Showing posts with label Olympic Games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olympic Games. Show all posts

Saturday, August 22, 2015

The summer of TORONTO 2015

The TORONTO sign at City Hall is a big hit.


The reason why I came to T.O. nearly two years ago has wrapped up with the conclusion of the TORONTO 2015 Pan and Parapan American Games.  All the planning, meetings and writing culminated with the successful delivery of the Games. Athletes competed, medals were won and our press clients had the required services and facilities to tell the stories of the Games.




Most of my time was spent in the two main press centres – at CIBC Pan Am Park (Exhibition Place) for the Pan Am Games and at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel for the Parapan Am Games  with long hours inside the press workrooms each day.  But, I did manage to make it to Nathan Phillips Square at Toronto City Hall twice for PANAMANIA concerts (the arts and culture festival) and the nightly fireworks. 

Other highlights were seeing my first wheelchair basketball and wheelchair rugby games which enhanced my appreciation for para-sport.

Wheelchair basketball: CAN vs. MEX at Ryerson.

Wheelchair rugby: CAN vs. USA at Mississauga.

Canadian star Zak Madell interviewed by our Games News Service.

With Olympic medallist Charmaine Crooks -- we first met in 2001!

I enjoyed the opportunity to meet some new Games gypsies and to reconnect with former colleagues from the Games circuit. As with any multisport Games experience – the TORONTO 2015 Games are my sixth multisport event – there are highs and lows as you work the event. The real appreciation of what was accomplished comes with time.  


The Pan Am Opening Ceremony on July 10.

The 'pine-cone' cauldron.
A daytime look at the now famous TORONTO sign. It's remaining at City Hall for now.

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Curling in the desert


In the Patch -- the Orleans Ballroom.
Much was said over the last few weeks about curling making its debut in Las Vegas. So I'll say a bit more in this blog to complete this story -- a story that almost writes itself with all the tempting clichés about curling taking a gamble on Vegas or being a hit in Sin City.

My first impressions of the Continental Cup of Curling in Vegas were documented in a blogpost in the Curling News and in a story I wrote for the Canadian Press that was picked up by many Canadian news outlets.

Escorting curlers onto the ice - Vegas style.
While in the Orleans Arena, the actual on-ice activity was much like other curling events I’ve been to in Canada (Continental Cup, Brier, Scotties and Olympic trials).  About 80 percent of the fans in the stands in Vegas were Canadians who were escaping the winter weather. But, when curlers are escorted onto the ice by showgirls in sequins, cast members from Thunder from Down Under and Marilyn and Elvis impersonators, you know you’re not in Canada, anymore!  And the noisy crowd almost matched what we heard at the curling venue at the Vancouver Games.

When we left the arena and walked through the brightly-lit casino to the shuttle bus stop and waited for the bus in the desert sunshine surrounded by palm trees, we certainly enjoyed this new twist on a winter bonspiel.
 
 Skips such as Niklas Edin were pleased to pose with curling fans .

Curling officials said they're pleased with the success of the event -- with an attendance of more than 50,000 over the four days.  And it looks like the event will be back to Vegas in a few years.

The skips I talked to support a return to Vegas.

Canada’s Brad Jacobs said the crowds, with some 4,000 fans in the stands for many of the draws, were “phenomenal,” adding that “with all of those people (from Canada) travelling here, it’s really made this event a huge success.”
The view from the media bench.
Norway’s Thomas Ulsrud, the silver medallist from Vancouver 2010, said he’s been lucky enough to play in other Continental Cups, “but never played in front of a bigger crowd than this. That’s what the Cup needed, a move to Vegas.”

And 2013 World Champion Eve Muirhead of Scotland said being in Vegas “was unbelievable, I will be back.”
In the meantime, curling fans have a lot to look forward to in the next few months: Canadian national championships and of course the Sochi Olympic Winter Games.


The US Olympic Committee promoted the Sochi Games outside the Orleans Arena. Look for scenes of palm trees in Sochi during the Winter Games next month!


The WFG Continental Cup in Las Vegas.