"Lucky them," I said to myself. I stayed awake in the wee hours just to watch the swimming finals in my moms bedroom; so odd that she didnt wake up even if the Japanese announcers were shouting in a mad frenzy upon winning gold for the 100-meter breaststroke for men, which came as a banzai feat when everyone thought it would be the Caucasians who would harvest the medals. But it seems winning the Olympic gold has become second nature to the Japanese; even if I found their "Hello-Kitty-ish" get-up during the Parade of Nations a bit cute and childlike, they really do go for the prowl. And as I write this, Thailand has already secured for itself two gold medals (womens weightlifting). All we can do is cringe in envy. This years Olympics has simply passed us by.
Even if I suddenly had an urge to head out for the beach when I saw the athletes from countries like American Samoa and Vanuatu during the parade of athletes, reality sank in when the games started. Then the question hit me, why arent we winning? Well, it sounded better than, "Why are we losing?" But one cant answer this question just pinning the blame on just anyone. The answer perhaps may not come to us in years to come, or if it does come to us, acting on them will take years.
Thats why I guess Filipinos dont really follow the Olympics anymore since we know what the gloomy outcome will be, though its kinda disheartening that our athletes dont get much support. Maybe one reason why we dont really have a good showing is that the country is so enamored with basketball, which to me, is a deadend sport for Filipinos. Though theres nothing wrong with loving the sport, it is just that we cant reap medals in that sport. Except perhaps in the SEA Games. But then again most countries in the ASEAN are hooked on football. Basketball can only go as far as entertaining us, and in these times we do need some form of entertainment.
So what should a cash-strapped country like ours do? Even the prospects for Beijing 2008 might seem bleak. 2008 will be more a competitive Olympiad than 2004. Maybe the most practical thing to do is for people to be exposed to a variety of sports, and see how it goes. The Chinese are taking the alternative route by focusing on the less popular sports. Theyre investing in shooting since they have seen you can harvest a lot of gold medals there (thanks to Time magazine for the info). Well at least we got lucky in badminton. Given a few years time we might just be great in the sport Indonesia got gold in Athens this year. In times when things dont really go too well, we do the blame game.
It has been some time since the government had a good sports program. But we should not rely only on the government if we want to shake things up; I guess its up to us, to do something about it, taking small steps is the way to go. We have a lot of work to do. We arent really an athletic country to begin with and athletes arent on the top of our list when it comes to "hero material" excluding basketball players and boxers. Whining and blaming is something we dont really need right now.
Theres no quick solution to bag the medals, but maybe once the lesser known sports are given an opportunity to shine and they develop a following, we might get somewhere. Its in the lesser known sports that we have a chance to win medals.
Sports have a way of unifying a nation. The countries that win the gold have a sense of nationalism. Perhaps we dont, not in Athens, not even in our own backyard.
E-mail the author at ketsupluis@hotmail.com.