You know, we humans can never stop comparing, however absurd it may be.
This, of course, happens in sports as well. Who is the Greatest Cricketer of
all time? Bradman or Sachin? Or Worse, Who is the Greatest Olympian of all
time? Phelps, Paavo Nurmi or Jesse Owens? More often than not, we do not end
with an answer to these questions, but that never stops us from doing it.
Because, things like these make life interesting. The fun is not in the
verdict, but in the discussion.
Similar to these comparisons
is this clichéd category of articles called, ”Top Ten Moments of the (Year,
Century, Olympics, Elections, Life and what not).” Cliched, but never ignored.
So, here is my list of
Best Moments from the Olympics- not the best achievements, but the moments that
made me feel so good.
In no particular order..
Michael Phelps – The
Magnificent Farewell
As Michael Phelps powered home the anchor leg
of the U.S. 4×200-meter freestyle relay, he did something he had never done
before underwater during a race: He started smiling with about 20 meters left.
He could not help himself. (Washington Post)
How does it feel to be the first ever
medallist of a country?
Just a lap away from the end. After one
hour and 15 minutes of walking, you are 4th, apprehensive if the country’s
blank slate will continue to remain so. But if you are Erick Borrondo, you will
get that last kick to hold your nerves, not lose hope and end with silver. He
became the first ever medallist from Guatamela.
Inspiring
This will be one of my most favourite moments. To see
Tirunesh Dibaba just sprint away in her last lap of the 10000m race and win by
a huge margin was the most inspiring moment of the London Olympics for me. Her
last 2 laps would be in the top 20 timings for the 800m this year. Not for nothing
is she known as the “Baby faced Assassin.”
Intimidating
Sharapova, the World No 2, was playing an opponent, who
just had recovered from a career threatening injury, and way below her ranking.
But the scoreline read 0-6, 1-5 against her. Because, on the other side was
Serena Williams, sending down an ace that would have made most male players
proud. At one point, Serena had more aces than points won by Sharapova. This is
what you call “Intimidating”.
The Curse of the 100m hurdles
Liu Xiang, the
2004 Athens champion, the most celebrated athlete of China, in his own turf,
Beijing, had to pull out of the finals at the last moment, depriving us of what
was expected to be a marquee race. Dayron Robles had hurdled to the Gold and a
World Record. This London Olympic was supposed to be redemption time for him.
But tragedy struck again as he fell down and injured himself in the first
hurdle itself. The curse of the 100m hurdles was complete when Robles, the
defending champion also hurt himself in the finals and lost. But heartrending
it was when, Liu refused the wheelchair offered and walked through the 110m on
one leg and supported by the winner of the race.
The most competitive event
of the Games
This is for the most passionate lovers of the Games. The
top 5 women in the 200m were World Champions in 100, 200 and 400 metres in the
recent past - Allyson Felix, Shelly Ann Fraser-Pryce, Carmelita Jeter, Veronica
Campbell and Sanya Richards Ross. It was so competitive that Sanya Richards
said that she would not even run again among such great champions.
Jack of all trades but...
Decathlon is one of the toughest events in the Olympics.
While Bolt did his 7 races covering 1000m over a period of 8 days, this has 10
events happening in just 2 days. But this also means that they are not
proficient in all of the events, while Bolt is, in his event. This led to quite
a funny scenes, particularly in Pole Vault – jumping in a crazy style, in the
opposite direction, falling face flat on the mat were some of the scenes witnessed.
What a moment!!!
This is very difficult for me to explain. This picture
tells the complete story. This is how Carmelita Jeter( My Darling) reacted when
she realised she is going to set a WR in the 4*100m relay.
Who am I?
Guor Marial completed the Men’s marathon at 47th position but
still made headlines in atleast a dozen countries. Why? He ran away from his
home in South Sudan to the US when he was 15, but he is not a US citizen yet.
And South Sudan has still not been recognised by the Olympic committee. So he
ran under the Olympic flag itself signalling hope to millions of people like
him, His position in the race was never a matter of concern, wasn’t it?
Never again say “Dont cry
like a girl”
This has been a universal phenomenon in this Games –
grown up men crying like babies. Two particular winners stand out – Mo Farah
and Felix Sanchez. They just couldn’t stop crying on the podium.
I am still waiting for the
day when I could be one among those 80000 cheering the most competitive race, a double amputee running, grown up men crying, a photo finish to a punishing
triathlon or a injured athlete spiritedly finishing his race.
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