The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Category Archives: Olympics
Winter Olympics 2022: 10 things to look out for in Beijing – The Guardian
Posted: February 7, 2022 at 6:37 am
1) Jamaica, we have a bobsleigh team (again)
Jamaica will enter a four-man bobsleigh team in the Olympics for the first time in 24 years after nicking the final qualifying spot, offering a feelgood reboot for the island nation whose debut at the 1988 Calgary Games inspired the Disney film Cool Runnings. Just making it to Beijing might seem like accomplishment enough for Shanwayne Stephens, the teams 31-year-old pilot and Royal Air Force lance corporal who emigrated to Great Britain with his family in 2002: certainly after improvised training methods at the height of the pandemic that included pushing his girlfriends Mini Cooper around the streets of Peterborough. But having touched down in China after undergoing their final preparations at the University of Bath, his goal is plain. Its got to be medalling, Stephens says. Its everybodys dream, its what were here to do. So why not aim high? BAG
Sign up for our Beijing 2022 briefing with all the news, views and previews for the Games.
There is no such thing as a banker in an event as chaotic or frenetic as snowboard cross, where four racers take each other on down a mountain, but Britains Charlotte Bankes is certainly in pole position. The 26-year-old, who transferred from France to Team GB after the Pyeongchang Games four years ago, is not only the reigning world champion but has been in impressive form on the circuit this season. Bankes is at the vanguard of a strong GB snowsport team that also have reasonable medal chances in the form of Zoe Atkin, James Woods and 17-year-old Kirsty Muir, the youngest member of the Team GB squad. SI
Mikaela Shiffrin, the 26-year-old American sensation of the piste whose three Olympic medals include gold in slalom in 2014 and in giant slalom in 2018, has said her plan is to race all five individual events in Yanqing and will go off as a hot medal contender in all but the downhill. That puts Janica Kostelics womens record of four medals at a single Olympics on watch. The Vail native, whose 73 career World Cup wins are 13 short of Ingemar Stenmarks all-time record of 86, can further burnish her legacy by becoming the first skier from the US, male or female, to win more than two Olympic gold medals. BAG
Its the most compelling figure skating rivalry in a generation. In one corner: Nathan Chen of the US, the three-time world champion, who has won all but one competition he has entered since a nightmarish short programme doomed him to a fifth-place finish in 2018. In the other: Japans Yuzuru Hanyu, the two-time defending Olympic gold medallist who became the first mens repeat champion in 66 years at those same Pyeongchang Games. Chen goes off as the favourite on merit after winning their three most recent head-to-head meetings, but Hanyus knack for raising his level when the lights burn brightest makes their showdown at the Capital Indoor Stadium one of the must-watch fixtures of the coming weeks. BAG
Remember how Britain briefly went curling crazy in 2002 when Rhona Martin and her stone of destiny won gold in Salt Lake City? Well, Beijing 2022 could be far bigger. The bookies rate the British mixed and mens teams, led by Bruce Brucey Moaut, as favourites for gold, and the womens team, skipped by Eve Evey Muirhead, as the third favourites in their event. And while there might be some parochialism baked into those odds, the form of the British teams stacks up. The men are world champions. The mixed team are world champions. And the women recently won the European championship. Three medals? Its not out of the question. SI
Haiti and Saudi Arabia are poised to make their Winter Games debuts, with these Games matching the fewest number of debutant countries at an Olympics after Squaw Valley 1960, when South Africa was alone to join the fray. In a curious twist, both will take part in the same event. Richardson Viano, a 19-year-old originally from Port-au-Prince who was adopted by an Italian couple living in France, is scheduled to compete in the mens giant slalom alongside Fayik Abdi, a 24-year-old born in San Diego and raised in Beirut who will become the first athlete from any Gulf nation to compete in a Winter Olympics. BAG
The San Francisco-born freestyle skier and IMG model competed under the US flag before switching affiliations to China, where she is known as Gu Ailing and has been positioned as the face of the Beijing Games. The 18-year-old is among the gold medal favourites in the halfpipe, slopestyle and big air events having scored World Cup wins in all three disciplines this year and well on her way to becoming a household name with more than 1.3 million followers on Weibo and a growing roster of sponsors including Cadillac, Tiffanys, Visa and Victorias Secret. BAG
It was a minor surprise when Norway, a country of only 5.4 million people, finished top of the podium at the 2018 Games, winning 39 medals. It wont be if they repeat the trick in 2022. Indeed the data company Gracenote projects them to win 44 medals well clear of the Russian Olympic Committee and Germany with cross-country skiing and biathlon providing the majority of medals. But what makes Norways success so remarkable is they spend only a 10th of what Team GB does on Olympic sports each year and they also stress the importance of the umbilical link between grassroots and elite sport and of putting fun and happiness ahead of medals. SI
Southern Californian prodigy Chloe Kim shot to global stardom in Pyeongchang when she became the youngest female athlete to secure Winter Olympics gold on snow with a transcendent performance that included back-to-back 1080s, the gravity-defying manoeuvre she remains the only woman to have landed in competition. But she quickly found the trappings of fame gracing the fronts of cereal boxes and magazine covers, getting name-checked in Frances McDormands Oscar speech were dwarfed by her yearning for a normal life as a college student at Princeton. After nearly two years off the mountain Kim picked up right where she left off with a world title, crediting her decision to start therapy and turn focus to her mental health with helping rekindle her competitive fire. Now 21, she is the hot favourite to defend her Olympic snowboard halfpipe title. BAG
A trio of boundary-pushing Russian teenagers armed with point-gobbling quadruple jumps is poised to obliterate the competition in womens figure skating, reducing the entire podium of the Winter Olympics glamour event to a fait accompli. Barring a colossal surprise, the more familiar pair of the 17-year-olds Alexandra Trusova and the reigning world champion, Anna Shcherbakova, will compete for the silver and bronze medals behind the 15-year-old prodigy Kamila Valieva, the newly minted European champion who has already broken the world records for the womens short programme, free skate and combined total in an extraordinary first season on the senior circuit. BAG
See the original post here:
Winter Olympics 2022: 10 things to look out for in Beijing - The Guardian
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on Winter Olympics 2022: 10 things to look out for in Beijing – The Guardian
With mixed doubles curling at the Ice Cube, the 2022 Winter Olympics are officially underway – USA TODAY
Posted: at 6:37 am
Learn the basics of Olympic curling ahead of the Beijing Winter Games
The Potomac Curling Club teaches the basics of curling strategy and tell you everything you need to know to watch curling in the Olympics.
Jasper Colt and Hank Farr, USA TODAY
BEIJING In 2008, as the Water Cube, it was where U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps won a record eight gold medals.
And Wednesday, as the Ice Cube, it's where the 2022 Winter Olympics officially began.
A full 48 hours before the opening ceremony, curlers from eight countries including the United Stateskicked off the mixed doubles competition at the National Aquatics Center, in what was the first sporting event of the Beijing Games.
The American team of Vicky Persinger and Chris Plys faced Australia in their first round-robin game, squeaking out a6-5 win. And the opportunity to lead off Olympic competition was just as exciting.
"It's kind of nice to be the first, to get the party started," said Persinger, 29."We've been here for several days, and we weren't able to get on the ice until today, actually. So just being out there, and getting to take our masks off and throwing those first few rocks in the game, it made me feel a lot more comfortable. Just kind of the joy of like, this is why we came here."
Plys said that, due in part to travel, it had been about a week and a half since they had been able to practice on the ice, prior to Wednesday's opener.
"We kind of talked about how half the battle to these Olympics is getting here healthy, to a point where we can play," the 34-year-old from Duluth, Minnesota said."It's been less than ideal circumstances, obviously, for everybody. But as the Games continue on and we get some reps in under our belt and find that confidence, I think it'll help us sharpen up down the stretch."
CHASING GOLD: Sign up for our newsletter to learn everything about USA's quest for gold in Beijing
EXCLUSIVE ACCESS: Sign up for USA TODAYs Olympics texts to get the latest updates and behind-the-scenes coverage from Beijing
Wednesday's action lacked some of the typical fanfare of Olympic competitiondue to COVID-19. With the Games being staged in a "closed-loop system," Beijing 2022 organizers had announced that only selectChinese fans would be invited to watch the Games in person and only if they met certain COVID-19 restrictions.
At the Ice Cube, this translated to about 200 fans spread out across six sections of blue seats, and a few dozen more scattered on the side opposite them. Most clapped when host China pulled off a big shot, or won an end. Others waived blue flags adorned with panda Bing Dwen Dwen, the mascot of the Games.
"It's cool, man," Plys said of the atmosphere. "We'll take fans any way we can get them right now. Last time I played in a major competition, there were cardboard cutouts of people in the stands, and that was a bit weird."
Persinger and Plys will return to the ice Thursday with two more round-robin games, against Italy and Norway.
It's a strange quirk of Olympic scheduling, that competition in some events begins before the Olympic flame is officially lit. Two other sports moguls skiing and women's hockey will join curling on the competition schedule Thursday, with the U.S. women facing Finland in their first preliminary game at 8:10 a.m. ET.
The ceremonial start of the Games will come roughly 24 hours later, with the opening ceremony at Beijing's National Stadium, more commonly known as the Bird's Nest. NBC's coverage of the event begins at 6:30 a.m. ET.
Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on Twitter @Tom_Schad.
See the original post here:
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on With mixed doubles curling at the Ice Cube, the 2022 Winter Olympics are officially underway – USA TODAY
The Omicron Olympics: Behind the Scenes of a Covid Stshow China Doesnt Want You to See – Rolling Stone
Posted: January 29, 2022 at 11:47 pm
Hed traded his 10-year residency at Burning Man for the hermetic existence of an Olympic athlete, his all-nighters in Ibiza for goggles and a facemask in the open air. And still Benjamin Alexander could not escape the damn virus. Hed traced an initial bout with Covid-19 this time last year to a chairlift, en route to becoming the Cool Runnings of the slopes after learning to ski at age 32, Alexander will represent Jamaica next month as its first-ever alpine racer at the Winter Olympics. Hed been double-vaccinated, then boosted in November.
Late last month, though, the chalet scene at a qualifying event in Montenegro broke on through. By the time he arrived home for Christmas in London, Alexander had a sore throat, and the aches werent from his familys spare bed. Of course hed tested positive again; this is the Omicron Olympics hes bracing for.
Benjamin Alexander
Stephen Shelesky*
I would love to say that I was in like a big party or an orgy it was just training with a bunch of athletes half my age, Alexander, now 38, tells Rolling Stone following a post-quarantine run in Austria. Through a gallows smile of gritted teeth, he equates contagion to competitive advantage: I now have the immunity to go around licking door knobs when I get to the Olympics if need be. But, look thats gonna give me that sense of security and peace of mind now going into the Games, because a lot of people a lot of athletes are really, really scared of getting the virus.
The International Olympic Committee, organizers in Beijing, and the $2 billion global advertising machine swear that everything is going to be just fine this February: A filtering process of travelers into Chinas draconian zero-Covid environment, followed by daily testing within a closed loop and country-specific precautions, will combine to create a triple-bubble of the 24th Winter Olympiad pandemic-proofing that would give Joe Rogan nightmares and put the efforts of the NBA, NFL, and NHL to shame.
But listen to actual Olympians, as Rolling Stone did in real talk with a cross-section of 17 prominent athletes this month, and you begin to comprehend a mutating pressure. After lifetimes preparing for their moment, the Omicron variant is following these young people around the world, straight into a maze of naked capitalism of germs and depression and greed that expects blind faith. As potential cracks in the Chinese crackdown emerge, competitors at the Beijing Games will be expected to grin and bear it for the NBC cameras while dreading that one positive test that could wipe them out from competition and land them in a medical prison run by the state.
China has made their decision, and theyre gonna steamroll this thing.
Once you get Covid, youre done you cant race, you cant do anything, and theres, like, no point in wasting four years, the 21-year-old American speed-skater Maame Biney tells RS. It would really, really suck if they were just like, a week before: Oh, hey! Just kidding! The Olympics are not happening this year. Theyll happen next year. That would just be actually devastating.
More than 175 cases have already surfaced from delegations arriving in China, including at least one snowboarder on Friday, with mounting concern that a wave of athletes could become infected next. Multiple Olympic executives acknowledge to Rolling Stone that on-the-ground organizers and national medical experts have internally discussed the contingency plan of a pause in the action, as the NHL did to take a look in the mirror when Omicron hit the United States in December and the league barred its players from Beijing.
At this point, anything could happen, and its such a weird headspace to be in, not being confident going in that this is whats gonna happen, the three-time gold medalist snowboarder Shaun White told Rolling Stone in an extended interview this month. Theyve easily canceled plenty of things. They could easily turn around and go, Hey, its too much. Everybodys testing positive, and were not doing it.
But the IOCs adaptive response to the variant with a patchwork of policies, seen through the eyes of the athletes surviving Beijings Omicron gauntlet in the spotlight, make it increasingly clear: Whenever the suits who run the Olympics see through the looking glass of our upside-down pandemic world, they determine that the games must go on, at any cost.
China has made their decision, and theyre gonna steamroll this thing if youre sending an athlete or not, they dont give a shit, says Apolo Ohno, the most decorated American Olympian at the Winter Games, in an interview with Rolling Stone. Theyre not gonna cancel the Games. Theyre gonna blanket this virus as much as possible to control every aspect that they can.
After the American delegation trickled into Los Angeles to quarantine, test, and train, Team USAs star-studded Delta charter flight took off this Thursday one or two isolated bobsleddersand a couple of curlers short.
Tabitha Peterson, the world-champion curler whose day job involves putting nasal swabs and vaccine jabs into Minnesotans as a pharmacist at CVS, has witnessed the Omicron threat firsthand. If the Olympics were taking place in October last year, when cases were super-low, I would say wed probably be pretty good, Peterson tells RS. We even threw out there: Should we be DRIVING to California, so we have one less flight? But, my god, that sounds awful, too.
Tabitha Peterson of the United States reacts after delivering a stone during Game 2 of the US Olympic Team Trials at Baxter Arena on November 20, 2021 in Omaha, Nebraska.
Stacy Revere/Getty Images
Without any elite circling clubs to train in Southern California, some of Americas top curlers were forced to fly commercial from Minneapolis-St. Paul to L.A., from L.A. to Tokyo, and Tokyo into the main arrival hall of Beijing International Airport. Athletes from smaller delegations who cant afford first-class tickets direct to China, meanwhile, planned to buy seats together, hop-scotch across Asia, and hope for the best.
Charlotte Kalla, a three-time gold medalist in cross-country skiing, woke up at dawn to beat the crowd at her public gym, only to criss-cross Sweden from Sundsvall to stersund with her 70-page Olympic protocol playbook pulled up on her phone its kind of like homework, she tells RS then join the Swedish cohort in Munich and take a charter to Beijing. (Good thing she didnt swing through Italy, where her Norwegian rivals are holed up after two positive tests this week; a member of the Brazilian cross-country team, traveling through Italy while awaiting a negative result to enter China, suffered major injuries in a car crash on Thursday and will miss the Games.)
The Australian freestyle skier Matt Graham, meanwhile, had made his way from a broken collarbone in Sweden, to Brisbane for a ramp-up, then home to Sydney. Hes since flown up to Finland to meet his teammates for a week back on the mountain, before hopping aboard the Team Australia flight to China on Wednesday. The Aussie contingent has been encouraged to avoid airplane food, so Graham likes to pull out his pre-packed bowl of spaghetti once everyone else onboard has stopped eating and put their masks back on. In some ways, Graham says, just getting to Beijing is gonna be quite rewarding in itself.
For all the lessons of the post-vaccine, post-spike Tokyo Games last summer, touchdown at the host countrys airport remains the incubation obstacle that most concerns Olympic officials. Were not going to swab at 30,000 feet, says Dr. Michael Wilkinson, the chief medical officer for Team Canada. But we also dont know how many other planes will be arriving at the same time. IOC advance-team officials who landed early at the dedicated Olympic terminal have told him to expect slightly less limbo than the eight-hour waits reported by athletes to make it through customs and receive a nasal-swab result in Tokyo. But five members of the Canadian traveling party have already tested positive in Beijing.
In some ways, says one athlete, just getting to Beijing is gonna be quite rewarding in itself.
As touchdown began in earnest this week, athletes were getting tested en masse at Beijing International. (Its the PCR throat swab this time.) To avoid needless interaction, theyre carrying their own suitcases. (Yes, even Shaun White.) Theyve been shown to their seats on socially-distanced buses run by the Chinese organizing committee. (Bus and taxi drivers are trapped inside the bubble, too.) And then theyre off through the processing center to wait up to six hours for test results inside the closed loop a pandemic purgatory of isolation, action sports, and a nebulous nether region reserved for quarantine.
Its pretty incredible that the Olympics is willing to risk and take on this, and try to put all these hoops and hurdles in place so that people are safe, White tells RS. And the vaccination, thats all part of it, obviously, is trying to keep people safe.
Full vaccination is all but mandated to enter this Olympic thunderdome; unvaxxed athletes and staff were required to complete a three-week quarantine upon arrival in Beijing. Despite the monastic effort of one Swedish gold-medal snowboarder who spoke to Rolling Stone from a Chinese Holiday Inn Express last week, and a Russian plot to exempt their teenage figure-skaters, the rule does not leave much realistic space for preparation. Twenty-one days is a lot of pause in training, alpine racer Max Gordeyev tells RS from Kyrgyzstan, one of the least vaccinated countries on Earth. There is no time to wait.
But thats a lot of what life in Beijings sprawling campus of athlete housing and dining halls is going to feel like: a lot of waiting around. Ilkka Herola, a Finnish nordic combined skier, admits that hes worried about getting bored. Hes also in the band Zen and Tonic, which skews toward rock, with the occasional country twang. I think I will bring my traveling guitar there, because its a great way to confine, especially when we are quite alone in our rooms, he says. But any song I write would be a quite lonely and sad song.
Short track speedskater Maame Biney smiles before boarding a plane en route to the Beijing Olympics at a Delta Airlines terminal Thursday, Jan. 27, 2022, in Los Angeles.
Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Images
As the first Black womens speed-skater on the U.S. Olympic team, Maame Biney is already a regular in the hype cycle of NBC Sports. Her fierce alter ego on the ice, Anna Digger, is to Biney as The Black Mamba was to Kobe Bryant a self-constructed edifice to hide the vulnerability beneath. For me, I worry a lot about things, and once I worry, I just get into this spiral and this huge hole, she tells Rolling Stone. Biney is re-binging Modern Family as her comfort-watch, and shell be clicking the sleep icon on her Headspace meditation app every night inside the Beijing bubble, to de-stress and to de-nervousness my head.
Get Biney thinking about her inspirations, though, like the mental-health champions Simone Biles and Naomi Osaka and then about her fears, like a super-spreader Olympic hotel or a mid-event quarantine and shell tell you about her real imaginary friend: Its a whole, like, what-if thing. Im basically a fortune-teller. So when I get into my fortune-teller mode, theres really, like, no way out of it until the actual situation happens.
IOC officials and national medical officers describe the actual daily routine at the Omicron Olympics as something like this: An athlete wakes up and finds coffee and a collection site for daily testing in the drab lobby of her apartment building in one of three Olympic villages, sub-divided by sport and then by delegation. She can find a window for socially-distanced leg presses, so long as the Canadian sanitation consultants arent busy measuring the sweat contamination on the machines, then spraying down the entire gym with their antimicrobial, electro-static shield.
The American bobsledders have been eating lunch with rubber gloves for months, and Team USAs endurance biathletes are Purell addicts whove always avoided the common cold like the plague; members of both were happy to hear that the dining-hall dividers in the 2022 villages are at least see-through. They might not be so happy to smell the leaning tower of Olympic rubbish, which Beijing organizers will keep stored within the bubble during the Games to protect the health and safety of the Chinese people, before mass-processing the garbage in what could amount to a literal dumpster fire.
There will, eventually, be actual competition itself, once Olympians venture to the transport mall shuttling them out into the rest of the closed loop, which Rolling Stone has learned will allow 30,000 people and counting. Bike-shares are out and commuter rail is in, so long as youre cool with the locals peering through the window of the next car over its the closest theyll get to the action, since these Games are restricted to all but Chinese fans in faraway spectator areas designated at each venue. Last week, in response to the first Omicron case breaking through to Beijing, Olympic organizers cut off ticket sales to limit attendance for a selected group of onlookers and conducted mass testing across major swaths of the city, anal swabbing included.
All the partying will be afterwards. Until then, were trying not to test positive.
Even at the events, two-thirds of which will be played outdoors, some athletes admit to Rolling Stone that they would compete in masks if it avoided a break in the action. Alas, there will be masks on the medal stand, as there were in Tokyo. Its impossible, 19-year-old Richardson Viano, who will represent Haiti on the mountain in the giant slalom, tells RS. We speak more about Covid and procedures than we ski.
The Omicron athlete, so long as they are of legal age, can always wind down with some KFC and a drink, although alcohol is more widely available at the alternative hotel accommodations reserved for the more lucratively sponsored class of athletes.
Chinese organizers confirmed to Rolling Stone that one important safety item would continue to be distributed throughout the Olympic villages this year: condoms. As Alexander, the DJ turned one-man Jamaican ski team, explained, Ive spoken to a lot of previous Olympians, and one of them whos had the experience of six Winter Games said to me, quite honestly: The Olympics is nothing other than a fuckfest.
Guillaume Cizeron, Frances reigning silver medalist in ice dancing, isnt so sure. Yeah, I dont think they need to do that anymore, although you never know, he jokes over the phone with RS from self-quarantine in Montreal. All the partying will be afterwards. Until then, were trying not to test positive.
The sisterhood of the traveling luggage was not impressed. The International Luge Federation had chartered a Russian airliner to Novembers training camp in Beijing that was delayed from Frankfurt and too small by half, what with all the sleds, which meant social distancing became a pile-up of snow gear and strangers. Only three people were sitting in their correct seats, Julia Taubitz, a 25-year-old luger from Germany, tells Rolling Stone. The remaining seats were occupied by suitcases. And one person had Covid.
Despite their protestations to the Chinese health authorities, 12 German racers were identified as close contacts. Even after two years of vigilance and interruption, these world-class lugers became a test-case preview of the second-class citizenry that is quarantine inside Beijings closed loop: The asymptomatic still got steered 30 minutes outside the villages to Chinese hotels, where testing was required at five in the morning and 11 at night, Taubitz says, with only a half-hour allowed for training from 8:30 to 9 p.m. and without Chinese first-aid workers allowed to touch the foreign athletes. When the Germans returned to their rooms, she recalls, the food was put in front of our door, in plastic bags and mostly cold. Icky shrimp. Potatoes. Soup, if you could call it that. And dont even think about asking for something vegan.
Food served to athletes in quarantine during a pre-Olympic training camp.Food served to athletes in quarantine during a pre-Olympic training camp.
Courtesy of Julia Taubitz
Germanys Natalie Geisenberger, the four-time Olympic gold medalist recognized as one of the best female lugers ever, threatened never to return for the Beijing Games if the isolation conditions remained. They are three- to four-star hotels, the IOCs operational coronavirus czar Pierre Ducrey tells RS. We have visited them and there has been a formal process to ensure that the accommodation is up to standard. They are decent hotels with good services.
More than 600,000 Covid tests were administered at the Tokyo Games, with 430 positive results but only 29 from athletes and five of those were Greek synchronized swimmers. Through Friday, according to a Rolling Stone analysis of data from Beijing officials, 595,438 tests (5,417 of them for competitors) revealed 177 confirmed positive cases since Jan. 4, 118 of them at the airport; at least one but as many as 22 could be for an athlete, after 19 competitors or team personnel tested positive on Friday alone.Its not so much if were going to have cases were going to have cases, thats a given, Ducrey says. If you look at the prevalence of Omicron right now, its impossible that people dont come in and bring Covid. But our ability to block them before they take the flight, at the arrival, or afterwards will demonstrate that were able to deal with this successfully.
Omicron turns up the attention on any voluminous testing effort: The NBA had 237 of its more than 500 players test positive in December, leading to 11 postponed games not that youd hear much about the whole global-pandemic thing during the rescheduled games on ESPN and TNT. Now, with a 24/7 TV guide to fill from Beijing, the IOC and its broadcast partners simply wont tolerate a break in the action. NBCs announcers will be doing play-by-play from the relative safety of a Connecticut studio, and a diplomatic boycott has its ad-sales team working overtime, but the lugers still gotta luge for that $1.2-million-a-minute primetime airtime a lead-in to the networks broadcast of a Super Bowl that falls smackdab in the middle of the Games.
Bob Costas, who was the face of the Olympics for NBC from 1988 to 2016, says that the network was dealt a bad hand between Omicron and probably the number-one human-rights violator on the planet but that executives have a responsibility to make sure Covid doesnt magically vanish on-screen. All of this hangs over the entire Olympics, Costas tells Rolling Stone. Its an elephant in every room. So its difficult to ignore. But in fairness to them and their investment, if you dwell on it too much, basically youre telling people, This sucks.
But stuff could rear its head a prominent athlete could be tossed or unable to compete, and that has to be acknowledged, continued Costas, who now hosts HBOs Back on the Record. You could have a young, uber-fit athlete completely asymptomatic test positive in an unfortunate timeframe for him or her. You miss a handful of games in the sports that we follow, but here you miss the whole thing that you trained years and years for. That could happen.
After testing positive, athletes can return from their three-star isolation paradise once they return two negative PCR tests, 24 hours apart. If their swabs keep showing up positive but theyre not sick, a medical review panel may intervene. During that window, however, entire careers can evaporate from a single bus-driver breakthrough.
It has been my dream since childhood to compete for my country at the Olympic Games, says Taubitz, the luger with the lousy soup. And now the anticipation is taken away because you always have the fear of testing positive in the back of your mind. Indeed, two of her teammates already did.
Our job as athletes is to make people dream. Hopefully people will get to maybe forget a little bit about the wholepandemic thing [during] the Olympics.
And that languishing is merely for the asymptomatic. Come down with a fever and chest pains to go with your perfect fitness, and youre headed to a Chinese-run hospital half-an-hour from the villages. You will not be going anywhere outdoors again until your temperature stabilizes for three days and the MRI of your lungs starts to look better. IOC officials do not anticipate such elite athletes to take up infirmary bedspace, and, sure, hospital workers will help lug in some free weights if athletes ask nicely. But national medical officers tell Rolling Stone they had to negotiate with Beijing for access to visit athletes if they end up in the three quarantine hospitals let alone bring them an iPhone charger to contact the outside world.
If I would be one of the unlucky people stuck in the medical prison, I did do a 10-day silent meditation retreat where youre not allowed to look anyone in the eyes or have any real human contact, deadpans Alexander. So I have a little bit of solitary-confinement training in case I need it when I get there.
Cizeron, the French ice dancer, skipped this months European Figure Skating Championships to avoid getting stuck in Estonia with Omicron. Informed by RS of the Olympic loops Chinese Covid hospital, he says, Estonia would be better!
Obviously its every athletes nightmare to just not be able to compete, Cizeron goes on. But our job as athletes is to make people dream. Hopefully people will get to maybe forget a little bit about the whole, you know, pandemic thing and just dream in front of their screens for the time of the Olympics.
The skeleton competition falls in the middle of that three-week window, meaning the American favorite Megan Henry wont even be sticking around for her first closing ceremonies. They want you to get out immediately, she tells RS. If Henry were to come down with symptoms, of course, Im concerned about being stuck in China and not being able to leave for 30-plus days its like trying not to get bit by a mosquito.
At final preparation meetings earlier this month, the IOC briefed national committees and athlete representatives on how much had been and would not possibly be changing as a result of Omicron. The NHL took a pause instead of sending its players to Beijing, but that doesnt mean a curling cluster will put the breaks on the Games. It doesnt matter if youre curling, ice hockey, or figure skating the reality is the scheme is made to avoid the possibility to create contagion, says Ducrey of the IOC. We have to be always imagining that the worst can happen. This is really ad hoc.
Matt Carroll, the CEO of the Australian Olympic Committee, has been inside the IOC boardrooms and always leaves them convinced that the Chinese will move heaven and Earth to avoid a Covid-induced avalanche. At the final major executive meeting before athletes began their sojourn toward Beijing, concerns were given a full airing. Literally: The medical prison is now officially required to provide access to an open window. And, yes, quarantine room service will offer a halfway decent vegan spread.
Bluntly, its gonna be a shitshow for anyone in the space, so you make it the best you possibly can and work within the confines, Carroll tells Rolling Stone. The alternative is what? The games dont go ahead? Nobody wants that.
See the original post here:
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on The Omicron Olympics: Behind the Scenes of a Covid Stshow China Doesnt Want You to See – Rolling Stone
2022 Winter Olympics: Free condoms available, but hugs and handshakes are to be avoided – USA TODAY
Posted: at 11:47 pm
2022 Olympics: COVID concerns will make winter games look different
The Winter Olympics will look different this year with strict COVID-19 guidelines in place as China battles an omicron outbreak.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY
Free condoms will be availableat the 2022 Winter Beijing Olympics, although organizers want athletes to walk a tight rope when interacting with others and avoid hugs and handshakes in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.
"All Olympic-related units will provide appropriate quantities of condoms for free at the appropriate time to people who've checked in to stay inside the loop,"organizers told Reuters via email.
According to the Olympics playbook, athletes are to minimize physical interactions and stay within the "closed loop" to curb the spread of the virus while competing.
The games are set tostart on Friday, and athletes from all over the world will compete in 15 differentsports until Feb. 20.
Team USA Olympic gear is here: Cheer on your favorite athletes with these patriotic pieces
'The biggest stage in sport': Team USA roster for 2022 Winter Olympics features second-largest number of women
Sex and mingling among the athletes have been notorious at the Olympic Village where athletes are housed.
"Theres a lot of sex going on," Hope Solo, the two-time gold medaling soccer player, told ESPN in 2012.
Organizerspassed out 450,000 condoms at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro as they sought to curb the spread of the Zika virus.At the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, organizers handed out 150,000 condoms but only as a parting gift.
There were also rumors the beds at the Tokyo Olympicswere "anti-sex" after some athletes claimed the cardboard material they were made of could only hold one person.
The rumor was debunked by organizers who said the beds could support 441 pounds of weight in a press release.
Condoms started being distributed at the Olympics in 1988 to raise awareness about HIV and AIDS.
Read the original post:
2022 Winter Olympics: Free condoms available, but hugs and handshakes are to be avoided - USA TODAY
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on 2022 Winter Olympics: Free condoms available, but hugs and handshakes are to be avoided – USA TODAY
The 2022 Winter Olympics are near: Here’s 23 Team USA athletes you need to know before you watch – USA TODAY
Posted: at 11:47 pm
US diplomatic boycott of China winter Olympics: Who goes, who doesn't
As a growing list of countries announce diplomatic boycotts of the 2022 Winter Olympics in China, USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour explains what it means for the upcoming Games.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY
There will be no shortage of American star power at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
After finishing fourth in the medal table at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Games with 23 medals, including nine golds, Team USA will look to improve on that mark with a diverse and accomplished group of athletes. The U.S. delegation in Beijing will feature several reigning Olympic medalists, recent world champions and up-and-coming starlets.
Here are 23 key names to know ahead of the 2022 Games, including some who have already become winter sports stars and others who are poised to join them in the coming weeks. The opening ceremony will be held Feb. 4.
NICE THREADS: 2022 Winter Olympics opening ceremony uniform unveiled
DOUBLE DUTY: NBC preparing for Super Bowl LVI, Winter Olympics
Jamie Anderson, women's snowboarding
Anderson isn't short on accolades. She's the most decorated slopestyle snowboarder in X Games history, the first woman to land a 1080 off a jump andthe only person to win an Olympic gold medal in the brief history of women's slopestyle. She's earned each of the past two.
Now, the 31-year-old will be returning to the Winter Games for a third time, with her eyeson a three-peat and a fourth overall medal. (Anderson also won silver in big air at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games.)
Kevin Bickner, men's ski jumping
It's been almost a century since the U.S. won its only Olympic medal in ski jumping, and that drought is likely to continue in Beijing.
That said, if there's one American to watch in the event, it's probably Kevin Bickner. The 25-year-old holds the national distance record of 802 feet, set in 2017. And he is coming off an 18th-place finish at the 2018 Gameswhich, while still a ways off the podium, marked the best finish for a U.S. man in the event since the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City.
TEXT WITH US: We'll share news and a behind-the-scenes look at the Beijing Olympics
NEWSLETTER: Subscribe for free to get daily Olympics news in your email inbox
Summer Britcher, women's luge
At 27, Britcher is already gearing up for what will be her third Olympic appearance. Though she didn't place higher than 15th individually in her first two trips, the Pennsylvania native has shown steady improvement over her career and seen better results of late, including a third-place finish in the 2018-19 World Cup standings.
Britcher has also been an important member of the relay team in recent years, helping the U.S. to a fourth-place finish in Pyeongchang and a bronze medal at the 2020 world championships.
Brittany Bowe, women's speedskating
A former inline skater and college basketball player, Bowe is now one of several U.S. speedskaters who figure to be medal threats in Beijing.
The 33-year-old won a bronze in Pyeongchang in team pursuit Team USA's only long track speedskating medal at those Games and she has been arguably the nation's most dominant skater in the years since. Bowe broke the world record at 1000 meters in 2019 and has won gold at that distance at two of the past three world championships. She also finished second at another distance, 1500 meters, at the most recent world championships last year.
Nathan Chen, men's figure skating
After a disappointing fifth-place finish at the 2018 Olympics, Chen has been nothing short of brilliant on the international level. He has won three consecutive world championships all by whopping margins and became the first U.S. man to three-peat since Scott Hamilton in the early 1980s. (Hamilton won four in a row.)
In addition to skating, Chen is also a student at Yale, where he is majoring in statistics and data science. He put his studies on pause to train for the Beijing Games butis likely to return to campus later this year with at least one individual Olympic medal perhaps gold.
Jessie Diggins, women's cross-country skiing
Diggins won a shocking gold medal at the 2018 Games in the team sprint event, alongside partner Kikkan Randall. It was thesecond Olympic medal ever won by U.S. cross-country skiers, following Bill Koch's silver in the 30K at the 1976 Innsbruck Games.
In the years since, Diggins, 30, becamethe first American to win the Tour de Ski a multi-stage event that is modeled off of cycling's Tour de France. In the niche world of cross-country skiing, shequickly has become America's brightest star.
Susan Dunklee, women's biathlon
Dunklee is in the midst of her final year as a biathlete, the end of a career that has spanned more than a decade and seen her achieve new milestones for Americans in the sport. Her silver medal at the 2017 world championships, for example, was the first-ever won by an American in biathlon the only longstanding sport at the Winter Olympics in which the United States has never won a medal.
Outside of biathlon, Dunklee has also been an advocate for sustainability and gender equity.
Alex Ferreira, men's freestyle skiing
In the brief Olympic history of ski halfpipe, onlyoneman has ever won a gold medal: American David Wise, who's done it twice. But this time around,itcould be Ferreira's turn to shine.
The 27-year-old Aspen, Colorado, native finished second to Wise in the halfpipe at the Pyeongchang Games andhas been on a tear in the lead-up to the Beijing Games, including wins at both Dew Tour and the U.S. Grand Prix Finals earlier this winter. There figures to be plenty of competition in this event in Beijing, especially among the Americans, but Ferreira will certainly be in the mix.
Taylor Fletcher, men's Nordic combined
Fletcher is one of the few four-time Olympians on Team USA, which is an achievement in and of itself. He won a bronze medal at the 2013 world championships and has long been one of the nation's stalwarts in Nordic combined, which consists of ski jumping and cross-country skiing. The event has long been dominated by Europeans including, unsurprisingly, Norway so Fletcher faces long odds of reaching the podium.
Alex Hall, men's freestyle skiing
Hall, 23, was born in Alaska, grew up in Switzerland, and won asilver medal in Norway at the 2016 Youth Olympic Games.
The reigning world bronze medalist in freeski slopestyle, he clinched his spot on Team USA in thrilling fashion at a Grand Prix event in January, landing a crazy run in his last attempt to winby less than a point. This will be his second consecutive Olympic appearance.He placed 16th in slopestyle in Pyeongchang.
Dusty Henricksen, men's snowboarding
From Shaun White to Red Gerard, it seems like there's always an up-and-coming American snowboarder who blossoms into a star at the Olympics. And at the Beijing Games, it could very well be Henricksen.
Just 18,Henricksen will be making his Olympic debut after claiming a pair of big victories in recent years. He won gold in slopestyle at the Youth Olympic Games in 2020, then followed up with a first-place finish at the Winter X Games in 2021, becoming the first American to win the event at the X Games since White in 2009.
Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue, ice dance
The U.S. is the only country to win an Olympic medal in ice dance at each of the past four Games. Hubbell and Donohue will be among those aiming to make it five.
Both are now north of 30 and have said this will be their final Olympic run, after more than a decade together. Hubbell and Donohue placed fourthat the 2018 Olympics, just a few points off the podium. But they've been in sharp form since, finishing third and secondat the most recent world championships.
Kaillie Humphries, women's bobsled
One of the most accomplished pilots in her sport, Humphries has won three medals in three Olympic appearances for Canadadating back to 2010. The Beijing Games will be her first with Team USA.
Humphries, 36,switched nationalities after filing a complaint against Canadian team officials in 2018, alleging verbal and emotional abuse. She became a U.S. citizen in December. With the Olympic debut of women's monobob, Humphries is favored to win at least one medal in Beijing, though there is a chance she could return home with two.
Chloe Kim, women's snowboarding
Kim was one of the breakout stars of the 2018 Olympics, where she won a gold medal at the age of 17. And she's heavily favored to become the first repeat winner in the women's halfpipe since its debut in 1998.
After taking a year off from competition in 2019-20to focus on her schoolwork at Princeton and to "be a normal kid for once"Kim has been as dominant as ever in her return to the halfpipe. The 21-year-old has racked up recent wins at the 2021 world championships and Dew Tour, among other marquee events.
Hilary Knight, women's hockey
More than 15 years after making her Team USA debut, Knight is back for afourth Olympic appearance and will be one of the veteran anchors for a team that will look to repeat atop the Olympic podium this winter.
At 32, she is one of the most recognizable athletes in her sport and still one of the most accomplished and dangerous attacking players on the ice. In 190 career games for Team USA, Knight has amassed 219 points, including 126 goals. She's also beenpart of eight world championship teams, on top of her Olympic successes.
Alysa Liu, women's figure skating
Liu, 16, had to withdraw from nationals this year after testing positive for COVID-19, but she successfully petitioned her way onto the Olympic team after a strong first season on the senior international circuit.
A two-time U.S. championand one of the few American women who can land a triple axel in competition,Liu probably has the best chance of any U.S. women of sneaking onto the podium, which the Russians are expected to sweep.
Jake Sanderson, men's hockey
The NHL's decision to pull out of the Beijing Olympics due to COVID-19 opened the door for younger players like Sanderson to step up.
The son of ex-NHL forward Geoff Sanderson, the 19-year-old currently plays collegiately at the University of North Dakota and was drafted fifth overall in 2020 by the Ottawa Senators. He has been a standout defenseman in the U.S. talent pipeline and captained the U.S. junior national team at its most recent world championships.
Kristen Santos, women's short track speedskating
Originally a figure skater, Santos switched to speedskating at 9 and won a pair of junior national championships. She barely missed out on the 2018 Olympic team, finishing fourth at thosetrials, where only the top three would be competing at the Games.
This time around, Santos left little doubt, sweeping the 1500-meter races at this season'strials to officially punch her ticket to Beijing, where she might represent Team USA's best shot at a medal in short track.
Mikaela Shiffrin, women's Alpine skiing
Shiffrin, 26, has quickly established herself as one of the most dominant American skiers ever and she is without question one of the brightest stars on Team USA.
With more than 70 World Cup wins and 11 world championship medals to her name, Shiffrin will enter her third Olympics with strong odds of winning medals in multiple eventsjust as she did in Pyeongchang, where she took gold in giant slalom and silver in Alpine combined. Shiffrin, who tested positive for COVID-19 just six weeks before the Games, has a stated goal of competing in all five individual events in Beijing.
John Shuster, men's curling
Four years after leading Team USA to an improbable gold in Pyeongchang, Shuster is back for his fifth Olympic appearance, once again as captain of the U.S. men's team.
Few U.S. winterathletes can match Shuster's longevity. The 39-year-old Minnesota native won his first national title in 2003, and competed at his first Olympics in 2006. He'll be joined in Beijing by two of the three teammates who competed alongside him in 2018, Matt Hamilton andJohn Landsteiner. Chris Plys replaces Tyler George to round out the team.
Jordan Stolz,men's speedskating
The 17-year-old Stolz has been touted as the future of U.S. men's speedskating, and he showed why at the Olympic trials in January. He won both the 500-meter and 1000-meter races at trials, breaking the 1000-meter track record set by two-time Olympic gold medalist Shani Davis in the process.
A Wisconsin native, Stolz will be the third-youngest American male speedskater to compete at the Games. But U.S. teammate Joey Mantia described him as the guy who's "going to carry that torch into the next several quads."
Katie Uhlaender, women's skeleton
Nearly two decades after her first competition,Uhlaender is still going. The Beijing Olympics will be her fifth, a rare achievement for U.S. winter sports athletes. The 37-year-old has come close to the Olympic podium, finishing fourth in Sochi in 2014 by four hundredths of a second, but she has yet to win a medal.
Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on Twitter @Tom_Schad.
Go here to read the rest:
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on The 2022 Winter Olympics are near: Here’s 23 Team USA athletes you need to know before you watch – USA TODAY
US Olympic bobsled team already facing COVID-19 ‘nightmare’ – New York Post
Posted: at 11:47 pm
COVID-19 is already throwing a wrench into plans for Team USA, a week before the 2022 Winter Olympics begin.
Multiple members of the United States bobsled and skeleton team have tested positive for the virus, Yahoo Sports reported on Friday night.
Bobsledder Josh Williamson announced Wednesday in an Instagram post that he had tested positive for COVID-19 last Sunday, but he is reportedly not the only one. There is at least one other athlete, in addition to multiple coaches and support staff, who tested positive, according to Yahoo. A team official confirmed to the website that there were multiple positive tests but did not specify details.
Its all a nightmare, one athlete told Yahoo Sports.
Williamson said in his Instagram post that while he was not able to fly to Beijing with Team USA, there were later flights that he could get on once he returns multiple negative tests. The Olympics officially begin Friday but bobsled training runs dont begin until Feb. 10.
The team official told Yahoo that at this time, [the federation] still expect[s] everyone to go to Beijing. What could complicate matters is anyone who tested positive will need four straight days of negative PCR tests and a fifth-day buffer before they can depart for Beijing.
Team USA won the silver medal in two-woman bobsled in 2018. Elana Meyers Taylor, who won the silver with Lauren Gibbs, tweeted on Thursday that she had made it to Beijing and passed her first COVID-19 test.
Continued here:
US Olympic bobsled team already facing COVID-19 'nightmare' - New York Post
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on US Olympic bobsled team already facing COVID-19 ‘nightmare’ – New York Post
For Olympic Sponsors, China Is an Exception – The New York Times
Posted: at 11:47 pm
At the bottom of the slope where snowboarders will compete in the 2022 Beijing Olympics, an electronic sign cycles through ads for companies like Samsung and Audi. Coca-Colas cans are adorned with Olympic rings. Procter & Gamble has opened a beauty salon in the Olympic Village. Visa is the events official credit card.
President Biden and a handful of other Western leaders may have declared a diplomatic boycott of the Winter Games, which begin next week, but some of the worlds most famous brands will still be there.
The prominence of these multinational companies, many of them American, has taken the political sting out of the efforts by Mr. Biden and other leaders to punish China for its human rights abuses, including a campaign of repression in the western region of Xinjiang that the State Department has declared a genocide.
The Olympic sponsorship reflects the stark choice facing multinational companies working in the country: Jeopardize access to an increasingly sensitive China, or deal with the reputational risk associated with doing business there. When it comes to the Beijing Olympics, the decision has been clear.
While the sponsors have faced protests by human rights activists in several countries, they have largely brushed them aside, choosing instead to keep China, and its emerging class of nationalistic consumers, happy.
The companies argue that the Olympics are not political, and that they have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on deals that span multiple Games, not just Beijings. Collectively, the top 13 Olympic sponsors have contracts with the International Olympic Committee that add up to more than $1 billion.
They just seem to be proceeding as normal, said Mandie McKeown, executive director of the International Tibet Network, a group that helped to organize protests by more than 200 rights groups calling for a boycott of the Olympics. Its literally like theyve got their heads in the sand.
For companies, though, the risks of angering Chinese consumers by criticizing Chinas policies are high. Armies of patriotic voices on Chinese social media have furiously denounced foreign brands for perceived slights, vitriol often amplified by the government and official state media.
Adidas, Nike and other fashion companies faced nationwide boycotts in China after they expressed concerns about reports of forced labor in Xinjiang, the region where the Communist Party has forced millions of Uyghur Muslims into mass detention and re-education camps. When the fashion retailer H&M pledged to stop buying cotton from Xinjiang, a boycott by Chinese consumers cost it around $74 million in lost sales over one quarter.
Even one of the top Olympic sponsors, Intel, faced a backlash last month after the company posted a letter calling on international suppliers to avoid sourcing products from Xinjiang. In the face of the fury, Intel rewrote the letter within days to remove the reference to Xinjiang.
The space to please both sides has evaporated, said Jude Blanchette, a scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. When choosing who to upset, its either a bad week or two of press in the U.S. versus a very real and justified fear that youll lose market access in China.
Top sponsors have sidestepped questions, at times awkwardly, about whether their support effectively whitewashes the Communist Partys authoritarian rule. The Olympics, executives argue, should not be politicized, pointing to the Olympic Charter, which says as much, despite a long history of political intrigue surrounding the Games.
Only four major sponsors Omega, Intel, Airbnb and Procter & Gamble responded to requests for comment. Omega, the official timekeeper and data handler of the Olympic Games, said that since it started its partnership with the Olympic Games in 1932, it has been our policy not to get involved in certain political issues because it would not advance the cause of sport in which our commitment lies.
Airbnb and Procter & Gamble said they were focused on individual athletes and emphasized their commitment to each Olympics Games rather than Beijing, specifically. A representative at Intel said the company would continue to ensure that our global sourcing complies with applicable laws and regulations in the U.S. and in other jurisdictions where we operate.
Ski and sport have no business in politics, said Justin Downes, president of Axis Leisure Management, a hospitality company and contractor that is working with the Canadian Olympic Committee and others to help with logistics and supplies.
Almost all the Olympic sponsors have codes of ethics or a corporate social responsibility pledge to honor human rights, but these Games have tested how far they will go to speak out against widely recognized violations.
In China, those violations have included the crackdown in Xinjiang, as well as the continuing repression of Tibet, the erosion of political freedoms in Hong Kong and the threats to assert Chinas territorial claim over Taiwan.
Mr. Downes has signed contracts with Olympics venues to ensure that the people he employs do not raise politically sensitive topics. If any member of his staff, which includes medical responders, makes a political statement on subjects like Xinjiang, Mr. Downes could be liable, he said.
We are told not to disclose on certain topics or post pictures on social media, Mr. Downes said of the contracts. They dont want people showing up and making a statement. Its common sense.
Chinas critics say the sponsors have associated themselves with an event that could tarnish their brands. Some have compared these Games to the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, which Nazi Germany used to showcase Hitlers fascist regime.
We always repeated these words, Never again, said Tenzyn Zchbauer, an ethnic Tibetan who has joined protests in Germany against Allianz, the insurance and financial services giant that is also a top Olympic sponsor. At least genocide should be a red line, she added, referring to Chinas crackdown in Xinjiang.
For many international companies, however, the Winter Olympics are an opportunity to capture the attention of more than a billion consumers around the world, as well as inside Chinas huge consumer market.
Beyond the top sponsors, numerous international companies have promoted their products in Olympic-themed campaigns. In one shopping center in Beijing, Adidas has erected a ski slope with skiing mannequins. At one Pizza Hut, the official panda mascot for the Games waves from a window display.
A skiing Bing Dwen Dwen, as the panda is known in China, is also splashed across KFC boxes.
The prominence of such advertising campaigns risks unwanted attention in the United States.
Executives from Coca-Cola, Airbnb, Intel, Procter & Gamble and Visa were hauled in front of Congress in July and accused of putting profits before ethics with their Olympics sponsorships. They have all been assailed in public letters. Lawmakers in the United States and in Europe have called them out for participating.
Even so, the issue of human rights violations in China has not generated enough protests to threaten the profits of multinational companies, while the angry Chinese consumers have fueled painful boycotts.
Lets be honest nobody, nobody cares about whats happening to the Uyghurs, OK? Chamath Palihapitiya, the billionaire investor and part-owner of the National Basketball Associations Golden State Warriors, said this month. Mr. Palihapitiya was criticized for the remark, and the Warriors later played down his involvement with the team.
Of the top Olympic sponsors, only Allianz is known to have met with activists calling for a boycott of the Games. The company has not spoken out, however. A protest last week at the doors of its office in Berlin drew only seven people.
Many of the main sponsors appear to be hoping they get through the Olympics without drawing too much attention.
Activists say the sponsors and the International Olympic Committee have the economic leverage to influence the Chinese authorities but are too timid to wield it.
If any other government in the world did what the Chinese are doing in Xinjiang or even in Hong Kong, a lot of companies would just pull up stakes, said Michael Posner, a former State Department official who is now at New York Universitys Stern School of Business.
He cited decisions by companies to divest in places like Myanmar and Ethiopia, as well as the campaigns to boycott South Africa when its apartheid government sent all-white teams to the Olympics.
China is an exception, he said. Its just so big, both as a market and a manufacturing juggernaut, that companies feel they cant afford to get in the cross hairs of the government, so they just keep their mouths shut.
Claire Fu contributed research. Keith Bradsher contributed reporting.
See the original post:
For Olympic Sponsors, China Is an Exception - The New York Times
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on For Olympic Sponsors, China Is an Exception – The New York Times
Beijing Winter Olympics reports jump in daily Covid cases – The Guardian
Posted: at 11:47 pm
China has reported a jump in Covid cases among athletes and team officials at the Beijing Winter Olympics.
The number of daily Covid infections rose to 19 on Friday from two a day earlier, and Games organisers said more cases could be expected in the coming days.
Thirty-six Games-related personnel, including the athletes and officials, have been found to be infected, 29 when they arrived at the airport in Beijing and seven already in the closed loop bubble that separates event personnel from the public, the organising committee said in a statement on Saturday.
We are now just going through the peak period of people arriving in China and therefore we expect to see the highest numbers at this stage, the Games medical chief, Brian McCloskey, told a news conference.
Organisers are confident in their Covid-19 prevention system and infections are unlikely to leak out to the public, he said.
Cases among athletes and team officials exceeded those for other stakeholders, including media, sponsors and staff, for the first time since China started releasing daily numbers of Olympics-related coronavirus cases on 23 January, according to a Reuters tally of previous statements.
Its annoying that every morning you need to get up a little earlier specially to get a PCR test. I think that in a few days, it will be like brushing your teeth, the Russian ice hockey player Anton Slepyshev told the RIA news agency.
Everyone is concerned that the test result will suddenly turn out to be positive, but the reality is such that we are living with Covid. We accept all the risks and fears.
The Games are to run from Friday to 20 February, its bubble sealed off from the rest of China, where the governments zero-tolerance Covid-19 policy has all but shut the countrys border to international arrivals.
Read the original post:
Beijing Winter Olympics reports jump in daily Covid cases - The Guardian
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on Beijing Winter Olympics reports jump in daily Covid cases – The Guardian
Utah officials want to bring the Olympics back to Salt Lake City but they won’t get to make their case in person in Beijing – Salt Lake Tribune
Posted: at 11:47 pm
(Jae C. Hong | AP) Olympic workers in hazmat suits work at a credential validation desk at the Beijing Capital International Airport ahead of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, Monday, Jan. 24, 2022.
| Jan. 29, 2022, 1:13 p.m.
The group pushing for another Winter Games in Utah wont get a chance to see first-hand how an Olympics is run during a pandemic after all.
The International Olympic Committee told The Salt Lake Tribune in an email Friday that it has canceled its Observer Program for the 2022 Games, to allow the teams on the ground in Beijing to focus on delivering the Games in the context of the current global pandemic.
An unexpectedly high number of COVID-19 cases has been linked to flights into Beijing. As of Wednesday morning, 50 people within the Olympic bubble had tested positive for the virus since it opened to foreigners Jan. 4, according to Olympic organizers. Another 79 tested positive at the airport during that period, including on Monday the first athlete or team official. In the past three days, about 3% of all Olympic personnel arriving in Beijing have tested positive for COVID-19.
A plane full of Team USA athletes and coaches was expected to arrive Friday in Beijing.
The IOCs decision came within days of the departure for China of three members of the Salt Lake City-Utah Committee for the Games. The committee is lobbying to host the 2030 or 2034 Winter Games and its delegates planned to participate in the Observer Program. The group included president and CEO Fraser Bullock as well as committee chair and four-time Olympic speed skater Catherine Raney-Norman and Games advisor Darren Hughes.
Of course Im disappointed, because it was the opportunity to reconnect with so many friends in the Olympic and Paralympic movements and watch athletes at their very best, said Bullock, who said he was alerted Monday of the Observer Programs cancellation. However, I totally understand the extreme caution that the Beijing Games organizers are taking and support them 100%.
Earlier this month, the United States announced a diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Olympics in protest of human rights violations by China. At the time, Bullock said that decision wouldnt affect his group because its mission was educational, not political.
Our focus is behind the scenes, he said, understanding what theyre doing in terms of hosting Games, new ideas that we can bring into our Games and talking with people about our future hosting opportunity.
The Olympic Observer Program is, according to Olympics.com, one of the key components of the knowledge transfer process, providing a unique opportunity to live, learn and observe real Games operations. Participants generally include delegations from future Olympic hosts, such as L.A. 2028, as well as applicant cities. Bullock said he expected all the cities interested in hosting the 2030 Games to have representatives there. That would likely include Sapporo, Japan; Vancouver, British Columbia; the Barcelona-Pyrenees region and Ukraine.
The groups would have observed such aspects as the Opening Ceremonies, ticketing, transportation, medical facilities and media operations. In addition, the SLC-Utah group planned to meet informally with IOC officials to learn more about the selection process and ways it could improve its bid.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Salt Lake City officials celebrate after getting the news that U.S. Olympics Committee chose Salt Lake City over Denver to bid for a future Winter Olympics, possibly 2030, as they gather at City Hall on Friday, Dec. 14, 2018 to announce the decision. Raising their arms in celebration are councilman Erin Mendenhall, former Salt Lake Organizing Committee chief operating officer Fraser Bullock, Utah Sports Commission CEO Jeff Robbins, Mayor Jackie Biskupski, Gov. Gary Herbert, speed skater Catherine Raney Norman and councilman Jim Bradley, from left.
The IOC said in its email that All learnings from the Games will be incorporated into the Beijing 2022 Debrief in Milano-Cortina later this year, which will provide an opportunity for [national organizing committees] and potential future Olympic hosts to discover topics such as vision and culture; legacy and funding; operating a mountain cluster; impact and reach; and evolutions and innovations.
This is the second time in-face meetings between the SLC-UT group and IOC members have been scuttled. A November meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland, was also canceled because of the coronavirus. Bullock said he expects that meeting will be rescheduled.
At that time, he said, We can learn from them everything that happened in Beijing that we should be aware of.
Bullock said he also expects to be on site in Paris to observe the 2024 Summer Games.
In addition to those who tested positive, people who were within two rows of an infected person on an airplane bound for Beijing are considered close contact and may also be required to quarantine. That could have been an issue for the SLC-Utah delegates. They hoped to return to Salt Lake City by Feb. 8, in time to participate in 20th anniversary celebrations of the 2002 Olympics.
Link:
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on Utah officials want to bring the Olympics back to Salt Lake City but they won’t get to make their case in person in Beijing – Salt Lake Tribune
Heather MacLean is Back on Track at the Millrose Games – The New York Times
Posted: at 11:47 pm
On a warm morning in early August, Heather MacLean laced up her sneakers and did what she usually does: She went for a run. Her time at the Tokyo Olympics was winding down after she had fallen short of qualifying for the final of the womens 1,500 meters, and as she began to jog, she found herself coping with that hard reality all the way down to her toes.
My legs had never felt heavier in my life, she said.
For many athletes, competing at the Olympics is the stuff of dreams, the product of years of painstaking work. But there is not much of a road map for what comes next, in the days and weeks following the Games. MacLean had heard others describe a sort of post-Olympics crash.
But I dont think there was any way for me to prepare for actually experiencing it, she said in an interview this week.
On Saturday, MacLean will compete in the Wanamaker Mile at the Millrose Games, the prestigious indoor meet staged annually at The Armory in Washington Heights. The field for the womens mile also features Elle Purrier St. Pierre, who set a national record for the event in 2020, and Athing Mu, the reigning Olympic champion in the 800 meters.
It will be MacLeans first track meet since the Olympics. Mark Coogan, MacLeans coach with Team New Balance Boston, had advised her to be methodical with her approach back to competition.
Just because I lived it a little bit myself, said Coogan, a former Olympic marathoner. I know there can be a huge letdown after the Olympics, and I think it was important just to be supportive: What an incredible year. No one but us thought you were going to make the Olympic team, and now youre an Olympian. And once you recharge, well get back at it.
MacLean, 26, has had something of a meteoric rise. She did not start running until her junior year of high school in Peabody, Mass., outside of Boston. At the time, she was working at a grocery store with one of her best friends.
She was my ride to work, MacLean said. So when she joined the track team, I figured I might as well join, too, so we could car-pool to work and practice together.
MacLean quickly revealed herself to be a natural talent who embraced hard work. After breaking a host of records at Peabody Veterans Memorial High School, she battled through injuries and adversity at the University of Massachusetts to become an all-American. But it was not until she was a fifth-year senior that she considered the possibility of running professionally.
Armed with a masters degree and liberated from academic demands, she joined Team New Balance Boston and made steady progress. At the U.S. Olympic track and field trials last June, she made her first national team by placing third in the 1,500 meters behind Purrier St. Pierre and Cory McGee.
MacLean was still riding the high from that experience when, on a flight home from a pre-Olympic meet in Monaco, she watched The Weight of Gold, an HBO Sports documentary that details the mental health challenges that some Olympic athletes face: their sacrifices, the outsize expectations they internalize and the inevitable uncertainties that confront them after the Olympics: What now?
She recalled dealing with immense pressure even before she arrived in Tokyo.
I was trying to hold onto my routine for dear life, she said, because Im obviously incredibly excited and so thrilled with everything thats going on, and I want to talk to everybody. But at the same time, I want to protect my own energy, and I definitely let a lot of people be in my space. So that was hard to navigate.
At the Olympics, she advanced through her opening heat in 4 minutes 2.4 seconds, just off her personal best, before fading to a 12th-place finish in her semifinal.
She had been planning to compete in a few more races after returning home, she said, but felt drained. She had to remind herself that she did not have anything to prove.
I made the best decision for myself, she said.
Before she officially pulled the plug on her season, though, she made a trip out to Cape Cod to run in the Falmouth Road Race with Molly Seidel, who had won the bronze medal in the womens marathon at the Olympics, and Dana Giordano, a close friend and fellow pro runner. Seidel had entered the race for charity: She would start at the back of the field and raise $1 for each runner she passed.
Seidel had assured MacLean that she was going to jog the seven-mile course, so MacLean took the liberty of meeting up with friends the night before the race. She was not feeling particularly spry at the start line.
Im running on three hours of sleep or whatever, and then they just started sprinting, MacLean said. And Im like, Why are we going so fast? But it was so much fun.
Seidel and her crew wound up passing nearly 5,000 runners. For MacLean, Falmouth was a fitting way to close out an extraordinary year. She could not fathom boarding another airplane. She also had some nagging injuries that she needed to address.
I hadnt felt fluid in a while, she said. So I just wanted to be able to go out for a run and have my body feel good and mentally feel good, and it just took a bit of time for that to happen.
During her self-imposed hiatus, MacLean moved into a new apartment in the Boston area. She celebrated her birthday. She took long walks and listened to podcasts. She went roller skating. She joined the Peloton craze. She became a regular at The Breakfast Club, her favorite diner. (She loves breakfast.) She made coffee runs for her brother Shawn. And she was the guest of honor at Heather MacLean Day, when the mayor of Peabody presented her with a key to the city.
By early December, she was easing her way back with some slow jogs. She spent recent weeks training with her teammates at altitude in Arizona.
Shes looking really good, Coogan said.
MacLean has learned to prioritize her mental health, she said, which has only helped her as an athlete. She reads books about mindfulness. She practices yoga. She does a guided meditation before bed. She has worked to detach herself from her phone and limit her time on social media. Her friends are aware of her various routines.
I think people think Im sitting in bed with all of these crystals around me, she said. Which, OK, I do have some crystals. But its not like that!
Now, ahead of her first track meet in months, she feels like herself again, she said. She is ready to run.
View original post here:
Heather MacLean is Back on Track at the Millrose Games - The New York Times
Posted in Olympics
Comments Off on Heather MacLean is Back on Track at the Millrose Games – The New York Times