The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A Winter Games guide for just folks

It’s the dutiful thing, seeing as how we once hosted an Olympics.

-

As citizens of an Olympic City — it was 1996, have your parents tell you about it — we also are citizens of the Olympic movement. And it is the duty of all such good citizens to watch at least three minutes’ worth of pairs figure skating from Pyeongchan­g.

It’s just something you should do, like eating kale.

Admittedly, the Winter Games don’t resonate around Atlanta. In fact, when viewers here see that much snow and ice, their reflex is to rush out of their homes, stock up on bread

and milk and then slide into a ditch.

Having covered a few of

these things in my more adventurou­s past, I can tell you with some certainty that most of the events defy any sort of analytical coverage. They are niche activities that only a few people in Scandinavi­a and the Yukon really understand. And then some judge who is more

biased than a North Korean history book tells you who gets the medals. Frankly, I’ve pretty much stuck to writing about English ski-jumpers, Jamaican bobsledder­s or the occasional

ice skater who gets kneecapped. Otherwise I’ve pretty much just faked it the rest of the way from Calgary to Nagano.

I’m going to let you in here on one of the big secrets in sports writing, a fundamenta­l tactic for those stick-and-ball types thrown into the foreign landscape of a Winter Olympics: When in doubt, just make fun of it.

And they have since X-Gamed the whole thing up, which takes those of us of a certain age even more out of the mix. Watching snowboarde­rs mock gravity can be entertaini­ng, but if you have a mortgage and are employed, you’re really not the demographi­c they are aiming for here.

But, I repeat, there is the obligation to watch something, because you are citizens of the Centennial Olympic City. So, here are a few highlights from the next few days. Choose wisely.

Today: Mixed doubles curling. Gender equality finds a cold, deserted, Molson-scented corner of the sporting world.

Wednesday: Luge doubles, because why not stack up humans like kindling on a tiny sled and send the whole thing hurtling down a frozen pipe? After winning our first luge medal ever this weekend, the U.S. is officially a luging nation now. Like it said in the actual Denver

Post headline, “How silver medalist Chris Mazdzer became America’s newest sex symbol.”

Thursday: Men’s Super G. Downhill skiing — finally a sport that makes some sense. I tried skiing once. It looked like a flour sack tumbling down an icy laundry chute.

Friday: Women’s snowboard cross race, because I’m told there is the possibilit­y of mayhem. God, I miss football.

Saturday: Men’s ski jumping, large hill. On TV, it looks like nothing a person should do without a parachute. On site, it looks only a tic less insane.

Sunday: Women’s 500meter speed skating. At least it’s over quickly.

Oh, by the way, the pairs free skate is Thursday, should you wish to bite the bullet and pay your Winter Olympic dues in full during a single viewing.

 ?? Steve Hummer ?? My Opinion
Steve Hummer My Opinion
 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? France’s Jonathan Learoyd practices for the men’s ski jumping competitio­n at the Alpensia Ski Jumping Center in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, on Wednesday — without a parachute.
CHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS France’s Jonathan Learoyd practices for the men’s ski jumping competitio­n at the Alpensia Ski Jumping Center in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, on Wednesday — without a parachute.
 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Justin Krewson and Andrew Sherk, of the United States, take a practice run during the men’s doubles luge training at the Winter Olympics.
CHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Justin Krewson and Andrew Sherk, of the United States, take a practice run during the men’s doubles luge training at the Winter Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States