The Only Olympian for his country!

Starseeker

Vault Senior Citizen
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2009/03/12/bc-snow-leopard-winter-olympics.html

http://www.vancouversun.com/sports/...te+went+from+zero+Olympics/1842694/story.html

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7939529.stm

Kwame Nkrumah-Acheampong, the self-styled Snow Leopard of Ghana, knows he’s literally in a league of his own.

In a country known more in sporting circles for boxing and soccer, Nkrumah-Acheampong is not just the president of the fledgling Ghana Ski Team. He’s its chief fundraiser, booster and its only skier.

Oh, and he’s also Ghana’s first and only athlete to qualify for any Winter Olympics. EVER.

Serious, that take some guts. The only person who ever represented his country and he will be the Only one competing. :shock: :)

6 years to qualify! Makes me think my fitness goals aren't that bad.
 
I'm seeing a Disney movie called Cool Runnings 2, where this guy teams up with the Jamaican bobsled team to save the Olympics and teach us all a lesson about the true meaning of family.
 
UniversalWolf said:
I'm seeing a Disney movie called Cool Runnings 2, where this guy teams up with the Jamaican bobsled team to save the Olympics and teach us all a lesson about the true meaning of family.
That sounds terrible.
THough the Jamaican bobsled team making it to the Olympics did happen.

As did someone from Equatorial Guinea making it to the Olympics as a swimmer, and doing this:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2teSx5xiRk[/youtube]
 
Winter olympics are heavily biased towards Western countries as it is anyway, so good on the kid.
 
Well, actually, mostly Northern countries do well for obvious reasons. Japan, South Korea, and China are doing well for non traditional winter sports countries.

Of course, sports like hockey and curling requires more than 1 player and more special/larger spaces to practice. IIRC, Chinese people didn't even know what curling was at Turin, and I remembered they were inventing random Chinese words to commentate. :lol:
 
I think Norway is #1 or #2 all time in Winter Olympic medal count. It's not biased toward western countries, it's biased toward cold countries with mountains.
 
UniversalWolf said:
I think Norway is #1 or #2 all time in Winter Olympic medal count. It's not biased toward western countries, it's biased toward cold countries with mountains.
Skiing and snowboarding, sure. Other numbers - not so much. Skating has been dominated by the Dutch (and Japanese) for dozens of years, because we have a lot of history with ice-skating, but we have a grand total of 1 'mountain' in our country, which is hardly a mountain and snowsports don't work there.

Sports are dominated by countries where the sport is popular, and in the case of cold-weather sports that's facilitated by the environment. Similarly, sports like surfing and jetskiing are dominated by countries with a lot of suitable water-access, sailing is dominated by countries with lots of sea-access, and cricket is dominated by people who serve a Queen and can't stand actual sports.
 
sander, that was funny shit.

and i have to agree.


in africa how many countries sport ski resorts?

only in dubai with the man-made ski resort.

how would someone from an african country get shitloads of experience skiing? by not living there.


simple as that. being good at a sport is all about natural aptitude and practice.

you can have as much aptitude as anyone ever in the history of the world... but if you never play the sport or never get to practice... your aptitude would be irrelevant.
 
Sander said:
UniversalWolf said:
I'm seeing a Disney movie called Cool Runnings 2, where this guy teams up with the Jamaican bobsled team to save the Olympics and teach us all a lesson about the true meaning of family.
That sounds terrible.
THough the Jamaican bobsled team making it to the Olympics did happen.

As did someone from Equatorial Guinea making it to the Olympics as a swimmer, and doing this:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2teSx5xiRk[/youtube]
Best swimmer ever.
 
Well he can get lucky you know.

This:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfQMJtilOGg[/youtube]
Is how you win a gold medal!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Bradbury



Bradbury is best known for his memorable and unlikely gold medal win in the men's short track 1000 metres event at the Salt Lake City 2002 Winter Olympic Games, owing to three improbable events occurring.

Bradbury won his heat convincingly in the 1,000 m, posting a time of 1 m 30.956 s. However, it appeared that his run would end when the draw for the quarter-finals were made; Bradbury was allocated to the same race as Apolo Anton Ohno (the favourite from the host nation) and Marc Gagnon of Canada (the defending World Champion), and only the top two finishers from each race would proceed to the semifinals. Bradbury finished third in his race and thought himself to be eliminated; however, Gagnon was disqualified for obstructing another racer, thus allowing the Australian to advance to the semi-finals.[13]

After consulting the national coach Ann Zhang, Bradbury's strategy from the semi-final onwards was to cruise behind his opponents and hope that they crashed, as he realised that he was slower and could not match their raw pace.[14] His reasoning was that risk-taking by the favourites could cause a collision due to a racing incident, and if two riders (or more) fell, the remaining three would all get medals, and that as he was slower than his opponents, trying to challenge them directly would only increase his chance of falling.[14][15] Bradbury said that he was satisfied with his result, and felt that as the second oldest competitor in the entire field, he was not able to match his opponents in four races on the same night.[16]

In his semi-final race, Bradbury was in last place, well off the pace of the medal favourites. However, three of the other competitors in the semi-final—defending champion Kim Dong-Sung of South Korea, multiple Olympic medallist Li Jiajun of China and Mathieu Turcotte of Canada—crashed, paving the way for the Australian to take second place and thus allowing him through to the final.[16]

Bradbury was again well off the pace in the final, and all four of Bradbury's competitors (Ohno, Ahn Hyun-Soo, Li and Turcotte) crashed out at the final corner while jostling for the gold medal. This allowed the Australian, who was around 15 m behind with only 50 m to go, to avoid the pile-up and take the victory.[14][15][17] Bradbury raised his arms aloft in complete disbelief and amazement at the unlikely circumstances of his victory. A shocked Bradbury became the first person from any southern hemisphere country to win a Winter Olympic event.[18] After a period of delay, the judges upheld the result and did not order a re-race, confirming Bradbury's victory.[19]
 
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