Tag Archives: 2008 Beijing Olympics

Usain Bolt in the NFL? If nothing else, it makes for a great conversation.

He was the star of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The fastest man on the planet. And Usain Bolt’s record-setting times in the 100- and 200-metre sprints were eye-popping.

 

Michael Phelps might have won eight gold medals, but Bolt won three and every one was in a glamour event. The title “Fastest Man on Earth,” is bestowed only once or twice — legitimately — in a generation and the 22-year-old Jamaican sprinter, who ran a remarkable 9.72 seconds in the 100, is clearly the fastest man on the planet.

 

Which makes him a pretty good candidate to be the NFL’s next game-breaking wideout.

 

On Aug. 23, the former vice-president in charge of player personnel for the Dallas Cowboys, Gil Brandt, wrote a column on nfl.com. In it he said, “If Hall of Fame general manager Tex Schramm and I were still running the Cowboys, we’d be in Jamaica right now waiting for Bolt’s plane to land.”

 

Brandt went on to say that under his watch, a contract would be offered, and Bolt would be given every opportunity to play for the Cowboys. Brandt did not say that he believed Bolt would make a great NFL player. He simply said that Bolt had speed that couldn’t be taught while, at the same time, football skills could be taught, and from the days — way back — when the Cowboys signed the world’s fastest human of the moment, Bob Hayes, the team has put a lot of its eggs in the speed basket.

 

Granted Cincinnati Bengals wideout Chad Johnson says he’d like to race Bolt, but Bolt has run a timed 4.2 40-yard dash while Johnson’s best is, evidently, 4.54 at the NFL combine. Advantage: Bolt.

 

And that makes a move by Bolt to football quite intriguing. He’s big — 6-foot-5, about 215 — has a strong upper body and is, YES, the fastest human on the planet.

 

So why not? Hayes was great. But then again, Skeets Nehemiah was a bust.

 

“Skeets is one of those track guys who didn’t like to get hit,” said Winnipeg Blue Bombers wideout Derick Armstrong, a former star at Arkansas-Monticello.

 

“Bolt has the size and speed, no question, but can he take a hit? That’s the question.”

 

This past Tuesday night, Armstrong was part of Hot Stove panel of current and former Bombers speaking at the Hearts of Blue and Gold for Variety dinner at Earl’s St. Vital Restaurant in Winnipeg. As the host for the evening, I asked him on behalf of the crowd, if he thought Bolt could be a pro receiver. 

 

“I guess, if you stuck him outside and just let him run and threw it as far as you could, he’d probably outrun the corner and the safety,” Armstrong said. “But can he catch a football? Maybe.

 

“The real question is, can he take a hit? If he’s going to be a receiver, he’s gotta run a route and take the occasional shot from a linebacker. I can tell you, that hurts. If he can do that — and do it more than once — I guess he can play. I’d like to see it, though.”

 

A lot of us would like to see it. Usain Bolt in the NFL is an intriguing prospect. Wonder if the league has any Gil Brandts left?

Two Olympians? What happened to the Pan Am Games Legacy?

It’s official. An announcement this week by the High Performance Centre for Sport — Manitoba confirmed that the 1999 Pan Am Games not only hurt sport in our province, but just might have destroyed it.

 

This week, the head of the Centre, Randy Anderson announced that only two Manitobans, rower Janine Hanson and archer Jason Lyon had qualified for the 2008 Canadian Olympic team. That’s the fewest number of Manitoba Olympians heading to a single Games in the modern era.

 

So what ever happened to the 1999 Pan Am Games legacy?

 

Oh, let me tell you, I heard a boatload of that insanity from the moment Winnipeg was awarded the Games in the early 90s until the biggest mistake in the province’s history was shut down in ’99. 

 

“It will be the greatest sports legacy in the history of the province,” proclaimed the organizers, as they chased down millions in public funds in order to put on their little summer soiree.

 

It was a crock. And I can tell you, I took a load of abuse for arguing that it was a crock and that those Games would be the biggest waste of $130 million-plus in the history of sport of Manitoba.

 

My own editor at the newspaper where I worked back then called me down — he had invitations to most of the parties — and he and his deputy editor spiked more than a dozen of my reports on Games spending.

 

Well, sports fans, here we are 10 years later and the Pan Am Games turned out to be nothing more than a party for the richest and most influential Manitobans. As a sporting event, it was B-list, and as a legacy, it was a lie.

 

Here’s the legacy in totality:

 

1. Seats at Canad Inns Stadium (back then it was still Winnipeg Stadium) are now two small to be comfortable and a football park that should have been torn down at the time should now be condemned.

 

2. Upgrades at Winnipeg Arena were worthless and the building was destroyed six years after the Games left town.

 

3. The destruction of the Velodrome (remember, the organizers used a portable Velodrome that was sold to the Dutch after the Games) left us without a cycling venue and as you can see, a sport once dominated by Manitobans no longer exists here.

 

That’s it. That’s the legacy. Nothing! No outstanding sports facilities and three Olympics later, we have virtually no Olympians.

 

At a cost of more than $130 million in public funds, we could have built a state of the art hockey arena and saved the Winnipeg Jets, but instead we let Mayor Susan Thompson and some of her wealthy pals convince us that the 1999 Pan Am Games was a good investment. 

 

As we prepare for an Olympic Games a decade later, a Games that involves only two Manitoba athletes, we are reminded that the Pan Am Games was nothing more than a waste of public funds and a party for those who had enough connections to get invited.

 

History now shows, it was the greatest waste of money and effort in Manitoba sport.