A new crop of freshmen is arriving in Athens this week to begin the college
experience at UGA. They’ll meet each other, size each other up, and compare
notes. "Oh, you were in the National Honor Society? Me too. I also lettered
in three sports."
One UGA freshman will be bringing something to campus that will be hard to
trump: an
Olympic medal.
Incoming Georgia freshman Allison Schmitt won a bronze medal as a member
of the women’s 800-meter freestyle relay on Thursday at the Olympics.
Schmitt, a native of Canton, Mich., led off the relay that set the American
record with a time of 7:46.33. Natalie Coughlin, Caroline Burckle and Katie
Hoff joined Schmitt on the relay.
Schmitt is just one of 22 athletes or coaches in Beijing with
ties to the University of Georgia. Not surprisingly, over
half of them are competing for or associated with nationalities other than
the United States. It’s also not surprising that most come from Georgia’s strong
swimming and diving program which will include a wide range of representatives
from the incoming Schmitt to coach Jack Bauerle. We’ll see more Bulldogs as
the track and field events get underway later this week.
Even Suzanne Yoculan is involved. The Georgia gymnastics program has had its
share of Olympians, and this year Yoculan
provided expert commentary during the women’s team competition. Most Georgia
fans know all about her strengths as a showman and promoter, but such a successful
program can’t be built without strong coaching competency, and she lets that
side loose in this commentary.
Since I’ve opened the Olympics topic, I have to tip my cap to Michael Phelps.
He’s the most decorated Olympian ever, and he dominates this sport. But I’m
not going to get much into the "best ever" discussion. He may be,
he may not be, but
absolute statements like this don’t impress me. I watched Phelps coast in
yet another qualifier last night and thought to myself, "didn’t he just
swim this event a few nights ago?" Oh, right – that was the 100 meter event,
and this was the 200 meter. And each comes with a medal just like the other
79 swimming events.
Think if they approached basketball the same way. You’d have the same team
competition still. But you’d also have a dunk contest. A three-point contest.
A 1-on-1 tournament. A 3-on-3 tournament. A 3-on-3 halfcourt tournament. H-O-R-S-E.
A free-throw shooting contest. A free-throw shooting contest using the granny
toss. You get the point.
I don’t begrudge Phelps his success. Few swimmers excel outside of one event,
and he’s in rare air even among other swimmers. Even fewer can do it from one
Olympics to the next. His accomplishments stand on their own. I’m just hesitant
to put everything on the total medal count when some very gifted athletes in
their own right have just a single event and a single chance at their one gold
medal.