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Dare to Ask: Emotions of Olympic proportions

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

Why do other countries take the Olympics so seriously? For example, the female of China’s doubles figure skating competition took a major fall. She cried, he cried, the coach cried. She got back up, finished her run and got second place. Is it really that big of a deal?

Ian, Minneapolis

Replies

Have you never seen American Olympians cry? Not just “other countries” take it seriously. Imagine you were in the NBA and didn’t play several times a week. Instead, all you trained for was the national championship, and your team only made it every few years. If that was the focal point of your career and it didn’t go according to plan, would you be upset?

Chibi, 28, female, Houston

The Olympic Games is an event where you find the best athletes, and so to them it is a big deal. Just like the teams competing in the Super Bowl.

Katrine H., 23, Odense, Denmark

I think it’s more dependent on how seriously the athletes and coaches take it rather than which countries they are from. With four years of preparation and anticipation – and then to have hopes dashed in an instant because of one mistake, and to know they may never get another chance – I might cry a bit, too.

Anne, 23, Iowa City, Iowa

Expert says

No one is saying we all don’t get worked up over the Olympics. Remember the worldwide furor in 1972 after people noticed archery hadn’t been in the event lineup since 1920?

Olympic athletes from all countries can get jacked up or burst into tears, said Orin Starn, professor of cultural anthropology at Duke University who teaches a course on the anthropology of sports.

“We all have seen images of American heroes crying on the victory stand – or, in Marion Jones’ case, crying when forced to admit to steroids.”

What may skew our impression of other countries’ athletes is our notion of the stresses they are under, he said. “We tend to have this idea, going back to the American rivalry with the Soviet Union, that athletes of other countries are products of sports machines, under pressure . . . to uphold the values of their system, so that when they lose, they feel the weight of the world.”

It’s generally not the case, Starn said. An exception is China, which hosts the Games this summer.

“For [China] it’s about proving they’ve arrived and are major players. The stakes are high, and that’s where you see the skaters cry, the coaches distraught.”

Of course, TV networks focus on the dramatic images of the Games, which also may skew our perceptions toward thinking other countries are unusually focused on Olympic performance, Starn noted.

“In general, the opposite is true. Other people tend to care less about the Olympics than we [in the United States] do. You’re more likely to see dancing in the streets, weeping if a team loses, riots and the whole country living and dying with a World Cup soccer game than with the Olympics.”

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