Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Let the Games begin!

We may be kicking and stroking our way to gold in a few events at the London Olympic Games, but I doubt we'll be able to score the 12 medals SASCOC has so over-optimistically set out to achieve (or am I'm being just too pessimistic?). Never fear. As a country, we have excelled in other areas and activities, mostly of them seemingly of the non-sporting persuasion, yet executed with such precision and perfection, in such glorious, awe-inspiring fashion and technique many of us are self-proclaimed Olympians in our own right; even if it's not at the traditional Olympics or in the form of any recognised activity.
Take corruption. In the alternative Olympics of a parallel netherworld a Team SA of some kind would soar to victory, breaking records aplenty along the way. The arenas and venues would be the seats of power such as Parliament and the Union Buildings. The competitors? These would be drawn from the growing masses of politicians, those paragons of  futility, the almost-but-not-quite athletes who have broken too many records to count in the field of graft. These Games are not limited to just politicians. Of course in the spirit of the Olympics, everyday Joe and Jane Nobodies also compete. This sport involves different styles. There's Stealing, Cheating, Lying and Back-stabbing. Excel in these and you not only become the champion of the world, but also impressively wealthy. The stock standard commentary would go something like this: And off they go! In lane one we have MP Steel off to a great start, edging into the lead. In lane two Tender Preneur has taken up second position followed by Eets Miright and I.M Fatcat, who are fast gaining ground... You see where I'm going with this.
The criteria of this lesser-known sporting spectacle would differ greatly from the authentic Games where traditional athletes exert immense displays of power and talent and sporting prowess. The most obvious and common criteria for, shall we dub them the Parallel Olympics, is power. But it wouldn't be gauged, recorded, timed and measured along the same lines as the real Olympics, where power is usually seen in how fast one can run, how high you can jump, how often you can achieve victory. To win, competitors are expected to gain as much power as possible, by any means necessary.
The Parallel Olympics would showcase sports, which have never enjoyed the glamour and adoration showered on the traditional events of the real Olympics the world has come to know. Nonetheless, the events are taken as seriously as other perplexing activities like jukskei, handball and curling.
Take the event of Sitting Around. On the surface it's a pointless challenge to the untrained, unappreciative eye. The aim: To simply out-sit your competitors and excel in doing as little as possible. Judges take into account posture and sitting styles. The crossing of legs and folding of arms are all considered and scored. MPs seem to excel in this, putting on impressive displays of indifference and sloth, all of which add to the scoring.Where would professional Sitters train? Parliament is the main training ground, but only for those competitors of the advantaged kind, who've been able to have their training professionally funded (often in surreptitious, dubious ways) and overseen. Other competitors are found all around us, on the sides of roads and streets, where they languish on their backsides, waiting for jobs, brandishing cardboard signs pleading for donations and employment. In informal settlements - where so-called 'Development Training Programmes' are being rolled out - the disadvantaged have been hard at 'work' for years training, honing their talent at sitting and waiting.
Many South Africans excel at the often-overlooked sport of Object Throwing. Again the roads and streets of everyday society serves as the training venues for these sportspeople. At the Parallel Olympics contestants compete in rounds where different projectiles must be hurled as far as possible. First, a stone must be thrown at a moving target (usually a person resembling a police officer or a vehicle). Secondly, the highly technical  Petrol Bomb throwing event is judged on how competitors ignite Molotov cocktails. They must then ensure the incendiary projectile is successfully thrown without going out. They are scored on distance thrown and whether the projectile ignites after making contact with a target.
Another sorely ignored activity, which has is origins in Object Throwing is Protesto-Police Wrestling. The aim of the game is for a competitor to try and avoid fellow contestants who must catch them. The ensuing flinging, contorting, slipping, flipping, arching and flailing (all of theses are actual positions/techniques used in the sport) are scored along strict criteria, which is itself based on the ultimate goal of avoiding being pinned down and 'apprehended'.
Substance Consumption has become a hugely popular event in SA, but also the most dangerous. The objective entails contestants consuming as much alcohol as possible during certain time periods. They are scored on this and how they conduct themselves behind the wheel of a vehicle. The finesse in the swerving,  and jumping of lanes and stop streets serve as hotly contested criteria. Contestants must then alight from their vehicles and try to convince judges they are intoxicated, all the while ensuring they hide the slurring, the red eyes and mask the stench of booze.
While the Parallell Olympics may not have superceded the hype and popularity of the real Olympic Games, you'll find it's far more accessible to the every-person, with many of us striving, battling, exerting ourselves to mind boggling degrees to become the best. Some of us are already professional Parallelympians, we just don't know it.

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