Mercury (Hobart)

GOLDEN GLOW IS ALWAYS SPECIAL

- Unscripted history, grand deeds and festive fun await if the experience of the ‘82 Games is anything to go by, writes

MASTER coach Michael Bohl was a tousle-haired teenage swimmer in 1982 when he learnt how hometown passion can charge a Commonweal­th Games.

He had boarded a competitor­s’ bus from the Games village at Griffith University to head to the Chandler pool for morning medley training. Or so he thought.

He was in countdown mode for the Brisbane Commonweal­th Games, just as the state is now for a sun-kissed Gold Coast edition.

It was still days away from a giant 13m mechanical kangaroo named Matilda stealing the show at the opening ceremony with a wink that started the awakening of an entire state.

“It was one of those big athlete buses heading to the pool and sure enough we passed a house with an Australian flag out front,” Bohl said.

“That was it for (coach) Laurie Lawrence, who always had something up his sleeve.

“He got the driver to stop, got us all out, Aussies, Canadians, Kiwis, and set everyone up in the driveway.

“It’s 7am but he knocked on the front door, got the family out and no one was leaving until everyone sung our national anthem, overseas swimmers included.

“It was part of Laurie’s way to show that these are Australia’s Games and dominating the opposition.”

Bohl won’t be pulling the same trick on the Gold Coast but he does hope the 70-strong swim squad and the broader 473-member Australian team are ignited by the same fervour.

The Bohl bloodline is a potent link between Brisbane in 1982 and Gold Coast in 2018 because, 36 years later, he is father and coach of 20-year-old breaststro­ker Georgia Bohl.

The 1982 Games were a pivotal force in Brisbane growing up from big provincial town to a position among Australia’s worldly cities, one equipped to host World Expo 88.

Instead of Tracey Wickham, Lisa Curry, Robert de Castella, Raelene Boyle and Co getting proud hearts beating over a gold rush of 39 prized medals, it may be Mack Horton, Ariarne Titmus, a pigtailed rugby player named Charlotte Caslick or a hot-handed netballer.

The new stands at the outdoor Games pool at Southport rise like steep cliff faces and the energy there at medal time will really be something to be a part of. The hope of Gold Coast elders is that the communitie­s housed along, and west of, a wonderful 57km stretch of coastline will never have felt more united as one.

“I can look back and understand because the euphoria around the (‘82) Games was the making of Brisbane with the help of a big papier-mache kangaroo,” Bohl said.

It certainly wasn’t the culottes worn by our Aussie girls in the opening ceremony which still make 1982 golden girl Wickham cringe with laughter.

It certainly was, in part, the photo that went around the world from a young Brisbane newspaper snapper, Fiora Sacco.

The Queen was happily holding an athletics program two-handed in the QEII Stadium grandstand.

Click. The photo gave the illusion she was clutching an icy XXXX beer, the image adorning the back cover as an ad. Priceless. It was uniquely Queensland as the Gold Coast Games lift-off will be.

There was a march past by surf lifesavers at the 1982 opening ceremony while a knockabout archery complex groundsman caused a stir with Games organisers over attire for a Royal visit.

“They told me I’d at least have to wear a shirt,” Cec Black said at the time.

He refused, wore shorts, working boots and a bronzed chest and Prince Philip still visited the Murarrie complex.

Heightened security long ago killed the game of swapping athlete accreditat­ions for free access.

In 1982, they doubled as an entry pass to the all-hours fun of the Sunnybank Hotel as Queensland­ers lapped up 24hour liquor licensing for the first time.

Mike Keelan represente­d England as an 82.5kg-category weightlift­er in 1982 and took the Friendly Games motto to heart.

“I’d had a few beers at doping control to get me going and thought I might as well continue after my final competitio­n,” said the now chief executive of the Australian Weightlift­ing Federation.

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