We would scarcely have know the U.S. softball team beat Japan 4-1 in extras to play for its fourth straight gold medal had we not run across article here on yesterday's front page of the San Diego U-T detailing the vote taken by the IOC in Singapore in 2005 that gave the death sentence to softball as an event at future Olympics.
The central figure is the owner of Easton Sports which makes aluminum bats, Jim Easton who recused himself from the vote as he believed there was a conflict of interest as he and his company stood to gain from a continuation of softball as an Olympic event. It turns out that Easton’s “yea” vote would’ve broken the 52-52 deadlock providing the simple majority needed to save softball.
It was the right and honorable thing to do but Easton has been treated less than charitably by the U.S. softball community who have essentially blamed him for killing the dreams of not only American girls but those the world over who see the U.S. as the bell cow in this sport.
For their part, NBC has been shoveling dirt onto the grave as much like a Stalinesque air-brushing of photos, the network has appeared to go out of its way to disregard any scores, updates and/or highlights of the softball team. We’ve been consistent viewers of NBC’s prime-time programming and its become evident that between their non-reporting of political events outside the sporting venues and the softball team’s successes, the network is pathetically bend-over compliant to the desires of the IOC.
UPDATE #1: So much for American dominance, hegemony and its exercise of soft-imperialism... Team U.S.A. loses in gold medal game to Japan, 3-1. Given this perception, this may indeed be the game that ultimately saves softball as an Olympic sport. We'd love to know how the Japanese contingent voted 3 years ago in Singapore.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
No Good Deed Goes Unpunished (Updated)
Posted by Dean at 8/21/2008 08:18:00 AM
Labels: aluminum bats, Beijing Olympics, caitlin lowe, Easton Sports, IOC, jennie finch, Jim Easton, NBC, Singapore, softball, U.S. Olympic softball team
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2 comments:
You keep talking about Women's (allegedly) softball.
When they did cover it, they showed that MAN (and nobody can convince me otherwise) that hit the dinger in a losing effort vs. Nippon. Shim may be Post-op or something, but had to come from the creator with an adam's apple.
I had to watch and re-watch Lolo Jones and Rythmic Gymnastics for hours to get the image of that Manatee out of my head (No offense to James Lithgow)
Sincerely,
Reason
Pablo... err Reason, they covered it? You have obviously been watching more than I and would then be certifiably more gay than I... no small feat, that.
Olympic softball was covered much more in previous Olympics but when the word came down that softball was no longer part of the gig then NBC, like their non-coverage of the vacated protest pens, dutifully complied.
What's your beef with the game? Its everything baseball isn't. Fast-paced, over after the 7th inning (so don't have to worry about beer sales being cut-off) and with hotter contestants.
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