Showing posts with label In the News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In the News. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Throwers Staying "Put" in Athens


Athens' own Reese Hoffa was the favorite for the 2008 Olympic Gold medal in the shot put. He won the world championship last year. His winning throw at the U.S. Olympic Trials was good enough to win Olympic gold in past games.

But as several of us from Jackson Spalding learned today, the Olympics are anything but just another track meet. Winning the Olympics means dealing with the natural adversity that comes with overseas travel (for Hoffa, this meant four days of travel while compressing his 315 lb frame into coach seats), dealing with unusual food, having hundreds of spectators attending his practice, and more. In the end, Hoffa settled for 7th place at the 2008 games. Not bad by most people's standards, but not what he wanted either.

But what is amazing is that Hoffa -- world champion, Olympic favorite, etc. -- lives right here among us in Athens in anonymity, despite a winning personality and a compelling story.

He is a part of the Athens Throwing Group, which seems to be an informal group of athletes who compete in the hammer throw, discus, or shotput on the international track and field circuit. These athletes often graduate from UGA and remain here. Others relocate to Athens to train under renowned UGA coach throws coach Don Babbitt. Beyond the occassional burst of publicity that may accompany an Olympic year or world championship, the group trains quietly in town.

They are quietly supported by local businessmen and athletic contributors who call themselves the Champions Club, which is headed by the legendary Billy Henderson (who entertained us with some lunch time stories about Clarke Central football and our own gridiron warrior).

In addition to Hoffa, the group has included from time to time the somewhat controversial Breaux Greer, who you may have seen on the new American Gladiators (photo and video below), Adam Nelson, the 2004 Olympic Silver medalist who once tried to auction his services to a sponsor on Ebay, and others you wouldn't recognize who are among the best in the world.

Today Babbitt (pictured above left with Hoffa) related the Olympic experience to a small group at a local club's monthly Tuesday Topics program. Since a few of us at JS got extremely passionate about the games, we decided to attend, and Babbitt didn't disappoint as he expounded upon on a number of issues, including:
  • the strengths and weaknesses of the American track and field's Olympic qualifying system (which forced Hoffa, the reigning world champion, to "earn" his way onto the team when his international competitors can focus on peaking jsut for the games);
  • Decrying the fact that the Olympic trials were a mere six weeks before the Olympics themselves, leaving little time for recovery and preparation among athletes;
  • The massive resources that UGA offers to its student athletes compared to the meager offerings of USA Track and Field, the national governing body for track; and
  • Outlining the massive investment China made in the Olympics, describing parks "three times as large as Central Park" and venues more than 400 meters away from each other. At one point, Babbit said he had to walk two miles to find a post office. Seems that everything about the China Olympics was supersized!
As a friend told me a few weeks ago when we ran into Olympic swimming coach Jack Bauerle at Big City Bread, Athens always seems to have a surprise up its sleeve. You never know where you'll find it, whether on the road, in the pool, at the track or somewhere totally different.


Reese Hoffa making the world's longest throw



Breaux Greer's American Record

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Breaking (or Broken?) News Cycle

A few weeks ago, photos of a lost Amazon tribe were splashed all over the Internet. For the better part of a day, Yahoo! ran this anthropological discovery as the lead story in its featured news box on the homepage. The photographs, taken from a helicopter, were released as evidence in the case against logging on the Brazilian-Peruvian border.

But today, Yahoo! has been forced into a mea culpa retraction. Turns out the photos are of a tribe that's been "discovered" since 1910, and the photos were released as a political statement against logging. The photographer came clean on his real motivations in Sunday's edition of The Guardian.

Since the Internet has set the pace of the news cycle to warp speed, one wonders how much of the time the information is half true, mostly true or - worst of all - not true at all. In this case, the tribe was documented (if never photographed), but knee-jerk journalism sent the photos out on the wire before there was even time to confirm their veracity. The race to be first isn't always winning the slow-and-steady path to accuracy.

Maybe it's time to concede that Mama was right - you can't believe everything you hear. Or maybe it's just that you have to take one source with a grain of salt. With blogs - like The Inbox - taking to reporting at the grassroots level, perhaps the news cycle is just starting with the major news sources and is making its arc through the online forums. All the same, it's hard to find anywhere these days that give you just the facts. That's what sparked the Obama campaign to create its own "fact checker."

The bottom line is, whether it's the Amazon or the American President, it's sometimes advisable to be your own fact checker and make sure that seeing is believing.