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Tuesday, September 19
The magic of the Olympics can sneak up on you



SYDNEY, Australia -- Beyond the soft sands and crumbling waves of Bondi Beach, the orange sun was dropping down and disappearing into the distance. To stand on the shores, listen to the sweet song of the surf, see the stars sparkling above Australia, is to feel like you're falling in love for the first time.

Olympic beach volleyball will be played at a scenic venue at Bondi Beach.

Sydney is siren calling out of the ends of the earth, a seductive temptress luring the world to its shores.

So, it's Sunday night here and you walk past the structure for the Olympic beach volleyball venue, a grunt, a groan and the smacking of a ball shatters the stillness. You step closer and discover there are two long, lean women taking turns setting and spiking a ball over the net. They're wearing nylon sweatsuits, with Bulgaria emblazoned on the back and a middle-aged man, a coach, watches with a critical eye.

A little later, you discover these are sisters Petita and Lina Yanchulova. They compose Bulgaria's beach volleyball team, Olympians for the first time. You sit in the sand and watch for a few minutes, imagining Saturday morning and 8,000 people packed shoulder to shoulder in the stands here. The Yanchulova sisters aren't expected to challenge for a medal, but for a few moments on this night, with the moon rising over the Pacific and the gathering darkness making it harder and harder to see the ball crushed to the corners of the court, these two don't seem to mind.

They've done it thousands of times together, and maybe, they can do it in the dark, too. They've worked a lifetime to get to the Olympics, and maybe, they'll never get back again. So, yes, it seems they're willing to stay on Bondi Beach until the sun is shining on Saturday, until the sold-out stadium is screaming and the Olympics Games are under way. They've worked a lifetime to get here, and now, they're down on the beach, hitting the balls in the dark, clutching a moment in time.

This is the spirit of the Olympics. These are the Games. There's too much cash, commercialism and corruption, but dig down and peel back the layers -- past the IOC bureaucrats lining their pockets with dirty deals, past the doped athletes and dreadful Dream Team living beyond the border of the athlete's village in 5-Star accommodations -- and it always amazes you on where you'll actually find the Olympics.

This time, there was a moment on the beach just hours after arriving in Sydney. Four years ago, I walked the streets of Atlanta, soaking through shirts and staring skyward at the inflatable Gumbys and Coca-Cola bottles, wondering how this magnificent spectacle could be reduced to the Georgia State Fair. And then, a Turkish weightlifter, Naim Suleymanoglu -- a chain-smoking, featherweight wonder called Pocket Hercules --- grabbed a barbell, set and broke three world records until a Greek lifter could no longer match him. Eventually, the cramped Georgia Congress Center was awash in a delirious impromptu parade of Turkish flags.

Two years ago at the Nagano Winter Games, it was at the bottom of a sky jump in Hakuba, Japan, with 45,000 screaming Japanese suddenly standing silent in the driving snow. This was the final round of the team competition, and the Japanese jumper leaning in the starting gate, Mashahiko Harada, had cost his country the gold medal four years earlier with the worst performance of his life. So ashamed, he issued a public apology to his countrymen. Now, it was happening again. The greatest jumper in history had butchered his first three jumps of the day. Still, Japan had a chance to get the gold. Across the nation, activity stopped, stores closed and people held vigil over television and radios. Finally, it was down to Harada. Again. So, the most tortured soul in his sport let loose into the sky, soaring to an incredible jump.

Japan won the gold, and Harada was no longer his country's Bill Buckner. He sprinted in delirous circles in the snow, waved a flag and when a Japanese television reporter pushed a microphone into his face, the poor guy couldn't get a question out. Like Harada, he was sobbing, too.

All I remember is rushing back to the press room, banging out a breathless 900-word column on deadline and, eventually, climbing on a bus for the ride back down the mountain. In my mind, there was Harata, dancing his delirious dance and 40,000 people hugging in the driving snowstorm, and thinking, man, how this had been something to see. Suddenly, there was a tear rolling down my cheek, too, a tear for the scene, the moment, and just maybe, a tear of thanks that these Olympics come every couple years now. There's so much to make cynicial and nonbelieving and just when the stink of it all comes close to consuming us, there's an Olympic moment to remind us of all the glory and good of sports.

Anyway, the other night on Bondi Beach, with the waves crawling to the shore and rolling back again, I watched the Bulgarian sisters play volleyball with the sun disappearing into the distance. Sometimes, the Olympics just sneak up, steal your heart and make you fall in love with them all over again.

Adrian Wojnarowski, a columnist for the Bergen (N.J.) Record, is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.


 

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