I'm not following the Olympics quite as much as I should be, only because our coverage of the Olympics at the newspaper is preventing me from following them (does that even make sense?)
But I still am having a great time when I am watching, and living so close to Canada always gives me a perspective that many others don't have (namely watching events on television as they happen).
I decided to grab another pack of Topps' U.S. Olympic team set the other day. The cards were buried behind all the newer stuff that Topps has issued since the Olympic set came out.
That made me sad. Because this is the time to open cards like these. I know collectors have to obsessively buy whatever is new and then discard it for the Next Thing two weeks later. But back when these cards first arrived, I didn't even know who three-quarters of the Olympians were. Now I don't even know who half of the Olympians are. But, you know, that's progress. I actually can identify some of the people I'm looking at on the cards.
So here's a pack of the stuff ... while the Olympics are actually going on ... while these people are in your consciousness ... before they disappear forever ... before you stop caring about fencing.
And I might have something to say that's informative.
#3 - Juan Agudelo
OK, a Topps fail right away.
The U.S. men's soccer team didn't even qualify. Those are the breaks when you produce a set before qualifying is over. That's a stinky part of this set, but I'm not sure how Topps gets around it -- issuing the set after the Olympics is almost pointless.
#45 - Phil Dalhausser
I remember a time when bald, bare-chested men were not allowed in the Olympics.
I'm not a beach volleyball person. Unfortunately, NBC thinks everyone on the planet is.
#1 - Shawn Johnson
Another person who never made it to the 2012 Olympics. She retired two months ago. Yet, Topps said "she will be a Team USA leader in London." Oops.
Still it's always nice to see Shawn.
#28 - Conor Dwyer
OK, I'm going to fill you in on some inside information about newspaper world.
A big pitfall of covering the Olympic games from afar is most of these people are athletes you have never seen before. Another pitfall is that AP photographers are absolutely incapable of identifying anyone correctly in photos even though they're -- RIGHT THERE.
There was a photo of whatever relay Dwyer was in that won a gold medal (I get confused, swimming has like 227 different events). All four guys standing up showing off their shiny hardware. The only person that AP was able to identify correctly was Michael Phelps. All of the other names were switched. How is that even possible? Well, after obsessively searching the internet and comparing faces of everyone -- on deadline -- I thought I had it. But apparently Dwyer and Ryan Lochte look alike to me. So the IDs were still incorrect in the paper. So thanks to AP, we look like idiots.*
#84 - Brendan Hansen
Michael Phelps really saved his butt in the relay yesterday.
#78 - Jordyn Wieber
NBC loves gymnastics because it's nonstop waterworks. But all I can think of is how everyone competing is 4-by-4.
OK, that wasn't informative. Wieber is the gal who shockingly did not qualify for the all-around final, but ended up winning gold in the team competition anyway. But you knew all that, because NBC is all gymnastics, all the time.
#19 - Bryan Clay
This is absolutely the saddest card in the set. Clay was the 2008 Olympic decathlete champion. That's like being named The Greatest Athlete in the World. But he's not defending his title because he didn't qualify this year. All that training, and he didn't qualify, and Topps puts him in a set anyway.
That sucks.
#76 - Tony Azavedo
I'm not much into water polo either, but I do know that Azavedo is the captain of the U.S. team. I saw him interviewed by Pierre McGuire (by the way, how strange is it hearing Mike Emmrick say "scooooooooorres!" at a water polo match). Every time I see McGuire, I remember how unpleasant he was when I was trying to interview him a long time ago. And now he's interviewing others. Hmmmmm.
#39 - Britney Reese, silver medal parallel
Track and field is just starting so I don't know much about her other than that she was in Beijing. And her twitter handle is @DaLJBeast.
Oh, and the parallels are still annoying.
#26 - Rebecca Soni, bronze parallel
How does she get away with wearing a red swimsuit while everyone else on the women's swim team wears those blue/black things?
So, there you are.
Don't you feel more knowledgeable looking at those cards while the Olympics are taking place?
And now, here are my completely random favorites from the Olympics so far (as inspired by a Play at the Plate post):
Favorite sport I'd never watch otherwise:
Weightlifting.
There are a whole bunch of these type of sports -- team handball, badminton, archery -- but just about everything about weightlifting fascinates me. It's so weird ... and intriguing.
Sports I can do without?: Beach volleyball, synchronized swimming, track cycling.
Favorite "new to me" American male athlete:
Brady Ellison, Archery
Yeah, I have something in common with every tween girl in America. I'm not proud of it.
Favorite "new to me" American female athlete:
Jordan Larson, Volleyball
I gravitate toward indoor volleyball every Olympics. It's probably my favorite sport to watch.
Favorite non-American male athlete:
Tomasz Majewski, Poland, Shot put
This guy is awesome. Every other shot putter looks like they're having a heart attack before they launch that thing. There's agony and endless talk about the dance they do inside the circle. Majewski just seems to simply throw -- and throws it farther than anyone. And there is no angst. Love it.
Favorite non-American female athlete:
Anita Punt, New Zealand, Field Hockey
Holy smokes, I'm in love. And she plays like a maniac.
Anyway, I hope you're enjoying the Olympics.
I think I'm going to try to catch some now. But on Canadian TV. NBC has "what we're tweeting about" (good god, who cares?). CTV has Jennifer Hedger.
(*Yes, I fully realize I bagged on AP photographers and used AP photos all in the same post).
But I still am having a great time when I am watching, and living so close to Canada always gives me a perspective that many others don't have (namely watching events on television as they happen).
I decided to grab another pack of Topps' U.S. Olympic team set the other day. The cards were buried behind all the newer stuff that Topps has issued since the Olympic set came out.
That made me sad. Because this is the time to open cards like these. I know collectors have to obsessively buy whatever is new and then discard it for the Next Thing two weeks later. But back when these cards first arrived, I didn't even know who three-quarters of the Olympians were. Now I don't even know who half of the Olympians are. But, you know, that's progress. I actually can identify some of the people I'm looking at on the cards.
So here's a pack of the stuff ... while the Olympics are actually going on ... while these people are in your consciousness ... before they disappear forever ... before you stop caring about fencing.
And I might have something to say that's informative.
#3 - Juan Agudelo
OK, a Topps fail right away.
The U.S. men's soccer team didn't even qualify. Those are the breaks when you produce a set before qualifying is over. That's a stinky part of this set, but I'm not sure how Topps gets around it -- issuing the set after the Olympics is almost pointless.
#45 - Phil Dalhausser
I remember a time when bald, bare-chested men were not allowed in the Olympics.
I'm not a beach volleyball person. Unfortunately, NBC thinks everyone on the planet is.
#1 - Shawn Johnson
Another person who never made it to the 2012 Olympics. She retired two months ago. Yet, Topps said "she will be a Team USA leader in London." Oops.
Still it's always nice to see Shawn.
#28 - Conor Dwyer
OK, I'm going to fill you in on some inside information about newspaper world.
A big pitfall of covering the Olympic games from afar is most of these people are athletes you have never seen before. Another pitfall is that AP photographers are absolutely incapable of identifying anyone correctly in photos even though they're -- RIGHT THERE.
There was a photo of whatever relay Dwyer was in that won a gold medal (I get confused, swimming has like 227 different events). All four guys standing up showing off their shiny hardware. The only person that AP was able to identify correctly was Michael Phelps. All of the other names were switched. How is that even possible? Well, after obsessively searching the internet and comparing faces of everyone -- on deadline -- I thought I had it. But apparently Dwyer and Ryan Lochte look alike to me. So the IDs were still incorrect in the paper. So thanks to AP, we look like idiots.*
#84 - Brendan Hansen
Michael Phelps really saved his butt in the relay yesterday.
#78 - Jordyn Wieber
NBC loves gymnastics because it's nonstop waterworks. But all I can think of is how everyone competing is 4-by-4.
OK, that wasn't informative. Wieber is the gal who shockingly did not qualify for the all-around final, but ended up winning gold in the team competition anyway. But you knew all that, because NBC is all gymnastics, all the time.
#19 - Bryan Clay
This is absolutely the saddest card in the set. Clay was the 2008 Olympic decathlete champion. That's like being named The Greatest Athlete in the World. But he's not defending his title because he didn't qualify this year. All that training, and he didn't qualify, and Topps puts him in a set anyway.
That sucks.
#76 - Tony Azavedo
I'm not much into water polo either, but I do know that Azavedo is the captain of the U.S. team. I saw him interviewed by Pierre McGuire (by the way, how strange is it hearing Mike Emmrick say "scooooooooorres!" at a water polo match). Every time I see McGuire, I remember how unpleasant he was when I was trying to interview him a long time ago. And now he's interviewing others. Hmmmmm.
#39 - Britney Reese, silver medal parallel
Track and field is just starting so I don't know much about her other than that she was in Beijing. And her twitter handle is @DaLJBeast.
Oh, and the parallels are still annoying.
#26 - Rebecca Soni, bronze parallel
How does she get away with wearing a red swimsuit while everyone else on the women's swim team wears those blue/black things?
So, there you are.
Don't you feel more knowledgeable looking at those cards while the Olympics are taking place?
And now, here are my completely random favorites from the Olympics so far (as inspired by a Play at the Plate post):
Favorite sport I'd never watch otherwise:
AP |
Weightlifting.
There are a whole bunch of these type of sports -- team handball, badminton, archery -- but just about everything about weightlifting fascinates me. It's so weird ... and intriguing.
Sports I can do without?: Beach volleyball, synchronized swimming, track cycling.
Favorite "new to me" American male athlete:
AP |
Yeah, I have something in common with every tween girl in America. I'm not proud of it.
Favorite "new to me" American female athlete:
AP |
Jordan Larson, Volleyball
I gravitate toward indoor volleyball every Olympics. It's probably my favorite sport to watch.
Favorite non-American male athlete:
AP |
Tomasz Majewski, Poland, Shot put
This guy is awesome. Every other shot putter looks like they're having a heart attack before they launch that thing. There's agony and endless talk about the dance they do inside the circle. Majewski just seems to simply throw -- and throws it farther than anyone. And there is no angst. Love it.
Favorite non-American female athlete:
Anita Punt, New Zealand, Field Hockey
Holy smokes, I'm in love. And she plays like a maniac.
Anyway, I hope you're enjoying the Olympics.
I think I'm going to try to catch some now. But on Canadian TV. NBC has "what we're tweeting about" (good god, who cares?). CTV has Jennifer Hedger.
(*Yes, I fully realize I bagged on AP photographers and used AP photos all in the same post).
Comments
Weightlifting--I'm too afraid to watch. I half expect their internal organs to come shooting out of their bottoms from the exertion. Or a knee to completely explode.
Archery: Cool, but their bows look like a cross between a bow and those Halo things people with broken necks have screwed to their heads.
Volleyball: I almost spit out my drink today while it was on and the announcer said something like "You can't hit it past the 6'3" Hooker". He was referring to Destinee Hooker, but I didn't know that at the time.
I love the Olympics.