Los Angeles Times

Michaels isn’t surprised

Television voice of many Olympics isn’t surprised by the Games’ postponeme­nt.

- By Sam Farmer

Longtime Olympics broadcaste­r expected the postponeme­nt of the Games because of pandemic.

It was month ago that we celebrated the 40th anniversar­y of the “Miracle on Ice,” when the U.S. men’s hockey team pulled off its highly improbable 4-3 victory over the Soviet Union. That’s when young announcer Al Michaels made his iconic call — “Do you believe in miracles? Yes!” — in the waning moments.

That was a Winter Olympics, of course. Since, Michaels has covered nine Summer Games, his first the 1984 edition in Los Angeles, when he covered track and field at the Coliseum. He said L.A. “became almost utopia,” with far less traffic and smog than people anticipate­d, and had “this wonderful feeling that permeated the city.”

“That’s what the Olympics were all about,” he said. “When the world comes together it’s a good thing. People say, ‘Well, it’s politicize­d ...’ I know all of the negatives and all of the warts. But it’s kind of cool that all of these peoples from all these different lands can come together at least for two weeks.”

While acknowledg­ing the power of sports to bring people together, Michaels, NBC’s play-by-play announcer for “Sunday Night Football,” questioned the optics of the NFL taking a business-as-usual approach to free agency amid so much uncertaint­y.

“If you’re distracted by free agency and you’re distracted by players signing eight- and nine-figure multi-gazillion-dollar contracts, that’s fine,” he said. “I’m not going to judge what somebody else’s distractio­n is …

“[But] we have a world crisis, and it’s unparallel­ed. I don’t think we’ve ever had — not in my lifetime — anything like this. And we don’t know what the end game is. … The psychic toll that this is taking right now is huge, it is wide-ranging. We don’t know what the end game is.

“I look at this whole situation and I think to myself, we’re talking about flattening the curve, which is great, and hopefully we can do that sooner than later and cut down on the number of cases and flatten that curve. But the distance between flattening the curve and sounding the all-clear signal is I don’t know how long.”

He said he can imagine sporting events without crowds in the coming months, but has a hard time envisionin­g people sitting shoulderto-shoulder anytime soon.

“Maybe our temporary national anthem should for at least a while be taken from the musical ‘Annie’ where the sun will come up tomorrow. Hopefully, it will . ... But in the meantime, sports just has to clearly be on the back burner,” he said.

Although the sports world paused after the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Michaels said, there was a distinctly different feel at that time.

“I think we took great solace, especially after something like 9/11 in people coming together,” he said. “Families physically hugging, and everybody had that feeling of, ‘Hey, we’ve got to pull together.’ Now, we have to go through this apart. Social distancing? Whoever heard this until now?

“So this is where we are right now, and who knows what’s around the corner.”

 ?? Scott Halleran / Getty Images ?? AL MICHAELS has covered countless Olympic moments.
Scott Halleran / Getty Images AL MICHAELS has covered countless Olympic moments.

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