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Our declining fortunes at the Olympics
E. Ablorh-Odjidja August 14, 2012
The Olympics is a good place to start judging the rise
and fall of a nation’s character and much more. While at it, you
will also be able to deduce that a nation that fails to build on
past achievements is certain and most likely to be the first in
none, regardless of the field of endeavor.
So was the
story for Ghana writ large at the London 2012 Olympics. But who
in the country would care?
The team that represented
Ghana at the games consisted of nine athletes and 14 officials.
On arrival in London, two athletes were suspended from the games
on medical grounds. Astonishingly, one was a boxer with a broken
jaw, sustained in a contest the month before the games.
Ghana’s first* presence (the Gold Coast as it was then known) at
the Olympics was in the summer games of Helsinki 1952.
With the exceptions of 1976 and 1980, when boycotts against New
Zealand and Russia were respectively taken, Ghana has always
been present at these games; with diminishing results in
achievement at every ensuing stage.
The 60s, however,
were banner years for sports in Ghana, including the Olympics.
In Rome in 1960, Ike Quartey, a boxer, won the first silver
medal for the country.
The Commonwealth Games, a separate
international sporting event for English-speaking countries,
also had a similar story about the 60s in Ghana.
The
most medal counts for Ghana at these Commonwealth games were
attained in Perth, Australia, 1962 (9 medals) and in Kingston,
Jamaica 1966 (9 medals).
In Kingston 1966, the team of
E. C. O. Addy, Stan Allotey, J. Addy, and B. K. Mends won gold
medals in the 4 x 110 yards (4 X 100 meters) race with a time of
39.8 sec; within a fraction of a second from breaking the world
record which then stood at 39.06 for that event, set by the
United States in Tokyo 1964.
E. C. O. Addy, a former
national sprinter, told this writer how he was recruited at
Fijai Secondary School in 1961 and didn’t know before then that
he was gifted as a sprinter.
Yet by 1966, Addy the
sprinter novice, and his mates were on the world stage in
Kingston, having smashed the Commonwealth record competing in
and with a country like Jamaica that years later was to produce
sprint legends; the likes of Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake.
At the 1966 games, Jamaica, by the way, came second behind Ghana
in the 4 x 110 yards relay in Kingston. Overall, Ghana placed
5th and Jamaica the 16th in medal rankings at the games.
At the recent London 2012 Olympics, however, Jamaica would
win the 4 X 100 meters relay, setting a new world record in
36.84 seconds; some 2.96 seconds faster than Addy and teammates
in Kingston, 1966.
Jamaica has improved, and Ghana has
not, as shown in London.
Kingston 1966 was a good 46
years away from London in 2012, with enough time to prepare and
gradually improve. Jamaica’s assault on the world record in the
4 X 100 meters race in London was an evidentiary statement on
the character of this small island nation – discipline and
readily building on the athletic talents that it had. Ghana, the
grasshopper nation, went to sleep on its talents.
Since
1966, Jamaica has used the sports process to ignite the
athleticism of her sons and daughters. Its athletes have gained
both international fame and respect and so has the little nation
of Jamaica.
Can the same be said for Ghana?
For
answers, start with the star athletes of the 60s. They were
faster than the Jamaicans but where are these athletes now and
what use have we made of their reputes and experiences?
Many of these athletes are still with us. Addy, Ahay, and others
live in Ghana. Stan Allotey lives in the US.
In 1966,
Allotey won the gold in 200 meters at Kingston and was listed
that same year as the third fastest in the 200 meters, behind
Tommie Smith and Jim Hines of the USA.
Also living in
the US is the lady athlete Ms. Alice Anum, who collected two
silvers and a bronze in two Commonwealth Games, Edinburg 70 (100
& 200 meters) and Christchurch 74 (200 meters).
It could
be useful if these medaled athletes of international fame had
been utilized in the administration and building of the sports
culture for the country like others nations did after 1966.
These famous athletes could have served as role models for
budding athletes in the regions and schools. Instead, they have
been simply forgotten.
The same is true for other fields.
Professional soccer players and elite world-class professional
boxers are shunted aside once their useful days are gone.
There is the story of former world champion Azumah Nelson, a
Hall of Famer and famously known as the professor in
international professional boxing circles, predicting before
London 2012 that Ghanaian boxers would not win a single medal.
We could have asked why and then been schooled by him.
Instead, Azunah’s prediction was greeted with derision from some
quarters.
It should be no mystery that Ghana would slide
into oblivion while Jamaica could grow into a mighty Olympic
nation if our famed athletes are denied input in the game. That
a famed athlete like the professor of boxing, Azumah Nelson,
could be derided on the merits of boxing by folks of lesser and
no talent must spell doom for the sport of boxing in Ghana.,
Considering first that both Jamaicans and Ghanaians come
from the same gene pool, it should be proper to ask why they are
doing well in the sprint races than we are. Add the fact that we
have a population base of 25 million and Jamaica has about 3
million people and it becomes necessary to question why the lag
in Olympic performances at the sprint races.
Even the
smaller nations of Grenada and Trinidad & Tobago, the same gene
pool as Ghana, much smaller in population size, had between them
five medals in 2012; one was gold for Grenada in the 400 meters.
Just one medal for Ghana in 2012 would have been enough
to build a future athletic reputation for the country. So, why
where went the effort?
An honest response would be to
place the blame for Ghana’s lack of achievement on the
dedication of her officials. Their mindset of selfishness and
insular thinking have brought achievements and fame in the game
of sports to a standstill.
Most sports achievements came
during the 60s. And it took a conscious effort to produce the
result that Ghana had. It was spearheaded by the Center of
Organization for Sports (COS), under the leadership of Mr. Ohene
Djan.
Like him or not, Ohene Djan created a sports
administration that brought young athletes from secondary
schools at regional levels to the fore of national and
international sports competitions.
He had in place a
system that gave budding athletes the chance to justify their
inclusion at select sports’ meets. Within five years, young E.
C. O. Addy was a star and had international athlete fame.
Before Eddie Blay, a boxer from the Central Region won his
bronze at the Tokyo Olympics in 1964, he had to battle first
hardened local boxers, like Ago Welbeck much to the trill of
boxing fans at the Sports Hall at the Accra Stadium. Had Blay
suffered from a broken jaw, he would not have shown up at the
Olympics. Sheer sport’s discipline would have demanded that
under Ohene Djan. Ohene Djan’s administration was such that
it supported sporting activities from all the regions. Athletes
from the regions got the chance to compete, resulting in happy
and proud moments for Ghana.
The absence of a system for
nationwide recruitment, and training, the deficiency of
experienced officials and sports facilities, lack of funding,
and administrative know-how foretold the outcome years before
2012.
And, Professor Azumah Nelson knew it before it
happened!
The lesson in all this is the lack of character
and discipline of our nation that has been on global display
throughout the years since the 60s.
And it is not the
fault of our athletes in London 2012 that we came up empty. It
is the fault of a system that we have been nursing for years.
One that promotes politics and rewards, meritless cronies.
Hence, the mediocrity!
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher
www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, August 14, 2012.
Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce,
with credits, unedited. If posted on a website, email a copy of
the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish at all.
*Publisher's Note: A reader, Mr. Percy Bonney-Andrews of the
UK, brought to our attention that Ghana's (then the Gold Coast)
first participation in the Olympics was not in 1952, but in
"1948 Olympic Games held in London (White City Stadium)".
The publisher is inclined to believe the point raised is
valid. The Olympics Museum, however, does not list this point.
Please check: http://olympic-museum.de/part_count/1948.htm and
help to bring this matter to the attention of the Ghana Olympic
Committee.
Mr. Bonney-Andrews lists the athletes
represented at the 1948 Olympic Games as Messrs AO Lawson
(Sprinter), G. S Laryea (Sprinter), Oswald Amaning (Huddler), A.
A Kwofie (long-distance runner), Van Dyke (High Jumper), and
another Laryea (Long Jumper). He adds "I am unaware whether they
returned home with a medal or not, but I hope this information
will help you amend your records."
He also adds the
following names as participants: "Two other athletes who
attended the 1948 Olympic Games held in London (White City
Stadium) have come to mind. They are Messrs Saka Akwei and J. K
Owusu but I am not sure of the events in which they took part.
Saka Akwei, an old student of Achimota became a Sculpltor in
later life, and J. K Owusu was a Policeman."
The mystery
is why Ghana (or the Gold Coast) is not on the Olympics Museum's
list as a participant in 1948. Are our sports governing bodies
aware of the neglect and is this how best they think to serve
the memory of our athletes and legends of history; and
consequently, our country?
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