Canadian Cycling Magazine

It’s Hard to Support the Olympics

The multi-sport event is fraught with problems, and the pandemic adds more of them

- Matthew Pioro Editor

Ihave trouble with the Olympics at the best of times. Even though the Games have lots of documents with high-minded notions of world peace, fair play and friendship, the real-world effects of the Olympics can range from problemati­c to criminal.

When the French aristocrat Pierre de Coubertin set about creating the modern Olympics in the late 1800s, he made them solely for amateur athletes, ostensibly for the purity of sport. But as Mark Johnson writes in his excellent book on the history of doping, Spittingin­thesoup, the Olympic project was really about class warfare. Only the upper classes could afford to be amateurs participat­ing in the Games. Profession­al sport was growing at the time, but it was practised and enjoyed by the working class. The Olympics were not open to anyone who ever used sport to get out of the factories or mines and make a better life.

Of course, pros were fully welcomed into the Games by 1988, but it’s not as if the Olympics suddenly became any more noble a project. For the 2016 Games in Rio, thousands of poor residents in and around the city were displaced. In some cases, people were moved so that constructi­on of Olympic infrastruc­ture could take place. In other instances, it was just so organizers could hide the poverty in the city. Bus routes were changed to make travel out of poor neighbourh­oods more difficult. People lost their homes.

Recently, the winter Olympics (Sochi 2014, Beijing 2022) seem to be PR stunts by authoritar­ian government­s.

Those are all “regular” issues I have with the Games. Amid the pandemic, there are a whole new set of ethical problems. In early January, the out-of-touch Internatio­nal

“Those are all ‘regular’ issues I have with the Games.”

Olympic Committee (ioc) member Dick Pound said athletes should have priority access to covid-19 vaccines so that Tokyo 2020 could go ahead this summer. In March, the ioc made a deal with the Chinese Olympic committee to source vaccines for athletes taking part i n the Tokyo Games. This deal brings with it concerns about vaccine diplomacy and nationalis­m. In April, Japan’s own vaccinatio­n efforts were going slowly. Citizens of that country had less and less support for the Games. Some Japanese officials were calling for a cancellati­on. Tokyo Olympics president Seiko Hashimoto said the events could proceed safely, even though Japan was entering its fourth wave.

I wrestled with all of this as Tara Nolan worked on her excellent story on Canadians’ efforts to get to the Games (p.44). We couldn’t have given the story any other sub-headline but “How the Games will maybe, kind of, possibly play out for Canadian riders.” Despite all my misgivings about the Olympics, I have the utmost respect for the athletes who dedicate so much for a shot that comes every four years, most of the time. I also have great sympathy for the staff at Cycling Canada who are navigating a logistical gong show as they try to support our athletes. If the Olympics go ahead, I wish the riders all the best. If they end up getting cancelled, I will commiserat­e with the athletes. As for the rest, I hope they will find opportunit­ies for much-needed change.

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