IOC Drops Softball From Olympic Games
By Robert H. Kelly
When the announcement came out of the International Olympic
Committee meetings in Singapore that softball and baseball
dropped were being eliminated from the Olympic program in 2012,
many, including myself, were stunned.
I could understand why baseball was eliminated. The fact that
Olympic teams do not include the best players in the world was
one of the major factors in that decision.
Major League Baseball has no vested interest in the Olympics.
Why should they? Participating in the Olympics would not give
the teams, players, and owners and benefits that would be
tangible. Could you see the owners deciding to shut down the
season for a few weeks so some of their best could participate?
I think not!
I think that Major League Baseball’s transparent drug policy
might also have had something to do with it.
Participation in the Olympic Games would require the all
professional players would have to submit to and pass year
round, mandatory and random drug tests. The Players Union would
never go for that.
My belief is “so what.” The Olympic didn’t need major
league players. Participate with those that want to follow the
IOC rules and wanted to play for the love of the game. But none
of these statements mean anything now. Baseball is gone from the
Olympcis.
However, none of this relates to softball, but some will try to
tell you it does.
In the nine years since softball was included in the Olympic
Games, I have never heard of a softball player testing positive
for performance drugs.
Softball is participated in over one hundred countries around
the world. Girls are gravitating to the sport in record numbers.
The sport is gaining in leaps and bounds at the local, national,
and international level. In the past three Olympics, all games
were sold out to record setting crowds.
Prior to the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, I was in Columbus,
Georgia for the 1995 Superball Classic. It was the first
international softball tournament I had ever covered as a
journalist.
Not knowing what to expect, I arrived in Columbus, notepad and
camera in hand, with the naiveté of a novice softball reporter.
It didn’t take me long to realize that softball had gone big
time, and this was not the softball that I knew about.
I remembered softball as the old slow-pitch variety of my youth.
The games played in Columbus were the softball of the future.
The girls were athletes, with the skills reviling many
professional baseball players. However, that is where the
resemblance ended.
It is very possible that members of the IOC thought of softball
and baseball as the same sport. It is also possible that many of
those same members had no idea what softball was.
If they did lump the problems of Major League Baseball in with
softball, there could be no greater crime.
The IOC has stated on numerous times their desire to increase
the participation of females in the Games. So why did they
eliminate one of the most popular team sports in the Games?
If any of the IOC members had ever picked up at bat, stepped up
to the plate and faced the likes of Jennie Finch, Christa
Williams, Lisa Fernandez, or even a Cat Osterman, they would
know the love, intensity, and competitiveness that many feel for
the sport.
They would have understood that softball gives many young girls
and women the chance to achieve their goals, and how their
success on the diamond would carry over to their everyday and
future lives.
The IOC really missed the boat on this decision. I wonder how
many of those members would own up to their true votes. The IOC
did not release the voting tallies or the outcome of the votes.
I wonder why?
If they truly cared about Olympic ideals, increasing female
participation in the Games, or even had a sense of fair play,
they would reinstate softball immediately.
Only time will tell if their decision was correct. I am sure
with the passage of time, history will view their decision with
the same disgust and disdain that it deserves.
About the Author: Robert H. Kelly is a sport writer from Texas.
His writings on Texas sporting events and events with Texas
participants attempt to provide a unique perspective not covered
by mainstream media. He can be reached at texsportpub@aol.com.
Source: www.isnare.com