Cortina d’Ampezzo and Garmisch have given away to Turin and Vancouver. Vancouver at least made some sense, given that the mountains basically run through the city (there are ski areas within the city limits of the suburbs) and the winter sports mecca of Whistler is an hour up the northerly road, but I’ve been caught in enough downpours in February in Vancouver to know that it ain’t exactly a winter wonderland. The choice of a summer resort on the Black Sea as the site of a winter sports festival requires the suspending of all disbelief, but the IOC has always been good in selling faerie tales, not to mention believing their own myths. (The 2018 games are centered on Pyeongchang, which is a cool looking area in the mountains of South Korea, but all of the ice events will take place down the hill in the coastal city of Gangneung. A cursory glance at the list of hopeful bidders for the 2022 Winter Olympics shows a few more creative acts of geography.)

The ways in which the Winter Games have grown are certainly ways that I approve of: adding more opportunities for women participants, which I am certainly in favour of, and also the further adding of legitimate forms of winter sports expression like snowboarding and freestyle skiing. But there’s a curious by-product of this move, which the IOC was well aware of in both of those cases: the United States now does well. Really well. (Some of the events were lifted right out of an American invention, the X Games, whose effect on the Olympics shouldn’t be discounted.) Consider that in the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, U.S. athletes won a grand total of six medals. And 14 years later, at the new-look, younger, hipper Salt Lake City Games, U.S. athletes won 34. Some of that was due to home-field advantage, of course, as the home side usually excels, and some of it due to an emphasis on the Salt Lake City games by the USOC. But the IOC knew very well that to keep their winter event relevant, they needed the U.S. to be successful at it, because U.S. success translates into U.S. interest, which means good U.S. television ratings, which means continued flow of revenue through U.S. broadcast rights fees.

And there isn’t a greater example of biting the hand that feeds you than the IOC’s relationship with the United States, as it is wholly dependent upon American television revenue to continue their operations, and yet the IOC is one of the most decidedly anti-American bodies on the planet, possessing all the disdain for their primary clientele that the head of a cartel has for the flock of addicts keeping his smuggling operation afloat. We tune in regardless, simply because we love the competition. It’s theatre of the highest order. The drama of the event and the emotions it creates – both in victory and in defeat – is far greater than any drama we can script for a cinema or a stage. It is better than fiction.

And, on occasion, stranger than fiction.

The impact of that particular comedy of errors from 1994 on the Winter Olympics cannot be understated. Consider that 1994 was the first time the Winter Olympics were standing on their own. The U.S. sucks in the Winter Olympics. There isn’t even the same old enemies for Americans to hate, as the Berlin Wall has fallen and the Cold War is over. (And we’ll cover that point in a minute.) What’s interesting for an American in this event taking place in a snowy Norwegian village? Well, not much really … until figure skater Nancy Kerrigan, who is gorgeous and graceful and excels at one of the few winter events Americans actually do well at, gets whacked across the leg with a club and all signs point to the perpetrators being members of the entourage of one of her closest rivals, Tonya Harding. Well, hell, the Winter Olympics just became Must See TV with that single swing of a club! The ratings on CBS for the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer promptly went through the roof, adding an ever greater sense of legitimacy to the whole event. And without that scandal, I would argue that the Winter Olympics wouldn’t be a fraction of the size that they are today. That scandal was the greatest gift the IOC could have ever hoped for. (There was even a nod to the old school, business-as-usual ways of the Olympics at the end of that Kerrigan-Harding bit, with Kerrigan settling for a silver in Lillehammer and losing out to Ukrainian/former Soviet Union skater Oksana Baiul through what appeared to be an act of bloc judging. It doesn’t really matter who I thought did/didn’t deserve to win. The whole point of bloc judging is that it doesn’t matter who deserves it. That was nicely done by the IOC, keeping it real like that while giving a tip of the cap to the past. But I'm getting political far too early in this blog, and this parenthetical is getting far too long, but I will also point out that I've actually been to the actual restaurant where the evil Nancy Kerrigan whacking plan was hatched, which is my only personal connection to this post.)

The IOC HQ in Lausanne is the most wretched hive of scum and villany this side of Mos Eisley. It's always been a haven for the best-dressed and most well-connected autocrats, scoundrels and scofflaws that the world has to offer up, all supposedly under the auspice of promoting (and zealously protecting) the Utopian Olympic ideals set forth by IOC founder Baron Pierre de Coubertin. Most of those ideas were myths, of course – the notion that Greek city-states all suspended wars for the purposes of sport is not true at all, and the notion of amateur athleticism (since mercifully disbanded) is that of an élite creating a realm and idle plaything all for itself, since the rich would have time for such leisurely activities while the working class were busting their asses in factories during the Industrial Revolution. And being a member of the IOC has always been a curiously good way to line one’s own pockets. The IOC somehow managed to spin its way out of further scrutiny in the wake of the Salt Lake City bribery scandal, when a large part of the argument put forth by those implicated in Utah was, in essence, that they were bribing IOC members because that was business as usual. It was what was necessary to land the games, and everybody else was doing it as well.

The new IOC president, Thomas Bach, recently made himself look stupid in calling out Barack Obama and a few other Western leaders who have shown their disliking of Russia’s anti-gay laws. He didn’t name names, of course, but everyone knows who he’s talking about. Bashing the U.S. has always been a popular pastime at the IOC, none of which should ever be taken with more than a grain of salt. My personal favourite IOC sniping at America for years came from the desk of Dick Pound, whose name I shall not joke of and who was head of the IOC spinoff World Anti-Doping Agency. He always loved taking the U.S. to task for lax policies when it comes to testing athletes for performance enhancing drugs. I will take the IOC seriously on that front after it goes back and retroactively strips EVERY SINGLE MEDAL that was ever won by an East German athlete. They’ve stripped medals before, after all (Marion Jones immediately comes to mind), and it’s not like there isn’t proof. There are entire warehouses full of documentation of a state-supported doping programme in East Germany. But making a principled statement of that sort would require far more courage than anyone at the IOC can ever muster.

The Olympic movement has always been particularly good at propping up dubious state-sponsored sport systems – and, indeed, one of the ways that state systems ultimately thrived (and continue to thrive) involves making enough alliances and getting enough people placed in influential positions so as to influence IOC policy and administration of the Games. It isn’t just enough to train/abuse/dope up athletes so that they will win medals on the field, because there is too much left up to chance once you take to the field of play – a place where everything is, in fact, complicated by the presence of the opponent. The state sports system is inherently an offshoot of the Ministry of Propaganda. Anything short of winning is unacceptable, since winning advances the aims of the state. It’s therefore important to also field a handful of corrupt officials and referees, and attempt to manipulate the games behind the scenes. There has been no better example of this than the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, the awarding of which was tantamount to handing the inmates the keys to the asylum. That event was already a mess, with the U.S.-led boycott on account of the Soviet Union invading Afghanistan earlier that year, but then you had blatant acts of upfront, out-in-the-open cheating such as this going on such as this, which makes a complete mockery of the whole idea that games have a purpose as a competition. (And, of course, one of the athletes most affected by that, Australian triple jumper Ian Campbell, went to Washington State, proving that not only can Cougars find ways to lose, but sometimes ways to lose can be found for them.) The event was clearly intended to be little more than a showpiece for the state sports system, a chance for the Soviet organizers to pat themselves on the back in front of a world audience – albeit one much smaller than originally intended. (Here is a fascinating piece on those 1980 games from George Plimpton.)

Now, The LOSE is not naïve. Athletes cheat in the West as well and always have, albeit on a personal need-to-cheat basis. Part of why anti-doping efforts are much harder in the West is that efforts at breaking the rules are usually undertaken by individuals rather than groups, and are much easier to hide in smaller numbers. But unlike in the West, where athletes make the choice to break the rules, those in places like East Germany didn’t necessarily have that choice to make. Here is a PBS documentary on East German doping. That it’s an episode of the show Secrets of the Dead tells you that it wasn’t all fun and games.

But I never have bought into that whole narrative put forth which surrounded the Olympics while I was growing up, which was our aw-shucks, gosh-and-golly American kids were venturing into hostile arenas armed only with their guile and wits while facing those colourless, soulless drones from behind the Eastern Bloc. That I didn’t buy it is saying something, in fact, since that is what everyone involved in the whole construct of the Olympics was selling for decades. Part of why the IOC has adopted a decidedly anti-American stance in recent years is that the movement, for it to be successful, needs enemies and villains and guys that wear the black hat. This flies in the face of the supposed anti-political stance of the Olympic movement, but the fact is that the entire concept of the Olympics only caught on because of the corresponding political back stories. No one cared that all much about the Olympics before 1936, when the Olympics in Berlin became a centerpiece of Nazi propaganda. (Watch this film sometime if you have the chance, as it is a truly remarkable piece of cinema years ahead of its time, political message be damned.) Once the Soviet Union and assorted Warsaw Pact entries began entering, the Olympics became yet another battleground in the Cold War. Every victory over the other guy was a triumph of ideology and way of life. If the Olympics was really not about politics, the athletes would not march in under flags and listen to national anthems on the awards podia. OF COURSE IT IS POLITICAL, and it always has been. The greatest threat to the Olympic movement, in fact, was a potential loss of interest after the Berlin Wall fell. Trying to figure out who was who in 1992 was ridiculous. (The Unified Team? What the hell is that?) Someone has to be the enemy, so it may as well be the baddest dudes on the block – which is the U.S., who wins all the time.

Athletes train and play to win. It is the only objective, in the end. For most of those who participate in the Olympics, the Games are the biggest competition in the world. They are, in reality, the only event that matters, for no other contests in their discipline – even World Championships – carry the same prestige and exposure. The set-up of the Olympics has always dictated not only winning, but doing so at all costs. And this is more true than ever now that the Cold War has fallen and the Olympics have become a 100%, full-on capitalistic venture. Pretty much everyone in the Winter Olympics makes nothing for their efforts and toil in obscurity for four years between games, save for some of the skiiers, the figure skaters and the NHL hockey players (who seem to embrace the Olympic spirit far more than just about anyone else, interestingly enough). Success at the Olympics can lead to fame and fortune otherwise unattainable – which simply intensifies the need to win, and which makes failure all the more of a bitter pill.

Sounds good to me.

Let the losing begin, and let all of the assorted responses to losing begin as well. Let there be controversy, protests, counter protests and everything else. It will happen. There will be whining and bickering and complaining, there will be allegations of foul play and bribery and graft, there will be people booing and protesting at the injustice of it all. It is all great stuff, wondrous stuff. The greater the stakes, the more personal the defeat, and the greater the indignation when it happens.
  
But again, it is all fun and games until something happens like what took place in Munich in 1972. That was a terrible Olympic games to begin with, what with the travesty of the U.S.-U.S.S.R. basketball final, the first appearances of doped out East German athletes who would come to dominate sports like women’s swimming, and a few other acts of lousy sportsmanship along the way, but the murder of athletes by terrorists showed the larger nature of the Olympics. The event does not take place in a buble. It is not just a sporting event and idle diversion for a couple of weeks. Sport is never free of politics. Nothing in this world is free of politics. A gathering such as the Olympics is the ideal place for those people who wish to call attention to their causes through violent means. We have learned the hard way in this country that nothing is safe and nothing sacred. Going into Sochi, there is legitimate worry that some sort of nutjob or another from the various insurgencies and counterinsurgencies running rampant through the areas of the old Soviet Union will decide to turn the Olympics into their own macabre theatre piece. From a distance, a security situation like that faced by F.C. Anzhi Makhcachkala seems bizarre and almost comic: “Due to armed conflict in Dagestan, the club's players live and train in a village near Moscow, at a training base previously used by Saturn Moscow. The club fly in for home matches which have a heavy security presence.” But it really isn’t a laughing matter at all. That such concerns exist at all should really trouble all of us.

And given all of the conditions at play, the awarding of these Olympics to Sochi seemed like a curious idea from the beginning, if an downright bad one. Then again, given how large and how costly the Winter Olympics have become to operate, it is something of a wonder anyone would bid to host the games at all. Vladimir Putin has viewed the Winter Olympics (and also the World Cup in 2018) as an international stamp of legitimacy for his government and what the ‘new Russia’ has/can/will accomplish. The cost of the games – $51,000,000,000 – is absolutely staggering, a sum larger than all previous Winter Olympics combined. The process has been rife with cost overruns and allegations of corruption, and early reports would seem to indicate that Sochi is still not quite ready on the eve of the event, there are security concerns of every sort, and the result of all of this is a collective sense of “why in the hell are we doing this?”

My hope is that Sochi pull this off, and that the Winter Olympics is memorable for the competition. I wonder, however, if this event actually leads to a gradual drawing down of the Winter Games, an event which seemed at one time like a wonderful little vacation like a ski getaway to the alps, but has become one very long, very strange, and very expensive trip.

So let us hope for everyone’s sake that is ALL I am writing about over the next couple of weeks is failure on the ice and snow. I declare open the Lose of the XXII Winter Olympic Games. Let the games begin!

And it would not be the Winter Olympics, of course, without the Norwegian curling team and their fabulous pants:


I gotta get me a pair of those.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Good Riddance

Seattle Public Enemy #1
“This is going to be short for me. I have a game to get to in Oklahoma City.”

That was David Stern’s opening statement in 2013 after the NBA’s Board of Governors meeting in Dallas. The main topic of conversation at that meeting was the fate of the wobegone Sacramento Kings: were they to be sold to a group led by Chris Hansen and Steve Ballmer, with the intent of relocating the franchise to Seattle, or was the sale to be rejected in favour of an 11th hour offer from a Bay Area group headed by Warriors minor partner Vivek Ranadive that would keep the team in Sacramento. By a vote of 22-8, the relocation to Seattle sale was rejected at that meeting, and David Stern, when facing a sizable collection of Seattle-area media for likely the last time, just couldn’t resist the opportunity to get in one last shot. (Here is the entire press conference, in full.) And it wasn't just a slip of the tongue, either. Nothing David Stern ever said or did was uncalculated.

That David Stern would happen to step down as commissioner of the NBA on the same weekend that the Seattle Seahawks are playing in the Super Bowl is an act of serendipity likely to leave a Seattle sports fan wondering if, for once, the stars are aligning over the Emerald City. (Further adding to this feeling is the retirement of Chuck Armstrong, who has presided over the disintegration of the Seattle Mariners, but we’ve dealt with those clownshoes before.) For after barely lifting a finger to prevent the Sonics from being moved to Oklahoma City, Stern basically held the hands of Sacramento civic leaders and bought time until they could all their ducks in a row. The entire process was rife with unstated animosity, all stemming from the fact that the speaker of the Washington State Legislature, Frank Chopp, had made a point of telling Stern during a hearing that the NBA’s business model – extorting sweetheart arena deals from municipalities and, essentially, taking billions of dollars in public subsidies – was garbage.

Which, quite honestly, it is.


David Stern did a lot to save the NBA, and I don’t think that can be discounted. When he took over the league in the early 1980s, the place was awash in red ink. And under his stewardship, the NBA has gone from being an afterthought with its championship series broadcast on table delay at 11:30 p.m. to a global entertainment powerhouse worth billions. He also managed to get the cocaine out of the game, rid the league of some of the worst owners imaginable (but not all of them), and establish a precedent for labour relations – gross percentage payouts to players in the form of a salary cap tied to leaguewide revenue growth – which has become a model for the sports business in North America. His successes on those fronts should be acknowledged. I have to give him some props.

And now that I’m given him props, I’m going to trash his ass. And I'm probably going to froth at the mouth an be irrational. I apologize in advance.

David Stern was also a lucky bastard. He was lucky that the L.A. Lakers won the coin flip and got to draft Magic Johnson. He was lucky that Red Auerbach knew the draft rules inside and out when he selected Larry Bird. He was lucky that the Portland Trail Blazers were stupid enough to draft Sam Bowie, permitting Michael Jordan to land in an enormous market – Chicago – that had been so badly mismanaged over the years by the NBA that the original expansion franchise in Chicago left what was then the 2nd largest city in America for the greener pastures of … Baltimore. He was ‘lucky’ when his first installment of the NBA lottery landed the next fabled talent to come along, Patrick Ewing, in New York City. The placement of the greatest talents in some of the most storied franchises of the game (or, in the case of Chicago, the untapped market ready to rise), the media and marketing machine could go about selling the stars of the game – but it only worked because those players were great, and those franchises turned out to be great. (Well, not the Knicks, but you don’t have to be great in New York to get attention, you just have to make enough noise to catch the ear of all the media outlets down the street.)

But the unintended consequence of this was the creation of several caste systems within the league. The superstars get all the calls, the glamour franchises get all the breaks. It wasn’t really news when a referee was found to be betting on games, because a lot of people had just sort of assumed that games were fixed to begin with. (People in Seattle have never forgotten this game, and no one in Sacramento will ever forget this one.) There’s always been a fraudulent, disingenuous overtone to the way the NBA conducts its business during the David Stern era, one espoused in the spin well-becoming of the battle-tested attorney who headed the operation.

The latter part of Stern’s tenure was marked by franchise relocations, conflicts of interest (aka The Curious Case of Chris Paul), labor unrest and lockouts. The NBA at present seems to have about 8 franchises that are actually trying to win and 22 more that are trying to be as bad as possible so as to get into the lottery. (Don’t tell the players that, of course, a lot of whom are busting their asses in spite of their front offices … *cough cough* Phoenix Suns *cough cough*) The entire operation is about contracts and cap space and exemptions. The game itself rarely seems to matter. And fans have tired of this: in an era where some of the greatest talents the game has ever seen are taking to the court, the NBA is selling fewer tickets these days than their winter counterparts, the NHL. Does anyone actually take the NBA seriously right now?

And then there is that whole Oklahoma City thing. Watch this documentary to understand it. I was a season ticket holder in Seattle. This game was one of the most wonderful, most exciting things I have ever been a part of. So if I sound like I have an axe to grind, well, I do. So there.

I am fortunate to have one of the few teams in the NBA that does seem to want to win in my backyard at the moment. They have Stephen Curry, probably the greatest shooter in the history of humanity. They have a terrific first six guys that can do everything – inside scoring, deep threes, shotblocking, midrange, transition game, and the five starters are all good passers, to boot. The Golden State Warriors are doing what seemed unthinkable a few years ago, which is making me like the NBA again.

Sort of.

I love the game of basketball and always have. Basketball is the athletic equivalent of jazz, a unique expression of the American urban experience that’s free-flowing and rife with improvisations, and yet it’s also right at home in the farmlands and the countryside. (What? No jazz roots in rural America? Listen to some old Western Swing records and tell me otherwise.) It’s also a game free of fences and walls, the spectators sitting right up close, the only demarcation being an unstated but understood line that neither side should cross, and does so at its own peril. That sense of danger is palpable when you play an away game. You never quite feel comfortable. It’s pretty exciting, actually.

Yet it’s also a game that’s easily manipulated. The rules grant far too much power to a referee to affect the result. (Referees don’t actually want to do that, of course.) It’s always been a game where hucksters and hustlers slink about in the shadows. (In the modern AAU era, the hucksters don’t even hide anymore.) David Stern is a different sort of huckster, one that’s well-dressed and well-spoken, big into packaging and public image, a Cheshire cat with little to nothing behind the grin. His efforts have turned the NBA into ‘fan-tastic,’ family-friendly, glitzy entertainment, but the game just doesn’t seem to matter much anymore.

Maybe that would change if a wrong could somehow be righted and the Sonics returned to their rightful place, but as much as I think that the Kings franchise would’ve been better off in Seattle, the idea of swooping up some other city’s franchise still feels a bit unclean. I wish Sacramento well and hope it all works out (although I doubt it will, but that is for another time.) And I don’t live in Seattle, anyway, so maybe my connections to the Sonics are just some act of the sort of nostalgia dabbling I generally decry.

But when David Stern decided to do his Little Napoleon routine, throwing his weight behind some carpetbagging sleazebags from Oklahoma and deciding it was worth picking a fight with the entirety of my home state so as to secure the franchise for that group of robber barons, he ceased once and for all to be a good commissioner. He was well on his way to irrelevance with the messes he made in Charlotte and Vancouver, but the Sonics fiasco sealed the deal. It was no longer about good business, at that point. It was all personal. And when you fancy yourself an Emperor, you don’t like being told that you’re wearing no clothes.

Good riddance.

Lose Tunes, Track 02

Today's edition of Lose Tunes is brought to you by Pow-Wow Botanical Rye, not because they are paying for it but because I am drinking some while writing this entry. (The crack Sales & Marketing staff here at IPL World HQ needs to get busy selling some advertisements.) This is the most weirdly interesting bottle of usquebae that I think I've ever had. Once you get over the fact that it doesn't take your ordinary usque, you just sort of settle in for a nice, easy ride. You can get really hammered on it if you're not careful, because it's so mellow.

Track 02 on the Lose Tunes soundtrack comes from a band from that bastion of rock'n'roll mayhem that is Provo, Utah. This band is called The Moth & The Flame and I was pretty much hooked by the drive of the bass riff the first time I heard this song. And the screaming out of the word "Sorry!" at the end of the song pretty much destined it to be added to the soundtrack of IN PLAY LOSE, "Sorry" being the generic, almost automatic first response to a great many acts of failure in this lifetime.

This band's new EP is a great record, with lots of sound sculptures and a good amount of ambient terror. You should check it out. And as for this video, is there any greater example of ambient terror than life in the 1950s?