Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Aizle wrote:
The Olympics is about the best competitors from each country, not the overall best from the world. If you just went with the top 24 competitors period, smaller nations would NEVER be able to attend.
This is true, but there shouldn't be quotas on who makes it past preliminary events. The smaller nations can still send their athletes, and they'll still be competing in the team events. And true stand-outs from small nations will make it into the higher levels of competition.
This.
Besides, no one is talking about just automatically going with the top 24 competitors. This is about keeping someone out who would have been in the top 24 simply because she had 2 teammates with higher scores, and despite the fact that other qualifiers scored lower than she did, and worse, is apparently a rule unique to gymnastics. Just going with the top 24 would mean dispensing with qualifying rounds entirely, and make the Olympics a mere ancillary to other international competitions.
The idea that smaller nations would never be able to compete holds no water; frequently at least some of the top 24 would be from smaller nations in the first place and second, the competition is supposed to be about individual athletes representing heir nations, not about nations all competing with differences in population and national character controlled out of existence. During the Cold War, excessive focus on the international aspects of the competition turned the entire thing into a matter of national glory for east vs. west, with the cheating in order to win glory for socialism reaching epic heights.
Inspirational stories like Eddie the Eagle and the Jamaican Bobsled team are not what the Olympics are about. Note that in both cases, despite poor overall performance, these competitors qualified based on their own merit. They may look awful compared to other Olympians, but they're among the best in the world compared to everyone else. We do not need to keep a better bobsled team out just to give Jamaica an opportunity to lose in a medal round.