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Poor ole Luongo couldn't pull off an Olympic style victory against the Boston Bruins. He was a sieve letting in 23 goals throughout the 7 games while Van scored 9 or 10. Can't win a series that way.
Boston out-played, out-skated, out-scored, and out-goalied Vancouver.
As much as I wanted a Canadian team to win the Stanley Cup, Bosten earned it and deserved it.
Congrats, Boston.
BALDY CHUTES & ALF'S HIGH RUSTLER at ALTA, UTAH!
Alta Ski Resort remains home - after nearly 75 years - to some of the deepest and steepest skiing on the planet!
Alta Alta Alta Alta Alta High Ruslter High Rustler High Rustler Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Alf Engen Alf Engen Alf Engen Alta Utah Alta Utah Alta Utah Extreme Skiing Extreme Skiing Alta Map Alta Trail Map Alta Trailmap Alf's High Ruslter Alf's High Rustler Alf's High Rustler Alf's High Ruslter Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes Baldy Chutes
Olympic News : Women's downhill ski-jump has finally been approved for the next Winter Olympics is Russia .
'bout time !!
News last evening : 2010 Olympics met their budget , not costing taxpayers ANY money . Infrastructure improvements to the City of Vancouver to handle the Olympics were not included in the budget .
I think this is the first Olympics anywhere in the world that met their budget .
I'm still going through Olympics withdrawals .
Nikki Yanofsky's career is taking off . Her ' I believe ' song for the Olympics has shown her incredible vocal talents and career doors have opened up for her .
A sixteen year old Diva in the making .
An amazing girl !!
huh> paralympics - sledge hockey? trying to figure out if a disability is required.
http://www.paralympic.ca/en/Games/Vancouver-2010-Qualification-Standards.html
Canada Hockey Gold song
I thought the opening was better.
And as much as the Kid scored the "GOLDEN GOAL" and I have been a huge fan of his. well not initially when he was 12 LOL but then I felt he was just another really good little minor hockey player. AFter that HUGE fan
BUTTTTTTTTTTTTTT for me the moment of the olympics for me was very early and the obvious love two brothers have for one another with our First Gold medal. This was not planned. there was no IMG group of handlers behind this moment. This was pure.
sure I was hooting an hollaring when the kid scored BUT maybe Im a sap. The again I chick flicked it last night at the movie "Dear JOHN". You want your woman all weepey and maybe evan a biot frisky afterwards - take her to that movie. YOU can sleep and she can cry.
It was another great olympics
I enjoyed contributing
And thanks for the thank-you notes
Medvedev: Russian Olympics Officials Must Resign After Vancouver Flop
DAVID NOWAK | 03/ 1/10 12:24 PM |
MOSCOW — President Dmitry Medvedev demanded Monday that Russian sports officials step down over the country's dismal performance at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver.
Russia, a traditional winter sports powerhouse, won just 15 medals – with only three golds – in one of its worst performances.
Officials said before the games that 30 medals and a top-three finish in the medal standings was the target.
Russia placed 11th for golds and sixth in the overall medal count.
In televised comments, Medvedev said if those responsible for preparing the athletes don't resign then the decision will be made for them. He did not mention anyone by name.
"Those who bear the responsibility for Olympic preparations should carry that responsibility. It's totally clear," he said. "I think that the individuals responsible, or several of them, who answer for these preparations, should take the courageous decision to hand in their notice. If we don't see such decisiveness, we will help them."
In post-Soviet history, Russia had never previously finished outside the top five in the medal standings and only won fewer medals once before, in 2002 at Salt Lake City. Russia was the top nation at the 1994 Lillehammer Games, garnering 23 medals – 11 gold.
In nine Winter Olympics between 1956 and 1988, the Soviet Union failed to top the medal standings only twice, finishing runner-up on those occasions.
Medvedev lamented that Russia "has lost the old Soviet school ... and we haven't created our own school – despite the fact that the amount of money that is invested in sport is unprecedentedly high."
The results leave Russia particularly red-faced as it takes the torch for the next Winter games in its Black Sea resort of Sochi in 2014.
"Without messing around, we need to start preparations for Sochi. But taking into account what happened in Vancouver, we need to completely change how we prepare our athletes," Medvedev said.
In an interview with the newspaper Vremya Novostei, sports minister Vitaly Mutko blamed several factors for the Vancouver flop. New sports such as freestyle skiing that "no one takes seriously" in Russia have allowed other countries to race ahead, he said.
Mutko also claimed luck was not on the country's side, saying in several disciplines Russia lacked "a shot here, a second or a point there," singling out Evgeni Plushenko, who took silver behind Evan Lysacek of the United States in a closely fought men's figure skating competition.
Doping bans had also deprived Russia of several leading medal contenders, he said.
Several Russian politicians have called for Mutko, who was appointed sports minister in May 2008, to step down.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/01/medvedev-russian-olympics_n_480932.html
Closing ceremony is unparalleled
Posted: Monday March 1, 2010 1:29AM; Updated: Monday March 1, 2010 4:11AM
Story Highlights
- The reasons we watch the Olympics are apparent during the closing ceremony
- They begin the competition as solemn athletes, they close it in brotherhood
- OC president Jacques Rogge: "These were excellent and very friendly games"
VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- There's a reason we come, despite the nonsense. There's a reason we come to the Olympics still, every two years now, despite the fact that sometimes you get William Shatner or the odd, massive inflatable moose. What with all the overdone stagecraft and security hassles, the butt-covering parsing of words or the smugness of IOC officials who speak of an "Olympic movement" that never moves quite far enough when it comes to abuses committed under those oh-so-hallowed rings, it's easy to forget.
But the reason rises most clearly, every time, at the end.
It rises during the closing ceremony, at the moment when stagecraft fades and the simplest of human acts begins. The athletes walk in.
That's it: They walk into some stadium, as they did again Sunday evening at Vancouver's B.C. Place to end the 2010 Winter Games, and the clearest picture of what the Olympics means emerges. Young people who have spent the months serving as civic heroes, national symbols, stand-ins for millions, become young again. Unlike the opening ceremony tradition of marching in national delegations in strict order, under a flag, at the closing men and women who have sweated against each other for weeks, sometimes years, walk out in an easy jumble, and soon mix, stand and dance until all national colors and flags become irrelevant.
It happened again Sunday. There the athletes were, smaller and more real suddenly, snapping pictures like tourists, waving to cameras -- "Hi, Mom!" -- milling aimlessly, mashed together in the most accomplished mosh pit in history. Canadians, Americans, Russians, Finns: all the stiffness, posing, pre-competition jitters was gone, dissolved in a moment of pure fun. There's nothing else like it in sports.
We didn't get that in Beijing. Organizers at the 2008 Summer Games ran a minutely-controlled and choreographed farewell that looked great on TV, but killed any hint of spontaneity; the athletes were all but herded into pens. But Canada is no China; it's the land of half the world's great comedians. When a faux-repairman, giant screwdriver on his belt, kicked off Sunday's festivities by "fixing" the same arm of the cauldron that so infamously failed to rise at the opening ceremony, allowing speedskating legend Catriona Le May Doan to finish the torch-lighting ceremony she missed a fortnight ago, we knew we were in good hands. Nothing is so endearing -- and rare -- as an Olympic host that can laugh at itself.
Then again, Canada could afford such looseness. The same Olympics that had begun with disaster, with the death of a 21-year old Georgian luger on the morning of the opening ceremony, and spent its early days focused on weather problems, a massive ticket cancellation, and the seeming underperformance of Canada's Olympians, had ended in triumph.
A late surge by Canadian speedskaters and curlers pushed the host nation to a best-ever medals showing at a Winter Olympics, and the ice hockey team's rapture-inducing, overtime victory over the U.S. Sunday pushed Canada to its 14th gold medal, the most ever won by any country at a Winter Games. Coming in, Canada had spent $110 million on athlete support and vowed to "Own the Podium" by winning the overall medal count. It didn't come close. But after Kid Canada, Sidney Crosby, scored the golden goal in overtime, it didn't matter a bit to anyone north of the 49th parallel.
"Alexandre," VANOC Chief John Furlong, said during his speech to moguls skier Alexandre Bilodeau, "your first gold medal gave us all permission to feel like and behave like champions. Our last one will be remembered for generations."
Furlong's delivery may have been stilted, but the response was not. The crowd of 60,600 rose to its feet, unscripted, and stopped his closing speech cold for a good minute, cheering the biggest win in Canadian hockey history. Such chesty flagwaving was seen across Vancouver and Canada throughout these games, but hit new levels in the aftermath of the hockey win -- horns beeping, men hugging, a once-shy country openly reveling in its success.
"That quiet, humble national pride we were sometimes reluctant to acknowledge seemed to take to the streets as the most beautiful kind of patriotism broke out all across our country," Furlong said. "So many new and dazzling applications for the Maple Leaf."
But other flags had their moments in Vancouver, too. Norway, a country of just 4.7 million, finished fourth in the medal count with 23, and produced the most accomplished male athlete in cross-country skier Petter Northug, who finished with two golds, one silver and one bronze medal. The USA's 37 medals set a record for success at a Winter Games, and came amid the most controversy-free American performance in decades. With skier Bode Miller redeeming his cavalier performance in Turin, Team USA kept as low a profile as an athletic superpower can, predicting no wins, displaying no arrogance, celebrating with class. It was a switch no one predicted: The Canadians acted more like out-there Yanks, and the Americans acted like humble Canucks. And it helped set, for these games, a graceful tone.
Indeed, though the first official response to the death of Nodar Kumaritashvili -- both VANOC and the international luge federation placed the blame on the 21-year old Georgian while making adjustments to the wall, ice and start of the notoriously fast track -- was both cold and absurd, the remainder of the 2010 Olympics was all but free of controversy. For the first time since the bombings of Sept. 11, an Olympics went off without terrorism casting a pervasive shadow, without the intrusion -- if you except Canada's genial border "war" with the USA -- geopolitical themes of any kind. Unlike Beijing or history-laden Athens, these were a Seinfeld Olympics, about nothing, really, except great competition.
"These were," declared a visibly relieved IOC president, Jacques Rogge, "excellent and very friendly games."
That should be the case for the Summer Games in London in two years, but 2014 is already taking on curious dimensions. Like the Chinese did with the Summer Games, Vladimir Putin's government has made clear that it plans to use the Winter Olympics in Sochi as a coming-out party for the new Russia. No shock there, but it does assume the task with far less momentum than Beijing. Team Russia, after all, was the most glaring disappointment in Vancouver, its 15 medals (three gold), a steep decline from the 22 it took home from Turin. Meanwhile, its most popular star in the West, hockey player Alex Ovechkin, came into Vancouver an Olympic hero for claiming he'd play in Sochi even if the NHL didn't release its players -- and went out in shame.
Not only did Ovechkin fail to produce during Russia's ghastly 7-3 loss to Canada in the quarterfinals, but he also shelved his usually gregarious personality in Vancouver and proved a gloomy, surly presence, snubbing the media and shoving to the ground one eager fan with a YouTube ready camcorder. Of course, when he popped up onstage Sunday night, Ovechkin was all smiles again, posing as one of Sochi's welcome ambassadors with three cute children, and lending athletic, gap-toothed form to Churchill's famous formulation about Russia -- "a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma".
Canada -- its people, its athletes, its lovely host city -- was hardly that the last two weeks. The country made itself known. Here's betting that, come 2014, it will be missed.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/olympics/2010/writers/sl_price/03/01/closing.ceremony/index.html
Another photo recap of the 2010Olympics
Feb 17 -- The 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics So Far…
http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2010/02/17/the-2010-vancouver-winter-olympics-so-far/
The 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics Part 2
http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2010/02/22/the-2010-vancouver-winter-olympics-part-2/
Another interesting site.
The Second Week of the Tour de France, Posted Jul 18, 2009
http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2009/07/18/the-second-week-of-the-tour-de-france/
I received an email to a different photo link, and stumbled across these and other interesting subjects/dates
http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/
yuk .. thanks to you, fung_derf and seabiscuit for the board ..
I just stumbled upon this page by accident tonight...it was crazy in Vancouver last weekend!
I went to the Bronze Medal Game and it was AWESOME. Finland came back with 4 goals in the 3rd period to win it. Afterward, tons of people wearing Canadian Jerseys including me running around downtown and in the clubs partying it up.
And, it was even more crazy on Sunday. I'll tell you what...you could hear a pin drop all across Canada when Parise scored the tying goal with 24.4 seconds left! Of course, you could not hear yourself think when Crosby scored the winner!!!!!!!!! He was mostly invisible until then.
Way to go Canada!
Props to the USA, Miller was the ONLY reason they made it to the Gold Medal game...IMHO!
well, wouldn't you? They look like they're about to fall over most of the time...gotta steady yourself. They shouldn't get disqualified for that! LOL
That's so nice! I think they ended it weird though!
A nice goodbye from NBC's Brian Williams (not CTV's Brian Williams LOL)
http://simonwhitfield.blogspot.com/2010/02/i-know-im-not-supposed-to-publish.html
there was nothing in my post to indicate actual proboscis insertion. I believe that only a well aimed fart would warm the nose if held ex-rectum.
Now the question comes.. is it against the rules to use flatulance as a method of assisted propulsion.
LOL! But only to stay warm.
I think he can put his nose on the guys ass in the eskimolympics
OHNO On Leno stil managed tio get his DQ shown - I cant say he was whining but he he had to get that clip up there twice to try and say he didnt push. He put his hand on the guys ass on a turn. The ref Canadian chinese or egyptian had no choice
Flash mob has a dance on robson street on the first saturday of the olies. I was emailed the invite with dance steps imcluded, but I didnt make it
I know, I know and since I got the diabetes, they have been a great help, but at 16 bucks a pop...
Has your "interactor" quit working? You know, they have pills for that.
there are over 400,000 asians in vancouver alone.. Love the food and really liked my interaction with the ladies when my interactor was working really well.
What the heck?? With all you white people, and they put an Asian dude in the video? What's the matter with your country?
I wasn't there.. I don't think...
If I was as stoned as you, I would have loved it also.
I am sorry that I never say I'm sorry.. better?
I guess I am just tired of people trying to find fault with a production the size of the olympics.. not everyone will be happy with everything and anyone can pick out crap they dont like if they try hard enough.
Personally, even though I can find things that could be better, I thought they did a great job overall.
Transportation to and from Cypress was the biggest glitch in week one but it got resolved.
I agree that Ohara was the weakest link there, but her bit just made everyone else look better.. shatner did a take off on the old molson add by "My name is Joe and I am a canadian" from years back.
Ohhhh, don't get all feeling hurt now. I just thought it was stupid. Plus O'Hara (is that her last name?) was talking about the raging hormones and nasty smell of the visitors. It certainly wasn't getting any laughs.
BTW, for a group that supposedly apologizes a lot, you never tell me you're sorry.
you missed the point .. from the beginning when the mime/repairman fixed the forth arm on the flame, the idea was to poke fun at ourselves. fortunately, most people got it and many liked it. NBC did shut the ceremonies down early to promote the new Seinfeld program so at least you didnt have to watch it all, if you felt insulted. It seems most American veiwers are not as sensitive as you and were unhappy with the decision not to show the great closing ceremony performances to end the deal, at least according to the Yahoo news page.
I am sure you will recover.
I fell way behind in reading this board, and since the Olympics are over, there's not much to say. However, I will add this last thought, What the heck was up with those closing ceremonies with Kathleen O'Hara and William Shatner? Seemed totally stupid and insulting to the other nations. Compared to China's closing ceremony it looked third world. Inflatable beavers??
Thanks for your periodic updates of Vancouver 2010!
hahaha ....we better get the puck outta here while the gittin's good .
Ok....thinking about Mike Weir now . Summer and we're good to go putting and to heck mit hockey .
Yeah we have Hockey and we have - UMM we have HOCKEY and we Have Hockey and
OH yeah PAID Naked Shorter bashers