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Exercises
Modern Olympic
Games
The
Modern Olympic Games might have remained just a part of history
without the dream of one Frenchman, Pierre de Coubertin.
Coubertin believed that sport and exercise were very important
for the health and happiness of every man and also for the
nation. He therefore tried, in 1892, to interest other Frenchmen
in his dream of starting a modern form of the early Greek
Games. His ideas were strongly criticized by many people,
who did not really understand what he was trying to do. It
is perhaps sad that the great work Pierre de Coubertin did
to bring back the Games was never properly recognized during
his lifetime. Gradually, however, people all over the world
became interested in his ideas and at a meeting in Paris in
1894, with representatives from twelve different countries,
plans were made to hold the first modern Games in Athens in
1899.
Organizing the first modern Games, however,
was not without problems. The Greek government was unhappy
with the decision to hold the Games in Athens, as they had
serious economic problems at the time and did not feel they
were in a position to spend the necessary money. It seemed
therefore that the Games would be finished before they had
even begun. Prince Constantine of Greece, however, gave his
support to Coubertin and the newly-formed Olympic Committee
and other rich Greeks soon followed his example. Enough money
was collected in Greece and abroad to build a new stadium
and pay all the other costs.
On 5th April, 1896, a crowd of over 60 000
people watched the King of Greece open the first modern Olympic
Games. There were, however, very few competitors - only two
hundred and eighty-five. Australia, Austria, Britain, Bulgaria,
Chile, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Sweden, Switzerland
and the USA, were the only countries to send athletes to the
Games and most of the
athletes who did come had to pay for their own travel and
other costs. There were ten sports in the first
program - cycling, gymnastics, tennis, swimming, athletics,
fencing, weight-lifting, rowing, wrestling and shooting; there
were also other non-sporting events, such as concerts and
ballet, just as there had been at the early Games.
At the first modern Olympics almost all the
gold medals were won by American sportsmen, but the most famous
of all the first medal winners was a young Greek named Spyros
Louis, who came from a small village in the mountains near
Athens. It was he who won the long and difficult race, the
Marathon, and gave the Greeks the national win they had hoped
for.
The Greeks would have been happy to keep the
Games in Greece but Coubertin believed strongly that the Olympics
should be truly international and would not allow this to
happen. It was therefore decided to hold the next Games in
Paris in 1900. Sadly, however, the Paris Games and the following
Games, held in St. Louis, America, in 1904, were poor examples
of Coubertin's dream and Coubertin himself did not even travel
to the St. Louis Games. For these two Games were more like
circus shows than serious international sports meetings. Only
fifteen non-Americans went to the 1904 Games, mainly because
the high travel costs prevented others from competing. Olympic
events were mixed with other sports and events, and the Games
were organized to continue over many months, so that as much
money as possible could be made by the organizers from the
selling of tickets.
It was not until 1908, when the Games were
held in London, that international rules and distances were
introduced; until then the events had been the decision of
the organizing nation alone. The London Games were far better
organized than any of the other modern Games but it took many
more years before Coubertin's dream of a truly international
meeting of sportsmen became a reality. It was necessary to
make many changes before the Olympic Games became as well-organized
and as popular as they are today.
Since 1896 the Games have been held every
four years, except for a break during the years of the two
World Wars. Gradually the number of competitors who take part
in each Games has grown and so has the number of countries.
In 1896, only thirteen countries were represented and only
two hundred and eighty-five competitors took part. Today,
however, as many as one hundred and twenty-two countries send
athletes to the Games and more than seven thousand men and
women come to the Games to take part. In recent years, the
number of events has grown to twenty-one, eleven of which
are also open to women.
It is interesting that Coubertin, whose ideas
were born in the late nineteenth century, probably never imagined
that women would ever play a part in the new Olympics. Women
had never competed in the early Greek Games; indeed, for many
years they were not even allowed to watch. In modern times,
the London Games in 1908 were the first in which women took
a serious part - 36 women came to the Games to compete. The
first woman to win an Olympic event was the British Tennis
Player, Charlotte Cooper, who won a tennis event in 1900.
From 1908, however, the number of events began to grow with
the introduction of ladies’ gymnastics. Athletics events for
women were introduced in 1928 at the Games held in Amsterdam.
Today, women are as highly-trained and as fit as men. Although
in almost every sport women and men compete separately, in
horse-riding events they compete against each other and women
have shown over the years that they are just as good.
Pierre de Coubertin once said,
"The most important
thing in the Olympics is not to win but to take part, just
as the most important thing in life is not the triumph but
the fight."
This idea, together with the Olympic motto
"Citius, Altius, Fortius" (Faster, higher, stronger), helps
to explain why so many men and women train long and hard to
come to the Olympics, although few have much chance of winning
a medal. The reason lies in their wish not only to do better
than other sportsmen and women but also to improve on their
own personal "best."
The International Olympic Committee, whose
home is in Lausanne in Switzerland, is responsible for all
the important decisions of the Olympic Movement. The members
of this committee are chosen not by their governments but
by members already on the committee and they are therefore
above politics or group interests. Most of the members are
simply rich men who wish to keep Coubertin’s ideas alive.
Not every country is represented, therefore, because this
would mean more than 120 members and no decisions would ever
be made.
However, each country must form a National Olympic Committee
before it is allowed to send competitors to the games and
this committee must be recognized by the International Olympic
Committee. At present, more than 136 countries have formed
such a committee. The National Committees are responsible
for organizing the national teams and for deciding which competitors
to send. Competitors cannot choose to go to the Games - they
must be chosen and this means competing against their own
countrymen. It is not even enough to be the best in the country,
for each competitor must be able to reach the standard expected
for entry to the Games. These standards change each year as
sportsmen and sportswomen improve. Some countries are not
able to send all the competitors they would like to, even
if they have reached the expected standard, because of the
cost. The National Committee must then decide whether to send
the competitors who have the most chance of winning or whether,
instead, to send competitors to represent each sport even
though some of them have little hope of doing well.
Not only the competitors but also the team
manager must be paid for. The manager is an extremely important
member of the team; he is responsible for the competitors
while they are at the Games and his job includes, for example,
getting the competitors to each event on time and helping
with medical or personal problems. Most countries ask the
people for money to help pay for the costs of travel and training.
A lot of money is given by businesses and companies who also
give, for example, clothes, shoes and uniforms.
The city where the Games are to be held is
chosen by the International Olympic Committee; this is usually
decided five years before the Games are to take place. Several
cities may wish to hold the Games in any one year and the
Committee decides only after it has listened to and seen the
arguments and plans of each city. Once chosen, the city then
has five years to prepare.
This may seem a long time but a great amount
of organization is needed. Some cities, for example,
Montreal
in 1976, have had problems finishing all the preparation in
time. One of the biggest problems is to find the large amount
of money needed to build the Olympic Village, first introduced
at the 1932 Games held in Los Angeles. It is thought that
the 1980 Moscow Village cost around £200 000 000 to build.
The Montreal Village was even more expensive and at one time
it was thought that it would be necessary to hold the Games
somewhere else as the city had difficulty finding enough money
to finish the buildings. The total cost of the Montreal Games
was more than $3 000 000 000.
Of course, when planning the Games, the organizers
try to design buildings that can later be used by local people.
In Lake Placid, home of the 1980 Winter Olympics, for example,
the designers of the Village planned to use it as an open
prison as soon as the Games were over. The organizers of the
Montreal Games had hope to sell the houses used by the competitors
to local people but many of them have not yet been sold and
the city of Montreal is still paying the bill some five years
later.
Obviously, the city which pays for the Games
is able to get some of the money back by selling tickets,
special stamps and coins and from the tourists who come in
their thousands to watch the Games. Most of the money is earned,
however, by selling the television rights to TV companies
all over the world. It is also important to remember that
a lot of work is given to the thousands of people who are
needed to help organize the Games. In Moscow, for example,
12 000 competitors took part; there were also 3 500 judges,
3 000 sports journalists, 400 photographers, 100 film cameramen,
800 TV and radio reporters and 3 000 TV and radio technicians.
All of these people depend on the help of other people such
as doctors, cooks, cleaners and translators. Transport is
one of the biggest problems of any organizer of the Games.
Not only must the competitors get to their events on time
and without difficulty but so too must all the people who
come to watch the Games. This means that the organizers must
provide special bus services, car parks and extra taxis. In
Moscow the Russians took this job so seriously that they sent
5 000 taxi drivers to school to learn English, French, German
and Spanish.
It is an unpleasant fact that security is
another big problem and another cost that must be added to
the total bill. There are walls around every modern Olympic
Village and no one may go in without showing a special card
with their photograph on it to the guards at every gate. This
is mainly to keep the public out, but in the last few years,
the possibility of a terrorist attack has made security a
much more serious problem. The wall, the guards and the guns
are of course necessary but unpleasant for the competitors
who feel almost like prisoners.
At last, however, everything is ready for
the Games and the world waits for the opening ceremony. This
is usually a very colorful event but it is also a serious
day - the sportsmen and sportswomen of the world meet together
in peace. All the competitors come into the stadium in groups
of nationality - and wait in the center. The Olympic flag,
with its five rings to represent the five continents, is then
raised. (The flag has been used at all the Games since it
was first introduced at the Antwerp Games in 1920.) A member
of each team, together with one of the judges, then makes
the Olympic promise to compete or judge fairly. Then the Olympic
Flame, first lit thousands of miles away at the Stadium at
Olympia, is carried in by a single runner, and there it is
used to light the great flame that burst all through the time
of the Games.
For two short weeks, thousands of men and
women from all over the world will compete and millions more
will watch them. There will be tears, smiles, happiness and
pain, but finally it is all over. The Flame goes out, the
flag comes down and the sportsmen and sportswomen of the world
are asked to meet again, in peace, in four years time at the
next Olympic Games. The name of the next city to hold the
Games lights up for all to see and preparations, already started,
continue for the next four short years so that the next Games
will be just as successful.
(2 250 words)
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