By Francis X. Rocca on 5.2.02 @ 9:42AM
People compete for the darnedest things -- for good reason.
The International Skating Union has suspended
a French figure skating judge for fixing the pairs event at the
2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. The judge supposedly obeyed
the head of her nation's ice sports federation (also suspended) in
awarding the Russian pair first place, on the understanding that
Russian judges would then favor the French in ice dancing.
The suspended judge insists on her innocence and promises to get
back at the organization that has punished her: "I will explain how
it functions," she says. "It is a system that is extremely slanted,
dictatorial and even corrupt."
All this must be distressing to skating fans, but it may be even
more so to those of us who don't follow athletics at all. Though
I've never felt a desire to watch any sports (much less actually
play them), I've always respected them from a distance as one realm
of human endeavor where excellence is clear and primacy goes
undisputed.
Maybe that's how it is, in the long run. I've never watched
Michael Jordan play, but on the word of everyone I respect -- and
everyone else, for that matter -- it's clear that no quibbling or
revisionism will ever rob him of superstar status.
But when it comes to judging particular events, why should we
expect mortals to be any more reliable than the jury at O.J.
Simpson's murder trial? Even head-to-head competitions like
football games have referees, whose calls, friends tell me, are not
always cheered by fans of the disadvantaged team.
The ice skating union is considering a plan to "reduce to a
minimum the prospect of bloc judging" by having computers make the
final decision in future competitions. I suppose that will make
outright fixing less likely, or at least more expensive, but no
computer can fully replace people at evaluating something so
nuanced and fundamentally subjective. There will always be a human
factor, and thus the potential for injustice.
Yet with all their manifest flaws, prizes keep their hold on the
imagination of contenders and spectators alike, and not just in the
world of sports.
Every years the Oscars race gets more transparently political,
with multi-million dollar media campaigns, endorsements from past
winners, and now even exposés by muckrakers like Matt
Drudge. If anyone ever believed that bestowal of the gold-plated
statuette had any necessary link to aesthetic or entertainment
value, it should now be obvious that it doesn't. Still, even the
most sophisticated cineastes will stay up late to hear who "the
winner is" (or however they present the thing nowadays).
Consider a higher-brow example, the Nobel Prizes. If you take
them seriously, you have to accept that Yasser Arafat is more a man
of peace than Ronald Reagan, and that Toni Morrison is a greater
writer than James Joyce. Surely not even Jimmy Carter or Bill
Clinton could believe something so absurd, but that hasn't stopped
both of them from striving for the laurel. V.S. Naipaul, who is a
great writer and knows it, reportedly moped for decades until the
Swedish Academy finally acknowledged him last year. As for the
Nobels in economics, chemistry, physics and medicine, don't get me
started (because, well, I don't know anything about them).
All this goes to show, not that prizes are worthless, but that
they're essential. Though it may make no sense, especially in the
absence of a Nobel-size monetary award (currently about one million
dollars), the prospect of honors inspires artists, scientists and
athletes to push themselves harder than they otherwise would. So
despite the rule-stretching and -breaking that the "race for the
gold" can encourage, in the end it's a race worth holding.
topics:
Economics, Sports, Law, Russia