Opalescent Olympics

Author’s Note: I’m taking a break from writing about tech to write about
sports. Any readers who aren’t interested should wait until next week, when I
sort-of-promise to write about the Python Requests library.

Opals celebrating.
Australian Opals enjoying their Bronze Medal victory. Image courtesy of London2012.com.

The 2012 Summer Olympics are coming to a close. As I write this article I’m
sitting in a beautiful British sunset, drinking red wine and basking in the
warm glow of having spent two weeks around my favourite international sporting
event. As an Australian (even though I am an ex-pat), I have something of an
inbuilt cultural love of sporting events of all kinds, and the Olympics is
unquestionably the greatest of all the sporting stages.

There have been a great many things to love about this year’s games. Ignoring,
for a moment, the fact that in very un-British fashion the entire event has
worked out more-or-less without a hitch, the games have provided a wonderful
quantity of drama and excitement. It is always a joy to watch the best
athletes in the world all on the same stage, but I have a feeling that this
has been the most exciting of all the games I’ve had the pleasure to see.

For me, the highlight has been a sport I’ve never really had the chance to
watch before: women’s basketball. I’m a big fan of basketball: I played a bit
as a teenager, and I’ve always thought that it is one of the best spectator
sports around. However, and I suspect this is true of most people, I’ve only
really ever watched men’s basketball. Women’s basketball, like most women’s
sport, has really been something I was only aware of, rather than engaged in.

However, this Olympics I found myself hooked. I stumbled onto the first game
of the Australian Opals campaign.
The Opals, ranked 2nd in the world at the start of the Olympics, turned out to
create the greatest spectator experience the Olympics had to offer. I ended up
watching every game of their Bronze-medal-winning campaign.

While I was writing this post, I had written fully 2000 words on the reason
people should be watching women’s basketball. However, in the interim, the
Opals have registered an 83-74 victory
over Russia in the bronze medal game. This is a team that, but for the
juggernaut that is American basketball, played like gold-medallists, and
through a bit of bad luck ended up meeting the United States in the semi-final
instead of the final, leading to them walking away with bronze medals.

These girls led me and everyone else who followed them on an emotional
roller coaster. The team was an almost equal mix of veterans and rookies, and
both groups of women played with heart and determination. They put their
hearts, bodies and souls on the line in green and gold, and they have earned
the gratitude and respect not just of me but of everyone they played for. They
won bronze medals: I personally would have liked to see them win gold, but the
fact that they didn’t is not their failing. I have no time for journalists and
individuals who criticise athletes for failing to win gold medals, and I won’t
do it. Instead, I congratulate them and thank them.

I’m not a journalist, a celebrity or someone with a great platform from which
to shout my praise, so instead I devote a page on my blog. I would like to
thank the following women, in the order of their squad number:

  • Jenna O’Hea (4) – Age 25, one Olympics
    (Bronze Medal).
  • Samantha Richards (5) – Age 29, one
    Olympics (Bronze Medal).
  • Jennifer Screen (6) – Age 30, two
    Olympics (one Silver Medal, one Bronze Medal).
  • Abby Bishop (7) – Age 23, one Olympics
    (Bronze Medal).
  • Suzy Batkovic (8) – Age 31, three
    Olympics (two Silver Medals, one Bronze Medal).
  • Kathleen MacLeod (9) – Age 25, one Olympics (Bronze Medal).
  • Kristi Harrower (10) – Age 37, four Olympics (three Silver Medals, one
    Bronze Medal).
  • Laura Summerton (11) – Age 28, two
    Olympics (one Silver Medal, one Bronze Medal).
  • Belinda Snell (12) – Age 31, three Olympics (two Silver Medals, one Bronze
    Medal).
  • Rachel Jarry (13) – Age 20, one Olympics
    (Bronze Medal).
  • Liz Cambage (14) – Age 20, one Olympics
    (Bronze Medal).
  • Lauren Jackson (15) – Age 31, four
    Olympics (three Silver Medals, one Bronze Medal), all-time high scorer in
    Women’s Olympic Basketball.

Each one had court time, and each one gave everything they had
for the team while on the court. They conducted themselves with grace, dignity
and good-humour while producing performances as good as or better than any
other athlete Australia sent to the Olympics.

Particular praise should be singled out for Kristi Harrower. Today represented
the last Olympic game she will ever compete in, and she went out with a bang
(21 points).

As for the rest of the women, many of them will return in Opals colours to
represent Australia in Rio. Given the difficulty of watching women’s
basketball in the UK, that’s likely to be the next time I can see them
perform. That’s now the event I am most looking forward to at the next
Olympics.

I don’t know what Australia did to earn such wonderful athletes, but I’m
certainly glad we have them. Thank you so much, ladies: you made this
Olympics special for me.