Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tasman Sea change in Medals Per Capita

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Tasman Sea change in Medals Per Capita

    Los Angeles Times, CA

    Tasman Sea change in Medals Per Capita
    12:51 PM, August 16, 2008

    Suddenly, we've got a Trans-Tasman tussle in Medals Per Capita, and
    anyone with any sense loves a good Trans-Tasman tussle now and then.

    After a jaw-plummeting Olympic Saturday in Beijing, those wacky Tasman
    Sea neighbors, Australia and New Zealand, sit a smidgen apart from
    each other at No. 2 and No. 3 in the crucial Medals Per Capita table,
    and you can almost feel the Southern Hemisphere seething.

    Because these two nations can seem so unspeakably pleasant to a
    visiting American, it's reassuring to learn they get all sore and
    chippy with each other over sporting events just like the rest of the
    absurd human race.

    They have a mutual and perfectly commendable loathing over rugby, and
    of course, we all know they had that Underarm Bowling Incident of
    1981, except that most of us probably don't know about any Underarm
    Bowling Incident, and those Americans who do know probably find this
    Underarm Bowling Incident to be the rough equivalent of hieroglyphics.

    Well, this Underarm Bowling Incident thing caused quite the ruckus,
    sparking criticism even from the prime ministers of both countries. It
    happened in February 1981 in Melbourne, when an Australian cricket
    captain -- get this -- told his bowler to send the last ball underarm
    and along the ground toward New Zealand batsman Bruce Edgar,
    preventing any conceivable New Zealand rally.

    What all this means is actually indecipherable to the American ear
    and, like many foreign languages, basically cannot be learned if not
    taught before age 6, but the UBI became a beacon for poor
    sportsmanship, lousy taste and the decline of Trans-Tasman
    civilization.

    Now, as an ever-looming T-Rex in Medals Per Capita, Australia has
    spent the entire first week of Beijing 2008 in the top three,
    stockpiling its medals to 25, racking up an MPC rating of 824,304 and
    reveling in its measured population of 20,600,856, all of whom can
    swim really fast.

    Then, from completely off the charts in the zero zone, here on
    Saturday came New Zealand, gorging on five sudden medals. It won the
    women's shot put (Valerie Vili) for its first track-and-field gold
    since Montreal 1976. It won a bunch of rowing necklaces. It won an MPC
    rating of 834,692 and a coveted No. 3 ranking given its enviable
    population of 4,173,460.

    Sure, neither can catch No. 1 Armenia just yet, but then, for the
    fifth day in a row, nobody else could either.

    In other Medals Per Capita minutiae:

    -- With just one medal each, severe MPC threats Estonia and Trinidad
    and Tobago entered the charts with their intimidatingly low
    populations at Nos. 8 and 5, respectively, with Estonia bringing along
    crucial MPC experience after nibbling at No. 1 in Athens 2004 before
    winding up a studly fourth.

    -- Medals Per Capita would like to welcome to the board No. 43 Canada,
    our adored neighbors to the north, up from zero medals to three on
    Saturday, and also would like to commend University of British
    Columbia student and blogger Julian W. at NowPublic.com for this
    outstanding line last week about Medals Per Capita: `Canada, with no
    medals yet, is the undefined error you get on a calculator when you
    try to divide a whole number by zero.'

    -- Flashing rarefied badminton prowess, Indonesia went from two medals
    to four, and demographics experts in the crowd will sense the MPC
    mania that followed. With a population of a staggering 237,512,355,
    No. 4 on Earth, Indonesia's additions lowered its MPC through the day
    from 118,756,177 to 79,179,785 to 59,378,088. Not many countries can
    improve their MPC by 59 million in a day, and yet, with so many
    countries craving MPC recognition, Indonesia dropped from 53rd (out of
    54) on Friday to 55th (out of 61) on Saturday.

    The top 10 (medals in parentheses):

    1. Armenia (5) - 593,717
    2. Australia (25) - 824,034
    3. New Zealand (5) - 834,692
    4. Slovenia (2) - 1,003,856
    5. Trinidad and Tobago (1) - 1,047,366
    6. Norway (4) - 1,161,114
    7. Belarus (8) - 1,210,721
    8. Estonia (1) - 1,307,605
    9. Slovakia (4) - 1,311,187
    10. Cuba (8) - 1,427,994

    Selected others:

    11. Mongolia (2) - 1,498,041
    18. South Korea (20) - 2,461,642
    24. Jamaica (1) - 2,804,332
    32. Ukraine (12) - 3,828,690
    37. Serbia (2) - 5,079,523
    38. United States (54) - 5,626,382
    43. Canada (3) - 11,070,898
    50. Colombia (2) - 22,506,837
    52. China (47) - 28,298,821
    61. India (1) - 1,147,995,898

    -- Chuck Culpepper

    Culpepper is a contributor to The Times.

    Photo: New Zealand's Valerie Vili celebrates after winning the gold
    medal in the women's shot put during the Beijing Games on
    Saturday. Credit: Kevin Frayer / Associated Press
Working...
X