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<text id=93HT0651>
<link 93XP0252>
<link 93HT0661>
<title>
1984: Summer:Glory Hallelujah!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1984 Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
August 13, 1984
OLYMPICS
Glory Hallelujah!
</hdr>
<body>
<p>America's athletes strike a rich--almost too rich--lode of
Olympic gold
</p>
<p> An appealing collection of young American gymnasts, most
stirringly Mary Lou Retton but also some wondrous men for a
change, have given the Olympic Games what they wait for every
four years--and sometimes eight--the gift of renewed youth.
Last week in Los Angeles, a pretty and pleasant time,
occasionally even captivating, the U.S. began swimmingly against
most of the world, less the Soviets and East Germans of course,
maybe too successfully for some tastes. After so many choruses
of our national anthem and chants of "U.S.A. 1," the impulse
might be to wish for someone else to win, just in the interest
of seemliness and hospitality, if not future international
relations. But the athletes can hardly be expected to
understand any such qualm, particularly those whose true primes
passed silently in 1980, and who therefore never really had a
prime. Maybe ABC is not just being parochial or pragmatic in
seeming to do little else but pan from one American face to
another, because frankly it has been hard to look away. Almost
to a man and woman, they are crying.
</p>
<p> Now Mary Lou moves over for Carl Lewis as he goes for the rest
in his quest for four; the "Gang of 10s" gymnasts hand off to
Mary Decker; the swimmers make way for track and field; and the
ongoing sports, like boxing and basketball, get down to
particular climaxes, as if there have not been plenty already.
The little events continue merrily. A problem with the
Olympics is that the perfect vault is followed immediately by
the perfect encore, by the national anthem, by the next game,
race or relay. The gold medals run together.
</p>
<p> The first one in these Games and in the history of China was won
by pistol shooting Xu Haifeng, a fertilizer salesman recruited
just three years ago on his rustic reputation for being handy
with a sling-shot. Throughout the week, the Chinese dominated
the weight lifting, a Bulgarian and Soviet preserve,
occasionally spicing the entertainment with wonderful
back-flips. From the top stand, Gold Medal Featherweight Chen
WeiQuiang reached down and vigorously pumped the hand of Bronze
Medalist Tsai Wen-Yee of Chinese Taipei, or Taiwan. "We are all
Chinese" was the translation for both.
</p>
<p> But the second anthem heard was American, and this became the
dominant theme straight from opening day, which dawned for the
U.S. in prosperous Mission Viejo at the cycling road races.
Charmingly, many of the estimated 200,000 spectators who lined
the green curbsides or climbed the brown hillsides arrived
astride their own ten-speeds, even bicycles built for
two-and-a-half (the baby on the back fender). It was the freest
event in the most expensive Olympics, and a sunny Sunday for a
picnic in suburbia, where neighborhood residents favored hearts
of palm and caviar over potato salad and baked beans.
</p>
<p> Freckled redhead Connie Carpenter-Phinney, 27, an Olympic
speedskater in 1972 who rowed for the University of California
at Berkeley and is built on the order of an oar, joined teammate
Rebecca Twigg, 21, in the lead pack--a six-pack--bearing
down on the finish after more than two hours of the first
women's road test in the history of the Games. Then the U.S.
pair broke out on the wings, and screeched practically side by
side across the line. Even before coasting to a stop, they came
together in a sweet embrace. After 49.2 miles,
Carpenter-Phinney's edge over Twigg could be measured in
centimeters, and blushing West German Sandra Schumacher, 17,
seemed delighted with third. How fast was Carpenter-Phinney
going at the end? She smiled. "Fast enough."
</p>
<p> Nothing keynoted the swimming competition or the week itself
more sharply than the women's 100-meter free-style race, the
first finals in the rapid white-water stream of them. When a
Swiss timepiece was unable to choose between Carrie Steinseifer
and Nancy Hogshead, duplicate gold medals were struck, and
naturally those two were immediately dubbed the Gold Dust Twins.
From their wide expressions on the unusually crowded victory
stand, neither swimmer minded the company or gave much thought
to absent East Germans. Regarding the boycott generally, the
athletes know where the asterisks go, and will cheerfully tell
anyone else.
</p>
<p> Relieving some of the embarrassment of U.S. riches, the most
imposing swimmer on the premises was actually a West German,
Michael Gross, 20, a world-champion freestyler and butterflyer
with the wingspan of a pterodactyl. But even he was overhauled
in an exciting U.S. relay and by a 17-year-old Aussie, Jon
Sieben, in a butterfly. Though the Australians and also the
Canadians had their moments, the drama at the pool was
fundamentally and expectably intramural.
</p>
<p> Unreasonable expectation will be a problem for the next male
class of U.S. gymnasts. But for Peter Vidmar, 23, and the rest
of these new heroes in white, the team victory over China was
an occasion for unrestrained celebration. If the hockey upset
of the Soviets in 1980 is an imperfect analogy--and it is--the feeling inside the arenas was similar. Until now the men
of this sport have drawn less attention than the women, an
inequity Conner can explain in a single word: leotards. But
a Nadia Comaneci's or Olga Korbut's influence may have been
triggered for boys finally by six amazing young strongmen who
are not only their own standard but their own barbells as well.
</p>
<p> Nationalism at the Olympics is essentially unavoidable because
of the flags and the anthems and the money for the badges. So
the home court must be acknowledged as a powerful advantage,
though at least it did not extend to ragging the Chinese
gymnasts (whom Mitch Gaylord reassuringly called "very human
human beings") or to begrudging the Rumanians their
corresponding triumph over the U.S. women gymnasts. News that
the Rumanians' traveling expenses were defrayed by the Olympic
organizers had no noticeable effect on their popularity since it
did not change the fact that they had stood up to the Soviet
Union.
</p>
<p> Everyone stood up for Retton, a resilient child and a killer
competitor of 16, whose 92 lbs. of forthright chunkiness rises
scarcely 4 ft. 9 in. from the preposterous base of a pair of
size-3 feet. Among her best reflexes is a snappy smile, but the
hunter's look with which she fixed Rumanian Ecaterina Szabo, 17,
was memorable too as fortune started Szabo off on her best
apparatus and Retton on her worst. They proceeded inversely
until Szabo dismounted the parallel bars with relief and Retton
came to the vaulting horse, her pet pony. A loud bear, Bela
Karolyi, the defector who instructed Comaneci and Szabo and now
teaches Retton and Julianne McNamara, quietly watched the team
ceremony two days earlier and listened to his old anthem from
a doorway. "I coached Szabo from the time she was five,
(Lavinia) Agache from the time she was six," he said. "I'm
feeling happy for Mary Lou and Julianne and the same thing for
my former girls." Little Szabo looks like she would sooner fall
off the balance beam than neglect eye shadow. When Retton was
the winner and she was the loser in the all-around, it was
Szabo's turn to watch Karolyi dance.
</p>
<p> "I feel sorry for the foreign athletes," said a South African
visitor, Glynnis Crouch. "They're not only competing against
the U.S. teams but against the spectators as well. They are
being demoralized before they even set foot on the field." But
except at the boxing matches, where fighting any American must
be a bloodcurdling prospect, few opponents have been blatantly
rooted against. When Gymnast Koji Gushiken of Japan edged Peter
Vidmar by 25 one-thousandths of a point in the all-around
competition, and Gushiken cried the tears of a 27-year-old
warrior who had been holding fast with more than chalk, not even
Vidmar seemed to mind. The U.S. exhibition baseball team was
able to square accounts (2-1) with those Taiwanese Little
Leaguers, all grown up, without excessive jingoism at Dodger
Stadium. Swivel-hipped Mexican Walker Ernesto Canto pleased
everyone in the Coliseum with his grand sombrero. Admittedly,
that "U.S.A.!" chant can sound a little sour in a 40-point
basketball blowout.
</p>
<p> Both of the U.S. basketball entries, men's and women's, were
devastating during the first week. "Are there a lot of coaches
who could take this team and win a medal? Yes," Canadian Men's
Coach Jack Donohue asked and answered. "But are there a lot of
coaches who could make them play like this? No. There's only
one Bobby Knight." It occurred to the Los Angeles Times's Jim
Murray that putting Indiana's famous bully in charge of an
Olympic team is like "assembling an aircraft carrier to ply the
waters between Staten Island and the Battery." Murray wonders:
"All this to beat Uruguay?" Behind former North Carolina
Tarheel Michael Jordan, the Americans crushed Uruguay, 104-68.
As yet no international incidents have fulminated from Knight,
who is still wanted in Puerto Rico five years after menacing a
gymnasium guard at the Pan American Games. He has caused some
celebrity to be visited on French Translator Marie Holgado, who
is having to fumble for literal meanings to some of his
characterizations, and who has set a press-conference record in
the use of the word derriere. "Nice man," she said. "Big
mouth."
</p>
<p> To prepare for a couple of 9 a.m. starting times at the outset
of the tournament, the U.S. basketball women forced themselves
into a habit of rising at 5:30. Pat Head Summitt, their quieter
coach from Tennessee, complained drowsily, "I keep pouring
coffee into my cereal." But the players, notably U.S.C. Star
Cheryl Miller (6 ft. 3 in.) and Louisiana Tech Guard Kim Mulkey
(5 ft. 4 in.) have looked more than alert. In the view of
Australian Coach Brandan Flynn, the U.S. women's team is "by far
the greatest ever." The Aussies were beaten, 81-47.
</p>
<p> Developmental programs in the sports that Americans tend to
label minor have evidently taken hold, because the improvement
is apparent in even boycotted company. The number of years that
the women's volleyball team has stayed and played together were
reflected down the stretch in a thrilling victory over China as
well as a taut 12-15, 10-15, 15-5, 15-5, 15-12 comeback against
Brazil one of the singular excitements of the Games. Several
clutch spikes were cracked by 6-ft. 5-in. Flo Hyman, 30, a
member of the U.S. national team since 1975. In the
oddest-sounding events, like the men's English match small-bore
rifle competition (won by West Virginian Ed Etzel), the
impression of a rout was confirmed. Where did the U.S. find Air
Rifle Markswoman Pat Spurgin, or Greco-Roman Wrestlers Steve
Fraser and Jeff Blatnick, or Cyclists Steve Hegg and Mark
Gorski? All have won gold medals.
</p>
<p> Some of the unexpected moments have been the brightest.
Blatnick, 27, a super-heavyweight from upstate New York, had his
spleen removed because of cancer two years ago. When he won,
the level of his emotion was stunning. "It was just an offering
of thanks," he said, after dropping to his knees and crossing
himself at the moment of victory. "I've been given a lot of
chances in my life, and I wasn't going to go without thanking
somebody for it." Gorski left the silver medal to Nelson Vails,
24, who learned to ride delivering messages in the mayhem of
Manhattan traffic. "If I had to lose, I'm glad it was to
somebody like Gorski," he said generously.
</p>
<p> There has not been much mean news. One Japanese masseur
received a twelve-year suspension for prescribing a forbidden
herbal remedy, and a sheared oarlock gate on a French eight-oar
boat showed all the marks (file marks) of a saboteur. The
regatta venue, Lake Casitas, is the last place one would expect
intrigue. More than 31,000 annuals, marigolds and petunias (the
Olympic flower budget is $250,000), have been trucked in, along
with several sycamores. Picnickers piped through the gates each
day by a flutist watch the seamanship from blankets spread out
on the grass. The civility of the place must be affecting,
because though the French and their wounded oar finished last
in the heat, the final was broadened to accommodate fairness and
one extra craft. "From a sport point of view," the announcement
said, it was the only thing to do. What a nice phrase.
</p>
<p> A cheater was turned up--where else?--in the modern
pentathlon, General Patton's Olympic event, recalling the Soviet
pentathlete Boris Onischenko, renamed "Disonischenko" eight
years ago when he hot-wired his sword in Montreal. The
chicanery of Sweden's Roderick Martin last week was less
elaborate, trying to catch up on a neglected target by squeezing
off two shots quickly.
</p>
<p> Any kind of gunplay is a serious matter at the Olympics, where
a Paraguayan trackman put up such a scuffle over a starter's
pistol he had been waving around recklessly that he spiked a
policeman and was charged with battery. At a city hall ceremony
belatedly honoring the eleven Israeli athletes murdered in 1972
(unattended by the International Olympic Committee),
weapon-bearing officers were posted on the rooftop. Wherever
Israel's team travels in one of the Games' old yellow school
buses, a wedge of police motorcycles and cars clear the way.
</p>
<p> But the first week passed peacefully, with a swath of petty
arrests and just one momentary scare: a security guard aboard
an athletes' shuttle bus radioed that they were being followed
by a suspicious car. In swooped the highway patrol and a
sheriff's helicopter. The lawmen arrested a man, who explained
his cache of weapons and explosives by describing himself as "a
warrior of the people" and voluntary protector of the athletes.
He was held for psychiatric evaluation.
</p>
<p> Contrary to the direst forecasts of terminal gridlock and
rampaging tourism, Los Angeles has seldom seemed so vacant or
livable since freeways were invented. A strange term,
"free-flow conditions," has been revived, and "Black Friday,"
the first day all the downtown venues were in session at once,
has been survived. The most worrisome congestion may be in the
sky, where security men, sheiks and chairmen of the board are
churning around in helicopter jams. "All of the talk about smog
and heat and traffic scared a lot of people away," said Charles
O'Connell, the Olympic traffic-operations chief in Los Angeles.
"There was a feeling of `let's not come to L.A. this year.'"
So traffic is also thinner at movies, restaurants and
Disneyland's Space Mountain, as the out-of-towners have not
kept pace with the let's-get-out-of-towners, rendering hotels
uncrowded and compelling rent-a-car companies, among other
profiteers, to restore normal rates. Since fully 70% of those
attending the Games are estimated to be local, this almost
qualifies as a home-town Olympics.
</p>
<p> For Juanita Hollands, 38, a bookkeeper at Radio Shack, the
fever arrived with the flame. "It didn't seem real to me until
I saw the torch," she said from her place in a ticket line.
"Now I want to go to every event." It seemed that the only
lines in town were for Olympic tickets; officials said they had
already surpassed their $90 million projection by $30 million,
and that sales were at 80%, compared with 62% in Montreal.
</p>
<p> Not only to Americans, to Olympians, the heart of the Games is
the track meet, which started on the run over the weekend with
Hurdler Edwin Moses going for his 105th straight victory.
</p>
<p> One gold medal down, three awaiting, Carl Lewis has begun his
flight finally. At times this year it has seemed that he has
had more publicity before taking off than Charles Lindbergh
enjoyed upon landing. But the evidence of the journey's first
100 meters started to corroborate the cause for anticipation.
He gusted past Sam Graddy and Ben Johnson to win, tossed his
arms again, plucked an oversize American flag out of the crowd
and bounced around the stadium, all eyes where he wanted them.
The margin of victory, one-fifth of a second, tied the largest
in Olympic 100 history. He cracked 10, but missed the 9.93
world record by .06 sec. Then his gaze shifted to the long
jump, the 200 and the relay, to Jesse Owens certainly, maybe
even Bob Beamon. The miraculous jump of 29 ft. 2 1/2 in. might
still be 4 in. beyond him, but it may be that nothing is beyond
him. As the XXIII Olympiad turns for home, his medals will mark
the rest of the way.
</p>
<p>-- By Tom Callahan. Reported by Steven Holmes, Joseph J. Kane
and Richard Woodbury/Los Angeles
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>