Home>News Center>Sports
         
 

Triumphant Olympics end with pride, relief
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-08-30 04:18

Efharisto! A nervous world learned the Greek word for thank you and repeated it endlessly at an astonishingly successful Athens Olympics that quelled fears, surprised skeptics and greatly honored the birthplace of the games.

Efharisto, Athens, for architectural masterpieces of stadiums and arenas that showcased record performances. The fountain sprays, reflecting pools and soaring arches. The undulating, giant white Wall of Nations that caught the whispering wind, bringing music to our ears and smiles to our faces.

Efharisto for the thousands of security forces who stood guard day and night, keeping terrorism away. An undercurrent of danger, a sense of tranquility. We saw guns everywhere, walked in peace.


Fireworks explode at the start of the closing ceremony of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games August 29, 2004. The next Olympic Games will be held in Beijing in 2008. [Reuters]

Fireworks and spectacular lighting kicked off the closing ceremony Sunday night, an extravaganza of folk dancing and music in the Olympic tradition that summed up the glee and relief the games brought to Greece. Shortly afterward, thousands of athletes marched into the stadium, waving their arms and flags, snapping photos of each other and bathing in the cheers of 70,000 fans.

"You have won," International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge told the Greek people, who responded with a roar. "You have won by brilliantly meeting the tough challenge of holding the games.

"These were unforgettable, dream games."

He was right, even if they started slowly the first week with empty seats and vacant plazas as many Greeks took their holidays and frightened tourists stayed away. The second week saw the games transformed. The huge Olympic stadium was packed each night for track and field. Basketball, tennis and beach volleyball rocked.

There had been no shortage of worries that Athens would not be ready for these games. As late as March 2000, the IOC considered moving the Olympics out of Greece, possibly to South Korea.

"It's always nice to underpromise and overdeliver," said Jim Easton, an American IOC vice president.

Athletes who finished their events partied, roaming the Plaka, Syntagma and Omonia squares. It was Greece at its rollicking best, a spirited fusion of visitors from all countries, and of all colors and ages. It reminded us again, at a time when we need all the reminding we can get, that the Olympics celebrate humanity's highest aspirations, the universal quest for peace and the exalted qualities of body, mind and spirit that transcend cultures.

Efharisto, Athens, for coupling the ancient with the new, putting up with years of jarring construction, spending billions beyond your budget, and giving us a glimpse of your future as a sophisticated, modern city.

"The world discovered a new Greece," said Athens 2004 president Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, who made it all happen with her fierce determination to overcome construction delays and avoid an international humiliation.

These games took us to their sacred origin in Olympia, the mythological home of the gods, to watch the shot put, to Marathon to stand on the spot where the race got its name.

We trod like pilgrims to a shrine up the dusty stones of the Acropolis to gaze with awe at the 2,500-year-old Parthenon. Our imaginations did the rest, letting us feel the spirit of Socrates, Plato and Aristole; Pericles and Alexander the Great; Hippocrates and Herodotus; Euclid and Pythagoras — that brainy bunch who laid the foundation for our culture.

The scourge of sports — steroids, stimulants and other drugs — intruded but didn't spoil the games. A record two dozen athletes were caught, seven lost medals, and there could be more to come as the test results keep rolling in.

"Each positive test is a blessing for us because it's eliminating the cheats and protecting the clean athletes," Rogge said. "The more we find, the better."

There were scandals and controversies, as always.

Greek sprint stars Kostas Kenteris and Katerina Thanou broke their countrymen's hearts — and angered many — when they pulled out of the games after questions over missed drug tests and a suspicious motorcycle crash the night before the opening ceremony.

Three gymnastics judges were suspended after it was determined South Korean Yang Tae-young was scored improperly, costing him a gold medal that went to American Paul Hamm.

Even the final event, the men's marathon, was marred an hour before the closing ceremony when a defrocked Irish priest bolted from the crowd and grabbed the leader, Brazil's Vanderlei de Lima, about three miles from the finish. De Lima recovered and finished, but had to settle for a bronze when a protest by his track federation was rejected.

"I was scared, because I didn't know what could happen to me, whether he was armed with a knife, a revolver or something, and whether he was going to kill me," de Lima said. "That's what cost me the gold medal."

The marathon medalists, gold winner Stefano Baldini of Italy, American silver medalist Meb Keflezighi, and de Lima received their olive wreaths and medals at the closing ceremony.

These Olympics saw the rise of China as a sports superpower as it positioned itself for the 2008 games in Beijing. The United States, buoyed by the brilliance of swimming star Michael Phelps but embarrassed by the three losses and mere bronze of its once-vaunted men's basketball team, won the most medals. Americans beat their target of 100 by three, 35 of them gold. China won 32 gold medals. Russia finished with 27 gold. 

Greeks gathered at cafes and tavernas in the Plaka to watch the marathon and the closing ceremony on wide screens and TV sets.

"The Greeks showed once again what they're capable of if they set their minds to it," said Yianna Mihalakpoulou, a graphic designer.

And, once again, Efharisto!



 
  Today's Top News     Top Sports News
 

Triumphant Olympics end with pride, relief

 

   
 

Miracles lift China up at Athens Games

 

   
 

China amends disease law, bans blood trade

 

   
 

Tens of thousands protest Bush in NYC

 

   
 

Price rise sparks inflation concerns

 

   
 

Terrorists blamed for Russian plane crashes

 

   
  Chen wraps up China's gold rush with 32nd gold
   
  Triumphant Olympics end with pride, relief
   
  Miracles lift China up at Athens Games
   
  Olympic competition ends in drama
   
  US says China breaks in upon new level in Athens
   
  Chen wins 32nd gold for China
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 含羞草实验室入口免费网站直接| 99re6在线| 日本福利视频导航| 日本簧片在线观看| 国产福利影院在线观看| 久久婷婷电影网| 约会只c不y什么意思| 天堂…中文在线最新版在线| 亚洲国产亚洲综合在线尤物| 蜜臀av免费一区二区三区| 奇米第四色首页| 亚洲一区免费视频| 老师xxxx69动漫| 国外欧美一区另类中文字幕 | 99久久伊人精品综合观看| 欧洲97色综合成人网| 国产FREEXXXX性麻豆| 99精品国产高清自在线看超| 极品人体西西44f大尺度| 伊人久久国产精品| 国产三级a三级三级野外| 成人免费视频软件网站| 亚洲国产精品自产在线播放| 视频一区精品自拍| 在线精品91青草国产在线观看 | 国产极品粉嫩交性大片| 在线亚洲人成电影网站色www| 久久精品日日躁夜夜躁欧美| 精品欧洲videos| 国产精品入口麻豆免费| 中文字幕无线码欧美成人| 欧美视频免费一区二区三区| 国产人碰人摸人爱视频| 99久久无色码中文字幕| 成人污视频在线观看| 亚洲变态另类一区二区三区| 美女视频黄的全免费视频网站| 国产美女爽到喷出水来视频| 久久丫精品国产亚洲av| 毛片在线播放a| 国产一区二区三区在线电影|