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August 11, 2004


Atlanta 1996: Dr. Bass with Justin Huish, double gold medallist in men's archery.

REMEMBERING PAST OLYMPIC MOMENTS

As my Olympic experiences grow, so, too, do the athletes that I remember. In Atlanta, it was Justin Huish, an archer that I interviewed in preparation for the Games. I spoke to him, his parents, his friends. And then he won two gold medals, one of which he let me try on, and I sat with him for a few minutes at the Closing Ceremony. I haven't seen him since, but I know that he's had a bit of a rough time since his days of Olympic glory. In Sydney, a profile by Jimmy Roberts of Eric Moussambani, a swimmer from Equatorial Guinea, showed us all a lot about the spirit of the Olympics. In the Research Room, we first encountered Eric when we phoned his national delegation to ask who was carrying its flag in the Opening Ceremony. It would be a swimmer, we were told, a swimmer named Eric Moussambani. Turns out, he swam the 100m freestyle, but he swam it rather slowly. He had only learned how to swim some eight months earlier, and had trouble finding a pool long enough to practice in. While other swimmers set or equaled 15 world records in the water in Sydney, Eric, swimming by himself because the others in his heat had been disqualified, posted one of the slowest times in the history of the Olympics, almost topping 2 minutes - just 8 seconds off Ian Thorpe's world record pace for the 200m. But he finished, the crowd applauded, and he became part of Olympic history.

News now comes that Moussambani, who has cut his time in half in the 100m free, will likely not be able to come to Athens because he has run into some Olympic red tape - his credential was never validated because his National Olympic Committee lost his passport photo and could not submit his paperwork on time. He told the Sydney Morning Herald, "I have been training very hard for three years . . . and my goal was wanting to go to Athens and to show the people I can do better and I can do something." I think he already has, whether he makes it to Athens or not.

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Be sure to check back often for Dr. Amy Bass's updates
to her Online CNR Olympic Diary.


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