Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Winter Games ~ 2018

These Winter Games officially known as The XXIII Olympic Games ~ are more commonly known as PyeongChang 2018 ~ is an ongoing international multi-sport event ~ hosted by the 'county of PyeongChang, South Korea.' Selected as the 'host city' in 2011, it marks the first time that South Korea has hosted the Winter Olympics ~ and the second Olympics held in the country ~ the first being the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, the capital City of the Republic of South Korea.

These Games feature 102 events (the most ever) in 15 sports disciplines including 'new this year' :
Big Air Snowboarding...Mass Start Speed Skating...Mixed Doubles Curling...Mixed Team Alpine Skiing to the Winter Olympic program. A total of 2,952 athletes from 92 National Olympic Committees are slated to compete ~ including the debut of Ecuador, Kosovo, Malaysia, Nigeria and Singapore. In after 2 years of 'high-level-talks,' North Korea agreed to participate in the Games.
The two countries marched together during the Opening Ceremony
and agreed to field a unified women's hockey team.

Mascots for the Games: Soohorang (a white tiger) and Bandabi (an Asiatic Black Bear)
were unveiled on 2 June, 2016.

Luge: Sledding on Ice at 145 km/h
(Born and raised on a farm, my knowledge of sleds were for tobogganing, which we had and used frequently; we also had sleighs for child-play and for being horse-drawn by 1 or 2 horses.)
Luges? I'd not heard of them until tuned in to Olympic Games a few years ago!

A black and white photo by The Canadian Press published today, shows an action-drama photo:
Sam Edney of Canada competes in Run 3 of the men's singles luge event on Sunday.
This overhead 'shot' shows Sam, wearing a #25 bib and laying flat on his back while speeding his luge;
fans in the foreground cheer him on with flags and upraised arms!
Edney finished 6th in his Olympic farewell race.

Victor Mather, from The New York Times writes about this race:
One of the most appealing things about luge is its name. Luge. It's like a sled whooshing down an icy track (it's actually a Swiss term for a small sled.) Luge feels familiar ~ it's like when you leapt onto your Flexible Flyer and steered down the hill with your feet. Only, these sleds weigh 23 kilograms and can hit speeds of 145 km/h. And then, there's the doubles luge. Is that one person just lying on top of the other person as they race down the icy track? Yeah, pretty much.

They've been lugeing in the Olympics since 1964. A lot of people remember back in the 1970's when some lugers wore conehead-style-helmets to gain an aerodynamic advantage (which are no longer allowed.) The start of the race is vital. The lugers push off with their hands as they sit facing forward on the sled and try to get going as speedily possible, aided by gloves that have spikes to grip the ice and propel the sled forward. They steer with their calves as they shoot around corners of the course.
(It causes me to wonder how when laying on their back(s) they see where they are going???)

It can be a dangerous sport. In 2010 in Vancouver, the day before the Olympian competition began, Nodar Kumaritashvili of Georgia flew off the track in a training run
and crashed into a steel beam. Sadly, he was killed.
Luge added a new event in 2010: the team relay! Each country sends one man, one woman and one men's double down the course, one after another. As each reaches the finish , they reach up and slap a board, which opens a gate to send the next racer down the icy track.
The total time of all 3 runs determines winners.

What They Said...(Compiled by The Canadian Press)
I'm on the podium and I probably shouldn't even be here. So, I'm pretty stoked!”
Regina snowboarder Mark McMorris, on winning a bronze medal in 'slopestyle' less than a year after suffering multiple injuries in a crash in British Columbia.

I said to myself, “Listen, Max. You fell 2 straight times. You can't fall on your 3rd final run! I had a lot of pressure and my heart was beating really fast before starting on the course. Talking to myself, “I've been snowboarding since I was 9 years old; it was already a victory that I was here at the Olympic Games.” Canadian snowboarder, Max Parrot on his silver-medal winning in 3rd in slopestyle run.
(Best score of 3 runs determines the athelete's given score.)

You just don't get too many shots at an Olympic medal, let alone an Olympic Gold Medal. I believe Canada has a great chance. We're a 'skating country...the choreographers...the coaches...the skaters that have come from our country are second to none.” Canadian ice dancer, Scott Moir...with chances for gold in the figure skating team event ~ which he and Tessa Virtue won!

I crossed that finish line knowing that no matter what happened next, this was it! This was the best run I could put down at the right moment and now it's the judges' decision. If I could do something that I could be proud of, and knowing that I did everything I could, no matter what the medal is.” Canadian freestyle skier, Justine Dufour-Lapointe on winning silver in the women's moguls.

That perfect race where you get into a flow and just fly to the finish ~ it doesn't always happen, but I made the most out of it ~ and I gave everything of myself. I'm really proud to be on the podium and it's a really big reward for my whole team.” Canadian speed-skater, Ted-Jan Bloemen finishing 2nd in the men's 5,000 metres behind Dutch legend, Sven Kramer.

Sixth place at the Olympics is still something to be really proud of ~ it's just not exactly what I was hoping for.” Luger Sam Edney, who raced his last Olympic men's singles race. His 6th place is Canada's best-ever result in the event.

Alex Gough of Calgary ~
leads Canada's 8 lugers into the 2018 Winter Games in South Korea
where the country seeks its first Olympic Medal in the sport ~
and Gough is Canada's most decorated luge athlete
with 25 World Cup medals and 2 World Championship Bronze in women's singles.

Canada's team certainly has the depth of talent and experience
to 'battle for the top of the medal table'
and win more Winter Games medals than ever before.
We head into the Games, probably with our strongest team ever,”
said. Own the Platform chief executive officer, Anne Merklinger.

Written by Merle Baird-Kerr...February 12, 2018
Comments appreciated: mbairdkerr@cogeco.ca or inezkate@gmail.com

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