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10th August 2008, 12:05 AM #1
The First Loser In Beijing - Is An Australian
There's nothing a Pom likes better than is to heap s--t on the Aussies. So here is an article taken from a leading British newspaper today. However he was caught out by an Aussie stating that he had got the score wrong when it actually was 21/9 21/16
. Go Aussies - Aussie Aussie Aussie, Oi Oi Oi
After 32 minutes, Beijing 2008's first loser
It had to be somebody, the question was who. The first loser of the Olympic Games made it just 32 minutes into the first day before she had to pack her kit bag and head home to the athlete's village. The badminton arena was the venue for this ignominious little slice of Olympic history. With play in simultaneous progress on all three of its courts, the start time of each match staggered in 10-minute intervals, one of six women would be the first to experience the pats on the back and the well-meant mutters of "unlucky" and "well-played". I was just hoping the loser didn't come from the first match, between Germany's Julianne Schenk and Indonesia's Maria Yulianti, as neither seemed to be a likely source of good material given my complete inability to speak either language. For a while it looked as though I'd have to attempt an interview in universal sign language, what with Yulianti losing the first set. Fortunately for me, an unfortunate Australian was being given a badminton lesson on the next court, conceding her first set 21-6 in the same time it took Yulianti to lose hers, despite the 10-minute head-start. It had to be somebody, and it was Erin Carroll, a 22-year-old Australian from the town of Ballarat, Victoria. It was just 9.32am local time when Spain's Yoana Martinez struck a match-winning smash into the back left corner and ended Carroll's Olympics before most other competitors had even begun. Covering the first loser in the Games seemed a grizzly task, especially when most folk are still tucked up in bed recovering from the monumental night before. Carroll though took my odious question - "how does it feel to be the first person to be knocked out?" - in good humour. Understandably so perhaps, given that she's not competing in any of the doubles events but is staying on till the end of the Games, meaning she has two weeks to do what she says are her three favourite things - "Shopping, eating and watching sport". Carroll, a stocky brunette, had missed out on a spot in the original Australian team, but snuck in later on when some spaces were reallocated by the International Badminton Federation. She's only been playing the sport at the top level for a couple of years, so she really was happy just to have taken part rather than won. Which is something I didn't think was ever true of Australians. Leaning over the barrier railing, grinning, sweating, Carroll clearly wasn't too happy about how she'd played. The Spaniard had really thrashed her, tucking into her serve with relish. Carroll's longest run on serve was just three points, and in all she won just eight points while in possession of the shuttlecock. Ah well. She was still enthralled by the experience of playing in this vast domed arena in front of the large, loud and appreciative crowd.
She will, she told me, carry on training while her team-mates are still in the competition. I didn't quite believe that, so I asked again, and she admitted "Yeah, well actually I'll probably become their feeder, make up for the diets the rest of them are on". Bright-eyed, she disappeared into the changing room, anticipating the coming two weeks of fun and high on the Olympic spirit. If you're going to lose, my advice is to do it early.
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10th August 2008, 12:08 AM #2
Their just dirty cause we win more medals than them both in the olympics and the commonwealth games
Ashore
The trouble with life is there's no background music.
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10th August 2008, 12:06 PM #3
Was a sheila anyway, it was really Jim Carroll!
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10th August 2008, 12:14 PM #4
and it was Erin Carroll, a 22-year-old Australian from the town of Ballarat, Victoria.
With a temp of 0 to 6 expected today i can understand why she wants to stay there for 2 weeks.
Anyway good luck to her and all the others who put so much into their sport.
Shane Reese is another from here as well and she was in the 4x100 last night apparently - bloody olympics are a PITA with all the replays, replays etc drives you nuts.
did i mention the replays
cheers
regards
David
"Tell him he's dreamin.""How's the serenity" (from "The Castle")
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10th August 2008, 01:50 PM #5
I am just staggered at the mentality of writing an article about the first looser. No wonder they never win anything.
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10th August 2008, 06:48 PM #6
Use to be the sun never set on the British Empire,now it never rises
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10th August 2008, 07:20 PM #7
It's a journalism problem, not a nationality problem. Sad to see they have to sink so low.
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10th August 2008, 09:20 PM #8
bloudy souterners making us qlanders look bad
. what will we do with them
.
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