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Beijing to Unleash a Golden Juggernaut
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China will top the Beijing 2008 gold medal count before permanently dominating future Games, an eminent international Olympic figure predicted yesterday.

 

 

Australian Olympic Committee president John Coates, whose home event was famously endorsed as the "best ever" by former International Olympic boss Juan Antonio Samaranch, tipped China's meteoric rise and expressed his awe at the sheer scale of the Beijing project during a fleeting visit for this week's Chefs-de-Mission meetings.

 

"I think they will top the medal count in gold medals," Coates told China Daily in an exclusive interview. "There's a feeling in sporting circles of apprehension about China on the sporting field."

 

Not one prone to hyperbole, the former lawyer has been making realistic calls ever since he kept a steady pace as his high school rowing crew's coxswain in the 1960s.

 

After attending every Olympics since managing the Australian rowing team at the 1976 Montreal Games, Coates has tracked the development of all nations and believes China is on the verge of becoming untouchable.

 

Coates cited tremendous progress in a range of sports, especially rowing, to back his claims, but also noted the country's limited success at the World Swimming titles in Melbourne earlier this year to temper his short-term forecast. "I think it's very difficult to beat the Americans in overall medals because there are 44 track-and-field events and they can have three or four in every event," he said in reference to next year's outcome.

 

"But London!" he gasped, shaking his head in awe of China's potential.

 

During his stay Coates visited Australian teams competing in the first official test event at the Shunyi Rowing Center, while the country's men's and women's hockey teams, sailors and other athletes got their first taste of China elsewhere.

 

Incredible facilities

 

Australia spent about US$5 billion on the 2000 games compared to Beijing's estimated US$40-US$50 billion, a 10-fold increase not surprising given the island continent's population is dwarfed by China's 65:1.

 

"I'm gobsmacked by the quality of the venues and infrastructure," Coates delighted, noting proudly that Australian architects had worked with Chinese to help design the aquatic center "Water Cube". "We have absolutely no doubt they will end up being the best ever," Coates says. "At this stage it's really the venues and infrastructure and ability to get something out of the ground so quickly."

 

The only concerns held by the Australian delegation, according to Coates, relate to air quality. But athletes he consulted while in Beijing complained only about natural weather conditions. "I went to the Shunyi rowing course yesterday and spoke to our teams and coaches," the Sydney resident said. "They were having their second row out there and they tend to think that humidity is the issue."

 

Like many cities straining under the scourge of fossil fuel combustion, Beijing's air quality is a concern. And it is being factored into the preparations of the 500-strong Australian team. "We are anticipating respiratory problems," said the man who has advised his athletes to arrive in China just four days before their events. "Our doctors met with experts for an environment workshop at the AIS (Australian Institute of Sport) a month ago and we are waiting on their report."

 

But International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge expressed satisfaction after the Beijing Olympic Committee outlined a number of air quality plans to be implemented, if required, this time next year.

 

"It is important to stress that our Chinese colleagues are doing their utmost to deal with this challenge," he said during the opening seminar of the Chefs-de-Mission yesterday.

 

"We are very hopeful the matter will be tackled effectively."

 

Home advantage?

 

Beijing's conditions raise the prospect that home athletes will enjoy significant advantages.

 

Australia's Olympic supremo believes they can emulate Ian Thorpe and Cathy Freeman's homebaked glory in 2000, when other local prospects, it must be remembered, failed to shine as brightly.

 

But Coates, too, is salivating at the knowledge Beijing's time zone is shared by Australia's west while its east is a mere two hours ahead. "There's always home advantages but we think there are also advantages for us in terms of western European countries in not having to come here early for acclimatization," Coates said.

 

Besides the glory won by Aussie athletes, Coates cited the relief he felt during Sydney's opening ceremony among his own highlights and as a salutary lesson for Chinese skeptical about their fortnight in the spotlight.

 

The chief organizer had dreaded Australia's opening spectacle ever since inflatable kangaroos wheeled out as Sydney previews at the 1996 Atlanta finale were ridiculed at home and abroad. "I was so worried it was going to be seen as kitsch," Coates recalled. "But when the horses came galloping into the stadium and the crowd went wild, I felt so relieved and I knew we had pulled it off."

 

The Chefs-de-Mission, which attracted representatives of relevant IOC bodies, major international sport federations and hosts of the 2012 Olympic Summer Games, will conclude tomorrow. The seminar is staged a year before each Olympics to brief nations on the hosts' progress and for them to glean the views of the community of nations including Australia.

 

East greets west

 

English poet Rudyard Kipling, who famously visited Australia in 1891, once condescended that "East is East and West is West, and never the twain shall meet". But a growing consensus exists among Australians today that the Indian-born writer's oft-quoted couplet belongs to the age in which he wrote it.

 

"Former World Bank president James Wolfensohn was in Australia to celebrate the 50-year anniversary of the Melbourne Olympics last year and he described the Beijing Olympics as China's coming out party -- and that's how we're viewing it," Coates said of the Aussie-born banker.

 

"I just think this Olympics will be like the world has never seen and probably never will again."

 

By Ben Johnson

 

(China Daily August 8, 2008)

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