By Alex P.
Vidal
LOS ANGELES,
California -- Life must go on for all of us after the Pacquiao-Bradley debacle.
After all, the tumult did not bring us all down; it even united us -- against
the diabolical backdoor operators in particular, and ruthlessness of the sport,
otherwise known as the "Sweet Science," in general.
Highly
regarded for producing immortal human beings in the persons of Gene Tunney,
Pancho Villa, Sugar Ray Robinson, Muhammad Ali, Joe Louis, Flash Elorde, George
Foreman, and, yes, Manny Pacquiao, boxing is now a forbidden name in the pedestal
of sports integrity as a result of the June 9 heist at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Controversies
don’t happen exclusively in the glitzy gambling capital of the world. The Olympic
Games has its own share of both fame and shame. And since it is an Olympic
season, let's pave the way for Bill Shaikin's Top 10 Olympic controversies that
have left indelible stains in the Summer Games.
GLORY, ACCLAIM
The Olympic
Games offer competitors the chance to bathe in national glory and international
acclaim. The victors — indeed, all the athletes who aspire to victory — are
celebrated in the Olympic motto of "Citius, Altius, Fortius." Faster,
higher, stronger.
Yet
celebration and aspiration sometimes share the Olympic spotlight with
controversy, with scandal and with athletes who train and compete outside the
bounds of Citius, Altius and Fortius. One ranking of the 10 least pure moments
in the history of the Summer Games:
No. 10
(1912): Jim Thorpe never had participated in a decathlon until the 1912
Olympics. He won the pentathlon, then gave the decathlon a try and won gold
there too. He was saluted as the greatest athlete in the world, rewarded with a
ticker-tape parade in New York and generally revered until the Worcester
(Mass.) Telegram reported a few months later that Thorpe had made a few bucks
playing minor league baseball — $25 or $35 a week, in the summers of 1909 and
1910. That made him a professional athlete, in the eyes of U.S. Olympic
officials, and the International Olympic Committee stripped him of his medals.
However, decathlon runner-up Hugo Wieslander of Sweden said he considered
Thorpe the fair champion and would not accept the gold medal. The IOC
reinstated Thorpe posthumously and awarded his children duplicate gold medals
in 1983.
No. 9 (1984):
At a time South Africa was banned from the Olympics because of its
state-sponsored racial segregation, a South African teenager named Zola Budd
ran for Britain, after London's Daily Mail paid for her to move to England four
months before the Games. She had a British grandfather, it turned out, and soon
enough she had British citizenship. In the final of the women's 3,000 meters,
she and American favorite Mary Decker bumped, with Decker tripping on Budd's
right leg and falling to the ground with a hip injury. She did not finish.
Budd, loudly booed at the Los Angeles Coliseum, finished seventh. Budd
apologized to Decker, who told her, "Don't bother. I don't want to talk to
you." Decker faulted Budd for improperly cutting inside; track officials
briefly disqualified her and then reinstated her. Budd had grown up with a
poster of Decker on her wall.
FINISH LINE
No. 8 (1904):
On a sweltering afternoon in St. Louis, Fred Lorz of the U.S. crossed the
marathon finish line with no other runners in sight. The day was so hot and the
course so poor — the only water available came from a well 12 miles into the
race — that 18 of the 32 runners to start the race did not complete it. As it
turned out, neither did Lorz. He tired after about nine miles, then jumped into
a car for the next 11. The car broke down, so Lorz ran the rest of the way, and
he was greeted as the winner. The fraud was quickly discovered, and Lorz
confessed to what he said was a practical joke. He did win the Boston Marathon
in 1905.
No. 7 (1936):
Perhaps the most enduring myth of the Olympic Games is that Adolf Hitler
refused to extend a congratulatory handshake to Jesse Owens, a claim for which
Olympic historians have found no supporting evidence. It is clear that Hitler
was neither pleased nor impressed by the four gold medals Owens won, even as
the German crowd cheered him loudly and mobbed him for pictures and autographs.
As Owens pierced the Nazi myth of Aryan superiority, his home country acted
with regrettable caution, replacing two Jewish sprinters on the U.S. team.
Owens got a hero's welcome upon returning home, yet as a black man he had to
ride the freight elevator to a New York hotel reception in his honor. Once the
Olympic glow faded, Owens had to earn money by racing against horses.
No. 6 (1968):
In the months following the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert
F. Kennedy, black American athletes debated whether to protest strained race relations
by boycotting the Olympics. Instead, Tommie Smith and John Carlos offered a
silent protest from the medal stand. Smith won gold in the men's 200 meters,
Carlos won bronze. As the national anthem played, Smith and Carlos bowed their
heads and raised a black-gloved fist toward the sky. The silver medalist,
Australia's Peter Norman, volunteered to wear a sticker supporting the Olympic
Project for Human Rights. The International Olympic Committee threatened to
expel the U.S. team if Smith and Carlos were not sent home at once. Smith and
Carlos both attended San Jose State, which erected a statue in their honor in
2005. When Norman died the next year, Smith and Carlos each served as
pallbearers at the funeral.
BLOWS
No. 5 (1988):
Roy Jones Jr. of the United States dominated the three-round light-middleweight
championship fight. That he would win was a foregone conclusion. He landed 86
blows; opponent Park Si-hun of South Korea landed 32. These Games were in
Seoul, and one judge told Sports Illustrated he "voted for the
Korean" so the boxers from the host country would not be shut out. But two
of the other four judges favored Park as well, giving him the gold medal in a
decision that triggered this commentary in the French newspaper L'Equipe:
"Scandalous.To vomit." Park reportedly admitted he had lost the
fight, but he did not return the medal. The decision stood — yet Jones was
selected as the most outstanding boxer of the Olympics.
No. 4 (1956):
As the Hungarian water polo team left for Melbourne to defend its gold medal,
Hungary withdrew from the Warsaw Pact and declared itself a free and
independent country. By the time the team arrived at the Olympics three weeks
later, the Soviet Union had invaded Hungary and crushed the rebellion. The
Hungarians played on, and drew the Soviets in the water polo semifinals.
"We were yelling at them, 'You dirty bastards. You come over and bomb our
country,'" Hungarian star Ervin Zador told the BBC. "They were
calling us traitors." Hungary led 4-0 when a Soviet player pummeled Zador
so severely that blood streamed from above his eye. The match was stopped, with
pro-Hungarian fans threatening to storm the playing area and fight with the
Soviet team. Zador's injury forced him to sit out the gold-medal game, which
Hungary won, but the semifinal has been immortalized as the "Blood in the
Water" game.
SWORD
No. 3 (1976):
The light went on whenever the sword made contact with the opponent. Get a hit,
trigger the light. That was fencing. But how could the light go off when there
was no hit? That was what Britain's modern pentathlon team wanted to know when
two of its competitors complained that Boris Onischenko of the Soviet Union was
getting credit for mythical hits. An examination of Onischenko's sword revealed
he could push a concealed button and trigger the light whenever he wanted. He
was disqualified, and the nickname wrote itself in headlines around the world:
"Disonischenko."
No. 2 (1988):
"I'd like to say my name is Benjamin Sinclair Johnson Jr. and this world
record will last 50 years, maybe 100." That is how Canada's Ben Johnson
opened the news conference after winning gold in the men's 100 meters in
Beijing, obliterating the previous record with a time of 9.79 seconds. He was
stripped of the gold medal three days later, after testing positive for
steroids, the biggest name to be caught in Olympic drug testing. Carl Lewis of
the U.S. was declared the winner, with a runner-up 9.92 that set an Olympic
record. It was not until 1999 that Maurice Greene ran the first legitimate
9.79. Jamaica's Usain Bolt holds the current world record of 9.58.
No. 1 (1972):
The United States never had lost a men's basketball game in the Olympics, and
three seconds were all that stood between the U.S. and another gold medal. The
Americans led, 50-49. The Soviet Union inbounded the ball, and time ran out.
But a British official from the international basketball federation — in the
stands, not on the court — ordered three seconds restored, ostensibly the time
left when the Soviets tried to call time out. Again the clock ran out, and
again three seconds were ordered restored, this time because the clock
allegedly had not been properly reset. Alexander Belov converted a long pass
into the winning basket, the Americans' record in the Olympics fell to 63-1 and
the U.S. team refused to accept its silver medals. The medals remain locked in
a Swiss vault.
Sources for
Shaikin's report included the Guardian's "50 Stunning Olympic Moments" and
David Wallechinsky's "The Complete Book of the Olympics."
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