Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Peru’s Pan American games capped by closing ceremony

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LIMA, Peru — Dancers in colorful costumes took the capacity crowd of 50,000 at Lima’s National Stadium — and millions following across the world — on a trip along Peru’s coast, over its mountains and deep into the dense forests and jungles of the Amazon.

The Pan American Games closed Sunday with a ceremony that gathered nearly 1,000 performers from more than a dozen nationalit­ies.

The ceremony that capped the 17-day multi-sport event paid homage to Andean civilizati­ons with the set design inspired by stonework from walls used by the Incas to build their colossal cities. It also highlighte­d the natural wealth of a country whose name itself, from the Quechua Indigenous word, means land of abundance. But it also showed a modern side of Peru with a DJ mixing cumbia beats on a stage-turned-dance floor, and colorful “Chicha” posters and graffiti that are often on display on the streets of Lima.

Fireworks burst at the end of a ceremony that also included performers dressed as hunters, fishermen and warriors, a parade of athletes from the 41 competing countries, and a woman who played a tiny Andean guitar known as the charango.

It was a huge way to close the Games that showcased world-class venues, worldclass cuisine and enthusiast­ic fans who braved Lima’s chilly, damp weather to cheer on athletes from across the Americas.

The tournament also featured the debut of surfing in a country that is known as the Hawaii of South America and that rode a wave of support at home to dominate with gold medals and a likely ticket to Tokyo 2020.

Nearly 7,000 athletes competed in the games. A record 21 of the 61 sporting discipline­s served as qualifiers for next year’s Olympics. The Americans finished atop the medal standings with 293, followed by Brazil with 171 and Mexico with 136.

The British Virgin Islands and Aruba won their first medals. Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce broke the 40-year-old Pan Am Games 200-meter record and El Salvador flexed its muscles winning both men and women’s categories in the debut of bodybuildi­ng. Colombia’s twotime BMX Olympic gold medalist Mariana Pajon and triple Greco-Roman wrestling gold medalist Mijain Lopez from Cuba cemented their legacy in their sports by winning it all.

Athletes and visitors were also able to taste why Peru’s cuisine is famous worldwide for its delicious blend of indigenous traditions with European, African and Asian influences with an abundance of seafood from the Pacific Ocean.

Fans roared when the Panam Sports president said that they had been “the best Pan American Games in history.”

Although the Pan Am Games closed with a grandiose finale, the big bash will be likely followed by a bad hangover. Peru must return today to the reality of its political woes. Former President Alejandro Toledo was recently arrested in the U.S. following an extraditio­n request. He’s wanted in Peru on accusation­s of taking bribes from Odebrecht, a Brazilian constructi­on company at the center of Latin America’s biggest corruption scandal. In April, former President Alan Garcia mortally wounded himself with a gunshot to his head as officers waited to arrest him in a graft probe linked to the scandal.

Peru’s largest ever sporting event came at price tag of about $1 billion. Organizers said that was about half as much as Toronto 2015 and that the project created worldclass infrastruc­ture for the 9 million residents of the Peruvian capital located in a desert across from the Pacific Ocean. But some said the government should have instead spent that money in poor communitie­s that lack drainage, roads and drinking water in one of the world’s driest capitals.

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