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- <text id=92TT0430>
- <title>
- Feb. 24, 1992: It's a Kick, But Is It Olympian?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 24, 1992 Holy Alliance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- 1992 WINTER OLYMPICS, Page 58
- It's a Kick, But Is It Olympian?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>From the acrobatic to the serene, new sports vie to prove
- themselves worthy of the Games
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III--Reported by James L. Graff/Tignes and
- Joe McGowan/New York
- </p>
- <p> Sticking a ski pole into the ground for leverage and
- vaulting a couple of meters forward to the accompaniment of rock
- music from a boom box. Wiggling back and forth on skis around
- a series of powdery bumps, periodically climbing these hillocks
- to leap off, flinging one's limbs spread eagle for a nanosecond
- or thrusting one's hindquarters left and right during a fleeting
- free fall. Skating at breakneck pace in a roller-derby throng
- around the perimeter of a hockey-size rink. Scuttling along a
- sheet of ice, brushing away bumps with a broom to clear the path
- of a flat, slow-moving stone. Or ducking one's head, bracing
- one's breakables and trying to hurtle faster than a sports car
- down a short stretch of sheer slope, sans turns, sans twists
- and sans breathing.
- </p>
- <p> Hearty, vigorous, genial and suitably spandexed these
- activities all are. But are they really sports worthy of the
- Winter Olympics? Do ski ballet and aerials and moguls,
- short-track skating, curling and speed skiing display the
- requisite patina of frostbitten history and frigid heritage? Do
- they evoke the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that is
- Nome?
- </p>
- <p> The answer to that question is a resounding "absolutely"
- from fans and a resonant harrumph from keepers of the flame.
- Spectators in Albertville have been cheering for the newcomer
- sports, in part because several French competitors have been
- medalists or contenders. But elsewhere, TV viewers have been
- granted only modest exposure and minimal instruction. What they
- have been most likely to sense is an aura of novelty and
- rebellion.
- </p>
- <p> The half a dozen start-up sports this year include two
- debuting as medal events: free-style skiing over bumps, or
- "moguls," and short-track speed skating. Four others are being
- classed as "demonstration" sports--a shadowland category,
- bestowing medals that are not real medals--that will be
- dropped altogether after this year. It is up or out: they must
- become medal sports or disappear from the Games.
- </p>
- <p> The decision on their fate, which will rest with the
- International Olympic Committee, is of vital significance to the
- pride and profit of each parvenu sport's participants,
- impresarios, bureaucrats and merchandisers. Getting a sport
- recognized takes years of lobbying and piles of documents.
- Moments after he won the first ever moguls skiing gold medal,
- Edgar Grospiron of France shifted from exultation to
- exhortation. "After this," he told the press last week, "we will
- have to continue to work hard so that the other free-style
- skiing disciplines, ballet and aerials, also become medal
- events."
- </p>
- <p> Mogul skiing, in which Donna Weinbrecht of New Jersey
- earned the women's gold medal last week, is dramatic. It
- involves slaloming among scores of boneshaking bumps down a
- straight 820-ft. course while completing two jumps, striving for
- both style and speed. Its curse, like that of so many Winter
- Olympics sports old and new, is that it involves subjective
- judging. That inevitably means at least a suspicion of politics--of favoring the stalwarts, whatever their performance on the
- day, over outsiders who may rise to one particular occasion.
- </p>
- <p> Subjectivity is everything in judging ski ballet, which
- resembles figure skating on skis and snow rather than skates and
- ice, and aerials, a form of skiborne gymnastics. The men's
- ballet winner, Fabrice Becker of France, wore a red sash around
- his waist and did a dancerly tango. Lane Spina of the U.S., who
- won a silver demonstration medal at Calgary in 1988 and a
- bronze this year, has a more robust style and wishes his sport
- would rename itself ski acrobatics. Says Spina: "It's a lot more
- acrobatic than figure skating." He has the battle scars, from
- five knee operations, to prove it.
- </p>
- <p> It is easy to dismiss most of the aspirant sports as
- upstarts. While curling can trace its formal heritage to a club
- formed near Glasgow in 1510, and speed skiers cite competitions
- in late 19th century California, free-style skiing took off in
- the 1960s and short-track skating in the '70s. Free-style ski
- competition began to be regulated only after two U.S.
- aficionados were paralyzed while attempting double backward
- somersaults in 1973; the sport did not hold its first
- full-fledged world championships until 1986.
- </p>
- <p> Yet in truth this arriviste nature is in keeping. Unlike
- their summer counterpart, the cold-weather Games had no
- classical antecedents. Moreover, some elements now considered
- traditional were afterthoughts. Luge, the quintessential Winter
- Olympics sport--in what other context does it ever arise?--entered the Games only in 1964. Ice dancing came along in 1976.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the claim of being a worldwide event, moreover,
- the Winter Games reflect, far more than the Summer ones, the
- Eurocentrism of the early Olympic movement. Just once has the
- competition been held outside Europe or its erstwhile colonies,
- the U.S. and Canada (at Sapporo, Japan, in 1972). Nations like
- Norway, too small to be a dominant factor in the Summer Games,
- win a fistful of medals time after time in the winter, while the
- world media regularly fasten on such symbols of this imbalance
- as Jamaican bobsledders and Senegalese downhillers. The formal
- criteria for inclusion in the Winter Olympics specify that a
- sport must be "widely practiced in at least 25 countries and on
- three continents." But "widely" means having a national
- governing body. Thus luge qualifies as widely practiced in the
- U.S. with about 50 serious competitors and one accredited track,
- at Lake Placid, in a nation of 250 million.
- </p>
- <p> Governing bodies that band together as an international
- federation may then seek admission for their sport in the Winter
- Olympics, but they must do so at least seven years before a
- specific Games. The process can be speeded up by making a new
- sport an offshoot of the old, as has happened with free-style
- skiing. The disadvantage is that this parent federation may
- dominate decisions about which events gain medal status. For
- example, Marc Hodler, the Swiss president of the International
- Ski Federation, sanctioned the rise of mogul skiing, but
- reportedly opposes giving the same status to aerials or ballet.
- Yet the ballet skiers are convinced that two years from now,
- their sport and aerials will join mogul skiing as full medal
- events. Says Conny Kissling of Switzerland, who won the
- demonstration gold in ballet: "They've already built the sites
- in Lillehammer." Purists may not like change, but Olympic
- history is full of the novel becoming the venerable. By the
- Games of 2022, it may be grandam Kissling who is declaring that,
- say, rhythmic snow dancing does not deserve to be elevated
- alongside her time-honored pursuit.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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