Monday, March 9, 2009

Special Olympics Round 2

Mara finished last in her qualifying heat but went on to win her division in snowshoe. A lot of the teams from third world nations didn't have enough equipment. Other teams were more than happy to lend a hand and let them borrow shoeshoes.



At the end of the day the snowshoe team pulled in quite the haul of metals. The medals themselves were well crafted and kind of heavy. Each division only had at most 8 people in it so most of the athletes took home some kind of hardware. They were joking they would have to hide them from customs and security on the trip home.


Some of the teams at the games had never seen snow before. This is the snowshoe team from El Salvador. They would train on the beach in the sand and had to rent snowshoes when they got to McCall.


Ah...the many colors of coats at the games. Green coats were the people in charge, yellow was security and blue for the 4500 other volunteers. With the coat on I could basically get in anywhere.


Despite not having any Italians in the figure skating, I think it might have been the most inspiring event I got to see. These athletes come out and get on the ice and do stuff most of us would put ourselves in the hospital trying to pull off. Twists, jumps, spins and twirls. I was floored at the grace and ability of these participants. This is a bad picture of the Russian who took gold in one of the higher levels of men's figure skating. His performance was spectacular and had the whole of the Qwest arena on it's feet at the end.


Michelle Kuan and Scott Hamilton gave out medals at the figure skating. The gold winner of this division bent over and picked Michelle up in a huge bear hug.


Dick Cheney came on Thursday to the figure skating. I'm not a huge fan of the guy but it was cool to see someone that famous up close.


This is me and Alessandro, the head of delegation. We had just been interviewed by the Channel 7 News. Alessandro made being a delegation assistant a lot of fun. He worked well with the families we stayed with, the athletes, the coaches and me. He made friends everywhere he went and across any language barrier.


One of the coolest parts of the Special Olympics is called Healthy Athletes. They run each of the athletes thought a series of health screens. This is Luca at Healthy Feet.


This is Giulia at the Healthy Eyes stop. For the athletes who needed glasses they would get to pick out a frame style and they would grind the lenses right there to send home with them. They also had sun glasses for those with perfect vision. They had athletes in who were getting glasses for the first time in their life who had gone for years with nearsightedness. Even in our team we found a few who had outdated prescriptions.


Last day of competition, most of the team had left at 4:00am that morning. I got to take Nat and Ellie up on the hill to participate.


This is our small group at the closing ceremonies. The ceremony was mostly the athletes walking around trying to trade jackets and shirts and pins and everything else and a lot of dancing. The volunteers had a big party afterwords with some really good eclairs, I had picked up a sinus infection at that point and just wanted to go home.


Emilio fell asleep during the closing ceremonies. The music was loud and there were people all over the place bumping into the back of his chair and he slept through the whole thing.

We had the family and the ski team over for Sunday dinner. The family and the athletes communicated pretty well. The kids drew pictures for the athletes and Micheal ended up giving his hat to Nat's little sister Maddie (I think he had a crush on her). He used the "bacci" excuse to kiss her cheek a number of times.


I ended up trading the head coach for the ski team a coat he kept from the Nagano 2005 games. This was the right before we sent everybody home to the hotel.

All in all an experience that greatly changed my perceptions.

Thanks Italia and thanks to the Special Olympics.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Special Olympics Part 1

I speak pretty fluent Italian having served a LDS mission in Milano, earning a minor in Italian at BYU and watching Lilo & Stich voiced over in the sweet melodic language many times.  So I signed up to help out when the world came to Boise to participate in the 2009 World Winter Special Olympics.
The first day in town we were hosted by local families who took us for a tour of the BSU stadium.  Italians could care less about "Futbol Americano" but they had a ton of fun doing cartwheels and summer salts over the blue turf in the stadium.  Despite not knowing each other's language both the families and the athletes seemed to have an awesome time.




Here we are waiting to go into the opening ceremonies.  We stood around outside the Idaho Center for about 2 ½ hours with about 50 other countries.  The girl in the middle holding the snowflake is from a local high school and each delegation had one.  So fifty of these kids walk out with their country on a snowflake written in English and they are trying to find the country they belong to and don’t speak a lick of what ever is spoken in Slovakia or Morocco and the Italians are there in the front waving at them to come here.  We had our picture taken with 15 other snowflakes while we waited.  I think the funniest was probably a bunch of white Italians standing under the snowflake from Hong Kong.  It was interesting to see the High School kids faces light up when they saw someone waving at them and speaking a foreign language and then the despair when someone holding the “Gibraltar” realized these weren’t the Gibraltarians.


We weren’t allowed to wave flags so we waved fuzzy colored hands.  I had to be in the back because there is only one person taller than me on the entire team.


Not a great photo but the flame all lit up.  The opening ceremonies were boring for 2000 athletes who don’t speak English when the speakers were going.  But when the music started or there was cheering to be done it was hard to get them off their chairs.


Here we have Luca.  He does down hill skiing at the intermediate level.  We talked a lot about American cars, country music and pin trading.  The Italians all were super cool designer glasses and Luca was no exception.  He’s wearing Dolce & Gabana that tint when you get in the sun. 


After our first day of Alpine we found this kid playing guitar close to the Lodge.  The athletes all started dancing and wanted to sing along to “I am the Walrus” by the Beatles.


The Italians are very impressed by the discipline of our local law enforcement.  They also tried multiple times to trade Special Olympic pins for the troupers badges.   


Nicola got dehydrated and needed to recover at the medical center.  We gave him some Tylenol and made him drink Power Aid (he couldn’t stand the stuff).  Here we are relaxing in the examination chairs after ½ a liter of liquid.


Here we have Alessando waiting for the start of the 4X100M snowshoe relay.  We were in forth for the first three legs but our power house finisher Marco beat out the Chinese in the last leg to punch us up to third.


Here we have our group of snowshoers, our head of delegation and a couple of visitors from Italy.  We have 5K, 1600M, and 100M runners.  I was blown away by how fast these guys run.  Pino, the coach on the bottom row far left told me a couple of months ago they decided the coaches would race against the athletes and the coaches ended up last out of five teams.


We spent quite a bit of time hanging around waiting for events to start.  At the venue for snowshoeing they run 10 different distances with at least 3-4 heats per distance.  Fortunately for Gianna her heat and distance for the day was run early so she got to eat.  You can see from the number of lunches stacked up around her that we had quite a few that ran races in the afternoon and had to wait to eat.


Mara finished last in her divisioning heat.  They time each of the snowshoers and then rank them from fastest to slowest and then start running the medal races.  It was amazing to see the determination on the field even with 30 meters to go and every one finished Mara kept the pace she had been working on and finished around minute.


This is the floor hockey team from Panama, I saw them at the speed skating venue and wondered how in the world they practiced for speed skating.  I found out later they didn’t have any games that day and wanted to see some ice.


On Tuesday we took a little tour of a couple of the local venues that we don’t have athletes competing in.  This is speed skating, this is one of the Japanese competitors.  Some of the athletes had hockey skates.  The Russians had fantastic form


We stopped by the floor hockey area at Expo Idaho.  They had 7 or 8 courts going at a time.  They use a donut shaped rubber/foam puck and a stick to slide the puck around on the ground.  We caught the very last bit of the Germany vs. USA game.  Germany scored in the last minute to pull ahead and win 7 to 6.


Michael’s sponsor is a company called “Rent and Go”.  They sent him to the games with a hat.  Here I am teaching him how to wear it. 



After loosing his skis and being sick on Sunday Nicola was very excited to be on the hill participating.  He participates at the advanced level they do slalom, giant slalom and super-g.  These guys come flying down in about 45 seconds.  My math is rough but I think with the distance they cover the fastest athletes reach speeds of close to 30 mph.


Alessandra and her coach Micaela celebrate after taking gold in the intermediate super G.  It happened to be Alessandra’s 20th birthday as well.


Michael and Nicola after the awards ceremony for the advanced super G.  Michael took silver.


Luca took gold in the intermediate super g (shaking hands with the Red Cross lady).  He was very pumped about taking first place.  Emiliano (#118 on the left) was cold and wanted to go back into the tent where they stage the athletes before the awards ceremony.


Thursday, February 12, 2009

My Experience with the 2009 World Winter Special Olympic Games

At first I was just going to take pictures.

I have been the Delegation Assistant Liaison for the Italian Delegation for the 2009 World Winter Games for the Special Olympics. I translate, get people on buses, make sure we get to dinner and anything else the Head of Delegation asks for. It has been awesome.