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12/30/16,
“Sydney 2000” (Goal 8/17 Complete)
Sydney
Olympic Park, New South Wales, Australia
I did
it. I fucking did it. All 27 Olympic Stadiums. Not, “I’ve seen all 27 Olympic Stadiums”, no,
I can now say, “I have set foot inside all 27 Olympic Stadiums.” It was no easy task, given that it required
going to 24 cities in 20 countries on 5 continents. It required a great deal of effort, not only
in planning the trips, but also in getting inside each stadium. It was a goal that was only realized through
a combination of determination, luck, and, sometimes, even skullduggery. Each Stadium had its own story, its own
adventure to match the uniqueness of each of the Games, and it is those
stories that I will recount in this entry.
First, though, I will need to move to get out of the rain.
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The view
hasn’t changed much, but the perfect view I had of the Stadium’s logo is not
possible from the protected area. I am
out of the rain, though, and I can now comfortably recount the adventures that
got me to the other 26 Stadiums. Unlike
the previous two times I did this so far, I will recount them by chronological
order of the Games they hosted, rather than by the order in which I visited
them, though, of course, I will save today’s adventure to be treated last, and,
again, I will do this from memory, rather than looking up my previous
entries.
Athens 1896. I first saw that Stadium in 2004 when we did
our family trip to Greece in anticipation of the upcoming Games. During that trip, it was closed to the
public, so I could not go inside, though I saw it from the outside. When I returned this summer, I paid the
nominal access fee and was able to set foot inside. That was relatively easy.
Paris 1900.
That was a little trickier. It
was during my 2013 Eurotrip, and I had arranged to spend a morning in Paris to
see the two Stadiums there. It was no
longer in use, and there were security guards, but they didn’t seem to car if I
wandered on to the track. After I took
my picture though, which seemed to be forbidden, I was followed by someone who
seemed to be working at the Stadium, but he didn’t say anything. He just started following me until I got back
to my car. That was odd, but I got my
picture inside.
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St. Louis 1904. That was the first one I ever set foot
inside. It wasn’t even planned, since I
hadn’t begun this adventure yet, but, when I went to Missouri with my friend in
2012, during our last day there, I suggested we go to the Olympic Stadium. I didn’t even know where it was, and I found
out that it was now the track for WUSL, and it was under construction. That seems to be a common theme. Many of these Stadiums that I visited were
under construction, which actually makes it easier to get into the Stadium if
you know what you’re doing. The gates
were unlocked, so we just walked in. The
workers gave us one look before ignoring us.
That was that.
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London 1908. Okay, so that was a bit of an oddball, since
the Stadium no longer exists, and the site is now occupied by BBC offices. However, there was outdoor plaza where the
Olympic track used to be, and I was able to take my ceremonial picture there,
with a proper Olympic memorial wall in the background. That was during my second trip to London in
2014, and my plan was to see visit all three London Stadiums in one day. As I will be recounting, I went 2/3.
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Stockholm 1912. That was a fun one. I went the Baltics last May with the express
purpose of visiting the Stockholm and Helsinki Stadiums, both of which offered
tours or access to the public. However,
Stockholm had a bit of a hitch. During
my day in Sweden, there was a soccer match at the Stadium, and I was told that
access would be offered after the match.
That was not the case. I got to
the Stadium after the match had ended, and there was no staff in sight. However, the fences were low, and it was
possible to climb them. Not easy, but
possible. As I began to climb the fence,
some fans saw me. They were still
drinking after the game. Rather than
tell me to stop, they gave me a hand and helped me climb the fence. That got me inside. Getting out was much easier. The 1916 Games were cancelled due to the
War.
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Antwerp 1920. Well, that’s a good one. I tried to go during my Eurotrip, but, of the
six Stadiums I saw during Eurotrip, this was the only one where I could not get
inside. I would wind up having to return
in April of this year, timing my visit to coincide with a soccer match so that
I knew I could get inside. Figuring out
their schedule and how to get tickets was no easy task, since they don’t sell
online to foreigners. I had to arrange
for a ticket to be held for me to purchase when I got there. Once I was there, it was easy, as it was just
a soccer match.
Paris 1924 (the Chariots
of Fire Stadium). That was also during
my Eurotrip, and, it was simply unlocked and unguarded. It was an active soccer stadium, but I had no
trouble setting foot on the field.
Amsterdam
1928. Again, that was during
Eurotrip. The afternoon I got there,
there happened to be a track meet going on, open to the public, no tickets
required. That was fortuitous, and I was
easily able to get in and walk around and take my pictures.
Los Angeles 1932. That was a bit of a challenge, since I had to
email ahead of time to arrange access when I went in 2012, but the director
just put my name on a security list, which was all it took for me to be allowed
inside. It is the USC Football Stadium,
and they were preparing the Stadium for their next game, so I had no issue
walking around if my name was on the list.
Berlin 1936. That was the first
Stadium I visited during my Eurotrip, and they offer access to the public for a
small fee. That was no problem to access
at all. The 1940 and 1944 Games were
cancelled due to the War.
London
1948. Again, that was during my 2014
trip to London, and while the original Stadium was torn down, they built a new
one in the same place. It is better
known as Wembley Stadium, the hallowed football grounds, as they know it in
England. They offered guided tours, and
that allowed me to set foot inside.
Helsinki 1952. That was the other
half of last year’s trip to the Baltic, and that was easy, too. You have to pay to go up the tower, but the
guard let me into the Stadium and sit in the stands for free. It was glorious, having the whole Stadium to
myself.
Melbourne 1956. Well, I have recently recounted that
adventure, the cricket test I saw there four days ago.
Rome 1960. That required a fair
bit of luck. When I planned my birthday
trip to Rome this year, I had no idea how I would get inside the Stadium. Fortunately, though, they would later
announce a soccer match during one of the days of my trip, so I was able to get
tickets for that and get inside the Stadium, at least until the pouring rain
began and caused us to evacuate the Stadium, but I had gotten my picture by
then.
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Tokyo 1964. That’s another good story. It was May 2014, when I was originally
planning on going to the Baltics, but Tokyo winning the 2020 Games and
announcing their intention to demolish the Stadium to build a new one in the
same spot necessitated me pushing the Tokyo trip up to 2014 and the Baltics
back to 2015. They were supposed to
continue to offer tours of the Stadium until demolition began in July, so I
figured my trip in May should be fine.
That turned out to not be the case.
Instead, I got there, and it was closed.
I walked around the Stadium, checking every gate until I found one that
was unlocked. I was able to get inside
the Stadium and, while not quite to the stands, I was definitely inside the
Stadium and could take my ceremonial picture with the field.
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Mexico City 1968. That was another one that required two
attempts. First, when I went to Mexico
in 2013 (the Paricutin trip), I was told the Stadium was closed, and I was not
about to argue with the police there.
Instead, I wound up returning in 2015, again coordinating it to be there
for a soccer match. I took my ceremonial
picture and left before the match had even started.
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Munich 1972.
Maybe that’s the best story of all.
That, too, was during the Eurotrip.
It was the reason why I call any time I am racing to get somewhere
before it closes a “Munich Run”. I knew
the Stadium offered access until 8 PM, and I had planned to arrive there at 7
PM, but things did not go as planned. I
wound up getting stuck in traffic and having to race at 150 mph along the autobahn
to make it there in time. I got to the
Olympic Park around 7:45 PM and then had to proceed on foot to the Stadium,
running at times, literally getting there at 7:58 PM. They told me I was too late. I begged and offered them a very large amount
of cash. In the end, they relented and
let me inside for the regular access price.
The picture I took there shows my sheer joy at having gotten inside.
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Montreal 1976. That was the weekend after I got my new
passport in 2012 and decided to drive up to Canada for the weekend. Getting to Montreal was quite an adventure
both due to the car battery constantly dying and issues at border control, but,
once I got there, they offered guided tours, so it was easy to get inside.
Moscow 1980.
That was during my spontaneous trip in 2013 to Moscow for the
weekend. Still being a rookie at this, I
had no idea how I would get inside. I
had arranged for a tour guide for the day, so, when I got there, I asked
him. He told me that there was a soccer
match going on that day, and he could get tickets for us if I wanted. They were expensive, but it was worth it to
get inside. That was easy enough, and,
once we were inside, watching a Russian soccer match was quite an
experience. Los Angeles 1984 was the
same Stadium as the Los Angeles 1932 Stadium.
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Seoul 1988. That was another
adventure. It was almost exactly a year
ago, at the beginning of this year, during my Christmas trip to the
Orient. Again, I had no idea how to get
inside, but, through skullduggery, I figured it out. I snuck in, but that was not enough. I had only gotten to the maintenance area,
and I could not figure out how to get into stands. I eventually found a maintenance worker, but
he spoke no English. I was able to
communicate to him my desire, and he let me into the stands. There I was.
The picture I took there shows even more overwhelming joy than the
Munich one.
Barcelona 1992. That was during my birthday trip in 2014, and
it was my first stop during that trip. I
went straight to the Stadium, and I knew that there was small area of the
stands left open to the public. After
circling the whole Stadium, I found it, and I was inside.
Atlanta 1996.
That was the second Stadium I visited back in 2012, when I went there
for a sci-fi convention. Again, my quest
had not yet formally begun, and I only went there by happy coincidence. The Stadium was known by a different name:
Turner Field. I went to a Braves game as
part of the trip, only later learning that that was actually the Olympic
Stadium. Sydney 2000. Well, that’s where I am now, and I will
recount that adventure in due course.
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Athens 2004. That was the hardest
and most important. I had seen it when
it was being built in 2004, but, of course, I hadn’t gone inside, so I returned
this year to do that. I had been told
the Stadium was now abandoned, so I had been planning to sneak in, by any means
necessary. I was so close to my goal at
this point that I was willing to risk getting caught. In the end, I found an open access point that
led to a groundskeeper office inside the Stadium. I asked if I could take a picture, and he let
me. It was only about fifteen minutes
before someone else kicked me out.
Beijing 2008. That was the other
half of my 2015 Christmas trip, and it was the first place I went after
checking in to my hotel. Covered with
snow, it was still opened to the public, and access was granted for a nominal
fee. Getting to Beijing (and procuring a
visa) was hard, but getting inside the Stadium was easy.
London 2012.
That was my one failure during my visit in 2014. I tried so hard to find a way in, but it was
impossible. It was under construction,
and security was way too tight to sneak in.
When I returned to London this summer, tours still were not being
offered, and my car accident precluded an attempt to sneak in. That was why I had to preface my trip to
Nepal last month with a visit to England, where I finally was able to book the
(self-guided) tour. I got in. I was home.
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Rio 2016. That was the most
exciting one. I went for the actual
Opening Cermonies this summer, but I had my ticket stolen. After spending an hour filing police reports
and waiting for a new ticket, they finally let me in, and I was there when the
Acting President of Brazil formally declared the Games open, and the stadium
became a Stadium. That’s all of them, no
holes in the list, and all that remains is to recount today’s adventure, but,
first, I need to light up a new cigar, as this first one was expended as I
recounted those visits.
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After I closed
last night, I published my entry and photos and then had my ice cream before
going to sleep. I didn’t even get two
full REM cycles before I woke up slightly after 3 AM. I got ready and headed down, where the
receptionist called me a taxi. It was a
short ride to the airport, and I went to check in with Qantas. My reservation did not come up. Uh oh.
I looked at my booking to confirm I had the right time and date. I did.
It was the airline that was wrong.
I was flying Virgin, not Qantas, so I walked to the other end of the
terminal, and Virgin had my reservation.
It was an easy process to go through security. There was an outdoor smoking area on the
other side. I knew I would only have 20
minutes with the cigar, but it was too good of an opportunity to pass up. I chose my cheapest cigar, a Nub, and smoked
it until I had to ditch it to board.
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I
fell asleep almost as soon as we took off, thinking to myself, “I’m going home”,
in reference to the phrase I like to use at Olympic Stadiums, since the Olympics
are my home as much as anything else.
When they brought the drink cart, I asked for a black coffee while I was
still half-asleep, but the coffee was left undrunk, as I fell right back sleep. I drank it lukewarm with the muffin they had
also left me. Soon enough, we were
making our descent, and we landed in Sydney ahead of schedule.
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It was 9 AM, so I had plenty of time. My tour was not until 1 PM, but I was hoping
to get there for the 11 AM tour. Nothing
else mattered today. The name of this entry
is “Sydney 2000” for a reason. I got a
flat white and headed to the taxi queue.
As we drove to the hotel, I kept repeating that phrase in my head, “I’m
going home.” This would be the perfect
place to end my quest. It was the first
Games I watched so intensely, and it was the Games that cemented my obsession
with the Olympics. I was going
home.
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When I got to the hotel, my room
was not ready. The hotel was next to an
old playhouse, and it was beautifully decorated to match. It was 10 AM, and they said check-in was not
until 2 PM, but they could try to have my room ready earlier. After some back and forth, I finally got her
to say that it would be at least an hour before it was ready, longer than I
wanted to wait. She told me where I
could change into my casual clothes, and I did just that. I took a cab to the Stadium. I was going home. I could still remember the Opening Ceremony,
all the pomp and circumstance, Cathy Freeman lighting the cauldron, and the
Governor-General announcing the Games open.
I was ready for this.
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We got to
the Stadium, and I saw people going in for their tour. I asked if they could put me on the earlier tour,
and they could. They also confirmed that
the tour would take us to the stands and end on the field. It was marvelous. I was ready.
When the tour began, we could see the field, and I was tempted to just
take my picture and be done with it, but I wanted the picture to be the last
one, at the bottom of the field. She
showed us how the stands can retract, and I wondered at the engineering
ingenuity of it.
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We then went to the
top, where she took us out to the stands.
I now had a dilemma. If I took a
selfie here, and I wanted to, that would count as my picture in the Stadium,
so, it was either claim it now or forgo the picture. I took the ceremonial picture. As soon as my finger touched the shutter
button, I lost all control of my emotions. I had done it. My mission was successful. I was off to the side to be alone in my
overwhelming sense of joy. I had been
working four years on this, and I did it.
I fucking did it. “All 27 Olympic
Stadiums. Goal 8/17 Complete.” I was home.
I posted my collage, and we continued the tour, going to the Coca-Cola
private suite, fitting with my shirt. We
also saw the member’s areas and the locker room. We ended it on the field. As soon as we stepped out, I could see in my
mind’s eye Cathy Freeman running down the track to win Gold in the 400m. It was glorious. That was that.
Our tour was over, and I headed outside,
where I sat down in view of the Stadium, lit up a Montecristo, and proceeded to
write this entry. Once the rain started,
I moved to the covered area, and, after my Montecristo, I switched to a Vegas
Robaina. On that note, I will now close
so that I can head over to the Aquatics arena, where an upstart kid named
Michael Phelps was overshadowed by the “Human Thorpedo.” I still remember those races, just as I
remember seeing the GOAT himself in Rio this summer. It’s been quite an adventure, and I cannot
even begin to express the pride (and relief) I feel in completing it.
Sydney, New
South Wales, Australia
When I
smoked my 2010 Christmas Pipe, the pipe I am now smoking, in Kathmandu a month
ago, I said that it beat out all the smokings of this pipe on my previous
Christmas trips, in Quebec, in Istanbul, and on the Bransfield Strait. The smokings in Nassau or Belmopan or Lake
Placid (or Port Antonio) do not even come close. However, here in Sydney, after this
triumphant day, the bar has been raised once more. For everything that went wrong yesterday,
today was the opposite, and it was a glorious triumph. Even the dinner selection, despite my
stupidity in not having made a reservation somewhere months ago, was better
than last night’s. The weather was far
milder, and it was a day filled with joy, rather than exhaustion.
This was, by far, the most important day of
the trip, and my success today leaves tomorrow completely open and unplanned
until the NYE festivities begin at 6 PM.
It lets me relax tomorrow and enjoy my big night. “Relax” and “enjoy” are not words that I
usually associate with my travels, rather more often associating those words
with a weekend in New York binge-watching TV or movies, but I earned it. I fucking earned it. I had to manage my way inside 27 Stadiums for
today’s triumph, and it is impossible to express in words how it feels. This smoking of the 2010 Christmas Pipe is
celebratory like no other smoking has been.
Whenever I think of the pipe, it will always be this smoking that takes
pole position on the list.
Tomorrow’s
entry will be accompanied by my 2011 Christmas Pipe, as is my wont to do for my
NYE entries, and that list will be in good company, but this was something
special. Of all the 17 Goals I set out
for myself, this was the most meaningful, other than the initial goals of every
US and Canada state/province/territory and WHS.
Setting foot inside all 27 Olympic Stadiums, is that even something
anyone else has ever done? I would not
be shocked if I was the first person to have ever done it. Who goes to the WUSL track with the 1904
Olympics in mind? Who does that and sets
foot inside the plaza at the BBC building where the 1908 Stadium used to
be? Actually, take those two and in the
Rio 2016 Stadium, which can only be counted after the Games were formally
opened this summer, and those three alone might be a unique accomplishment. Beyond those three, I would think Athens 2004
would be enough to ensure the uniqueness.
Add in all the other Stadiums, all 27 of them, and I am more and more
convinced of my claim, that I may very well be the first person to have set
foot inside all 27 Olympic Stadiums, and that’s saying a lot.
Today was a great day, and today’s
accomplishment is one that I will remember for the rest of my life. It also means that I will probably have to go
to Tokyo in 4 years to see what new talent joins the old and to renew my
accomplishment. Okay, so I left off as I
was about to head to the Aquatics Centre.
After I closed, I made my way down Olympic Boulevard, and I was reminded
of the Olympic Park in Rio. This one was
so much better and well-designed. I soon
arrived at the Aquatics Centre, which has family swimming pools now, so there
was a bit of a line to get in. The fee
was much-reduced since I didn’t want to swim, and I headed straight to the
stands for the Olympic pool.
All my
memories of Rio came rushing back, of seeing Phelps secure his title as the
Greatest (Olympian) of All Time, the GOAT, as did my memory of visiting the
pool in Beijing a year ago, the same pool where he, miraculously, went 8 for
8. This was where he swam his first
Olympic race. I hope my reader can
understand why this was such a meaningful experience for me. After I took my ceremonial pictures, I went
to the café area to get lunch, opting for a meat pie, a lemonade, and cheese
rings. I could have ordered better, but
it filled me up. I then got a taxi back
to the hotel, basking in my triumph as we drove back.
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We were soon at the hotel, and my room was
ready, my bags and suit already having been brought up. I was shocked by the décor of the room. In keeping with the 1930s Hollywood theme of
the hotel, the room looked very much a like a movie star’s bedroom. It took some getting used to in order to
figure everything out, but I did eventually.
I treated myself to a seltzer and protein ball from the mini-bar, before
attempting to take my nap, but frustration in figuring out my dinner plans got
in the way. Every place I wanted to go
was fully booked for the night, and I was annoyed with myself for not having
made reservations beforehand.
Eventually
I settled on this place called “Canopy”, not far from the hotel, which was
labeled as “Modern Australian”, a term I knew to mean fusion. It was slightly after 5 PM, and my
reservation was at 7:30 PM, but I wanted to stop at Parliament on my way to the
restaurant. That would give me exactly
enough time for one REM cycle before heading out.
Like clockwork, I woke up 90 minutes after I
fell asleep and then headed out, going first to Parliament to take my
ceremonial picture. I was shocked how
small it was, since New South Wales is the most populous state in
Australia. I then walked through Hyde
Park, enjoying the sites and stopping at the ANZAC War Memorial on the way to
the restaurant.
The restaurant was not
at all what I was expecting, given the ratings and the price points. It was closer to a café than a fancy
restaurant, but they had outdoor seating, and the weather was nice. I sat down with a menu, and, ten minutes
later, no one had come to take my drink order, which was absolutely
unacceptable, especially given the small size of the restaurant and high
staff-to-diner ratio. To make matters
worse, the menu was not at all what I expected.
Everything had a Mediterranean theme (be it Greek or Italian or Middle
Eastern), but, I suppose, that is what fusion means.
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I then realized that, given the Olympic
triumph of today, Aussie-Greek fusion dishes would be extremely fitting. I walked inside and asked what was going
on. The server was extremely apologetic
for not coming out earlier, and he helped me with the menu. I had an appetizer and main course in mind,
and his recommendations confirmed what I was thinking, so I went with the
assorted bread and Mediterranean dips (hummus, an olive concoction, and
tzatziki sauce) for my appetizer and the crispy fish for my main course. I chose well, and it was fitting to the
day. I also asked for a bottle of
sparkling water and a glass of local red wine.
The breads came out soon enough, and they were delicious.
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Halfway through the bread, he asked if I was
ready for the fish. I was. There it was.
My first Official meal in New South Wales, and it was perfect. All’s well that ends well, and that meal,
like this trip, has worked out for the best.
I was happy. Very happy. After dinner, I got a dessert to go and
walked back through the park. I found a
bench in view of the iconic fountain and church, where I sat down, lit up my
2010 Christmas Pipe, and proceeded to write this entry, which I will now close
so that I can finish my pipe and head back to my hotel to publish.