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#1
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It's been under discussion for several times, but I want to bring it up again.
There have been several pro's and con's towards soaring in Olympics, but nobody argues that it'd rise the popularity of the sport. So it is important for soaring community. Therefore my question is following: Wich way is soaring worse than sailing? None of the cities that have organised Olympic games in the past would have any geographic troubles on organising soaring competitions (Moscow had troubles with organising sailing competition which had to be held in Tallinn - 900 km away). None of the latest summer games that I remember have had such miserable weather that the competition would have to be left unheld. The main argument against soaring is the fact that equipment can make a difference here. Well. Here is the challenge for igc. They have to face that their first trial of monoclass failed and they have to try again. This time with relatively high-performing, yet still not expencive standard or 15m class design. As a matter of fact I don't believe that sailing deserves to have 9 different classes on Olympics and soaring none. I personally think that FAI has failed bigtime to find the concensus amongst all air sports to get air sports represented on Olympic games. It shall be the biggest argument towards Olympic Commety - there's no air sports in Olympics nowadays. And the most suitable sport would be soaring because it's competitive, not so dependent on equipment and directly measurable. Making soaring TV-friendly shall not be a problem as well today. And with racing tasks only allowed on olympics it shall be understandable for general public as well. How can we do it? Regards, Kaido |
#2
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One could make it more of a spectator sport by having synchronized soaring,
with loops, rolls and spins judged while synchronized, with points deducted for less than perfect landings. The new Sparrowhawk sailplane would be perfect for this event. Colin --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 6/30/04 |
#3
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Any sport that wants to crack the Olympic shell must pass these two tests:
1) People must want to watch it, which means it must have a visual appeal and must work on television. (Unfortunately, soaring might be the least direct and television-friendly sport I can think of.) 2) It must demonstrate the above by successful participation in the International World Games Association (IWGA), a collection of 30-odd Olympic wanna-bes that have their games every 4 years, one year after the Olympic games. (Think of the IWGA as the Olympic "farm system".) The 2005 IWGA will be in Duisburg, Germany. The IOC alway visits the IWGA to select which, if any, of the IWGA's sports might be suitable for inclusion as demonstration sports at the next Olympics. If a sport manages to get selected as an Olympic demonstration sport, it must then pass the test of succeeding in an actual Games. Good weather will not be enough for soaring -- see (1) above. Like it or not, the Games are about revenue, period. The FAI has been working hard since the mid 1980s to get one of its airsports into the Olympics. (Remember the "rings" freefall formation over the opening ceremonies at the 1988 games.) Parachuting (4-way Formation Skydiving and Accuracy Landing) has been an IWGA participant since Finland's 1997 games, and was the largest spectator ticket seller at the 2001 games in Akita, Japan. (The Accuracy Landing event is very popular with spectators.) Alas, the IOC elected not to include parachuting in the 2008 Beijing games, so the FAI will be without a representative for at least 8 more years. Interestingly, the 2005 IWGA will feature "Air sports: parachuting, gliding, free flight (hang gliding, paragliding)". It might be worth a visit to the FAI and IGC web sites to what form "gliding" will take at Duisburg. I'm certainly looking forward to watching the results up close -- I'll be there to support the parachuting events, but will be following the other air sports closely. More can be found at the IWGA web site: http://www.worldgames-iwga.org -ted w. "2NO" "iPilot" wrote in message ... It's been under discussion for several times, but I want to bring it up again. There have been several pro's and con's towards soaring in Olympics, but nobody argues that it'd rise the popularity of the sport. So it is important for soaring community. Therefore my question is following: Wich way is soaring worse than sailing? None of the cities that have organised Olympic games in the past would have any geographic troubles on organising soaring competitions (Moscow had troubles with organising sailing competition which had to be held in Tallinn - 900 km away). None of the latest summer games that I remember have had such miserable weather that the competition would have to be left unheld. The main argument against soaring is the fact that equipment can make a difference here. Well. Here is the challenge for igc. They have to face that their first trial of monoclass failed and they have to try again. This time with relatively high-performing, yet still not expencive standard or 15m class design. As a matter of fact I don't believe that sailing deserves to have 9 different classes on Olympics and soaring none. I personally think that FAI has failed bigtime to find the concensus amongst all air sports to get air sports represented on Olympic games. It shall be the biggest argument towards Olympic Commety - there's no air sports in Olympics nowadays. And the most suitable sport would be soaring because it's competitive, not so dependent on equipment and directly measurable. Making soaring TV-friendly shall not be a problem as well today. And with racing tasks only allowed on olympics it shall be understandable for general public as well. How can we do it? Regards, Kaido |
#4
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Your fist point is achievable and in theis regard soaring can compete (I
don't say it currently does) with many other sports. At least I do not know anyone who wants to watch 8days of constant swimming. Your second point is good information, but in order to succeed soaring needs to have a successful monoclass before and PW-5 just isn't that. We have to get our own things ok before we jump to the IWGA. Otherwise we're just another wannabies. "Ted W" wrote in message ... Any sport that wants to crack the Olympic shell must pass these two tests: 1) People must want to watch it, which means it must have a visual appeal and must work on television. (Unfortunately, soaring might be the least direct and television-friendly sport I can think of.) 2) It must demonstrate the above by successful participation in the International World Games Association (IWGA), a collection of 30-odd Olympic wanna-bes that have their games every 4 years, one year after the Olympic games. (Think of the IWGA as the Olympic "farm system".) The 2005 IWGA will be in Duisburg, Germany. The IOC alway visits the IWGA to select which, if any, of the IWGA's sports might be suitable for inclusion as demonstration sports at the next Olympics. If a sport manages to get selected as an Olympic demonstration sport, it must then pass the test of succeeding in an actual Games. Good weather will not be enough for soaring -- see (1) above. Like it or not, the Games are about revenue, period. The FAI has been working hard since the mid 1980s to get one of its airsports into the Olympics. (Remember the "rings" freefall formation over the opening ceremonies at the 1988 games.) Parachuting (4-way Formation Skydiving and Accuracy Landing) has been an IWGA participant since Finland's 1997 games, and was the largest spectator ticket seller at the 2001 games in Akita, Japan. (The Accuracy Landing event is very popular with spectators.) Alas, the IOC elected not to include parachuting in the 2008 Beijing games, so the FAI will be without a representative for at least 8 more years. Interestingly, the 2005 IWGA will feature "Air sports: parachuting, gliding, free flight (hang gliding, paragliding)". It might be worth a visit to the FAI and IGC web sites to what form "gliding" will take at Duisburg. I'm certainly looking forward to watching the results up close -- I'll be there to support the parachuting events, but will be following the other air sports closely. More can be found at the IWGA web site: http://www.worldgames-iwga.org -ted w. "2NO" "iPilot" wrote in message ... It's been under discussion for several times, but I want to bring it up again. There have been several pro's and con's towards soaring in Olympics, but nobody argues that it'd rise the popularity of the sport. So it is important for soaring community. Therefore my question is following: Wich way is soaring worse than sailing? None of the cities that have organised Olympic games in the past would have any geographic troubles on organising soaring competitions (Moscow had troubles with organising sailing competition which had to be held in Tallinn - 900 km away). None of the latest summer games that I remember have had such miserable weather that the competition would have to be left unheld. The main argument against soaring is the fact that equipment can make a difference here. Well. Here is the challenge for igc. They have to face that their first trial of monoclass failed and they have to try again. This time with relatively high-performing, yet still not expencive standard or 15m class design. As a matter of fact I don't believe that sailing deserves to have 9 different classes on Olympics and soaring none. I personally think that FAI has failed bigtime to find the concensus amongst all air sports to get air sports represented on Olympic games. It shall be the biggest argument towards Olympic Commety - there's no air sports in Olympics nowadays. And the most suitable sport would be soaring because it's competitive, not so dependent on equipment and directly measurable. Making soaring TV-friendly shall not be a problem as well today. And with racing tasks only allowed on olympics it shall be understandable for general public as well. How can we do it? Regards, Kaido |
#5
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iPilot wrote:
Your fist point is achievable and in theis regard soaring can compete (I don't say it currently does) with many other sports. At least I do not know anyone who wants to watch 8days of constant swimming. Your second point is good information, but in order to succeed soaring needs to have a successful monoclass before and PW-5 just isn't that. We have to get our own things ok before we jump to the IWGA. Otherwise we're just another wannabies. Why a single class? To say its needed for the Olympics implies, to me, that there is something wrong or unfair with current FAI classes. Any racing is expensive, so I don't buy that as a valid argument. Lots of people race Standard and 15 m class all over the world, the FAI has experience with it, and one class racing doesn't occur naturally in the international soaring world (WC is contrived, and 1-26 is US only). If gliders are to be raced in the Olympics, our best bet is to propose a class that's already established, with gliders already racing. Shawn |
#6
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Beacuse otherwise it's a tehnical sport where money invested in equipment can make a difference and
this is what is avoided generally by IOC. The examples you made are just bad. Reasons? WC is flawed in design philosophy and class requirements. I do not really see who it was made for - pilots who hav necessary skills to compete have the skills to fly more complex aircraft than the oversimplified WC design. 1-26 is morally and physically aged and US only. Last but not least. Sailing wouldn't be represented in Olympics when they wouldn't have made monoclass rules long time ago. And I do not think that there's possible to launch 3 different glider monoclasses from day one. BTW monoclass does not equal single class. Monoclass is a class where only one particular glider (like PW-5) is allowed to participate. 3 different monoclasses in olympics would be super, but i do not believe that it is achievable in any foreseeable future. Maybe we shall have monoclasses based on one standard class design and one 18 meter design. Maybe just to declare one current design from both classes a standard and make the drawings available to everyone (that doesn't answer the cost needs however). There's nothing wrong with current FAI classes. Just the principles of competition are different. In it's current form soaring is a form on technical sport. And to expect a techical sport to achieve IOC accept is the same as to expect F1 racing to make it to the Olympics - never happens. "scurry" wrote in message ... iPilot wrote: Your fist point is achievable and in theis regard soaring can compete (I don't say it currently does) with many other sports. At least I do not know anyone who wants to watch 8days of constant swimming. Your second point is good information, but in order to succeed soaring needs to have a successful monoclass before and PW-5 just isn't that. We have to get our own things ok before we jump to the IWGA. Otherwise we're just another wannabies. Why a single class? To say its needed for the Olympics implies, to me, that there is something wrong or unfair with current FAI classes. Any racing is expensive, so I don't buy that as a valid argument. Lots of people race Standard and 15 m class all over the world, the FAI has experience with it, and one class racing doesn't occur naturally in the international soaring world (WC is contrived, and 1-26 is US only). If gliders are to be raced in the Olympics, our best bet is to propose a class that's already established, with gliders already racing. Shawn |
#7
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iPilot wrote:
1-26 is morally and physically aged and US only. Interesting thought: the "Old Morality" of the SGS 1-26 is a hindrance? I would have thought honesty would be considered one of its best features. As far as "aged" goes, I am twice as old as my 1-26E. Jack |
#8
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"soaring is a form on technical sport. And to expect a techical sport to
achieve IOC accept is the same as to expect F1 racing to make it to the Olympics - never happens" What's the different between racing sailplanes and sailboats - apart from water and air? Both require technical and tactical skills. A monoclass sailplane/sailboat comparison with F1 is invalid as competitors performance in F1 is largely differentiated by the car. I also think that with todays technology and some imagination, the 'gliding is not a spectator sport' argument is weakened. Sure it is not lke watching F1 go round a circuit where they pass by every two minutes, but there is no reason why each glider could not be equipped to broadcast live video, GPS co-ords, and telemetry, and the gaggles could be followed by helicopters also broadcasting live. Sailboat racing is not always exactly gripping neck-to-neck stuff but I'm sure that a big gaggle would be as interesting for many viewers to watch as a few sailboats rounding a buoy. To promote our sport we need to be positive, and to exploit technology and creativity to present it to viewers as the exciting, challenging and adrenalin pumping sport that it is. "iPilot" wrote in message ... Beacuse otherwise it's a tehnical sport where money invested in equipment can make a difference and this is what is avoided generally by IOC. The examples you made are just bad. Reasons? WC is flawed in design philosophy and class requirements. I do not really see who it was made for - pilots who hav necessary skills to compete have the skills to fly more complex aircraft than the oversimplified WC design. 1-26 is morally and physically aged and US only. Last but not least. Sailing wouldn't be represented in Olympics when they wouldn't have made monoclass rules long time ago. And I do not think that there's possible to launch 3 different glider monoclasses from day one. BTW monoclass does not equal single class. Monoclass is a class where only one particular glider (like PW-5) is allowed to participate. 3 different monoclasses in olympics would be super, but i do not believe that it is achievable in any foreseeable future. Maybe we shall have monoclasses based on one standard class design and one 18 meter design. Maybe just to declare one current design from both classes a standard and make the drawings available to everyone (that doesn't answer the cost needs however). There's nothing wrong with current FAI classes. Just the principles of competition are different. In it's current form soaring is a form on technical sport. And to expect a techical sport to achieve IOC accept is the same as to expect F1 racing to make it to the Olympics - never happens. "scurry" wrote in message ... iPilot wrote: Your fist point is achievable and in theis regard soaring can compete (I don't say it currently does) with many other sports. At least I do not know anyone who wants to watch 8days of constant swimming. Your second point is good information, but in order to succeed soaring needs to have a successful monoclass before and PW-5 just isn't that. We have to get our own things ok before we jump to the IWGA. Otherwise we're just another wannabies. Why a single class? To say its needed for the Olympics implies, to me, that there is something wrong or unfair with current FAI classes. Any racing is expensive, so I don't buy that as a valid argument. Lots of people race Standard and 15 m class all over the world, the FAI has experience with it, and one class racing doesn't occur naturally in the international soaring world (WC is contrived, and 1-26 is US only). If gliders are to be raced in the Olympics, our best bet is to propose a class that's already established, with gliders already racing. Shawn --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.735 / Virus Database: 489 - Release Date: 06/08/2004 |
#9
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![]() There have been several pro's and con's towards soaring in Olympics, but nobody argues that it'd rise the popularity of the sport. So it is important for soaring community. Therefore my question is following: Wich way is soaring worse than sailing? Because in sailing, you can "park" a bunch of boats, with the requisite TV crews, along the couse line. People will be able to watch the event - not so in soaring. Yes, I'm aware of the proposals to transmit GPS coordinates of the competitors to be displayed in some fashion. It ain't the same, IMHO. For other would be Olympic events, see: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.j...toryID=5746437 Tony V. http://home.comcast.net/~verhulst/SOARING |
#10
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![]() "Tony Verhulst" wrote in message ... There have been several pro's and con's towards soaring in Olympics, but nobody argues that it'd rise the popularity of the sport. So it is important for soaring community. Therefore my question is following: Wich way is soaring worse than sailing? Because in sailing, you can "park" a bunch of boats, with the requisite TV crews, along the couse line. People will be able to watch the event - not so in soaring. Yes, I'm aware of the proposals to transmit GPS coordinates of the competitors to be displayed in some fashion. It ain't the same, IMHO. For other would be Olympic events, see: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.j...toryID=5746437 Tony V. http://home.comcast.net/~verhulst/SOARING The only way I can see soaring as a spectator sport is as a very technical one. Not only would it require real-time GPS tracking, it would require on board TV cameras on every competitor. Several camera aircraft would be needed to follow the leaders plus a staff of color commentators to explain why the pilot in 3rd place is taking a big chance by passing up that 5 knot thermal in an effort to claim 1st place. You couldn't do it real-time, you would have to cut away to another sport while the drama develops. Most of it would be edited recaps of the last hour or so of the action with color commentary. Long final glides just aren't very interesting except to the pilot. The rules would have to be vastly simplified so the audience could understand them. Start gates, finish gates, simple speed triangles and maybe even free distance would interest the audience. On the other hand, soaring is a visually compelling activity. There are very talented videographers who could produce stunning video clips that would hold a very large audience. The technology to do it just barely exists and it the cost would be astronomical. However, do it right and you would have half a billion people from around the world on the edge of their seats. I've got a feeling that it will happen sooner or later. Bill Daniels |
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