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  • Medals per capita goes to the Bahamas

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Aug 24 2008



    Medals per capita goes to the Bahamas
    12:40 PM, August 24, 2008


    Just as England once lived under the Tudor, China once lived under the
    Ming and the American League East once lived under the Torre, we
    earthlings live under a dynasty these days.

    It's a benevolent dynasty, the Bahamas dynasty -- they do let us come
    visit their islands and serve us drinks with tiny umbrellas sticking
    out of them -- until it comes to the quadrennial test known as the
    Olympics, when they fluster the rest of us again.

    The rest of the world tried everything we could to overthrow the
    Athens 2004 kings and queens in the crucial, vital-to-life, telltale
    Medals Per Capita ranking. We sent our Australia, runner-up in Athens
    with its population of just 20,600,856 and its vast collection of
    studs and studesses. We proposed Armenia, wrestling and weightlifting
    with the best from a population shy of three million.

    We offered Slovenia, No. 5 in Athens, and we sent in Jamaica, No. 6 in
    Athens with its bolting Bolt and other track prowess, and we tried New
    Zealand, hearty archipelago, and as it concluded we even summoned
    Iceland with its 304,367 population and its gaudy handball
    team. Mongolia, a nation with cold weather and disagreeable soil,
    showed it mettle with two early medals and then, on Sunday, two boxing
    medals, from Serdanka Purevdorj (silver) and Badar-Uugan Enkhbat
    (gold). That made four for 3 million hardy people and made an
    impression.

    We had Cuba (No. 3 from Athens), Estonia (No. 4 from Athens) and our
    fibrous Norwegians and Danes, and we had our horde of other frolicsome
    former Soviet republics like Belarus and Latvia.

    Heck, we had both Trinidad and Tobago, in one entry.

    We just couldn't get to the Mozart Bahamas MPC score of 153,725 -- or
    one medal for every 153,725 Bahamians -- forged by medals in the
    triple jump and the men's 4-x-400-meter relay. We couldn't stave off
    the three-peat, what with some connoisseurs of long division having
    figured the Bahamas the Medals Per Capita winner in Sydney 2000 as
    well.

    The ancient, decrepit, tyrannical, misguided, superpower-tilted Medals
    Table claimed either China or the United States won the Olympics,
    depending on who does the miscounting, but we recognize arithmetical
    propaganda when we see it.

    We know that while 110 medals or 100 medals can disappear into the
    United States or China with their tactically unwise populations, there
    are so many medals per person in Australia that it's practically a
    fashion accessory, that 47 medals for 60 million Britons constitutes a
    seismic paradigm shift given Great Britain's recent sporting history,
    and that two medals in the wee Bahamas doth an empire make.

    There's not even suspense lingering in the possible case of the
    Netherlands Antilles before the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Dogged
    in its pursuit of the MPC top five -- and that's understandable -- the
    Netherlands Antilles hopes to overturn the disqualification of
    200-meter runner Churandy Martina for stepping on the line thrice,
    claiming the disqualification didn't come in proper disqualification
    time.

    If you can imagine a more sonorous court case, have at it, but not
    even the Netherlands Antilles with its 225,369 sun-kissed citizens
    could trump our mighty Bahamian royal ruler.

    Two weeks of gruel and melodrama, and it's the same quotient story:
    the Bahamas. At least you could say that in this particular defeat we
    learned a valuable life lesson.

    Always look out for the triple jump.

    Medals Per Capita minutiae from Sunday's final day:

    -- The United States 40th out of 70 countries in Athens with 103
    medals and an MPC rating of 2,844,928, wound up 46th out of 87 with a
    better rating of 2,762,042. It really does supply hope for the future,
    just imagining how a gutty little overmatched MPC country might
    continued to make slight strides, like maybe if it goes rummaging
    around that pool in Baltimore for another giant fish-boy.

    -- Jamaica went from five medals and No. 6 in Athens to 11 medals and
    No. 2 in Beijing, while Cuba went from 27 and No. 3 to 24 and No. 8,
    while Trinidad & Tobago logged in at No. 11, which all goes to show
    that if you seek victory -- just as with the former Soviet republics
    -- you don't want to go messin' around down there in those
    islands. Sure, they look all sanguine and relaxing and everything, but
    that's just part of the lull.

    -- The mainstream media continues to laud China for its forge to the
    fore in the Olympics, and while that's part of being a good guest, it
    also chronically overlooks an MPC rating of 68. While that's not bad
    and surely the best ranking in history for any country with
    1,330,044,605 people, it's certainly a far cry from 1985 Bears or 1927
    Yankees entries like the Bahamas or Jamaica or Iceland, and the praise
    just comes as another sad reminder of the suppression of free speech.

    The top 25:

    1. Bahamas (2) - 153,725

    2. Jamaica (11) - 254,939

    3. Iceland (1) - 304,367

    4. Slovenia (5) - 401,542

    5. Australia (46) - 447,844

    6. New Zealand (9) - 463,717

    7. Norway (10) - 464,445

    8. Cuba (24) - 475,998

    9. Armenia (6) - 494,764

    10. Belarus (19) - 509,777

    11. Trinidad & Tobago (2) - 523,683

    12. Estonia (2) - 653,802

    13. Lithuania (5) - 713,041

    14. Bahrain (1) - 718,306

    15. Latvia (3) - 748,474

    16. Mongolia (4) - 749,020

    17. Georgia (6) - 771,806

    18. Denmark (7) - 783,531

    19. Slovakia (6) - 874,124

    20. Croatia (5) - 898,284

    21. Hungary (10) - 993,091

    22. The Netherlands (16) - 1,040,332

    23. Azerbaijan (7) - 1,168,245

    24. Kazakhstan (12) - 1,180,041

    25. Switzerland (6) - 1,263,586

    Selected others from 87 nations with medals:

    26. Mauritius (1) - 1,274,189

    27. Great Britain (47) - 1,296,678

    29. Ireland (3) - 1,385,373

    31. South Korea (31) - 1,588,156

    32. France (40) - 1,601,444

    33. Ukraine (27) - 1,701,640

    36. Canada (18) - 1,845,149

    37. Russia (72) - 1,954,195

    38. Germany (41) - 2,009,013

    39. Italy (28) - 2,076,618

    40. Spain (18) - 2,247,282

    43. Kenya (14) - 2,710,988

    46. United States (110) - 2,762,042

    57. Japan (25) - 5,091,536

    61. Togo (1) - 5,858,673

    67. Brazil (15) - 12,793,906

    68. China (100) - 13,300,446

    86. Vietnam (1) - 86,116,559

    87. India (3) - 382,665,299

    -- Chuck Culpepper

    The Bahamas team of Andretti Bain, Michael Mathieu, Andrae Williams
    and Christopher Brown pose with their silver medals after the men's
    4x400m relay at the National stadium as part of the 2008 Beijing
    Olympic Games. Photo by Fabrice Coffrini /AFP / Getty Images

    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/olympics_b log/2008/08/just-as-england.html
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