Los Angeles Times

Rankings not as easy as 1, 2, 3

- By John Cherwa john.a.cherwa@gmail.com Twitter: @jcherwa

This is your daily infusion of informatio­n and news that you might have missed. The really big stuff you’ll find in other stories.

The United States picked up two medals on Sunday, one gold and one silver. So, in the world of Olympic medal standings, is that one medal or two? That depends.

Most organizati­ons and record keepers use the gold standard when deciding how to rank the countries. But in the United States, a lot of organizati­ons such as The Times, USA Today and the Associated Press (which also offers the gold standings) list the rankings based on total medals.

The reason is simple. In a sporting event brimming with jingoism, the United States always looks better in total medals, and that goes directly to the size of its delegation. In fact, when the U.S. Olympic Committee sets its secret goal for medals, it’s usually total medals. It may have a gold goal, too, but it’s the total it talks about.

In the Summer Games, it doesn’t seem to matter a whole lot. The U.S. crushed both the gold and total counts in Rio and London. But in 2008 in Beijing, the U.S. was second in gold but first in total medals.

The Winter Games, where the reindeer countries do exceptiona­lly well at sports the U.S. struggles in (such as cross-country and biathlon), it’s a different story.

In the last Winter Olympics in Sochi, the U.S. was fourth in gold but second in total medals. In 2010 in Vancouver, it was second in gold and first in total. Turin, Italy, hosted the 2006 Games, where the U.S. was second and second, and if you go back to Salt Lake City in 2002, the U.S. was third in gold and second in total.

There is a national obsession over the medals table, which is as much a staple of the Games as the raising of the flag. It’s OK; everyone wants to think their country is the best.

Nobel Peace Prize?

The early feel-good story of the Games has been the combined women’s hockey team of North and South Korea. When they play, the score will never matter, it’s the fact they are a team after practicing together for less than a month.

But did Angela Ruggiero, a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, get caught up in the moment? “I would love the team to get the Nobel Peace Prize,” she said.

No doubt, sports and natural disasters are the two greatest unifiers of people. In this case, will it last into the month of March?

Rewriting history

NBC had to issue an apology for remarks by Joshua Cooper Ramo, who said during the opening ceremony that Japan was important to the transforma­tion of South Korea. Whoops. Japan actually occupied Korea from 1910 to 1945, and educating the masses wasn’t its mission. Olympic officials reportedly accepted the apology.

Biathlon surprise

What would have happened if neither Gary Oldman (playing Churchill) nor Daniel Day-Lewis (playing some fictional fashion guy) had been nominated for an Oscar? Consider that possibilit­y when neither Martin Fourcade of France nor Johannes Thingnes Boe of Norway hit the medal stand in the biathlon men’s 10-kilometer sprint. They were No. 1 and 2 for most of the season, dominating the competitio­n. Arnd Peiffer of Germany was the beneficiar­y and gold medalist. Lowell Bailey, at 33rd, was the highest U.S. competitor in the 87man field. In Saturday’s women’s 7.5-kilometer sprint, the high U.S. finisher was Emily Dreissigac­ker, 51st in a field of 87 women.

Norway rules

In the cross-country 30kilomete­r skiathlon, Simen Hegstad Krueger won the gold in an all-Norway medal stand. Scott Patterson, who finished 36th in his only skiathlon of the last World Cup circuit, was the highest U.S. finisher (18th).

Couldn’t if you tried

Long-track speedskate­r Sven Kramer of the Netherland­s won the men’s 5,000 meters for the third straight time. But what was amazing was the fraction of a second in his time, which was identical to Sochi in 2014. On Sunday, he set an Olympic record of 6:09.76, which was exactly one second better than the 6:10.76 he did in Sochi. It’s like when you throw the dog toy in a spot that seemed impossible and then you couldn’t duplicate it in 500 tries. Yeah, that difficult. Emery Lehman was the highest American finishing 21st of 22.

Nothing to see here

Perrine Laffont of France won the gold in the women’s moguls. Four of her opponents were from the British commonweal­th (two from Canada and two from Australia) and one from Kazakhstan. No one from the U.S. made the final.

Quote of the day

NBC’s Leigh Diffey, no doubt calling on his childhood memories of luge in Australia, was in hyperdrive when Chris Mazdzer won the silver medal for the U.S. “The luge world will be speechless,” Diffey bellowed. Diffey covered the sledding sports in Sochi, too.

 ?? Vadim Ghirda Associated Press ?? LONG-TRACK speedskate­r Sven Kramer of the Netherland­s basks in the spotlight after winning the men’s 5,000 meters for the third straight time. He set an Olympic record of 6:09.76 on Sunday, which is exactly one second better than the 6:10.76 he did in...
Vadim Ghirda Associated Press LONG-TRACK speedskate­r Sven Kramer of the Netherland­s basks in the spotlight after winning the men’s 5,000 meters for the third straight time. He set an Olympic record of 6:09.76 on Sunday, which is exactly one second better than the 6:10.76 he did in...

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