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Your best Olympic moment



Icy Gull

Back on the rollercoaster
Jul 5, 2003
72,015
Haven't seen too many threads on this years Olympics. The games are not that far away now so let's have your best ever Olympic moment

Coe and Ovett had some fantastic head to heads but, for me, it was probably old man Linford winning the young mans event in '92 :clap:

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Simster

"the man's an arse"
Jul 7, 2003
54,953
Surrey
Zola Budd tripping Mary Decker Slaney then carrying on to finish a SHITHOUSE fifth place.

Well worth bypassing all the passport regulations, she was. :rolleyes:
 








Gully

Monkey in a seagull suit.
Apr 24, 2004
16,812
Way out west
I was going to say that mine would be Sir Steve Redgrave winning his fifth gold medal, but then read down and found that the thread had taken an irreverant turn...so I will go for the bloke smacking his head off the diving board in Barcelona, hard to believe someone could make such a basic error in something he had been practicing for years.
 


Icy Gull

Back on the rollercoaster
Jul 5, 2003
72,015
I was going to say that mine would be Sir Steve Redgrave winning his fifth gold medal, but then read down and found that the thread had taken an irreverant turn...so I will go for the bloke smacking his head off the diving board in Barcelona, hard to believe someone could make such a basic error in something he had been practicing for years.

Eddie the Eagle probably deserves a mention then, even if it was the winter Olympics
 


My best personal memory of the Olympics was watching a guy I used to go drinking with - yes, ME, out on the piss with a so-called ATHLETE - breaking the Olympic 10,000 metres record at Montreal in 1976.

The record stood for eight years.

Sadly, it was only in the heats. And he only got a bronze medal in the final.

Brendan Foster ... fuelled on Guinness.
 




Barrel of Fun

Abort, retry, fail
The Olympics is more than just winning gold. It is about years of hard work and fine tuning of the body to compete with the best in the world. The sheer grit and determination and effort that goes into training and the eventual performance is flabbergasting.

There are many heroes who have performed great feats beamed across the globe, but one stand out moment for me was Derek Redmond and simply wanting to finish the race.

You would be hardened character to have avoided a small tear or a lump in the throat when he dragged his failing body to the line with the help of his father.

Img214049546.jpg
 








Stoichkov

The Miserable Bulgarian
Jul 26, 2004
1,335
Brighton
Daley Thompson whistling the national anthem.

Daley Thompson trained himself to eat really fast so that he could cut down on the amount of time he thought he was 'wasting' between his am & pm training sessions..

Not only did he train on xmas day, he knew that all athletes would be training on that day (thinking that no one else was and they'd be extra dedicated) so he trained twice.
 








S'hampton Seagull

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2003
6,946
Southampton
Yoshi throwing 112m in the Javelin round my place last weekend, marvellous scenes :p
 


Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
31,273
I liked Torville and Deane's Bolero

:safeway2:
 




1234andcounting

Well-known member
Mar 31, 2008
1,609
David Hemery in '68 was pretty good.

Mark Spitz winning 7 (?) golds in the pool in '72.

GB's fantastic medal haul in '76 (no golds whatsoever, if memory serves, at least not in genuine sporting endeavours, which rules out prats riding about on gee-gees).

Wells, Ovett and Coe in '80.

The Carl Lewis show in 84.

Lots really.

But best of all are the David Coleman's commentaries, particularly the one about Alberto Juantorena which inspired the Private Eye column.
 








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