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Melanie Roach - powerful and beautiful at 33
Photo
by Getty
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Diego Salazar took silver
Photo
by AP
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While
everyone else in Beijing seems to be focusing on Michael Phelps, the
swimmer
who, miraculously, STILL has a chance at winning eight gold medals,
this writer
and erstwhile weightlifter will be focusing on Olympic weightlifting,
or, at
least what little of it can be captured among NBC, CNBC, MSNBC, and
USA.
(I still can't find Telemundo).
Most
impressive of all to me is the story of Melanie Roach, who took 6th in
the
Women's 58 kg. division. for the U.S. What's amazing
to me
about Melanie is that she equaled her amazing performance of April,
1998 in Flagstaff
at the American
Weightlifting Championships, totaling 193 kg. At 33 years of age,
after a
back injury, after marriage and kids and ten more years of life,
Melanie took
center-stage in Beijing,
China.
And, from the looks of
things, she's still flashing that radiant smile.
I
personally witnessed that Flagstaff,
AZ meet.
In fact, I still
have the videotape. At that time, I was a master lifter, who, at
a
bodyweight of 77 kg, could snatch about 80 kg and clean and jerk about
110
kg. On that day, I witnessed a young woman surpassing my totals
at a
bodyweight of 19 kg. less (that's about 40 pounds less) and SMILING
while she
did it.
That
day Melanie became the first American woman to clean and jerk double
her
bodyweight. I went home to Jersey
with a
renewed sense of determination and, thoroughly inspired by Melanie, who
was a
Pritchard-Kosoff at the time, eventually snatched and jerked about 15
kilos
more in both lifts combined after another year or so of training.
Ms
Roach hurt her back shortly thereafter, apparently, and had to quit the
sport. Then there was marriage and children, and, by accounts I
have
read, she didn't lift a weight again until 2005, when she awakened one
morning
with a hankerin' to make the Olympics team of 2008!
Well,
make it she did, and did herself and her country proud.
Here is a person who perhaps most
spectacularly embodies the notion that… it’s all in the journey. For, although her results have been
spectacular enough, they are nothing compared to the trials and
tribulations
and life experience that took that sweet face to Beijing, China
to finish 6th in the entire world.
That’s
the reason for my frustration with the news coverage of these (and
every)
Olympics. The focus is always on the
results only and Americans only and the beautiful only; no one else
need
apply. We’ll cover the ridiculous sport
of beach volleyball more than any other. And
why? Because
gigantic
string-beans run around in bikinis!
We
covered the heck out of the “Dream Team” in basketball four years ago
and
finished third. This year, all we hear
is about Michael Phelps’s hopes for breaking Mark Spitz’s record of 7
swimming
gold medals.
Well,
Phelps was VERY lucky to win his second yesterday, and not for his
efforts so
much as for the effort of his teammate, Jason Lezak, who swam the
fastest 100
meter leg in history to touch that wall a millisecond in front of the
French
anchorman. Instead of marveling that
Phelps has now won two golds, we focus on the fact that he needs six
more for
eight. Ridiculous.
I
still haven’t seen Melanie on TV; why should we see her? She only took 6th. That the U.S. usually can’t compete
internationally with the rest of the world goes unnoticed, that a
33-year old
woman accomplished the feat is lost, that she did it despite injuries
and all
the rest-who cares? She finished 6th. She doesn’t wear a bikini.
She’s not a gymnast. She’s not a swimmer. She
doesn’t compete in a sport in which we excel every four years.
Perhaps
I’m taking a cock-eyed look at this whole thing. After
all, I did get to see the magnificent
Chinese 17-year old Quong in the 56 kg men’s competition and the 62’s
were
televised as well. And there is the
companion web page. It’s the most
extensive and comprehensive Olympics coverage ever.
So
why am I so irritated? It’s the
focus. The focus is always on the medal
count. How important is that really when half the sports are those we
don’t
play at all? Badminton, beach
volleyball, rhythmic gymnastics, synchronized swimming,
trampoline and water polo are sports, sure
they are, but when was the last time you played badminton competitively? Or even SEEN it played seriously?
Besides you and cousin Jackie beating Uncle
Harry and little Jimmy on the 4th of July?
The
medal count is ridiculous. China,
you got
it. Meanwhile, I’ll have fun watching
the sports we play in the summer… baseball, basketball, soccer, and,
for me,
weightlifting, although it’s more of a year-round activity and almost
always
done indoors, so why it shouldn’t be a Winter Olympics thing is beyond
me.
But
the whole thing is larger than life, I have to admit, especially as
staged by China. That opening ceremony was, by all accounts,
the single most memorable experience in their lifetimes.
This reporter missed it, but I did manage to
see a lot of people walking.
But,
if this extravaganza is all about promoting peace and harmony, why do I
have to
see the single worst President of the U.S.
on TV discussing his chastising of his
buddy Putin for attacking Georgia?
And why focus on Iran’s
dissing the swimming heat because Israel had a participant?
So,
all in all, like most people I guess, I have mixed feelings about these
Olympics, at least the coverage of it. And,
after all, there’s always the remote control. Push
a button and it’s gone, as it is now, as
I watch the Mets try to hang on against the Pirates, and win one for
Pedro.
But
as soon as Heilman turns my stomach over one more time, I’ll turn back
to the
Olympics, I’m sure, or maybe I’ll get to the gym and do a couple of
snatches. For Melanie Roach.
