THE
U.S. WOMEN GYMNASTS WERE THE SAVING GRACES
DURING
THE FIRST WEEK OF THE ILL - FATED CENTENNIAL
GAMES
By: Steve Wulf Atlanta
A picture of the Magnificent
Seven on the medal stand, with their gold medals ) Golden girls
Borden, Dawes, Chow,
Phelps, Moceanu, Strug, and Miller back in the moment. ( Picture of Amy
Van Dyken in the pool celebrating ) American swimming sensation Amy
Van Dyken celebrates the second of her four gold medals, in the 100 - M
butterfly. She also took the
50 - M freestyle and
anchored America's winning relays. ( Donovan Bailey celebrating after he
wins the 100 m ) Donovan Bailey claims the title of World's fastest
human. ( A picture of John Macready on the rings ) Gymnast John Macready
hangs tough in team competition. (Pozdnyakov is happy after winning gold
in fencing ) Russian Stanislav Pozdnyakov exults over his sabre gold.
( A picture of Judoka being thrown in the air ) Half - lightweight
Judoka Udo Quellmalz of Germany is thrown for a victory by his jubilant
teammates and countrymen.
( Picture of two volleyball
players going up on the net ) Sandra Pires and Barbara Fontana
Harris play beach ball.
( Yuzawa serving the ping pong ball ) Ryo Yuzawa of Japan serves
one up to his Swedish opponent. ( Suleymanoglu holds the bar over his head
in weightlifting ) Naim Suleymanoglu gives forth a pocket - Herculean
effort. ( An underwater picture of swimmer Allison Wagner ) A fish
- eyed view of Allison Wagner in the 200 - M medley. ( Two wrestlers are
trying to put holds on each other ) The scary - looking Alexander
Karelin of
Russia had hold of the
Gold, not to mention American behemoth Matt Ghaffari, in the final of
Super - Heavyweight Greco
- Roman wrestling.
Audacious. When Kerri
Strug took off down the runway late last Tuesday afternoon ( real time
), ignoring
the intense pain in the
left ankle she had badly sprained on her previous vault, she thought she
needed
to stick it in order to
give the U.S. women the gold medal in the gymnastics team competition.
She
didn't even need to vault,
as arithmetic turned out, but no matter. Strug did more than win
a gold medal.
She added another
word to the Olympic credo: Citius, altius, fortius, audacius. Faster,
higher, stronger,
braver.
Until the roar of terrorism
early Saturday morning, the defining moment of the Centennial Olympic
Games had not been a Cream
Team snoozer or a stalled bus or an O.J. Simpson sighting or even one of
the inspiring performances
by American swimmer Amy Van Dyken. it was Kerri Strug nailing her
landing
after her Yurchenko 1 1/2,
then maintaining her balance on one foot as she pivoted in deference to
the
two tables of judges.
With that, the 87 - lb. 18 - year - old shoved aside Shaquille O'Neal,
Alexander
Karelin, Billy Payne and
all the big, bad Olympians. There were other heroes, to be sure,
in the first
eight days of the 16 - day
competition, but none as compelling as the Seven Sisters of U.S. gymnastics
( see page 42 ). In
this ghost town on Saturday, one could only wish that they might magically
reappear
to make all of Atlanta -
spectator, Olympian, official - braver. After all, in just a few
hours last week, they
had crystallized and reminded
us of the intent of the Games.
Citius. Threats of
thunderstorms never materialized on Saturday night, but there was lightning
on the
Olympic Stadium track.
Donovan Bailey of Canada won the 100 m in a world - record time of 9.84
sec.,
although it took three false
starts and a petulant protest by Great Britain's Linford Christie, who
was
disqualified for two of
them, before the gun sounded for good. Bailey ran down Frankie Fredericks
of
Namibia and Ato Boldon of
Trinidad to become the world's fastest human - ever. He also helped
erase
the Seoul stigma of Den
Johnson, who like Bailey was a Jamaican running for Canada. " I'm
not trying
to do what Ben did, or undo
what Ben did in Seoul, " he said. " My name is Donovan Bailey. "
The women's 100 m took both
10.94 sec. and an eternity. Gail Devers and Gwen Torrence of the
U.S.
and Merlene Ottey of Jamaica
all hit the tape together, with Devers winning by a literal nose.
But
minutes passed before the
result was posted, and then silver medalist Ottey filed a protest that
was
denied an hour later.
Devers, who thus becomes the first man or woman since Wyomia Tyus in '64
and
'68 to repeat in the 100,
was quick to bank her joy with concern for the loved ones of the people
injured
and killed in the blast
at Olympic Park. " It's hard to enjoy this, " said Devers, " knowing
that someone
is trying to destroy the
Olympic spirit. But they won't be able to do that unless we let them.
"
The pool at the Georgia Tech
aquatic center was supposed to be the fastest in the world, but it yielded
more surprises than world
records ( four ). While teammates like Janet Evans and Amanda Beard
got all
the pre - Olympic hype,
the charmingly gawky Van Dyken stole the show with an unprecedented four
gold medals. Michelle
Smith, another relative unknown from Ireland, a nation not heretofore known
for its
aquatics, won three races.
The U.S. men's 4 x 100 freestyle relay team of Gary Hall Jr., Jon Olsen,
Josh Davis, and Brad Schumacher
not only kept America's unbeaten streak in the event intact, but also
provided the delicious symmetry
of winning the 100th gold medal for U.S. men swimmers in the 100th
year of the Olympics.
" Cool, " said Davis when first informed of the milestone. Cool was
also the
reception given to Smith
and the Chinese swimmers, who were persistently accused of drug use by
American journalists and
swimmers on only circumstantial evidence. " They're being a little
bit ungracious, " said Smith. " I don't want to lower myself to that
level. "
Altius, America. After
baking in the opening ceremony and the first parade of nations to include
every
nation ( 197 in '96 ), the
Atlanta Journal - Constitution summed up the first day of competition with
this
banner headline: NO GOLD
FOR US. The message was that there was something ignoble about the
two silvers and the bronze
that U.S. athletes won that day, and by extension the dross won by athletes
from other nations.
Aleksandra Ivosev of Yugoslavia certainly appreciated the bronze medal
she won for
the women's 10 - m air rifle.
Ivosev has a training problem, which would be laughably ironies if it weren't
sadly so: " Because of war,
" she said, " we couldn't find a good location to practice. "
The U.S. did find a mother
lode of gold in the pool, enough to satisfy even the most jingoistic sports
fan.
But the medal - count
table has about as much soul as the meter on a cab, the rate on the back
of a
hotel - room door, the total
on a cash register - numbers that dominated conversations in Atlanta.
When
the women of the U.S. gymnastics
team did something none of their predecessors had ever done, their
collective effort, and the
spirit of Kerri Strug, transcended metallurgy. They went higher,
and so did we.
Higher was also the objective
of the many stargazers who attended the first week's events and collected
celebrities like pins: Simpson,
David Hasselhoff, Bruce and Demi, Arnold, Ali, Chelsea - who, bless her
heart, went to everything
- and her parents. Royalty mixed with Olympian and, in the case of
Kuwait
swimmer S.A.B.S. Sultan
Alotaibi, who finished 37th out of 37 in the 200 - m individual medley,
were one
and the same. Perhaps
the most interesting encounter occurred at the Olympic Village, when U.S.
team handball circle runner
Dave DeGraaf was followed into the lavatory by men in suits. " Mr.
President, how are you?
" asked DeGraaf. " Fine - how are you, young man? " responded
Clinton. As
DeGraaf's teammate, goalie
Yaro Dachniwsky, put it, " Dave's now an expert on presidential leaks.
"
Fortius. The third
Olympic goal was also well served last week. There was the Pocket
Hercules,
Turkish weight lifter Naim
Suleymanoglu, who won the 64 - kg class to become the first man to win
gold
medals for weight lifting
in three consecutive Olympics. Asked if he thought he was the greatest
weight
lifter of all time, the
4 ft., 11 in. Suleymanoglu said, " You can make your own decision. "
( We think
so, Pocket. ) On the
first night of track and field on Friday, Randy Barnes of the U.S. won
the shot put
with a toss of 70 ft., 11
1/4 in., easily out distancing teammate John Godina and erasing the shame
of
the drug suspension that
kept him from competing in Barcelona.
The best test of strength,
though, may have been in the super heavyweight final of Greco - Roman
wrestling. Matt Ghaffari,
representing the U.S. and resembling a refugee from the World Wrestling
Federation, locked up with
Karelin, the Russian who had two Olympic gold medals and has a real future
as a Hollywood heavy.
Ghaffari gave it his all in a tense, exhausting eight minutes, but Karelin
emerged
victorious by the scantiest
of margins - 1- 0. Appearances are deceiving. Ghaffari blubbered
like a baby
on the medal stand - he
was overjoyed, mind you - and Karelin revealed himself to be a pussycat.
Asked if he was bothered
that people are afraid of him because of his countenance, the Dostoyevsky
-
quoting Karelin replied,
" I'm used to it, and anyway, it's better than the other way around: being
beautiful
and mean. "
Until the competition took
over, Atlanta was threatening to add another Latin word to Baron de
Coubertin's motto: Irritabilus.
Testier. Journalists whined about A.C.O.G., IBM, the I.O.C. and
journalists who whined.
Atlanta mayor Bill Campbell said that the media critics should be taken
out to
the Wolf Creek shooting
complex. Cuban fencer Elvis Gregory got into a shoving match with
Adam
Krzesinski of Poland, who
had won their gold - medal match in the foil. The Italian baseball
coach
complained that Team USA
was running up the score. When two of his boxers lost controversial
decisions, U.S. coach Al
Mitchell said, " Now you know why these guys go pro. " ( So they
can ply
their trade among honorable
men? ) Joe Frazier, the ex - heavyweight champ and former gold medalist
who was in town for a promotional
appearance, had the bad taste to ridicule the torch - lighting dexterity
of old nemesis Muhammad
Ali. And Reggie Miller, Dream Team II guard, won the gold medal for
chutzpah when he complained
about the room service at the deluxe hotel accommodating the U.S.
basketball team.
The one unfortunate, unshakable
characteristic of these Games is the class system: first class or
coach. At Morehouse
College, where the popular U.S. women's basketball team plays most of its
games, the cheap seats made
available to the public are completely filled, and the good seats bought
out by Olympic sponsors
go unused. Before basketball games, the two teams exchange gifts
like pins
and jerseys. At the
U.S. - Angola men's game last week, it would have seemed fairer if the
Dream
Teamers had given the Angolans
keys to luxury automobiles. After the game, which the U.S won by
only 33 points, Angolan
coach Vladimiro Romero was asked how much his players earn. After
he and
two of the players stopped
laughing, Romero said, " Each might earn on one - thousandth of what
each
player on the team we played
tonight earns. "
Not every famous athlete
is isolated by wealth. Monica Seles, who would have every reason
to
sequester herself, is just
one of the girls on the U.S. tennis team, living and reveling in the Olympic
Village, catching as many
events as she can. Evans, in her last Olympics, did the laundry for
Beard, in
her first. Nothing,
not the Atlanta Olympic committee, not commercialism, not even a bomb,
can
extinguish the Olympic ideal.
Some of the most heated matches in these Games - boxing, baseball,
volleyball - will be between
Cuba and the U.S. Yet the other night, after Jeff Rouse of the US.
defeated
two Cubans, Rodolfo Falcon
Cabrera and Neisser Bent, in the 100 - m backstroke, Cabrara took his seat
at the press conference,
smiled at Rouse in admiration and patted the chair next to him as an invitation.
It was the smallest and
the largest of gestures.
At another press conference
last week, after weight lifter Zhan Xugang of China won the 154 - lb. gold
medal, his coach, Yang Han
Xiong, was asked why Zhan added more weight to the bar in the clean and
jerk ( bringing it up to
a world record 430 lbs. ) even after he had clinched the gold medal
at 424 lbs. "
The Olympic spirit is faster,
higher, stronger, " said Yang. " So we tried it. "
Taken From: Time: August
5, 1996
Pages: 32 - 41
Thanks goes to Thomas Doyle for typing this article.