India is ready, let the Games begin -- pity is, they
started 11 days ago.
As the Commonwealth Games closed today, Delhi had them in
good order -- Games buses were running on time, crowds at
many venues were sizeable, as security guards relented on
their frisking frenzy, and let spectators get in.
There were no terrorist attacks, no venues collapsed,
transport lanes worked a treat, no athletes were struck down
by dengue fever, a few Aussie and English swimmers got "Delhi
belly", and even that was not from the Commonwealth Village
food.
There were technical glitches with shooting electronic
targets that didn't register hits and possibly the worse
results service since the 1896 Athens Olympics, but
predictions of a technological Armageddon proved well off the
mark.
So, all in all these were -- to use Olympic Games parlance --
the not so baddest Games ever.
For a Games where all the (western media) talk going in was
about cancellation, or a swift transfer to Melbourne, and
where athletes bailed out pre-Games for fears over their
safety and hygiene, Delhi far exceeded expectations.
At the start that did not look possible, with the event beset
by problems. There were empty grandstands, allegations of
corruption around ticket sales, and Games bus drivers who did
now know their way around Delhi, so either didn't turn up, or
if they did, roamed the city in hopeless circles with
athletes trapped inside.
Security guards prevented people -- athletes, officials,
spectators, you name it -- from getting where they were
going, and confiscated water bottles, so fans had to watch
the sports in 40degC heat without it. Indians stayed away,
rather than go through that.
Yet things improved by the day, with important sport and
athlete related fix ups done first, followed by the small
details.
So, using the main press centre as an example of the trend, a
couple of days after the spectacular opening ceremony, food
other than coffee and biscuits was at last available, a bar
followed a few days later then -- three days before the
closing ceremony -- a souvenir shop.
And a dormant fountain at the Commonwealth Games Village
suddenly burst into life, a week into the Games. India was
ready.
None of this mattered once competition started. Delhi proved
a Commonwealth Games was not about than venues, transport and
accommodation -- it's about athletes and their competition,
and if that goes smoothly and is exciting, nothing else
matters.
"Delhi has performed. The feeling is the end result has been
good," Commonwealth Games Federation chairman Mike Fennell
told reporters today, though he diplomatically refused to
stipulate just how good.
Organising committee secretary general Lalit Bhanot told the
final press conference he never doubted the Games would
proceed.
"I had confidence always, I told everyone we would deliver
the Games, which we have done," Dr Bhanot said.
Delhi did perform, and it did deliver, albeit in a quirky,
colourful, spasmodic, random and often frustrating fashion,
attributes the well-organised and near-perfect Games at
Melbourne four years ago lacked.
India has eyes for hosting the 2020 Olympic Games, with that
dream seemingly so close to Delhi head honcho Suresh
Kalmadi's heart that he mistakenly said "Olympics" at the
final press conference today, when he had meant to say
"Commonwealth".
With, quirky and random not qualities the International
Olympic Committee holds dear to its own cold money oriented
heart, Delhi might have dealt a blow to its aspirations to
leap on to that stage.
Those Games, India is not ready for.
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