Following two weeks of world class basketball (and other
sport, so I’m told), the winners have been celebrated and the excuses have been
made.
From a fan’s perspective, it was a disappointing Olympic
performance. Not the Australian Opals standing on the third highest podium, or
Australia finishing tenth overall on the medal tally, or the underperformance
of so many athletes who had been expected to deliver.
No, the most disillusioning aspect of the entire XXX
Olympiad was the behaviour of the most noted members of the Australian Olympic
team. The entire country watched the swim team react to their failure to meet
their own expectations. Not to mention the controversy involving a number of
members, before the Olympics began. And to top off this class act, a member of
the rowing team going on a post-race bender.
What action did the Australian Olympic Committee decide to
take? They sent these athletes home early. You know, so they couldn’t march in
the Closing Ceremony. Foot down. Meanwhile, the Brazilian Women’s Basketball
team left one of their key players behind for disciplinary reasons, leaving
them with a squad of eleven for the Games. St Kitts and Nevis sent their flag
bearer home before he could compete in the men’s 100m for similar reasons.
I can’t say whether or not trying to spend time with your
family is justified as a disciplinary reason, but I do respect the Olympic
Committees for adhering to their principles. They are upholding the spirit of
the Games.
The AOC however, is sending the message that as an athlete,
there may be consequence to your actions, but nothing that will keep you from
representing Australia, as long as you win a medal.
Perhaps the Australian Olympic team managed to inspire a generation. It is a shame that
they were unable to inspire a sense of sportsmanship in that generation.
At the 1956 Australian National Championships, Olympic
runner John Landy stopped to check on a fellow runner who had fallen during the
race. At the 2012 London Olympics, a member of the Australian Opals landed a
punch to the stomach of Tamika Catchings, of the US basketball team.
See how far we’ve come.
No, our tally count is not a disappointing performance.
After all, what does a medal contribute to society but to inspire others? And
if we managed to perform with integrity and sportsmanship, that’s pretty damn
inspirational, in my eyes. But when all that we care to ‘inspire’ is the will
to win at all costs, and kick dirt in the face of sportsmanship, that’s when we
should all feel disappointed.
We have four years until Rio 2016. Four more years to
prepare. I hope that we use these four years to instil a sense of sportsmanship
in our next representative athletes. To teach them humility. To make them understand
that wearing the green & gold doesn’t simply mean you’re the best athlete
in the nation. It means you need to conduct yourself in a way that makes the
rest of the country want to look at
you and think, “I’m an Aussie too.”
That’s worth more than gold.