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Blog entries tagged: Sports

The Jets and Giants and Nazi collaborators

Will a company with a Nazi past and a history of cooperating with Hitler win the naming rights for the new NFL stadium for the Giants and Jets?

More than six decades ago, Allianz, a Munich-based insurer and financial services company, insured facilities and personnel at concentration camps like Auschwitz and Dachau, had a chief executive who wore an SS uniform and served as Hitler’s economics minister, and refused to pay the life insurance policies of Jews, instead sending Jewish beneficiaries’ cash to Nazis.

Now Allianz wants its name atop the football stadium representing the hometown teams of the most Jewish city in America, and the world.

So far, no decision has been made, according to a report on the subject in Wednesday’s New York Times. The Giants and Jets have hired a crisis management firm to deal with possible problems arising from the sale of the stadium’s naming rights, which reportedly will go for $20 million to $30 million per year. Here’s what Richard Sandomir writes in the Times:

A deal with Allianz would not be easy to sell publicly, like Citigroup’s with the Mets. The possibility of an Allianz Stadium will make some people cringe, especially in a market that is home to many Jewish people, and in which the Tisch family, which owns half of the Giants, has supported many Jewish causes.

“There must be sensitivity to the psychological impact this would have,” said Elan Steinberg, a vice president of the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors and Their Descendants. “Survivors are still alive. It would not be appropriate to affix the Allianz name to a stadium name in an area where a lot of survivors still living.”

...Even the best arguments in Allianz’s favor are imperfect. The teams can say that Allianz has done much to atone for its role before and during the war, but no amount of apologies or restitution to victims and survivors can make full amends for its past.

The teams can say Allianz participated in two major efforts that began in the 1990s to compensate slave and forced laborers as well as insurance policy holders — but only after pressure from the American government, state insurance regulators and Jewish groups, and class-action suits filed in federal court.

The teams refused to speak about Allianz, which has United States subsidiaries like Fireman’s Fund Insurance and Oppenheimer Capital, because a deal is not done. And Allianz refused to discuss the naming-rights negotiations.

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How Israel wins

Not surprisingly, Israel’s first medal of the Beijing Olympics was not won in Beijing, but rather in Qingdao, where the Sailing competition is being held.

In recent days, many Israelis in China have flocked to Qingdao in hopes of seeing better results than they had in Beijing.

Shahar Zubari was able to clinch the bronze after finishing second in the the RS:X (Windsurfer) medal race on Wednesday, August 20. China was so excited for Israel, the official Xinhua news service even wrote a story about Olmert calling to congratulate Zubari.

After Uriel Heilman posted a list about Top Ten excuses from Israeli Olympians for not winning, I thought it was appropriate to see the way that Israeli Olympians talk after they win.

Quotes from bronze medalist Shahar Zubari from the Olympic News Service:

“"I feel so happy. I’m only 20 and I feel like a superstar, with all the media paying attention to me. I even painted my nails especially for this event.”

(At least his parents are trying to keep his feet on the ground, according to this Haaretz profile, where his mother Vered says, “It has always been and continues to be important to us to not let success get to his head.")

As for his Wednesday night celebration plans:

“I’m going to get drunk.”

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Beijing Bar Mitzvah

His voice had the slightest rasp to it, but that was probably from cheering on Team USA during the athletics competition at the Bird’s Nest the previous night. Isaac Shapiro did a remarkable job with his maftir and haftarah portion during his “American bar mitzvah in Beijing” on Saturday, Aug. 16.  His family also sponsored the lunch afterwards at Dini’s Kosher Restaurant, complete with groups of five Olympic ring-colored cupcakes (arranged just so, three on top of two) and a Bird’s Nest miniature cake.

Saturday night, after conquering the bimah, Isaac went to what was for him the highlight sporting event of his trip: back-to-back basketball. First China beat Germany in a heart-poundingly close match led by Yao Ming, and then the United States trounced Spain in what was supposed to be a fairly close match.  Isaac even learned the ubiquitous Chinese cheer “Let’s Go!” “JIA YOU!”
[caption id="attachment_1377" align="aligncenter" width="300" caption="From the bimah to the basketball game."]From the bimah to the basketball game.[/caption]

His family says despite attending team and individual gymnastics competitions, tennis, handball and basketball events among others, this was surely the highlight of their trip to China.

“Everyone has their bar mitzvah photos taken by the Wall,” dad Sam said, referring to the Kotel in Jerusalem. “But instead we took photos by the Great Wall.” Isaac’s mom, Marjie, who arranged the whole trip, added that “Israel certainly has a big role in our life, and I go there at least once a year. But this trip can show our kids the rising superpower of the future, and show them that there is community everywhere.”

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Beijing blues skies to cheer up Israeli athletes

With sailing competitions in Qingdao up and running today after being postponed due to insufficient wind, Israel’s Olympic delegation has something to be happy about again. Already at the time of this blogging, Israeli sailing duo Nike Kornecky and Vered Bouskila had moved up to third place in the rankings for the Women’s 470 event, and Shahar Zubari is still ranked first in the Men’s Windsurfer competition.

By comparison, Israeli athletes in Beijing (aside from Alex Shatilov who just barely qualified for the Men’s Floor event in Gymnastics) have been continually eliminated from their competitions, including medal hopefuls like Men’s Tennis Doubles pair Andy Ram and Jonathan Erlich.

At least today in Beijing there are clear skies to pick up their spirits. Yes, that’s right. Look at this picture of my office taken Friday, August 15 around 1pm.
[caption id="attachment_1354" align="alignleft" width="225" caption="See, there are beautiful Beijing days."]It\'s a beautiful Beijing day[/caption]

This is where I work for the official Beijing Olympic website (en.beijing2008.com). Not only are the skies blue and clouds distinguishable, but this is one of those rare days where you can see all the way to the hills that surround the city, hills that are normally veiled with smog.
[caption id="attachment_1355" align="aligncenter" width="300" caption="Most days I don\’t know these hills are there."]Most days I don\'t know these hills are there.[/caption]

The reason for this beautiful weather is three nights and one day of pouring rain in the Chinese capital. The older Chinese translator who sits at the computer next to mine, Mr. Bai, says this year saw an abnormal amount of rainfall for the normally dry city. I asked if it was because of the government’s cloud-seeding program, and he replied that it is sometimes, but the authorities also exaggerate their abilities. He thinks it’s a shame that that every time it rains, Beijingers now wonder whether it’s natural or manufactured.

Either way, the rain worked to clean the skies, and air, for tourists and competitors alike. How convenient that this improvement comes on the first day of the Athletics events…

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Israeli Shooting

This post’s title might be alarmist considering I am blogging about Olympic competition, not an act of violence. Still, I find myself just a bit alarmed that Israeli shooters are not the sharpest in the world.

I think Jews, outside of Israel at least, like to mythologize the IDF and Israeli military prowess. Yet off the battlefield today, the Ukraine (gold), United States (silver) and Norway (bronze) showed they can wield a rifle better.

Then again, does the IDF even use rifles?

Israelis Guy Starik and Gil Simkovich both competed in the Men’s 50m Rifle Prone qualification round, but neither finished in the top eight to reach the final.

Starik came in 12th with a score of 594, while Simkovich came in 22nd at 592 (many competitors tied with the same scores). Starik improved upon his Athens finish of 16th, and is one of two Israelis to be competing in his fourth Olympics.

Simkovich will also participate in the Men’s 50m Rifle 50m 3 Positions event on August 17, joined by fellow Israeli Doron Egozi, who already competed in the Men’s 10m Air Rifle Qualification and finished 41st in the qualification round.

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Basketball’s Blatt

During the first week of the Beijing Games, the media focused on the Iranian swimmer who skipped a race with an Israeli in the next lane, but not enough attention was paid to the historic handshakes that the entire men’s basketball team of Iran gave to a dual citizen American-Israeli Jew.

That Jew was David Blatt, the head coach of the Russian national men’s basketball team.

(And I bet you didn’t know the head coach of the Russian team was Jewish, either.)

The Boston-born Blatt played basketball at Princeton University from 1977-1981, and participated in the Maccabiah Games as part of the 1981 gold medal USA national team.

After his Maccabiah victory, Blatt began his Israeli hoops career, playing for teams including Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Jerusalem.  Blatt made his coaching mark with Maccabi Tel Aviv.  Blatt was at times this team’s assistant and head coach, and took Maccabi to win European championships in 2003–04 and 2004–05.

In 2004 he moved to Russia and signed as head coach with Dynamo St. Petersburg. During this year he won the FIBA EuroCup with Dynamo and also the title of “Coach of the Year in Russia.” In the summer of 2006 he was also appointed head coach of the Russian National team, who he led to a European championship win in the 2007 Eurobasket.

“Can you imagine — an American Jewish Israeli?” Blatt said in an interview with a Princeton publication about being offered the national team coaching job

“I was amazed. The Russian team had had an unsuccessful European campaign. They were looking for somebody who could bring some new ideas, and I had had a really good season coaching in St. Petersburg. But I’m sure it was shocking for so many people on both sides of the old Iron Curtain…Forget about the basketball aspect — all I could think about was [Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev] ... saying, ‘We will bury you!’”

Blatt was the head coach of the Istanbul-based Turkish team Efes Pilsen, but parted ways with the team this April. Recently Blatt agreed to become the head coach of Dynamo Moscow, though ESPN talks about him eventually moving up to the NBA.

With dual-citizenship it is hard to tell if Blatt is American or Israeli, and some articles even refer to him as a European with all the coaching he has done in Italy, Turkey and Russia. For the 2008 Games, I found him listed in the Olympic News Service as Israeli.

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Lezak eyes a solo on podium

Jewish Olympian Jason Lezak surely has made his mark on U.S. Olympic swimming relay teams, notably with his unfathomable dash in the final 50 meters on Monday to lift the 4x100 men’s freestyle foursome to the gold medal in Beijing and a new world record.

Now Lezak, at 32 the oldest male swimmer ever to qualify for an Olympic team, may have his last shot to earn the individual honors he so craves. The American record holder in the 100 free finished sixth in Wednesday’s semifinals to qualify for the night’s finals.

In his three Olympic Games, Lezak has five medals, including three golds with the one he acquired in his remarkable anchor leg in the Water Cube, but none individually. And while he talked in an interview with JTA a week before the Games about being a “team-type player” and the “amazing feeling” of winning medals in the relays, the Californian savors the chance at redemption in the individual 100 free. He failed to qualify for the finals at the 2004 Games in Athens.

“I took the preliminaries too lightly,” he told me in a phone interview. “I was thinking about how many races I had to swim and I saved too much energy.” Lezak says he learned “a horrible lesson” from Athens, but that it sparked him to keep going for China and “that he had unfinished business.”

His improbable surge in the 4x100 – overtaking the favored French and their one-time world record holder Alain Bernard – helped Michael Phelps in his historic pursuit of eight golds in Beijing. And Lezak will have a tough road to the top of the medal podium against the likes of Bernard, who recaptured the world record in one semifinal, only to see it snatched in the other by the Australian Eamon Sullivan. (Another American Jewish swimmer, Garrett Weber-Gale, did not qualify for the finals.)

In our interview, Lezak said, “To do something on your own feels pretty good. I have a lot to prove to myself. I know I’m capable, I just haven’t done it yet.”

Can he do it tonight? Certainly his anchor leg in the relay shows that anything is possible.

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Bad bounces in Beijing

Shahar Peer in action on Jan. 21, 2008, when she was part of a doubles team that advanced to the Australian Open quarterfinals.
Shahar Peer in action on Jan. 21, 2008, when she was part of a doubles team that advanced to the Australian Open quarterfinals.

Israeli tennis stars Andy Ram and Jonathan Erlich didn’t bring their Melbourne magic to Beijing. In fact, the Olympics have turned out to be a major disappointment on the courts for the entire Israeli tennis contingent, which had high expectations for China.

Ram and Erlich, strong contenders for a medal, had fired up Israel in January by winning the Australian Open men’s doubles in January – the Jewish state’s first Grand Slam title. No doubt the veteran French tandem they defeated that day in a tough two-setter recalled that loss this week, when they exacted revenge Tuesday in the first round of the Olympics. Unseeded Arnaud Clement and Llodra Michael knocked off the third-seeded Israelis, 6-4, 6-4.

On the women’s side, 24th-seeded Shahar Peer may have been thinking medal, too, especially with such highly ranked players as Maria Sharapova and Lindsay Davenport sidelined by injuries. Peer, 21, who gained much attention playing in the Qatar Open in February, won her first-round match Monday before falling in the second round the next day.

She did go down fighting: It took Russia’s Vera Zvonareva one hour, 11 minutes to win the second set, 7-6, after taking the opener, 6-3.

So, too, did Israel’s other women’s singles performer, Tzipora Obziler. She dropped a grueling three-hour affair to Mariya Koryttseva of Ukraine, 5-7, 7-5, 6-4, on Tuesday. The deciding set lasted one hour, 6 minutes. That same evening, Obziler and Peer fell in straight sets in their doubles match.

Peer, who last year became the first Israeli woman to reach the U.S. Open quarterfinals, should be back for another shot in 2012 in London. But Ram and Erlich may not return, as both will be in their 30s for the next Summer Games.

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Swapping old Jewish swim records for new ones

Jewish-American swimmers Garret Weber-Gale and Jason Lezak, along with Cullen Jones and the unstoppable Olympic champion Michael Phelps, made history in the pool on Monday, August 11. The US relay team won the Men’s 4 x 100m Freestyle Relay and smashed the world record by nearly four seconds on their way to the gold.

In a strange Jewish sports irony, the gold for this half-Jewish team may come at a price to the legacy of an iconic Jewish sports figure. Phelps needed this gold medal to help him on his quest to break legendary Jewish swimmer Mark Spitz’s 36- year-old record of seven gold medals in one Olympics. With the relay gold under his cap, Phelps is on his way to eight in ‘08.

But at least a new Jewish name can be added to the annals of Olympic swim glory, for the sports world will be talking about Lezak’s outstanding anchor leg to edge out Alain Bernard and the French team for a long time.

“Going out in the first 50 (meters), I was breathing on my right side,” Lezak said after the race. “I saw him (competitor Bernard) a little bit. I knew where he was. I knew I had to swim my mind out. I had more adrenaline going than I ever had in my life.”

As JTA’s Marc Brodsky reported in a feature about Lezak, the 32-year-old is competing in his third Olympics and has garnered four medals on relay teams, including a gold in the 4x100 medley in ‘04.

A third Jewish-American swimmer actually took home a gold for this team, even though he wasn’t in the pool for the historic win. Ben Wildman-Tobriner, the other member of the self-described “hyphenated Jew crew,” is among the seven swimmers on the 4x100 relay team who received a gold medal.

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Jews in the Water Cube

Jewish-American swimmer Dara Torres won a silver medal in the Women’s 4x100m Freestyle Relay on Sunday, August 10. This is her 10th Olympic medal, and makes her the oldest medalist in Olympic Swimming.

Since it’s been 24 years since she won her first medal, she has tied the all-time record for medal-winning timespan for female athletes (held by Birgit Fischer of Germany).

She is also the first swimmer in Olympic history to win a medal at five different Olympic Games.

Torres’ father was Jewish, but she also converted before marrying Israeli surgeon Itzhak Sasha.  She was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 2005.

“There are a lot of middle-aged women and men who tell me that I am an inspiration to them,” Torres said, “and that they are doing things that they never thought they would do.”

Unfortunately, not all news from the Water Cube on day two of the Olympics was so inspiring. An Iranian swimmer pulled out of his 100m breatstroke heat today, minutes before competing with Israeli Tom Beeri, despite earlier reassurances from the Iranian NOC that he would participate.

The water doesn’t know your age, but it seems to care if you’re Israeli.
At least Beeri went on to set a national record and a personal best.

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