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International Capsules: Rome 1960: When the Olympics went modern

ROME (AP) — They were the Summer Games that ushered in the Olympics as we know them today.

Starting 50 years ago on Wednesday, Rome hosted the first Summer Olympics to be commercially broadcast.

They were the first games with a major doping scandal, as Danish cyclist Knud Enemark Jensen collapsed during his race under the influence of Roniacol and died the same day.

Abebe Bikila of Ethiopia ran barefoot and won a night marathon in front of the Colosseum, starting the age of African dominance in long-distance races.

And they served to introduce the world to an athlete who would become a global superstar — Cassius Clay, the man who would later become Muhammad Ali.

It all began with an Italian teenager named Giancarlo Peris, who won a regional scholastic race that came with the prize of being the final torchbearer at the Rome Games

"I didn't believe it," Peris, now 68, said in a phone interview. "It seemed like something too big for me."

Shaking away nerves, Peris ran the final 350 meters of the torch relay and lighted the cauldron in the Stadio Olimpico on Aug. 25, 1960. The games were on.

Many participants, both foreign and Italian, have been invited to take part in the main anniversary celebration Wednesday in Michelangelo's Piazza del Campidoglio — where Peris, now a retired teacher, will re-light the flame.

When organizers asked Peris to take part, he gave them one condition.

"I told them I'll do it as long as I don't have to run," he joked.

Other events over the next few weeks include a fencing exhibition by the Spanish Steps, a youth soccer tournament at the Stadio dei Marmi and an amateur boxing meet between Italy and the United States in all categories at the Foro Italico.

As David Maraniss documented in his recent book "Rome 1960: The Summer Olympics that Stirred the World," CBS paid $600,000 to the Rome organizing committee — not the International Olympic Committee — for the rights to televise the games.

The American network sent three on-air reporters to Rome and had Jim McKay as studio host back in New York.

Video tapes were sent back to New York daily on commercial Alitalia flights and if all went according to plan — taking advantage of the time difference between Rome and New York — the network could show footage of morning events in prime time.

McKay recalled having to hold the tapes close to his body to thaw them out from the freezing temperatures of the airplanes' cargo holds and hastily write his own copy.

Meanwhile, Jensen's doping case got stuck in a maze of bureaucracy and an autopsy report seven months later said that the cyclist died from heatstroke. Decades later, an Italian doctor involved in the case said they found traces of several substances, including amphetamines.

The IOC created a medical committee in 1961, issued its first list of banned substances in 1967 and started testing athletes a year later.

The Rome Olympics came at a time when the Cold War was in full force, but Italy was rather tranquil — and still rebuilding after the destruction of World War II.

"Rome is the city of history and nice weather. Athletes arriving from all over were excited just at the fact of coming to Rome," said former boxer Nino Benvenuti, who won the welterweight division in 1960.

"When you're excited about being somewhere it translates into motivation," 'Benvenuti said in an interview. "I really think that part of the reason the athletes in Rome got the best out of themselves was their psychological state — they were happy to be here."

Benvenuti beat out Clay for the Val Barker trophy as the games' best boxer.

"I only realized the importance of that award in the years that followed the games, when Muhammad Ali really became Muhammad Ali and the best boxer in the world," Benvenuti said.

Benvenuti recalled how startling it was to see Clay in action for the first time.

"He had a different style from everybody else. We were all standing still compared to him," the 72-year-old Italian said. "He had unbelievable quickness not just with his punches but with his legs, too. He was years ahead of everyone else.

"His style had nothing to do with the basis of boxing as we knew it — left, right, upper cut, hook. That was it, there weren't many variations. He developed all sorts of things, like those movements where he put his arms down to invite the opponent to attack. We all learned from him. I adapted that style, too, when I turned professional."

Benvenuti later became the world light middleweight and middleweight champion (twice), but he said those titles pale in comparison to his gold medal.

"When you win the Olympics you're an Olympic champion for the rest of your life," Benvenuti said.

Benvenuti has lived in Rome for years and often drives by the site where he competed in 1960, the Palazzo dello Sport arena, now renamed the Palalottomatica after a sponsor.

Both the Palazzo dello Sport and the smaller Palazzetto dello Sport were designed by Pier Luigi Nervi, a master of reinforced concrete, and are architectural gems. By contrast, the 1960 Olympic Village is badly deteriorating under the strain of residential housing.

Another Italian star of the games was 200-meter champion Livio Berruti, who upset a trio of Americans — Les Carney, Stone Johnson and Ray Norton.

The Americans' reactions still stick in Berruti's mind.

"They had very smug faces afterward and they wouldn't talk," Berruti said. "Before the race, as the host, I wished them all well. Afterward they didn't behave with that same carefree attitude like the American athletes usually did."

Like many athletes, Berruti attempted to court Wilma Rudolph, who sprinted to three gold medals for the United States.

"I had a nice feeling with her, because she really expressed a lot of joy and loved life," the Italian said.

"You could see it in the way she smiled. She offered to exchange warmup suits with me in the Olympic Village and I didn't know that someone by the name of Cassius Clay was one of the athletes chasing her, and he was very dangerous," Berruti added with a laugh.

Oscar Robertson, one of the captains of the Unites States' winning basketball team, also noticed the attention surrounding Rudolph.

"Everybody had a crush on Wilma. (Clay) wasn't the only one. This was a lovely young lady, but they couldn't catch her," Robertson said when his 1960 team was enshrined into the basketball Hall of Fame earlier this month.

Robertson's 1960 co-captain Jerry West looked back on the games as a tremendous opportunity.

"We were much more nationalistic as a country," West said. "It was an incredible time for me, someone from a town of 500 who had hardly ever been out of the state of West Virginia except to play basketball, to travel overseas and represent our country as an amateur was truly the highlight of my life."

West led the Americans with 19 points in a tense win over the Soviet Union before the final-round victories over Italy and Brazil. Besides Robertson and West, the United States team also featured three other future individual Hall of Famers — Jerry Lucas, Walt Bellamy and coach Pete Newell

"There's not a day that goes by that I don't think about those days," West added. "The single proudest moment of my life was to (win) a gold medal for the United States in 1960."

Missing top talent hurts US team at Youth Olympics

SINGAPORE (AP) — The head of the U.S. Olympic Committee on Tuesday blamed scheduling conflicts for the Americans' woeful performance in the inaugural Youth Olympics, where their gold medal tally is less than Hungary and Azerbaijan.

The U.S. team, which traditionally is a dominant force at Olympic games, has won just four gold medals in Singapore and trails far behind China, which tops the medals table with 29 golds.

"There were some scheduling challenges," USOC chief executive Scott Blackmun said. "We looked at this as a developmental opportunity for some of our athletes who don't otherwise get the opportunity to compete internationally."

The talent gap was most glaring in the pool, as Chinese swimmers won 11 golds while the American team won one race. Some elite U.S. swimmers skipped the Youth Olympics to compete at the Pan-Pacific Championships in Irvine, Calif., on Aug 18-22.

On Tuesday, Chile won the girls soccer gold, defeating Equitorial Guinea 5-3 in a penalty shootout, while the Netherlands beat Argentina 2-1 in the girls field hockey final.

Blackmun said the U.S. team embraced the sports, cultural and educational activities of the Youth Games, which feature 3,600 athletes aged 14 to 18 from 204 national Olympic committees competing in 26 sports from Aug 14-26.

"As things turned out, we might have struck that balance a little closer to the culture and education line," Blackmun said. "It's not like we sent athletes that weren't qualified to be there."

U.S. coaches defended the quality of their teams. Girls basketball coach Kathy Richey-Walton said her team, which won the bronze, had the best talent in the tournament. The boys basketball team stumbled to a fourth-place finish.

"I can't speak for the other sports, but I can tell you that we have two of the best performers in our sport at these games," trampoline gymnastics coach Tara Guidry said.

Some athletes' parents said their children appreciated the opportunity to battle against top competition.

"They're learning how to compete internationally," said Peter Janzen, whose daughter Kiera won the silver in the 400-meter freestyle. "This is a great experience here that will give great depth to the U.S. swimming program in the future."

IOC president Jacques Rogge said he was not concerned about the quality of the American team.

"Sure, certain swimmers are not present," he said. "But this will not diminish the quality of the swimming events or the youth games. When people don't participate, they are easily forgotten and they do not weigh on the success of the organization."

-- Alex Kennedy

USOC says keeping HQs in town is worth the expense

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — By keeping its headquarters in Colorado Springs, the U.S. Olympic Committee will keep 722 jobs in the city with a combined payroll and benefits of $55 million, according to a study being finalized for the federation.

The USOC's CEO, Scott Blackmun, rolled out those figures Tuesday at a luncheon attended by key business leaders in the city, where there has been a healthy debate about spending more than $53 million to keep the headquarters in town for the next 30 years.

Earlier this year, the USOC moved into its new building downtown, part of a three-part project that also includes new offices for several Olympic sports' headquarters and improvements on the Olympic Training Center.

The 722 jobs include 264 employed directly by the USOC, with most of the others coming at the 22 national governing bodies whose headquarters are in Colorado Springs. The 264 USOC jobs combine for a $27 million payroll and benefits, though Blackmun said that might go down slightly because of cuts in the past year.

Despite the jobs the Olympic movement produces, there are a core of critics in fiscally conservative Colorado Springs who believe the money could be better spent. To push the project forward, the city had to approve a deal requiring it to pay $1.7 million a year for the next 30 years to repay "certificates of participation" that helped fund the new headquarters.

The mayor, Lionel Rivera, supported the headquarters using studies that showed the new buildings would produce $3.4 million in taxes — or twice the city's repayment obligation.

The USOC study, being prepared by Deloitte, a federation sponsor, is expected to buoy the argument that keeping the headquarters in Colorado Springs was a financially sound move.

-- Eddie Pells 

Boccia showcased in London's Trafalgar Square

LONDON (AP) — Trafalgar Square has been used to showcase the Paralympic sport of boccia as part of the celebrations counting down to the start of the 2012 Games.

London Mayor Boris Johnson was taught how to play boccia, a bowling sport designed for athletes with severe disabilities, by gold medal-winning Paralympians and members of London Boccia clubs.

Boccia is a sport Britain is expected to excel in during the 2012 Paralympics, which begin two years from Sunday. Britain's team is ranked No. 1 and won the gold medal at the Beijing Games in 2008.

Track & Field

Usain Bolt is running all the way to the bank

LONDON (AP) — A season-ending injury hasn't stopped Usain Bolt from celebrating.

The world's fastest man turned 24 over the weekend and then signed a three-year contract extension with German apparel company Puma on Tuesday that is said to be the biggest for a track and field athlete.

And although the world-record holder at 100 and 200 meters may be able to buy just about anything he wants because of his new sponsorship deal, he couldn't even wrangle himself a proper birthday party back home in Jamaica.

"I didn't know what to do," said Bolt, who was in his country on his birthday for the first time in seven years. "So I just chilled. We went out and had a couple of drinks."

Although contract terms of the deal were not released, Puma chairman and CEO Jochen Zeitz said Bolt would be the "best-paid athlete in track and field history."

"It's good, man. I'm happy," Bolt told The Associated Press by phone. "I'm very happy with the figure."

Bolt set world records in the 100 and 200 at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and helped Jamaica capture another gold and set another world record in the 4x100 relay. A year later, he again set world records in the 100 and 200 at the world championships in Berlin.

Bolt said this month he is cutting short his 2010 season short because of his ailing back. Now he is pain free and looking forward to defending his sprint titles at the 2011 worlds and the 2012 London Olympics.

"I'm trying to make myself a legend," he said. "People are really looking forward to me breaking records. I'm going to go run hard to win, that's my aim. And every time I go out there and run hard to win, I get records."

At the Bird's Nest in Beijing, the lanky Jamaican's effusive personality endeared him to fans, but not to IOC president Jacque Rogge.

In the 100, Bolt surged away from the field and slowed over the last few meters, taking time to slap his chest before crossing the line in 9.69 seconds. A few days later, Bolt ran 19.30 in the 200 and then made little effort to congratulate his opponents before taking a victory lap and shouting "I am No. 1!"

"I have no problem with him doing a show," Rogge said during the Beijing Games. "I think he should show more respect for his competitors and shake hands, give a tap on the shoulder to the other ones immediately after the finish and not make gestures like the one he made in the 100 meters."

At the worlds, Bolt's showboating was muted, but his star was rising. He lowered his world record in the 100 to 9.58 and in the 200 to 19.19.

"He's not just an athlete that promotes performance products but he's also an athlete that transcends well beyond his sport into lifestyle, and that's where we see the opportunity," Zeitz said.

Bolt's announcement on his shortened season came days after he lost a 100-meter race in Stockholm to Tyson Gay. It was his first loss in an individual race in two years, also in the Swedish capital.

"Stockholm is not my favorite place," said Bolt, adding it was good for the sport for him to lose once in a while. "Tyson was in good shape. He really wanted to beat me."

The early end to Bolt's season will keep him from the Commonwealth Games in India.

"It wasn't really part of his training schedule and race schedule anyway," Zeitz said. "It's unfortunate that he's missing a few races, but we all know that 2011 and 2012 are the really important years."

Zeitz said Puma intends to make Bolt a centerpiece in its Olympic marketing program and use him to help develop footwear and other apparel. Bolt first signed with Puma, which also sponsors the Jamaican Olympic Association and the Jamaican Amateur Athletic Association, when he was 16.

"We've been together since forever," Bolt said. "I like the fashion, so they try to make it fashionable for me. ... I'm looking good, but I'm also prepared."

-- Chris Lehourites

Figure Skating

Skating split: Kim Yu-na leaves coach Brian Orser

Olympic champion Kim Yu-na insists former coach Brian Orser knows why the two are no longer working together, and was "flabbergasted" and "upset" that he would say otherwise.

Orser said Tuesday that Kim's mother, Park Mi-hee, told him Aug. 2 that he was no longer Kim's coach but gave no reason for the decision. When Orser and fellow coach Tracy Wilson met with Kim last week, Orser said even the skater seemed confused by the events.

But in postings on Cyworld, a South Korean social networking site similar to Facebook, Kim said her relationship with Orser had been "awkward" for the last few months, and that it was ultimately her decision to leave.

"Do you think it's really true that my mother decided on her own to part ways with the coach? I'm no longer a child," wrote Kim, who turns 20 on Sept. 5. "He was my coach, and whether we stay on or part ways, it was my final decision, and this is what I decided to do, with discretion, after consulting with my mother."

Kim's management agency, AT Sports, confirmed that the postings, written in Korean, were made by Kim. AT Sports also confirmed the skater had posted an angry tweet in English directed at Orser, which was quickly deleted. AT Sports did not explain why.

Kim is still training at the Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club, where she has worked with Orser since 2006. But she has been "more or less" working without a coach since May, AT Sports said, and they have no plans for a new one. Kim announced last month that she is skipping the Grand Prix series and will focus instead on the world championships.

Kim and Orser have always had a warm, friendly relationship — he's even made appearances in some of her commercials — but Orser said he noticed a change when the skater returned from South Korea in May. Kim had said after the world championships that she wasn't sure if she wanted to continue competing, and Orser said he and Wilson tried to give her space to decide.

Wildly popular in South Korea — her nickname is "Queen Yu-na" — she ranked fifth on Forbes.com's list of the world's highest-paid female athletes this month with earnings of $9.7 million the past year.

But when Kim announced her plans for the season, she did it without informing Orser first. He then got a call from Shae-Lynn Bourne, who said she had been asked to choreograph Kim's short program.

Kim's programs are usually choreographed by David Wilson, who works with Orser and Tracy Wilson.

"I immediately started e-mailing them," Orser said. "I was in the dark and felt I deserved to have some clarity. ... I was a little embarrassed, to be honest with you, that I didn't know any of this stuff."

But Kim said "everyone involved in this, including coach Brian Orser" knows the reasons behind the split.

"If you knew about the process that we went through, you will understand how shocked and flabbergasted we felt when we saw Orser's interviews," Kim wrote. "... But I don't want to talk about the process we went through, and there's no need to do so. This is strictly our issue."

Orser said he held off announcing the split in hopes Kim and her camp would have a change of heart. He decided to make the separation public Monday because he didn't want it to become a distraction for his other skaters, including up-and-coming Americans Adam Rippon and Christina Gao.

"What's happening now would happen at some point. I didn't want it to happen when I was at a competition with Adam or Christina," Orser said. "That's not fair to them."

Kim began working with Orser in 2006, when she came to Toronto to work with noted choreographer David Wilson. Orser, a two-time Olympic silver medalist, became her full-time coach in 2007, and Kim flourished under his guidance. After finishing third at the 2008 worlds, she won all but two competitions the next two seasons, often in record fashion.

She overwhelmed the competition in Vancouver with a spellbinding blend of technical skill and elegance, oblivious to the pressure that came with being the biggest favorite to win gold since Katarina Witt in 1988. She shattered her own world record for total score by 18 points, and also topped her marks for the short program and free skate.

It was South Korea's first Winter Olympic gold in a sport other than speedskating. Kim also won the 2009 world title, and was the Grand Prix final champion three times.

"It's disappointing because it involves Yu-na," Orser said. "I love her and I've been working with her and we've grown together and she's flourished under this team that we had. So I'm saddened we weren't able to get through it.

"Now it's done. We all move forward," he added. "I want the best for Yu-na."

In a statement released by AT Sports, Kim thanked Orser for helping her become Olympic champion and wished him well in the future. But her postings had a far more bitter tone.

"It's unbearable to let people believe lies and let criticisms fall on those who are innocent," she wrote. "Why something that could have ended well had to end up being so hurtful like this to each other ... I just really want it to stop."

-- Nancy Armour


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