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Opening Ceremony has somber start with tribute to Kumaritashvili
By Maggie Hendricks
February 12, 2010
VANCOUVER, BC In time-honored tradition, the show went on.
Despite the training-run death earlier in the day of a luger from the country of Georgia, the Olympics opening ceremonies were launched Friday night with a jubilant countdown by the crowd filling BC Place Stadium.
The festive mood, and the opening act of a snowboarders leap through giant Olympic rings, contrasted sharply with the grief that befell the games earlier in the day when luger Nodar Kumaritashvili died in a horrific crash on the sliding track at Whistler.
The ceremonies were dedicated to Kumaritashvili, and the seven remaining members of the Georgian delegation, who decided to stay and compete, wore black armbands as they marched behind a black-trimmed flag. Most of the crowd rose to give respectful applause. There were also plans to lower the Olympic and Canadian flags to half staff.
More than 50,000 ticketholders packed into the stadium for the evening extravaganza, the first Olympic opening or closing ceremony ever held indoors.
Rain was forecast through the weekend in Vancouver, with high temperatures near 50 degrees, prompting some to dub these the Spring Olympics. Rain also has disputed Alpine skiing events at Whistler.
According to program, the opening ceremony was to climax with the Olympic cauldron being lit jointly by four Canadian sports heroesall-time hockey great Wayne Gretzky, skier Nancy Greene, speedskater Katrina LeMay Doan, and basketball All-Star Steve Nash.
About 2,500 athletes from a record 82 countries are participating in the games, vying for medals in 86 eventsincluding the newly added ski-cross competition. First-time Winter Olympic participants include the Cayman Islands, Columbia, Ghana, Montenegro, Pakistan, Peru and Serbia.
The overall favorites include Germany and the United Stateswhich finished first and second four years ago in Turinand also Canada, a best-ever third in 2006 and now brashly proclaiming its intention to finish atop the medals table on its home turf.
Were still going to be nice, but were going to be nice in winning, said Michael Chambers, president of the Canadian Olympic Committee.
The Canadian team was scheduled to be the last contingent in the parade of nations at Fridays ceremony, marching behind flagbearer Clara Hughes, defending gold medalist in the 5,000- meter speedskating race.
Just ahead in the parade will be the Americans. Their flagbearer is Mark Grimmette, 39, of Muskegon, Mich., competing in his fifth Olympics as a doubles luge competitor.
U.S. team officials said Grimmette would wear a Georgian pin in honor of Kumaritashvili, who would have been one of his Olympic rivals.
The cultural segment of ceremony featured many of Canadas best-known musical starsincluding Bryan Adams, Nelly Furtado, Sarah McLachlan and k.d. lang.
It also highlighted performers and traditions from Canadas aboriginal communities. And the highest-ranking official delegation at the ceremonyamid dignitaries from around the worldincluded the four chiefs of the First Nations whose traditional native territory overlaps the Olympic region.
Several well-known Canadians received the honor of carrying the Olympic flag at a high-profile moment near the end of the ceremony. Among them were hockey Hall of Famer Bobby Orr, singer Anne Murray, race car driver Jacques Villeneuve and Betty Fox, mother of national hero Terry Fox.
Terry Fox lost a leg to bone cancer as a youngster, then set off in 1980 on a fundraising trek across Canada. He had to give up after covering more than 3,000 miles, and died in 1981 at age 22, but remains revered by his compatriots as a symbol of courage and perseverance.
The flame reached the stadium after a 106-day torch relay across Canada, passing through more than 1,000 communities in every province and territory.
The relay was the occasional target for protesters, and Friday was no exception.
Activists espousing a variety of causes prompted the relay to change course twice as it passed near Vancouvers skid-row neighborhood, the Downtown Eastside.
The Olympics have done more damage than good, protest leader Lauren Gill said.
But one positive is the world getting to see what Vancouver really is. Downtown Eastside is an international model
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Olympic luger from Georgia dies after crash
By TIM REYNOLDS AND TOM WITHERS
February 12, 2010
WHISTLER, BC It took only three seconds.
Sliding faster than ever in his life, 21-year-old Nodar Kumaritashvili had one turn left in his final Olympic training run. Flirting with 90 mph on a $100 million track pushing speed to the outer limits, the luger from the republic of Georgia tilted his head slightly forward as his sled climbed the high-banked wall.
His last move.
Kumaritashvili lost control, crashing into the wall entering the final straightaway. His body went airborne, arms and legs flailing over the opposite side of the track, his upper body smashing into an unpadded steel pole as his sled continued skidding down the track. It all took just 48.9 seconds, start to crash.
Paramedics began working on Kumaritashvili within seconds, quickly starting chest compressions and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, all to no avail.
The IOC said Kumaritashvili was pronounced dead at a trauma center in Whistler.
Less than an hour after the accident, a representative from each team was told the grim news.
With that, tears began flowing across the close-knit sliding world and throughout the Olympic family.
I have no words, a teary International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge said, to say what we feel.
Within an hour of the accident, an investigation was opened. Security officials closed access to the crash area and the remainder of the track for the rest of the day, and all further training runs scheduled for Friday were canceled.
Womens luge Olympians are scheduled to train at the track Saturday morning, nine hours before the mens two-day competition is set to begin.
It is a nervous situation, Latvian luge federation president Atis Strenga said. Its a big tragedy for all (of) luge. I hope, we all hope, its the first accident and the last accident in this race.
The danger of the Whistler track has been talked about for months particularly after several countries, including the U.S., were upset with restrictions over access to the facility by nations other than Canada, some noting it could lead to a safety issue.
Some sliders, especially those from small luge federations, saw the worlds fastest track this week for the first time.
Nikolos Rurua, the Georgian minister of culture and sport, said Kumaritashvili had been on the Whistler surface before, and it would be unfair to say that the slider was ill-prepared for the test of the demanding track.
When you are going that fast it just takes one slip and you can have that big mistake, U.S. doubles luger Christian Niccum said Thursday, when asked about track safety. All of us are very calm going down, but it you start jerking at 90 mph or making quick reactions, that sled will steer. Thats the difference between luge and bobsled and skeleton, were riding on a very sharp edge and that sled will go exactly where we tell it to so you better be telling it the right things on the way down.
The luge federation had several options, including delaying competition, trying to re-shape the ice to make some curves less severe, having mens sliders start from the womens rampwhich would keep speed a bit more in checkor simply going forward as scheduled.
Officials in Vancouver and Whistler both stressed that no decisions regarding what happens next would be made before the initial investigations are complete.
Its not nice, but I hope they will make the track as safe as possible, said bobsledder Timothy Beck from the Netherlands.
These accidents should not happen, Swiss figure skater Sarah Meier said.
This is dangerous, German bobsled star Andre Lange said. You should never forget that.
Rogge said he was in contact with Kumaritashvilis familythe sliders father is president of the Georgian luge federation and his cousin is the teams coach, VANOC officials saidand the Georgian government. The remaining seven members of the Georgian Olympic delegation said they would stay in the games and dedicated their performances to their fallen teammate.
My thoughts and prayers are with the Georgian Olympic team, U.S. bobsled pilot Steven Holcomb said on Twitter. The sliding community suffered a tragic and devastating loss to our family today.
Under giant Olympic rings near the medals plaza in downtown Whistler, mourners placed candles and flowers around a photograph of Kumaritashvili, on his sled and barreling down the track. Around the photo, an inscription read: In Memory of Nodar Kumaritashvili, May he rest in peace.
There was a moment of silence in memory of the luger at the start of the Alpine skiing team captains meeting.
Kumaritashvili is the fourth competitor to die at the Winter Games, all in training, and the first since 1992.
Crashes happen often in lugeat least 12 sliders have wrecked just this week on the daunting Whistler surface. Still, some who have been around tracks their entire lives couldnt remember someone actually being thrown over the wall.
Its a very rare situation, three-time Olympic champion and German coach Georg Hackl said, clearly shaken after seeing Kumaritashvili tended to furiously by medical workers.
Shortly before the accident, Hackl said he didnt believe the Whistler track was unsafe.
People have the opinion it is dangerous but the track crew does the best it can and they are working hard to make sure the track is in good shape and everyone is safe, he said. My opinion is that its not any more dangerous than anywhere else.
VANOC officials said the investigation was taking place to ensure a safe field of play.
As athletes, we know that the international federation, the IOC and VANOC have no higher priority than ensuring our safety, on and off the field of play, said British luger A.J. Rosen, who dislocated his hip in a crash at the Whistler track last fall. I know they are looking into this and, should it be deemed necessary for them to introduce additional measures, they will do so.
This was Kumaritashvilis second crash during training for the games, the first coming Wednesday in the opening session. He also failed to finish his second of six practice runs.
His last recorded speed Friday was 89.4 mph, measured near the last curve. He was on a higher pathline, they call it in lugedown the final turns of the track than most sliders prefer, and the combination of speed and gravitational pull was too much for his 176-pound body to control.
Sliding diagonally, Kumaritashvili smashed into a corner entering the final straightaway feet-first. He was knocked off his sled and sailed in the other direction, coming to rest on a metal walkway after his upper body smashed into the post. The first rescue worker just happened to be nearby and was at his side within three seconds.
His competitive spirit and dedication to sports excellence will be remembered and honored during the games, Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper said.
This would have been Kumaritashvilis first Olympics. He competed in five World Cup races this season, finishing 44th in the world standings.
Earlier in the day, two-time Olympic champion Armin Zoeggeler of Italy crashed, losing control of his sled on Curve 11. Zoeggeler came off his sled and held it with his left arm to keep it from smashing atop his body. He slid on his back down several curves before coming to a stop and walking away.
Training days in Whistler have been crash-filled. A Romanian woman was knocked unconscious and at least four AmericansChris Mazdzer on Wednesday, Megan Sweeney on Thursday and both Tony Benshoof and Bengt Walden on Friday in the same training session where Zoeggeler wreckedhave had serious trouble just getting down the track.
RIP Nodar Kumaritashvili, American skeleton athlete Kyle Tress, who did not qualify for the Olympic team, wrote on his Twitter feed. Lets never forget how dangerous these sports can be.
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