i couldn't figure this out either she has a bad fall and an amazing comeback, but she was waaaaay off missing another jump etc. there is no way they should have got a silver.
there are some good things happenng for us on the speedskating oval. this is another good story, he's not a texan but... Recognizing Good Fortune, Cheek Shares Gold Medal February 14, 2006 TURIN, Italy, Feb. 13 — Joey Cheek of the United States arrived at the starting line for the first of his two heats in the 500 meters Monday with a strategy, which was unheard of. Most long-track speedskaters will tell you that the shortest race on the Olympic program is over too soon to scheme for anything other than a fast start and a clean trip around the oval. Cheek's design, it turned out, was grand. Bonnie Blair, a three-time Olympic gold medalist in the 500, was among those at the Oval Lingotto who marveled at how relaxed Cheek looked en route to winning the gold medal in a rout. On the strength of two nearly flawless races, Cheek finished with a combined time of 1 minute 9.76 seconds, which was 0.65 faster than Dmitry Dorofeyev of Russia. Casey FitzRandolph of the United States, the defending Olympic champion and one of Cheek's closest friends, stumbled a few meters after the start of his first race and could not make up the lost time, finishing 12th. Cheek said he had "kind of been plotting a little bit in my head" since winning the World Sprint Championships last month. His plan came out in the news conference afterward, when he politely interrupted a moderator who had opened the floor for questions. "Before we do that, can I make a statement?" Cheek said. Speaking at nearly as fast a clip as he had just skated, Cheek said, "I have a pretty unique opportunity here so I'm going to take advantage of it while I can." Noting that he had a human tailwind behind him of family, friends, coaches and countrymen during the 12 years he pursued his Olympic dream, Cheek said, "I always felt like if I ever did something big like this I wanted to be prepared to give something back." He then announced he would donate his $25,000 gold medal bonus from the United States Olympic Committee to a humanitarian organization, Right to Play. Cheek said he would funnel his money to a program to help refugees in Chad. "I thought about this for a while," Cheek said. "I won World Sprints and I thought: 'Jeez, I might actually have a shot of doing something great in the Olympics. If I do, I want to make it meaningful.' " He observed the Olympic production in 2002 when he won a bronze medal in the 1,000 meters in Salt Lake City. He saw the attention paid to the stars on such a stage. "I learned there's a gold medalist tonight," he said. "And tomorrow there's another gold medalist. So I can either take the time and just gush about how wonderful I feel or use it for something productive." It is not a coincidence that Right to Play is the pet cause of another Olympic speedskater, the Norwegian superstar Johann Olav Koss. Winning three gold medals in the 1994 Winter Games in Lillehammer, Norway, Koss inspired Cheek, then a 14-year-old living in Greensboro, N.C., to switch from inline skating to speedskating. Cheek's mother, Chris, recalled wandering into the living room one night during the Lillehammer Games while Koss was being profiled and Cheek saying, "Mom, that's what I want to do next." Two years later, after cramming to finish high school early, Cheek moved to Calgary, Alberta, to train year-round. While there he lived in a couple's basement. "I never hesitated over letting him go," Chris Cheek said. "If it's a dream they've got, you've got to let them go." She added, "Joey's always been someone who picks something he wants to do and then figures out, how am I going to get there?" Inspired by Koss's altruism, Cheek, 26, searched out the Right to Play office in the athletes' village shortly after settling into his room. He pored over the organization's literature and liked what he read. Through contacts he made there, Cheek was able to arrange to meet with Koss a few days ago for coffee, an experience Cheek called surreal. "The things that he has done for other people has been an absolute inspiration for me," Cheek said. "Now I have an opportunity to do something similar. It's my hope that I can assist some people and maybe walk in his large shoes." Before heading to the ice rink for his event Monday morning, Cheek was looking for the right frame of mind and he found it in the Right to Play office. "I think on some level it is empowering to think of someone other than yourself," he said. When he was introduced before his first heat, Cheek smiled broadly and waved to the crowd. He would say later that he never had felt more relaxed. He posted a time of 34.82, which was 42-hundredths of a second faster than his closest challenger, Dorofeyev. Only needing a time of 35.58 in his second heat to win, Cheek finished in 34.94. He was the only skater with times under 35 seconds. Cheek admitted that his blueprint for success was not a sure thing. What if he had not skated well enough to have the news media hanging on his every word? "A little risky, don't you think?" he said. Cheek laughed and acknowledged it crossed his mind that he might be jinxing himself. "Yet I just wanted to be prepared if the stars aligned and God blessed me with the races I got," he said. Win or lose, Cheek recognized that he was richly blessed. "What I do is great fun," he said. "I've seen the entire world and I've met amazing friends. But it's honestly a pretty ridiculous thing. I mean I skate around on ice in tights, right?" http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/14/sports/olympics/14speedskate.html?pagewanted=all
remember 2002????? i see another bribe. regardless of a new scoring system, you can't seem to keep the mob out of figure skating
I liked the story about the fifth place Chinese duo. The guy broke his achilles tendon 6 months ago and came back to compete and still managed to finish near the top. His partner did make her landing, while he did his. What was her excuse?
Righteous move by Cheek! ---------------- Olympic champion Cheek donates prize money to Darfur TURIN, Italy (AFP) - US speedskater Joey Cheek credited his decision to donate any prize money from a Winter Olympic gold medal to a Sudanese relief project with helping him capture the 500m title Monday. Cheek will donate the 25,000 dollars he will receive from the US Olympic Committee for his victory to "Right to Play", an athlete-driven charity organization, with the money earmarked for the battle-ravaged Darfur region. "I knew if I ever did something like this, I wanted to be able to give something back," Cheek said. "The best way I can say thanks is to donate my money to help somebody else." http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/torino2006/news?slug=afp-oly2006sskateusa&prov=afp&type=lgns
Except for the fact that Bode Miller has actually done something in his career. He won 2 silver medals at the 2002 Olympics.
I can't quite understand that either. I think it's a combination of the new scoring system and judges being sympathetic. But they were in the 2nd place after the short program. But Bribe? come on. China has already had the Silver and Bronze wrapped up at that point (2-4 were all Chinese). Why the heck do they need a bribe?
good for him. he is still is too much of scrub to talk about lance armstrong and barry bonds. all that hype for silver medalist skier. please. i'll forever hate the media for hyping up this drunk. give me lebron, trash this dude.
Well here's what I found out after reading a few articels from last night. Apparently the national media is pretty damn blind if they think they "nailed" everything after that fall. She was clearly shaken (probably injured) and even jumped out of one throw. I applaud her determination and courage to keep going, but they did not skate cleanly through the rest of the performance. And second, apparently under the new rules this was how it was supposed to be scored! If you attempt something like say a quad throw, and ALMOST complete it, well you get credit for a triple! WTF?! In the past, and any other sport, if you fell, you're done, if you slip up (like Kwan did four years ago), you're screwed.
Spoiler.... How about the US women's hockey? I thought they looked kinda flat when they were down to Finland today, 3-1 late in the second, then bounce back w/ 6 straight goals...
Anybody else keeping up to speed? While it hasn't - obviously - been as "special" as the Salt Lake games, there have been a number of memorable moments. Ligety's win in the combined and the dissapointments of the other U.S. men. Men's figure skating was somewhat of a letdown, everybody outside of Pleshenko seemed to struggle, but Lysacek's performance in the long program was pretty stirring. Snowboard Cross was pretty cool and Jacobellis' fall in the final is unparrelled. And then this whole US Men's speedskating business... I don't care if he's a hometown boy, I'm starting to get a little pissed of with Hendrick for ripping into Shani Davis like he has. He's got his gold medal already, so let him get his. It's pretty damn selfish of Hendrick to basically demand Davis race in the pursuit so he can "pad" his gold medal count.
Speaking of Shani Davis. Congrats to him for becoming the first black athlete to win an individual gold at the Winter Olympics.
Shani Davis came off a like major ahole as well when he was interviewed about his victory. He was curt and acted like a tool. Can the egos on him and Hendricks get any bigger? It's friggin' ice skating.
I agree there. Maybe it was because he's gotten pretty hammered in the press the past week..but the media has been fairly objective about the whole thing, so there was really no call for that.
I wish Evan Lysacek could have gotten a medal, though I know he was too far behind after the short program. I hope he dominates for the next four years and wins gold in 2010. Not bad to look at, either.