(Today 06:43 )lovebabes56 Wrote: (Yesterday 09:50 )Louisetights Wrote: This is the games we're it's either Gold or heartbreakingly 4th and no in between
To win three golds in one winter games is historic enough, but the 4th places are gutting to be honest, but I do think there are events where we never taken part in before and should be looking at taking part in. Wondering if converting an old disused industrial estate and turning in to a multi winter indoor sports training facility somewhere might help us improve in some sports and get athletes into sports like speed skating (not short track) which I don't think we have ever competed in before.
I recall some chatter about this in the past, but no one can ever get the funding and financials to stack up.
A full-size speed skating rink must be hugely expensive to build and a bitch to maintain and operate. And we’ll never produce enough skaters to make it financially worthwhile.
Also, I don’t believe there is a link between public participation and elite performance. After London won the Olympic Games in 2007, we binged on 50m pools to make sure we didn’t embarrass ourselves in the aquatic events. Over half-a-billion pounds spent on huge aquatic centres in London, Manchester, Sunderland and Cardiff just to win two bronze and a silver in 2012.
And, sure, we all cheered for Rebecca Adlington and had our collective national wank-fest for three weeks in one summer. But then half the leisure centres in the country started closing or crumbling for lack of money to maintain the pools. And now more kids than ever are finishing secondary school without knowing how to swim — which is problematic when you live on an island.
A bit ranty, but my point is this… Funding for elite athletes in marginal sports isn’t good value for money if it comes at the expense of facilities that the general public might use. I’d rather see more kids off the couch and socialising in curling rinks than stuffing a trophy cabinet with medals that we’ll all forget about within hours of the closing ceremony.