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Official XX Olympic Winter Games - Torino 2006 Thread

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AirBrian

Member
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http://www.torino2006.org/ENG/OlympicGames/home/index.html
http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/torino2006


Event and TV schedule:

http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/torino2006/schedule

List of athletes participating:

http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/torino2006/athletes

List of countries participating:

Albania
Algeria
Andorra
Argentina
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Belgium
Bermuda
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Brazil
Bulgaria
Canada
Chile
China
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Ethiopia
Finland
France
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India
Iran
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Japan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Latvia
Lebanon
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Macedonia
Madagascar
Moldova
Monaco
Mongolia
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
North Korea
Norway
Peru
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
San Marino
Serbia and Montenegro
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Thailand
Turkey
Ukraine
United Kingdom
United States
Uzbekistan
Venezuela
Virgin Islands

http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/torino2006/countries

Go USA!
 

commish

Jason Kidd murdered my dog in cold blood!
Is it strange that I don't give two shits about these Olympics? Which is surprising for me, because normally I love watching the winter olympics. They need to get some feel-good stories out there asap.
 

h1nch

Member
i never care about any olympic sport ever....until the olympics roll around. then ill usually randomly watch whatever they happen to be showing at the time. I'll definitely watch anything the US is good at (minus figure skating) especially the snowboarding stuff, and the hockey. (yeah I know we're not good at that but who cares)

I watched an abnormal amount of events during athens on top of the usual basketball stuff. So I'm looking forward to olympic coverage. Its good to watch when theres nothing else on.
 
I never get too hyped about the Olympics, but once they're on, I tend to watch quite a bit. This time I get it in HD though, which should be nice. :)

I'm looking forward to seeing Shaun White in the half pipe. I've really come to enjoy the snowboarding events. Hockey is always cool, and bobsledding/luging is cool too. The skiing can be great, love to watch them do the ski jump, and speed skating is kind of cool.

No figure skating and certainly no curling!
 

Shinobi

Member
I love the Olympics...it's always fun seeing top athletes compete in a variety of sports for their country at the highest level.

Of course I completely and utterly HATE the IOC...the corruption, dollar squeezing, drug testing cover ups, and the way Olympic hosts are completely and utterly raped by these freeloading cocksuckers makes me want to puke. Vancouver found out the costs to hold the 2010 games have somehow risen 23% over budget, and that the provincial and/or federal government (read: the taxpayer) will have to foot that difference. It never changes.

But yeah, I'll be watching...Canada's got a chance to get a pretty decent haul of medals, and of course the hockey will be the big thing up here. I'll just have to hold my nose to avoid the stench of the bullshit.
 

madara

Member
Thanks for the links! I'm totally in the olympic winter mood this time around. Hopefully everyone is 100 percent and we see some great skating performances. Does NBC show most of the games or do you need to flip around to espn and such? This reminds me how bad I like a dvd box set of the 1980 Olympic hockey team.
 

Tiger

Banned
I love the olympics. It's that time every couple years when the nationalist in us all comes out to play. I love watching most of the events too.


Downhill skiing is fun to watch and I love the high speeds. I also love ski jumping! Might be one of my favorite events. I also love all the speed skating events.


I'm really looking forward to them starting this weekend. I'll be watching them in high def as well. :D
 

AirBrian

Member
madara said:
Thanks for the links! I'm totally in the olympic winter mood this time around. Hopefully everyone is 100 percent and we see some great skating performances. Does NBC show most of the games or do you need to flip around to espn and such? This reminds me how bad I like a dvd box set of the 1980 Olympic hockey team.
All of the coverage will be on NBC, CNBC, MSNBC, and USA. I'm pretty sure ESPN does not get anything this time.

Also, is this the first time the games will be broadcasted in HD?
 

kumanoki

Member
Can someone tell me why NBC is calling Turin Torino? Isn't that a little silly? The locals call it Turino. Why did they decide to go and muck up the name of the city?
 

Aruarian Reflection

Chauffeur de la gdlk
Curling ftw.

Otherwise, the winter Olympics never excite me. Summer Olympic sports are much more interesting to me. I will be watching figure skating though, to cheer on hometown hero Michelle Kwan.
 
kumanoki said:
Can someone tell me why NBC is calling Turin Torino? Isn't that a little silly? The locals call it Turino. Why did they decide to go and muck up the name of the city?

It was a marketing decision and a stupid one if you ask me, but since most American's can't find Italy on a map, they'll not know any difference.

Some coverage will also be on UHD, which is owned by NBC as well. This is the first time they are in HD, but it is by far the most HD coverage ever.
 

AirBrian

Member
SnowWolf said:
Curling ftw.

Otherwise, the winter Olympics never excite me. Summer Olympic sports are much more interesting to me. I will be watching figure skating though, to cheer on hometown hero Michelle Kwan.
I don't know why, but I love watching curling. It's just so crazy!
 

VALIS

Member
Hockey, curling, ski jump, speed skating, slalom, bobsled, luge....

Winter Olympics >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Summer Olympics
 

calder

Member
I also much prefer the winter games to the summer. Not as many events, not nearly as much schmaltz, less tedious 15 minute slo-mo montages about random 3rd world runner dude who overcame civil war and sweaty boot rash to make it to the Olympiad.

Hockey (duh), speed skating, most skiing and snowboarding, curling... I'll be watching all that. :D Sucks that I had this week off work and not next week, I could have planned out that vacation better.
 

Y2Kev

TLG Fan Caretaker Est. 2009
VALIS said:
Hockey, curling, ski jump, speed skating, slalom, bobsled, luge....

Winter Olympics >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Summer Olympics

Generally I feel the exact opposite (I love swimming), but I'm gonna watch this olympic games just to watch Michelle Kwan fall flat on her face for the last time.
 
This isn't the first time the Olympics have been broadcast in HD. The Summer games two years ago were in HD, even if it was a disaster, and I think there were HD feeds from Japan in the past.

Comcast added Universal HD for the next two weeks for Olympic coverage... I really wish it was permanent.
 
calder said:
I also much prefer the winter games to the summer. Not as many events, not nearly as much schmaltz, less tedious 15 minute slo-mo montages about random 3rd world runner dude who overcame civil war and sweaty boot rash to make it to the Olympiad.

Hockey (duh), speed skating, most skiing and snowboarding, curling... I'll be watching all that. :D Sucks that I had this week off work and not next week, I could have planned out that vacation better.

I have reading week next week

More like

OLYMPIC WEEK
 

AirBrian

Member
And what's an Olympics without scandel? :lol

TURIN, Italy (AP) -- The first whiff of scandal hit the Turin Olympics the day before the opening ceremony, as eight cross country skiers -- including two Americans and a former gold medalist from Germany -- were suspended for failed blood tests.

The athletes were suspended five days each for elevated levels of hemoglobin, the red blood cell that can increase endurance. The only cross country event that falls within that time is men's and women's pursuit on Sunday.

There is no proof that the athletes did anything wrong: Elevated hemoglobin can be caused by simple dehydration or the body's acclimation to mountain air. But the test result raises the possibility of blood doping with synthetic hemoglobin or transfusions to increase the oxygen in the muscles.

The tests were conducted by the International Ski Federation, which said the suspensions were not disciplinary, but to "protect the health of the athlete."

"It's a health and safety issue, and that's why it's there," U.S. Ski Team spokesman Tom Kelly said Friday morning.

Kelly said team officials don't believe the two American skiers -- Kikkan Randall and Leif Zimmerman -- did anything wrong.

"I get tested pretty regularly, especially the last few years with the U.S. Ski Team's sport science department," said Zimmerman, competing in his first Olympics. "We have a pretty good passport on my blood levels and I'm routinely around 17 (maximum level) as I've spent almost my entire life living and training at altitude. I also have had a head cold for the past week and that definitely affected my hydration, along with the altitude. Hopefully this won't effect any of my plans at the Olympics."

The suspensions come against the backdrop of extraordinary scrutiny of the athletes in Turin, where the IOC has said it plans to conduct some 1,200 tests, and is the first hint of a drug controversy since Olympians began arriving in Italy.

As of Tuesday, more than 100 IOC drug tests had been conducted with no positive results.

The International Ski Federation said it sampled 224 athletes over two days this week. The U.S. Ski Association said the five-day suspensions start Wednesday, when the tests were administered.

International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge said the suspensions "were not doping tests."

"They will have to wait five more days until their blood parameters go down."

Jim Galanes, a coach for Randall, said there's no chance she was involved with illegal doping.

"There is absolutely no likelihood of that," said Galanes, the head Nordic ski coach at Alaska Pacific University who spoke with Randall on Thursday, the day after the test. "I can guarantee it."

The American skiers were 23-year-old Randall of Anchorage, Alaska, and Zimmerman, 22, of Bozeman, Mont. The other skiers were: Sean Crooks of Canada; Sergey Dolidovich of Belarus; Jean Marc Gaillard of France; Aleksandr Lasutkin of Belarus; Natalia Matveeva of Russia; and Evi Sachenbacher of Germany.

Sachenbacher won gold in the 2002 Salt Lake City Games in the women's relay, and silver in the women's sprint. She is currently seventh in World Cup rankings.

Sachenbacher broke down in tears after professing her innocence and explaining to reporters how she always drinks plenty of liquid when training.

"At home, I drink a lot and I never did anything to be guilty. I am the last person to do something like this," she said.

Randall, who goes by the nickname "Kikkanimal," has won several national titles and competed at the Salt Lake City Games. She is a sprint specialist; her aunt, Betsy Haines, competed in the 1980 Olympics in cross country and her uncle, Chris, was on the 1976 team.

"I knew that with all the running around we did getting here and into the village earlier this week, that not getting fluid was a problem for me," Randall said.

John Estle, an Alaska-based official with the USSA, said there could have been up to a half-dozen instances in this World Cup season where athletes were forbidden from competing because of elevated hemoglobin levels but later cleared in follow-up tests.

"It's not unheard of," said Estle, saying it could be caused by dehydration, if athletes have recently traveled, are working at high altitude in low humidity or have used an altitude tent.

"Any number of things can cause it -- I believe it can be a reflection of your fluid levels. It can fluctuate quite a lot," he said.

This is not the first time hemoglobin levels have tainted Olympic skiing.

In the 2002 games, Russia was unable to compete in the women's 20-kilometer cross country ski relay after Larissa Lazutina was disqualified for having high hemoglobin levels. She later was stripped of the gold medal she won in the 30-kilometer classic-style race after she tested positive for darbepoetin.

Also testing for high hemoglobin at those games was Johann Muehlegg of Spain, who lost his gold medal in the 50-kilometer classical race after testing positive, also for darbepoetin.

In mid-January, World Cup cross country skier Reto Burgermeister was suspended for five days for having elevated hemoglobin levels. The 30-year old Burgermeister was tested after training in Val di Fiemme, Italy, and then suspended by the International Ski Federation.

All previous blood tests taken since December 2005, showed normal levels, the Swiss ski federation said. Burgermeister is entered in seven events at Turin.

Associated Press writers Dan Joling in Anchorage, Naomi Koppel, Nesha Starcevic and Janie McCauley contributed to this report.
http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/to...p-xxc-hemoglobinsuspensions&prov=ap&type=lgns
 

Shinobi

Member
The funny thing is that any athletes caught doping up for the purposes of improving performance can get arrested in Italy. So for those who are going to cheat anyway (and you know there will be), they'd better be sure as fuck their masking agents are tight.
 

Peru

Member
Winter Olympics rock.. ski jump, biathlon, bobsled, various alpine skiing... curling gets fun in the olympics too, for some reason. Norway will kill Canada in curling this time..
 

AirBrian

Member
Shinobi said:
The funny thing is that any athletes caught doping up for the purposes of improving performance can get arrested in Italy. So for those who are going to cheat anyway (and you know there will be), they'd better be sure as fuck their masking agents are tight.
:lol That's great.
 
Gigi D'Agostino is from Torino.

I dunno how much I'll get into these games though. I think it's silly cheering for the hometeam...like I have something riding on the success of Michelle Kwan? I'll probably watch skating just to see Sasha Cohen though and see how much she has matured physically since Salt Lake City. Granted, she was smoking back then as well.

Curling is a cool sport to watch because of the strategy involved. And I'm sure I'll watch some Hockey games cheering for all the teams with few NHL players. I like that speed skating stuff too, that shit is always intense.
 
ZigZagZig said:
Remember watch curling. It's very very exciting altought it may at first look seem boring.


Only the last few rounds are good, when they have to use all the crazy sweeping techniques to make the stone do crazy things
 

GSG Flash

Nobody ruins my family vacation but me...and maybe the boy!
I wish they had a DJ doing original music like in Athens with Tiesto instead of just playing random 80's pop songs.
 

Teddman

Member
So isn't Turin supposedly woefully unprepared for the opening ceremony and the Olympics in general? Is this 3 1/2 hour broadcast going to be worth watching tonight?
 

pollo

Banned
TURIN, Italy (AP) -- Losing softball and baseball was tough enough. Losing a place on the Olympics' most powerful body could be even more painful for the United States.

The diminished U.S. clout in the Olympic movement slipped even further Friday when Jim Easton failed to retain a seat on the IOC executive board. Anita DeFrantz withdrew her own candidacy at the last minute to try to give Easton a better chance.

Call it 0-for-4 for the Americans at this week's International Olympic Committee assembly.

"I let down the U.S. by not being able to keep a place on there," said Easton, who had served as an IOC vice president for four years.

The loss of U.S. influence comes down to several factors, including anti-American sentiment, growing European control of the IOC and the fallout from political turmoil and leadership changes at the U.S. Olympic Committee in recent years.

"The seeds of what happened here were sown in the last five and 10 years," U.S. member Robert Ctvrtlik said. "We knew that coming in."

The signs were clear last July when New York finished fourth out of five candidates in the vote for the 2012 Olympic host city. At that same meeting, the IOC voted to scrap baseball and softball -- two traditional American sports -- for the 2012 London Games. Thursday's rejection of attempts to reinstate the two sports was another blow.

Europe is by far the biggest bloc in the 115-member IOC. After Friday's elections, Europe holds nine of the 15 seats on the policy-making executive board, along with three Asians, two Hispanics and one African.

"It's cyclical," said Canadian member Dick Pound, a former IOC vice president. "Europe is really exercising its full control. It makes it pretty hard to stand up and say the executive board reflects the composition of the session."

The last time the United States had no member on the board was a seven-month transition period between the end of DeFrantz's term as vice president in July 2001 and Easton's election in February 2002. Otherwise, there had been a continuous U.S. presence since 1989.

"We're very disappointed not to have representation on the top body," Ctvrtlik said. "It's important for our sponsors, important for this movement to have a good working cooperation with the United States. We'll work hard in the future to see if we can regain some of the things that were lost."

The next chance for a U.S. member to get elected to the board will be at the 2007 IOC session in Guatemala. DeFrantz said she will definitely run again.

"I believe I'm still a qualified candidate, still someone who has respect of my colleagues," she said.

DeFrantz, a former Olympic rower, became the first woman elected as an IOC vice president in 1997. She ran for the presidency in 2001 but finished a distant last in the four-person race.

Easton could also run again for the board next year. Ctvrtlik has been mentioned as a potential candidate, too.

IOC president Jacques Rogge dismissed suggestions that the United States was no longer a major Olympic player.

"In my humble opinion, I believe that is not the case," he said. "In the last 20 years the United States of America have organized three Olympic Games. This is a feat no other country has done."

The United States staged the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles in 1984 and Atlanta in 1996 and the Winter Games in Salt Lake City 2002. The USOC is weighing a possible bid for 2016.

Ctvrtlik said the election defeat and rejection of baseball and softball were a culmination of a period of U.S. alienation from the international scene.

"Sometimes we had people working very hard but not too effectively," he said. "The body of the IOC rewards continuity and familiarity as well as good work. This really just points to the turnover we've had from the top of the USOC."

U.S. election chances Friday had been compromised by the rival candidacies of Easton and DeFrantz. It's unheard of in IOC politics for two members from the same country to seek board seats at the same time.

DeFrantz, who had come under pressure to pull out in favor of Easton, did so just before the vote.

"It was a very difficult decision, but the chance of winning for one was better than for two," she said.

Easton then withdrew from the running for the IOC vice presidency to go for one of the regular seats on the board.

Germany's Thomas Bach beat Italy's Mario Pescante 57-34 in a surprisingly one-sided victory for the vice president's spot.

Easton lost out to Pescante in the ensuing vote for the second post. Easton contested the third and final opening, a seat unofficially reserved for an African member, and lost 57-36 to South Africa's Sam Ramsamy.

Bach, a 52-year-old former Olympic fencer who heads the IOC's legal commission, may have been the biggest winner Friday. His return to the vice presidency after a two-year absence puts him in line for a possible future run for the presidency.

Rogge's eight-year term expires in 2009, and he's eligible for a second term of four years.

wtf..no seating for the US on the IOC? I smell European conspiracy.
 

GSG Flash

Nobody ruins my family vacation but me...and maybe the boy!
Teddman said:
So isn't Turin supposedly woefully unprepared for the opening ceremony and the Olympics in general? Is this 3 1/2 hour broadcast going to be worth watching tonight?

Well, here in Canada theyre showing it live from Turin and so far it seems good
 
GSG Flash said:
Well, here in Canada theyre showing it live from Turin and so far it seems good

We get CBUT (Vancouver CBC) down in Seattle, and I typically end up watching more of the Canadian coverage than the American channels. Although, that may change since I have NBC-HD and Universal HD's coverage. When the American broadcasters learn to stop talking over the entire opening ceremonies and show us more than just the American athletes, than we can talk.
 

Batongen

Banned
Yeah the hockey should be interesting. I also like cross country skiing. There's always something special about watching the 50 km race. I hope Sweden can get at least one gold medal this time. Aren't we supposed to be a winter nation=)
 
kumanoki said:
Can someone tell me why NBC is calling Turin Torino? Isn't that a little silly? The locals call it Turino. Why did they decide to go and muck up the name of the city?

Italian name is "Torino", english version is "Turin". Anyone calls our city "Turino"

I live here so i think i should be right :lol
 
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