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SA Olympics: We need a hero

2008-08-29 15:05

Mike Finch has covered two Olympic Games - in 1992 and 1996 - and written on athletics and road running since 1989. Mike has been editor of Runner's World magazine for eight years and was a sports analyst during SABC's Olympic broadcast. (File)

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Mike Finch, Editor: Runner's World magazine

By the time the whistle is blown on Saturday afternoon to start South Africa's Tri-Nations game against Australia at Coca-Cola Park, the Olympics will long be forgotten.

For the next four years athletics, swimming, cycling and the rest of the Olympic sporting minnows will be put on the sidelines of public and commercial interest as South Africans return to the predictable sporting pastimes of cricket, rugby and soccer.

But in four years time these sports will be wheeled out of obscurity for London 2012 and put under typical harsh South African scrutiny and told to perform... erm, make that, win!

People like sprinter Geraldine Pillay for instance, will be asked to win the Olympic 100m title because South Africans don't expect anything less. But in the meantime Pillay, the fastest SA women's sprinter in years, can hardly pay for a place to live and is battling to raise money to travel to Jamaica and train with the world's best.

Pillay didn't make it to Beijing this year. Instead she sat in a cold studio in Auckland Park as an SABC studio guest because she doesn't have the support to ensure she is able to train and look after her health.

But instead, the media and the South African collective consciousness willingly throw around expectations that border on the ludicrous. They expect an oak when only cabbage seeds are planted.

Laughing stock

So let's quit blaming the athletes.

Instead, the trouble lies further up the tree. From the debacle around the sub-standard team kit to the lack of any real sponsors, the South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (Sascoc) have single-handedly managed to turn a national team of the country's best sportsmen and women into a laughing stock.

All the sponsors choose to support the Paralympic team. Not that there's any reason they shouldn't, but when the Olympic team cannot muster a single significant sponsor (including no one to even sponsor the team kit), there has to be question marks over the ability of Sascoc to reasonably run sport in this country.

If the report in the Afrikaans Sunday paper, Rapport, is anything to go by, even their ability to keep an athlete like disabled swimmer Natalie du Toit happy ahead of her event, proved difficult.

The last time South Africa did so badly in the Olympics was in 1936 when we won a sole silver medal in boxing. While Khotso Mokoena proved a world-class performer in the long jump to take a silver in Beijing, no one else even got close to a podium with only 14 finals made compared to the 27 made in Sydney in 2000. In Athens in 2004, South Africa won one gold, three silver and two bronze medals. Compare that to the rest of the world where 40 world records were broken while Kenya led the African challenge with 14 medals including five gold.

Get their acts together

However, in SA, since the Athens Games, swimming has been constantly embroiled in a war of words between the star gold medal swimmers and pretentious administrators while track and field athletics in South Africa has all but ground to a halt with little financial support and almost non existent crowds.

So what's the solution? In a country where there are far more important social issues than Olympic medals its unlikely the government will prioritise sport over housing and the poor. So the responsibility lies with the federations to get their acts together and look after their best.

Create heroes. Heroes inspire the young and is the best form of development money can buy. Just look at Kenya and Ethiopia and even Zimbabwe (who took one gold and four medals in total in Beijing). Create heroes and you create commercial properties that bring in money, fans and new stars.

Let's get to it. We've got four years.

  • Mike Finch has covered two Olympic Games in 1992 and 1996 and written on athletics and road running since 1989. Mike has been editor of Runner's World magazine for eight years and was a sports analyst during SABC's Olympic broadcast.

  • Mike Finch has covered two Olympic Games in 1992 and 1996 and written on athletics and road running since 1989. Mike has been editor of Runner's World magazine for eight years and was a sports analyst during SABC's Olympic broadcast.

  • Send Mike your thoughts

    Disclaimer: Sport24 encourages freedom of speech and the expression of diverse views. The views of columnists published on Sport24 are therefore their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Sport24.

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  • E-Rabbit 8/26/2008 1:30:51 PM
    I agree with you that we need to create heroes, but all this starts with the athletes themselves, you do not need the best facilities and money to become the best, what you need is a desire to be the best and then train to be the best. They all have the same excuses - money, facilities etc and I have learned a lot - time to put that learning into better times and distances - people don't go the meetings becuase it is of poor standard, when last did we break records one after another on these meetings etc. Last point I would like to make is - get the schools to getter better coaches to assist young "stars" with their training etec at school level and grow it from their. NEED A ACADAMY for these talents identified early to go and train and get the support and mental state to perform better

    James 8/26/2008 2:48:29 PM
    I see that the president of the SA Olympic commitee blames poor funding and a very young team. It seems that we have forgotten what it takes to be competative in the Olympics and that you can be expected to just "rock up " and win medals.How can you send a "young team" to the games to start with.Shouldn't that be for lesser events such as maybe the Commonwealth or Africa games .The Olympics should be where you send your absolute best with the best possible chance of being at least competative. How can countries with even less funds that us still win more medals than us. It makes you think. Did the best that we have go to the games?

    frank 8/26/2008 3:57:22 PM
    Besides getting heroes, lets also fire a couple of passangers, like Sam Ramsamy, who is in it for only the money. Sat next to me in traffic the other day, am sure he didn't battle to pay for the new Audi A8 he was sitting in. Appoint people who know something about sport, not only how to line their own pockets.

    Pieter Vorster 8/26/2008 4:24:13 PM
    I totally agree with Mike. SA has many heroes, but heroes can't go into a fight without equipment and motivation. I also noticed the poor Kit of the athletes. How can small poor countries get it right to be sponsored by Major Sponsors and SA "a model to the world" not even get a local Sponsor. What about being proudly SA. As an athlete training for 2012 I want to be proud of SA and SA must be proud of me too.

    Skiballas 8/26/2008 4:39:53 PM
    what do you mean the goverment prioritises housing and the poor. they do neither, nor look at our athletes. billions are poured into soccer! a 1/4 of the money could have been used to upgrade current facilities, a fraction of the remaining money could have funded athletics and other sport for 4 years, and the majority of the leftover money could have build thousands of houses for the poor. but hey, as long as the goverment officials have a lekker 2010 party.

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