Wednesday, October 10, 2007

On the Marathon, Mariotti, and the Olympics

One of the bigger stories in the city of Chicago the last few days is the recently completed Chicago marathon.

In short, it was a disaster.

Thanks to the heat and what seems like a general lack of preparation, there were a ton of people that needed to be hospitalized, and even one fatality. 35-year old Chad Schieber, a police officer from Michigan, died as a result of running in the race.

The doctors say Schieber's death was related to a heart condition, not the heat. While I'm sure they're right, I highly doubt that the heat didn't have just a little something to do with it.

Anyway, I'm not here to add to the pile of people in this town writing about what morons the marathon organizers are. I've never been in charge of planning a marathon, and I have absolutely no idea what goes into it (where do you place the cones!?), so I'm not going to pretend I do and tell everyone what they did wrong. It's already been done to death.

But what annoys me about the coverage of this story is that people are acting like those who chose to run had absolutely no say in it. As if once they signed up for the race, they were contractually obliged to complete it.

Anybody who decides to run in one of these things is aware of what's going to come with it. Running 26.2 miles isn't exactly good for the body. All you have do is see somebody who ran a marathon the day after.

It's not pretty.

My point here is that the guy who died could have thought to himself at some point, "Damn. It's hot out here today. Maybe it's not the best idea in the world for me to run 26.2 miles today. I do have that heart condition and all."

Now I'm not placing all the blame on the runners. The marathon organizers have to share the blame. I'm just annoyed we seem to be putting all the responsibility on the organizers.

So moving on, there was only one thing I read yesterday about the marathon that truly made me shake my head, and I'll be you never guess who wrote it.

That's right, Mariotti.

This isn't going to be one of those posts where I rip on Mariotti, though, because the opinion he shared is one that a lot of people in this city seem to have right now. They think Chicago actually has a chance to land the Olympics in 2016, and Mariotti's concerned the debacle that was the marathon could cost the city its chance.

I'm disgusted today. You should be, too. Here we are, a major metropolis in the American heartland that aches to host the 2016 Olympics, and our sport organizers can't even grasp when it's too oppressively hot to stage a 26.2-mile road race for 35,000 runners.

What went down at the Chicago Marathon was an ill-timed lapse in basic common sense that might cost this town its five-ringed dream.

Honestly, would you award a Summer Games to a city where one runner dies, several more end up in hospitals in serious to critical condition and hundreds of others have to be helped through heat-related ailments and exhaustion by a large fleet of ambulances? As it is, U.S. Olympic Committee chief Peter Ueberroth thinks Chicago ranks as low as fourth on his perceived pecking order of 2016 candidates, urging a groundswell of politicking before savvier groups in Madrid, Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo gain insurmountable leads.

Listen, folks. The marathon did not cost this city a chance at the Olympics.

Now this may come as a shock to some of you, but the truth is, this city never had a chance at the Olympics.

Now I know what you're thinking, "Chicago doesn't have a chance?! We're the greatest city on earth! Of course we have a chance!"

I don't disagree that Chicago is, in fact, the greatest city on this planet. At least, of all the cities I've been to, Chicago blows them away. (That's right, Milwaukee, I said it.)

But that has nothing to do with why Chicago won't get the Olympics.

Do you know the biggest advantage Madrid, Rio and Tokyo have over Chicago ?

They aren't in the United States.

Guess what? The rest of the world isn't too high on this country at the moment. Be it the situation in Iraq, or just the way our President acts without seeking any input from places like the UN or anybody else not named God.

The world doesn't like that.

I'm not going to get into politics, because if you think I don't know what I'm talking about when it comes to sports, you should hear me talk politics. You can talk to Panger if you want to get political.

All I know is that when the world is mad at you, the last thing they're going to do is reward you.

So get this through your heads now: Chicago is not going to get the 2016 Olympics.

Hear it, accept it, move on.

Admittedly, I don't want the Olympics here, anyway. You think traffic in and around this city is bad now, just wait until the whole world shows up at the same time.

Don't get me wrong, I know that hosting the Olympics would bring in a ton of money for the city, but a bunch of that would go towards recouping all the money the city would have to spend to prepare the city for the games.

Sure, there will be money left after that, but this is Chicago. It's not going to go to the right places. Yeah, the city could use all that money to help finance it's public school system, but why do that when they could build a new skyscraper!? One even taller than the Sears Tower!

No, they'll just have to build that skyscraper the old fashioned way. By making us pay for it.

Ballhype: hype it up!

3 comments:

Dr. C said...

Yeah, I agree that I don't want the Olympics here, either. Considering it takes me anywhere from 1 1/2 to 2 hours just to go from aurora to ohare everyday for work is bad enough.

Mac G said...

Great point about the marathon and especially about the world hating us because of awful decisions made by this administration.

After 9/11, all around the world, even Muslim countries had vigils for us, and now everyone sees us a big bad bully.
I hope the next president can restore our diplomatic standing and display that we can work together with other countries to make the world a better place. I rant on my blog about politics all the time. :) 70 percent of our country think Bush/Cheney suck so it is not hard to point out their faults. macgsworld.com

I just want this Fn disastrous war to end and american soldiers to stop dying in the middle of a civil war. We do not have a real debate on solutions to our foreign policy problems, instead we just get semantic debates over "winning" or "fighting for freedom" from our political leaders.

I think the only way Chicago gets the Olympics is if they build more condo buildings because I did not see enough over Labor Day weekend on my visit. :) Like your blog, keep it up.

MP said...

Yeah, anyone with half a brain knew that the traffic situation in Chicago would doom them from the start. If the Marathon was just the final tipping point for Chicago losing its bid, so be it.

A point not being made by anyone yet: who was the sponsor of this Marathon, the corporation who was in charge of making sure everything went right? LaSalle Bank. LaSalle Bank is a greedy, penny-pinching organization that will rob their customers blind if they get half the chance. Think they had any intention of spending more on water supplies for runners on the hot day? Almost certainly not.

However, LaSalle Bank's murderous greed indicates that one ray of hope for Chicago's Olympics bid: as long as LaSalle Bank isn't in charge of the Olympics, it can't go THAT wrong, can it?

Or maybe it can...regardless, yeah, everyone hates us and that's why the U.S. won't win.