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Taylor: U.S. piling up Olympic medals as Canada stumbles

09:52 AM CST on Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Column by JEAN-JACQUES TAYLOR / The Dallas Morning News | jjtaylor@dallasnews.com

Jean-Jacques Taylor

VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Many Olympians spend their lives preparing for an event that lasts a minute or two but can define them for a lifetime.

Champions embrace so-called pressure because they view the Olympics as an opportunity to display their talent, not as a risk of failing, before the millions watching the Games.

Right now, is there any doubt about the approach the Americans have taken as we move into Week 2 of the 2010 Olympics?

Nope.

The U.S. already has 24 medals, three more than second-place Germany. Two more medals and the U.S. will eclipse its total from the 2006 Games in Turin. Eleven more, and the U.S. will beat its record of 34 medals set in Salt Lake City in 2002.

The impressive aspect of the U.S. haul is that the medals aren't coming just from athletes we expected to dominate their events.

No one who follows the Winter Games is surprised that Shaun White, Lindsey Vonn, Apolo Ohno and Shani Davis have stood on the medal podium multiple times.

We knew others such as Evan Lysacek and Bode Miller had talent, but who really thought that Lysacek would beat Evgeni Plushenko, the 2006 gold medalist and master of the quad, for the gold medal in men's figure skating? Or that the 32-year-old Miller, who contemplated retirement, would earn a gold medal in the men's Super Combined?

And let's not even talk about the silver medal in Nordic Combined won by Johnny Spillane, the first American to medal in that sport.

The U.S. has won 83 medals in the last three Winter Olympiads.

It's not coincidence. Success begins with amateur programs.

In 1996, USA Hockey began a national team program that houses the nation's best juniors and seniors with families in Ann Arbor, Mich., allowing them to face the best competition.

The program costs nearly $3 million a year, but the U.S. owns the international titles in the under-17, under-18 and under-20 divisions.

Then there's the Maine Winter Sports Center, a non-profit organization that opened in 1999 and focuses on biathlon. Last year, Tim Burke became the first American biathlete to lead the world rankings. The sports center also has a Nordic skiing program.

Ashley Caldwell, 16, an aerial skier, was one of the first people accepted into the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Association's Elite Air Program, among the reasons she's competing in these Games.

And to think, the U.S. has done it without a fancy slogan and marketing campaign such as Canada's.

"Own the Podium."

Not this time.

In the last five years, Canada has spent $117 million on facilities, coaching and marketing in its quest to rule the medal standings in Vancouver after winning a Canadian-record 24 medals at the 2006 Games.

The slogan seemed full of bravado for a country that prides itself on politeness and friendliness. Now, that doesn't mean Canadians don't compete hard or receive tremendous support.

They do.

Maybe that's the problem. Perhaps Canadian athletes are trying too hard on their home soil.

Skier Jen Heil looked like she wanted to cry after earning a silver medal but failing to become the first Canadian to win a gold medal on home soil. Melissa Hollingsworth, a strong candidate to medal in skeleton, dropped out of contention on her final run.

Speed skater Denny Morrison initially implied the Own the Podium program hurt his performance in the 1,000 meters because it prevented him from training with Team USA's Davis.

A day later, he apologized.

Canada's 5-3 loss to the U.S. in men's hockey Sunday completed a disappointing week.

Chris Rudge, leader of the Canadian Olympic Committee, delivered a concession speech Monday because Canada isn't going to win the medal count. It's tied for fifth with nine medals.

At leastCanada has three gold medals in these Games. Canada had never won a gold medal at home, either in 1988 in Calgary or in the 1976 Summer Games in Montreal.

So there has been progress.

Just not enough of it.U.S. medals by decade

Decade Olympiads Gold Silver Bronze Total
2010s 1 7 7 10 24
2000s 2 19 22 18 59
1990s 3 17 12 8 37
1980s 3 12 9 5 26
1970s 2 6 5 7 18
1960s 3 5 11 8 24
1950s 2 6 9 3 18
1940s 1 3 4 2 9
1930s 2 7 4 5 16
1920s 2 3 4 3 10
Below expectations

The Canadian Olympic team set its record of 24 medals at the 2006 games and hoped to finish No. 1 in the medal count on its home turf. A look at how Canada has fared at each Winter Olympics:

Olympics G S B Tot.
2010 4 4 1 9
2006 7 10 7 24
2002 7 3 7 17
1998 6 5 4 15
1994 3 6 4 13
1992 2 3 2 7
1988 0 2 3 5
1984 2 1 1 4
1980 0 1 1 2
1976 1 1 1 3
1972 0 1 0 1
1968 1 1 1 3
1964 1 0 2 3
1960 2 1 1 4
1956 0 1 2 3
1952 1 0 1 2
1948 2 0 1 3
1936 0 1 0 1
1932 1 1 5 7
1928 1 0 0 1
1924 1 0 0 1
All-time winter medal standings

Nation Gold Total
1. Norway 103 290
2. United States 84 237
3. Soviet Union 87 217
4. Germany 72 192
5. Austria 53 191
6. Finland 42 152
7. Canada 42 127
8. Sweden 45 121
8. Switzerland 40 121
10. East Germany 39 110
All-time medal standings

Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
Norway 103 101 86 290
United States 84 86 67 237
Soviet Union 87 63 67 217
Germany 72 70 50 192
Austria 53 66 72 191
Finland 42 58 52 152
Canada 42 41 44 127
Sweden 45 31 45 121
Switzerland 40 37 44 121
East Germany 39 36 35 110
Italy 36 32 37 105
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