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Synchronized 'Homies' and Other Fun Memories From an Olympic Insomniac



For most people, the dust is already settling on all the extravagant Olympic action, but this sports graveyard desk editor is still riding high from sixteen sleepless days of swimming, more swimming, and the occasional taekwondo kick to the face. You want a unique perspective on the Beijing Games? This is the place to be. Just don't expect there to be any fresh coffee.

Michael Phelps is signing an endorsement deal for IHOP somewhere in exchange for free 5,000-calorie breakfasts for life.

Usain Bolt is concocting new ways to hot dog and high-step so he'll have some records left to break in 2012.

And I'm somehow still awake watching NBC replay the closing ceremony and Turkish oil wrestling highlights (now there's the next event!)

Spending the majority of the past sixteen days engulfed in Olympic coverage wasn't always a treat, but the memories I'll take with me will last a lifetime ... or at least four more years.

The visual treasures embedded in my mind aren't what you'd expect them to be. Phelps' record-breaking eight gold medals? Definitely wasn't a cakewalk, but we saw it coming. Bolt's ridonkulous sprints to history? Dude, his last name is Bolt.

Spanish synchronized swimmers dressed in 'gangsta' outfits, on the other hand? Now there's something I'm never going to forget, or hopefully see again for the rest of my life.

So let's toss the "memorable performances" and "winners and losers" aside for now. Here are my selections for the "Sweet 16" -- the lasting images that are off the beaten path ...

Cuba's Dayron Robles Breaks Hurdle Record, Showdown With China's Liu Xiang Looms


The 110-meter hurdles is shaping up as one of the biggest showdowns of the 2008 Summer Olympics, as Cuba's Dayron Robles has just broken the world record owned by China's biggest star.

Robles set a new world record by crossing the finish line in 12.87 seconds today in Ostrava, Czech Republic, breaking the previous record of 12.88, set by China's Liu Xiang. Liu is China's biggest star and its best hope of a transcendent performance in Beijing, and today's performance clearly establishes Robles as Liu's biggest rival.

Said the 21-year-old Robles:
"It's such a good time; I wasn't expecting that. Wow! I do not know if I can beat Liu Xiang in Beijing now. But we will see."
Robles beat Liu twice head-to-head last year. They won't face each other again until Beijing.

Liu Xiang, China's Biggest Sports Star, Feels More Pressure Than Any Olympic Athlete


Although he's nowhere near as famous in the United States as Yao Ming, China's biggest sports star and best hope for a transcendent Olympic performance is Liu Xiang, who won gold in the 110-meter hurdles in 2004 and is favored to do it again this summer in Beijing.

Liu is beloved in China and may soon be a star in the United States as well. Richard Deitsch of Sports Illustrated writes that when Liu visited New York City this week to promote the Reebok Grand Prix, organizers expected a handful of media and ended up with close to 100. His name won't be a secret in the West much longer.

At least, it won't be if he wins the gold medal. If he fails to take the gold, he'll be mostly a footnote in the United States, and he'll be viewed as a failure in China. No Olympic athlete in the world has more pressure on him than Liu.

Liu Xiang Beats Terrence Trammell, China Feels Confident Heading Into Olympics

China may have its best track and field team ever when it hosts the Olympics next year, and the biggest star of them all is Liu Xiang, who won the 110-meter hurdles yesterday. Watch him stare down American Terrence Trammell at the finish line:

The China Daily reports that there's growing confidence in the Chinese Olympic track team:

"I believe the Chinese athletes can do better in the Olympics because they compete at home," said Diack in an interview with Xinhua. "Liu Xiang will 100 per cent have the chance to win again and I think China can make breakthroughs in other events."

And The Washington Post reports that Liu knows the pressure is on him:

"I was under a lot of pressure to win the gold medal, but I think I was able to conquer my tension and the pressure," said Liu through an interpreter. "After I jumped over that last hurdle, I couldn't bare it anymore. I unintentionally looked around to see how the others were running."
I'm already excited to see how the others run in 2008.

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