Anonymous wrote:More $ and resources for training. More personal incentive to win cause the commercials and companies will call them to represent them. That means more wealth. The wealth and fame makes them want to try harder.
Other countries? "I do this for my country." or "I love the sport."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So is it really fair to call so and so the best in the world if they have a bigger budget? Has there ever been an attempt to level the playing field? I remedy the 80s Winter Olympics and loved that the US used amateurs against professional Russians and won, but the olympics have really gotten stale. It was cool to attend in '96 but there wasnt as much thrill seeing the US win, and it continues to slide especially with 24/7/365 sports TV. There are a few individual stories that are somewhat interesting, but NBC continues to focus primarily on the US. The CBC always seemed better at covering a broader range of countries not just their own.
According to NBC, there are only a few Olympic sports:
Beach volleyball, swimming, basketball, soccer, and the 100-meter dash.
And women's gymnastics.
Anonymous wrote:Because Phelps pretty much took home 90% of the gold medals since there are a gizillion different swimming events.
It'll start to even out a bit more now that track & field (and there's a gizzillion events for that too) have started.
Anonymous wrote:More athletes + more training budget = more success.
I'd be interested in seeing percentage of athletes who medal, vs straight numbers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So is it really fair to call so and so the best in the world if they have a bigger budget? Has there ever been an attempt to level the playing field? I remedy the 80s Winter Olympics and loved that the US used amateurs against professional Russians and won, but the olympics have really gotten stale. It was cool to attend in '96 but there wasnt as much thrill seeing the US win, and it continues to slide especially with 24/7/365 sports TV. There are a few individual stories that are somewhat interesting, but NBC continues to focus primarily on the US. The CBC always seemed better at covering a broader range of countries not just their own.
According to NBC, there are only a few Olympic sports:
Beach volleyball, swimming, basketball, soccer, and the 100-meter dash.
Anonymous wrote:So is it really fair to call so and so the best in the world if they have a bigger budget? Has there ever been an attempt to level the playing field? I remedy the 80s Winter Olympics and loved that the US used amateurs against professional Russians and won, but the olympics have really gotten stale. It was cool to attend in '96 but there wasnt as much thrill seeing the US win, and it continues to slide especially with 24/7/365 sports TV. There are a few individual stories that are somewhat interesting, but NBC continues to focus primarily on the US. The CBC always seemed better at covering a broader range of countries not just their own.