Joannie Rochette. Her ability to put forward a bronze winning free skate days after losing her mother made me weep, not for her loss, but for her resilience.
The Olympic Torch. Shortly after I found parking, the torch had already passed me by. In ridiculous high heeled shoes, I raced down steep White Rock streets for blocks on end and made it to Marine Drive, just in time. I found a spot in the sea of red-dressed locals and cheered at the top of my lungs as the torch lit up the darkened early morning streets.
Our Olympic event. The only tickets we had were for a Finland/Belarus men's hockey game. It's noon on a weekday, we've got our beers in hand and the arena is packed to the rafters with Finnish and Belarusian fans waving flags - it was electric. The ironic thing is that when we bought the tickets, months before the Olympics had begun, we had no idea that Smiley would have to do a 3 week work stint in Belarus. Merely days before our event, Smiley returned and had a new fellowship with Belarusians, which made the occasion even more momentous.
Alexandre Bilodeau. Everyone knew it would happen. Eventually we would win a gold medal on Canadian soil. But little did I know, the first event that I got to sit down to watch, would be of such historic measure. The Men's Moguls made us believe with Alexandre the great.
Canadians. I have never seen so many citizens flashing their pride. Everywhere you turned you'd see red, white and proud. Canada was written everywhere -on t-shirts, mittens, toques and tattoos. People ran through the streets wearing our flag for a cape. Line-ups for the Bay's Olympic store ran longer than beer gardens. The word was out. It was hip to be Canadian.
Our Atheletes. 26 Medals (14 gold, 7 silver, 5 bronze). Impressive. But when you see the performances behind the numbers: Kevin Martin, John Montgomery, Virtue and Moir, Clara Hughes to name a few - you remember where you were and just how loud you screamed.
Friends/Family: Nothing is more fun than sharing the Olympic events with friends & family. Whether we were at a pub, a friend's house, a free outdoor concert, or among thousands of people on Robson street cheering at a jumbo screen, it was the best entertainment ticket in town. You were always at the right place at the right time.
The Game. It's funny because I had said that it didn't matter what the outcome was. We kicked ass at the olympics and truly bonded as a nation. I didn't want one final hockey match-up to define our success at these games. We had shown the world our strength in so many arenas: curling, speed skating, skeleton, ice dancing, bobsledding. We had spent weeks in a swell of Canadian pride. But when the game started I couldn't sit down. When Zach Parise scored in the last minute of the third period he silenced a nation. I don't think I took a breath in the overtime period. I literally ran on the spot. And here I was telling everyone at the beginning of the game that it doesn't matter about the outcome. Doesn't matter my ass. When Crosby pushed through a wall of US players, and Iginla passed him the puck from the corner, Crosby found a home for that puck. The 80% of Canadians glued to the game all erupted at once. The sound was simply awesome. We celebrated as a nation - everyone unified.
No comments:
Post a Comment