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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201270727
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920723
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, July 23, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
Barcelona '92; OLYMPIC SPECIAL SECTION
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
HERE'S THE NAKED TRUTH, FROM ATHENS TO BARCELONA
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
They ran naked, for one thing.

  Really. In ancient Greece, or so the legend goes, Olympians sometimes ran
their races in the raw. Nude. A-buffo. Today, Russian athletes don't have a
flag or even  an anthem. But they have shoe contracts.

  Progress, right?
  To moan that the Olympics "ain't what they used to be" is to say Shirley
Temple doesn't wear pigtails anymore. Tell us something we don't  know. From a
small, simple ritual that featured one race and a prize of an olive wreath,
the Games have evolved -- if you can call this evolution -- into TripleCast, a
$125 act of stupidity in which  the American couch potato can watch everything
from water polo to the modern pentathlon minute-by-minute, day-by-day, on his
cable TV. Even Zeus couldn't handle that. I don't care if they all ran naked.
  These days, the Olympics are big. I mean BIG. Looking back on where they
came from and where they are now gives you the feeling of a farmer who put a
male and female rabbit in a cage, then returned  one year later. Whoa! Where
did all this come from?
  Ah, but the Olympics rarely look back -- not on the bad stuff, anyhow.
Although they almost died several times this century -- the 1904 Games in  St.
Louis were such a fiasco that the Greeks put on another Summer Games two years
later just to convince people the Olympics should continue --  the closing
ceremonies still end with the words, "See  you in . . . (wherever the next
Games are scheduled). Already, they are building stadiums in Atlanta for 1996.
Already, hotel rooms are booked. Already, Jane Fonda has picked out a dress.
  And we  haven't even found out who the world's greatest athlete is this
year.
  Think about what the Games have become! Reebok. Butch Reynolds. Yugoslavia.
Steroids. Badminton. Charles Barkley. These concepts  would have baffled the
ancient Greeks. And they invented math.
  Yet as we head toward the year 2000, there is no stopping the whopping.
The Olympics continue to bloat into this massive flying zeppelin,  swelling
fatter and fatter with demonstration sports, corporate sponsorships,
professional teams, drug tests and camera wires.
  Who would have ever guessed that from Point A, as in Athens, we'd now  be
at Point B, as in Barcelona? A few Olympic traditions, and their modern day
counterparts:
  
* Ancient Greece: The Olympics consist of one event, a footrace, that takes
less than a minute.
* 1992:  Sixteen days, 28 sports, about 10,000 athletes and 9,000,000,000
commericals.
  
* Ancient Greece: Boxers try to get an edge by sticking nails in their hard
leather gloves and  shred their opponents' faces.
* 1992: Boxers must fill a urine beaker before they can exit the building.
  
* Ancient Greece: The Games feature an event called Pancration, a bloody
man-to-man battle in which anything  -- scratching, kicking, eye-gouging -- is
allowed.
* 1992: Badminton is an Olympic sport.
  
* Ancient Greece: Emperor Nero insists on competing in the Games, accompanied
by 5,000 bodyguards.
* 1992:  Michael Jordan arrives in Barcelona.
  
* Ancient Greece: Nero competes in the chariot races, falls out of his vehicle
but is helped  up by fearful competitors, who let him win the race without a
struggle.
* 1992: Larry Bird.
  
* Ancient Greece: All wars are suspended during Olympic Games.
* 1992: Yugoslavia.
  
* Ancient Greece: The mother of Peisidorous, a boxing champion, disguises
herself as a man to be in her son's corner.
* 1992: Sandra Farmer-Patrick runs the 400-meter hurdles in a two-piece,
sequined, bikini track suit.
  
* 1896: A Greek water carrier named  Spyridon  Louis wins the marathon but
refuses a barber's gift of free haircuts for life because he wants to preserve
his amateur status.
* 1992: The U.S. basketball team is staying in a $900-a-night hotel.
  
* 1908: Dorando Pietri, an Italian marathon runner, hobbles into the stadium,
dazed, weak, and is helped across the finish line by sympathetic Olympic
officials.
* 1992: Butch Reynolds sues the  Olympics to let him compete.
  
* 1904: The St. Louis Games, due to poor organization, take four and a half
months to finish.
* 1992: NBC begins its promotion campaign.
  
* 1904: The St. Louis  Games feature a competition between "uncivilized
tribes."
* 1992: British soccer fans arrive in Barcelona.
  
* 1912: Jim Thorpe is stripped of his two gold medals and erased from Olympic
history  books because he was paid $2 per game for playing semi-pro baseball
the summer before.
* 1992: Reebok spends $20 million on a Dan vs. Dave ad campaign -- before
either one qualifies for the team.
  
* 1920: The swimming competition is held in a moat.
* 1992: Olympic swimmers will wear warm-ups designed by Henry Grethel.
  
* 1920: Charley Paddock, a barrel-chested Californian, wins the 100 meters
after drinking a pre-race glass of sherry and a raw egg.
* 1992: Ben Johnson is back again.
  
* 1924: A French spectator pokes an American student for "loud rooting."*
1992: "USA! USA!  USA! . . ."
  
* 1932: The first full-scale Olympic village is used, and athletes love it so
much that some cry when they have to leave.
* 1992: Carl Lewis books his hotel suite.
  
* 1952:  The USSR competes for the first time.
* 1992: The  Unified Team competes for the first time.
  
* 1976: East Germany wins more gold medals than the United States.
* 1992: East Germany?
  
* 1976:  African boycott.
  
* 1980: U.S. boycott.
  
* 1984: Soviet boycott.
  
* 1988: South African and Cuban boycott.
  
* 1992: No boycott.
  
  And that's just a taste of it. There  is no stopping the Olympic explosion.
Big goes to bigger. The Games are like that giant marshmallow man in the film
"Ghostbusters" -- massive, frightening and yet appealingly childlike at the
same time.  
  After all, the idea of the Games -- the best athletes in the world, brought
together in one single, harmonious competition -- is exactly what the ancient
Greeks were hoping for. Of course, they  never figured on Nike, Chuck Daly,
Latvia, Estonia, Summer Sanders, Bob Costas or the Synchronized Swimming team.
  But, hey, they ran naked. What did they know?
  Let the Games begin.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
CHRONOLOGY;  UNUSUAL; OLYMPICS; COMPARISON; HISTORY; OLYMPIC GAMES;;GREECE; ANECDOTE; HUMOR
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
