Arab Times

Brazil’s military helps Oly athletes march to victory

Instant sergeants

-

BRASÍLIA, July 26, (AFP): The bow string twangs and Bernardo Oliveira, one of Brazil’s army of military-sponsored Olympic athletes, sends his arrow swooping into the target 70 meters (yards) away. Mission accomplish­ed.

Oliveira’s path to the podium at the Rio Games is being planned with military precision. Six days a week for five years, he has fired off 350 arrows — amounting to 546,000 arrows to get to the opening day of competitio­n on August 6 in Rio de Janeiro’s Sambodromo arena.

Sport is often talked about as a nonlethal form of war, and sports training —

OLYMPICS

like military training — requires strategy, physical strength and mental fortitude.

Brazil’s Olympic machine takes that close relationsh­ip further, with 145 athletes connected to the military forming a huge contingent within the 465-strong Brazilian team.

The program dates back to 2008 as preparatio­n for the 2011 Military World Games, which Brazil hosted and ended up winning with the biggest number of medals.

But that sporting influence soon went beyond the barracks, with Brazilian military athletes winning five of the country’s 17 medals at the 2012 London Olympics.

Admiral Paulo Zuccaro, who directs the program, says that in the Rio Games, his men and women could win as many as 10 of a possible 30 medals targeted by Brazil in its bid to be among the top 10 countries in the medal count.

“From the start, the program has had an enormous potential to transform Brazil into an Olympic power,” Zuccaro told AFP at the marines base in Brasilia.

“Sport imitates combat and athletes are good soldiers or become good soldiers because they share the values.”

As Brazil seeks to learn from similar programs in China and Russia, it has rapidly expanded the program.

Only 76 of the athletes accepted into the elite training are actually career military, while 594 are civilians who won places and then went through hurried military induction and were given ranks of third sergeant.

Oliveira, formally an air force third sergeant, is one of that category, winning access to sporting and medical facilities and getting a monthly salary.

Tamires Morena, a member of the Brazilian women’s handball team and another of the instant sergeants, says that military culture also gives athletes an edge.

“Civilian athletes think things over and then let themselves get carried away, but in the military they think three, four times. They think a bit more before taking what may be a harmful decision,” she said.

Oliveira says he takes his mixed role seriously.

“The armed forces defend this country and we are doing the same thing. We bear the flag and we defend the name of our country and in a way we serve it,” he said.

 ??  ?? razilian military athlete Berardo Oliveira trains recurve archery for the Rio 2016
Olympic Games, at the Army Club in Brasilia on July 8. (AFP)
razilian military athlete Berardo Oliveira trains recurve archery for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, at the Army Club in Brasilia on July 8. (AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait