Well
it is less than 24 hours to the start
of the games and Head of News Alan
Perry is going throught his plans
to confirm the assignments for the
first couple of days. He hands me
a ticket and I look at it to see that
it is for the opening ceremony at
the main games stadium.
Words could
not explain how I felt. Suffice to
say it was wonderful.
After
all the planning back home in England,
the application to the Commonwealth
Relations Trust, the travel and everything
else, this was it. The Games were
here and I was going to be there for
Day 1.
Everyone
knew that certain things were running
late and the final bits were still
being put in place as we arrive and
I show my press pass to get into the
press centre in the main games stadium.
Over the past couple of weeks I had
taken my, newly purchased, camcorder
everywhere with me.
This was going
to be my record of the games and I
was determined to produce a video
on my return to the UK. One copy was
going to go to the Commonwealth
Relations Trust while the other was
to be presented to Sir Bob Scott of
the Manchester Games Committee, for
their records.
As
I arrived in the press centre at the
main stadium, I immediately got the
impression that all was not well.
Some of the international media who
had travelled all from over the world
to be here, were dissatisfied with
the facilities. We were placed in
a marqee of quite substantial size
however TV monitors were in short
supply, computers in even shorter
supply and we were walking on the
green grass of Victoria. Nobody thought
to put a floor in place.
To
be honest, not a lot of this posed
a problem to me as since these were
my first games I had no yard stick
to judge it by. But others were less
forgiving. The word was out and I
started point my camcorder at anyone
who would talk to me to get a feeling
of what their greviences were. Before long, I was taken to one side
by the head of the press centre to
be told that the press centre was
a part of the games, and as such came
under the remit of Rights holders
and I would no longer be able to use
my camcorder within the press centre. The host broadcaster, CBC, were the
only ones allowed to bring cameras
into the press centre.
This
was quite an amazing statement as
earlier in the planning we had been
told categorically that the press
centres were not a part of the Rights
process as they had been built outside
of the games centres to avoid any
potential problems. No amount of pleading
or arguing was going to change their
mind, and for the rest of the games
I was not allowed to remove the lens
cap on my camcorder while in any of
the press centres. It
was unbelievably fustrating to attend
the press conference some days later,
after the great Linford Christie had
won the 100 metres and have to have
only sound on the interview, despite
the fact that he was siting literally
4 yards away from me. Oh WELL!!
It
was of course an attempt to silence
complaints about the facilities, but
despite attempting to shut us up,
they had taken notice. On arrival
for Day 2, the scene was completely
changed with a newly installed floor
in place, more monitors, more computers
and all'n'all a far more professional
set-up.
However,
back to the games and what an fantastic
opening ceremony it was. The whole
thing reflected on the history of
Canada and was a tribute to its first
nations. To be honest, one really
did not get a full picture of the
whole opening day of the games as
there was so much going on.
I remember
phoning my wife back in the UK an
asking her to make sure that she taped
the whole thing so that I wouldn't
miss anything. The host broadcaster,
The Canadian Broadcasting Company
CBC, really did a fantastic job on
that part of the games.
I
spent the early part of Day 1 out
back where the participants and athletes
were lining up for the opening ceremony.
This really was an unbelievable sight
of laughter, colour, national dress
and camaraderie. Perhaps the most
excited team was the Australians who
were convinced they were going to
win everything. That kind of confidence
should be bottled and sold. The
Games Organising Committee really
did a fantastic job getting all of
this together.
Boy I hope Manchester
were going to do as good a job as
this. 2002 was still 8 years away
and Kuala lumpa was going to happen
before Manchester got to their games
but all the way I was praying that
we could do as good as this. By the
way, Manchester hadn't even been awarded
the games as yet. The
other stars on Day 1 were, not surprisingly,
the hometown Canadians, a massive
team, who were determined to have
a good time, come what may. They were
going to be the last team to enter
the stadium.
The
word was that Sir Bob Scott and his
team were here and I was hoping to
grab a quick chat with him at some
point. I didn't have to wait long. Before
heading into the stadium to take up
my seat I saw something which I hadn't
realised the importance of when it
actually happened. The British team
had gone through and since this was
an alphabetically organised event
(with the exception of the home team)
there were many other teams to go
through.
After the Brits had made
their way out of my sight, I continued
to interview and chat with other teams.
After about 10/12 minutes, the only
member of the British team whom I
knew personally, came back out of
the stadium and walked past me. She
said that she wasn't feeling well
and was going back to to athletes
village. That
person was Diane Modahl. Later I found
out that she had been asked to leave
by the British team management as
she had allegedly had a positive drug
test at an earlier games in Europe.
This
was the news that was going to dominate
the early days of the 1994 Commonwealth
Games in Victoria. Everybody wanted
to know everything about her. In
fact, since I was doing reports back
to The BAY in Lancaster, I had to
be very careful as to what I could
say, and on one ocassion I had to
call the station back in the UK and
listen to the news to find out what
IRN (Independent Radio News) was saying
before I could compile my report. This
was perhaps the saddest part of the
games for me.
This was a Manchester
girl, it was the only person I knew
personally in Victoria. She had taken
the time to speak to me when she arrived
at the airport, and I had felt exceptionally
good about seeing her. But, once drugs
was mentioned, the media were interested
in one thing and one thing only. I
remember saying in one report back
to the UK that 2 years earlier it
was Canada who had the pain of having
one of their top athletes, Ben Johnson,
charged with drug taking. Now it was
the turn of Manchester. I
sat in the official press conference
when the announcement was made and
prayed that Diane and the Commonwealth
Games in Victoria would
recover from this.
I
am not sure if either ever did.