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0202080419
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
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<DATE>
020208
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<TDATE>
Friday, February 08, 2002
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<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
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<SECTION>
SPT; SPORTS
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1
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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM FREE PRESS COLUMNIST
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</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SALT LAKE 2002 WINTER OLYMPICS
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<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 2002, Detroit Free Press
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<HEADLINE>
EVER WONDER WHAT IT'S REALLY LIKE AT THE GAMES?
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Cold and old. That's my answer. When you ask what I'm expecting to feel as I
head for the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, I can tell you, straight away:
cold and old.

Why cold? Because nearly every event is held in a snowdrift, by an ice track
or someplace else meant for a penguin.

(The Winter Olympics, while lovely, are, without question, the worst spectator
sport in history. The closer you get to an event, the less you see.)

REPORTER 1 (shivering by the Olympic downhill): Is t-t-that the skier from
L-L-Liechtenstein?
REPORTER 2: I think it's the chairlift.

This, by the way, is a typical exchange between two "expert" sports writers.
We are hopelessly lost in these sports. Most of us haven't seen a ski jump
since that poor slob went flopping on "Wide World Of Sports."

Q: What is the Nordic combined?

A: Elke Sommer and her sister?

This is a typical sports writer response. Nobody covers Winter Olympic sports
full time. Nobody covers them half time. And why? Because they're COLD, that's
why! What do we look like, YAKS? Oh, sure, once in a while, a newspaper sends
a reporter to cover a ski event. And eight years later, it sends another
reporter to search for the first guy.

So I know what I am in for. Chattering teeth, freezing wet feet, hand warmers
in my pockets and a confused look on my face.

A Brief History Of The Winter Olympics, As Written By A Typical American
Sports Writer:

100 B.C.: In ancient Greece, one fierce warrior clubs another over the head
with a stick. Hockey is born.1994: Tonya Harding hires a thug to attack Nancy
Kerrigan.2002: The Olympics open in Salt Lake.

What? Are we missing something?

Snowboards, strange language and pot

So I've told you about the "cold" part, which has a history at the Winter
Olympics dating back to the very first Games held in Disney's Duck Pond in
Anaheim, Calif.

Now, about the "old" part. That is relatively new.

It started last Olympics, when I noticed there were a few new events on the
schedule, including the halfpipe. I might have known what the halfpipe was,
had I known what the McTwist was. I might have known what the McTwist was, had
I known what the Michaelchuck, or the Miller Flip, or the Tranny was. These
are all parts of snowboarding. That would have cleared it all up, had I known
what snowboarding was.

Which is where the "old" comes in. You see, there is a concerted effort to get
"young" people to watch the Winter Olympics, "young" meaning those people the
TV networks think are still gullible enough to watch commercials.

So new sports were added, thrilling, speedy sports, like snowboarding, aerial
skiing, women's bobsled and the aptly named "skeleton" -- which, after you go
down an ice track head first, on a sled, with no brakes, is what they hope to
find left of you.

So was rock music at events, and gold medalists who admitted doing a little
marijuana here and there, strictly for, you know, motivational purposes.

REPORTER: So, Mad Dog, how does it feel to win the gold?
MAD DOG: Dude, I smoked 'em!
REPORTER: Your competitors?
MAD DOG: Them, too.REPORTER: What is the Nordic combined?

The price of security

This year, I notice, they are having nightly concerts at the Olympics. The
bands include Creed, Train, Nelly Furtado, 'N Sync, Foo Fighters, and numerous
others that know what the halfpipe is.

This only serves to make the rest of us -- and by the rest of us, I mean
people who know Paul McCartney is not a New York City firefighter -- feel very
old and very tired.

Did I mention the security?

All of us will be frisked, whisked, patted, formatted, searched, scanned and
scoped -- I believe you can have a colonoscopy performed while in line for the
hockey.

But you can never be too careful. And so, reporters and fans will be treated
like the terrorists we could be but of course are not. A terrorist would never
stand for four hours watching sleds come down a chute.

Now, lest we seem ungrateful for this assignment, let me say that some of my
fondest memories are from Winter Olympics. There was the flight out of
Albertville, and the flight out of Lillehammer, and the flight out of Nagano .
. .

No. I'm kidding. It's a wonderful privilege, and I'm sure, if I get too cold,
I can find a place to sit inside and get warm, unless it is already occupied
by someone who gave a free VCR to an IOC member.

The cold part, I can buy a coat for. I wish it were that easy for the old
part. I saw an ad today in an Olympic section that said "Appearing in Salt
Lake City this week, Barenaked Ladies."

And I thought they meant figure skaters.

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Catch "Albom in
the Afternoon" 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM (760).
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THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
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COLUMN
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