6th Aug 2016.
Nations Parade at Rio Olympics : Why USA is Not Last ! and Why Tonga is in News !!
Posted on the 06 August 2016 by Sampathkumar Sampath
They are in news
and Internet search engines are busy …. Tonga, officially the Kingdom of Tonga,
is a Polynesian sovereign state and archipelago comprising 169 islands of which
36 are inhabited. Tonga stretches over
about 800 kilometres; surrounded by Fiji and Wallis and Futuna (France, Samoa to the northeast, Niue, Kermadec (part
of New Zealand), New Caledonia (France)
and Vanuatu. The country accorded
reception to Capt James Cook in 1773. Till
1970s, Tonga had British protected state status, with the United Kingdom
looking after its foreign affairs under a Treaty of Friendship.
Mário Rodrigues
Filho, was a Brazilian journalist and writer. The Rio Olympics officially
started with a long and loud celebration of Brazilian culture that also
featured some unfortunate reminders of the troubled backdrop to these
Games. The 31st Olympiad was open in Rio after a stunning
opening ceremony at the Maracana stadium. All 207 countries plus the refugee
team walked at the Parade of Nations. As part of the tradition, Greece led the
parade followed by other countries in alphabetical order ** The refugee team was the second last to come
and the last were host was Brazil. After
the Parade of Nations, IOC president and chairman of the Olympic organising
committee Nuzman addressed the gathering and later acting president of Brazil
Michel Temer announced the Games open.
The dominant images
from the four-hour opening ceremony at the Maracana Stadium were supermodel
Gisele Bundchen's catwalk across the pitch to The Girl From Ipanema, the joyous
arrival of Brazil's team and former marathon star Vanderlei de Lima lighting an
Olympic cauldron that morphed into a golden disco ball. But the boos that
greeted acting Brazilian president Michel Temer's short address to open the
Games, the smattering of jeers the Russian team received and the catcalls that
followed a reference to government funding tell a different story.
The venue - Maracanã
Stadium, is a football stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The stadium is part
of a complex that includes an arena known by the name of Maracanãzinho, which
means "The Little Maracanã" in Portuguese. Owned by the Rio de
Janeiro state government, it is named after the Rio Maracanã, a now canalized
river in Rio de Janeiro. It was opened in 1950 to host the FIFA World Cup, in
which Brazil was beaten 2–1 by Uruguay in the deciding game. The official name of the stadium, Mário Filho,
was given in honor of the journalist.
During the Parade
of Nations within the Rio de Janeiro 2016 Summer Olympics opening ceremony,
athletes and officials from each participating country marched in the Maracanã
Stadium preceded by their flag and placard bearer. In keeping with Olympic
traditions, Greece, the birth place of the olympic games that started in 1896,
entered first, while Brazil, the host nation, went last. The Refugee Olympic
Team, composed of refugees from several countries, went second to last and
received a standing ovation. Other
countries entered in an alphabetical order in the language of the host country
(Brazilian Portuguese).
Beijing Olympics
gold medalist Abhinav Bindra, competing in his fifth Games, led the Indian
contingent. The Indian men were attired
in navy blue blazers and trousers, white shirts and ties, while the women
looked elegant in yellow and navy blue sarees.
The 33-year-old Bindra is till date India's only individual gold
medallist at the Olympics. The shooter achieved the feat when he clinched a
historic gold in the 10-metre air rifle event at the Games in 2008. Success in
shooting will be key to India's hopes of surpassing the London Olympics'
six-medal haul, and the performance of Jitu and Bindra will be crucial to
achieve that aim, while the likes of Gagan Narang, Manavjit Singh Sandhu, Heena
Sidhu and Apurvi Chandela can also fetch medals.
Long accustomed to
coming late in the program, the U.S. team was introduced a little before the
midway point in the parade of athletes. Because the ceremony is done in the
language of the host country – and USA is Estados Unidos da America in
Portuguese – the Americans got their march earlier in the program. Other
countries saw their order shift, as well. Germany, for instance, was the fifth
country introduced. In Portuguese, it’s Alemanha. Saudia Arabia, or Arabia
Saudita, entered as the ninth country in the parade.
The most
eye-popping outfit was really just a greased up hunk. Taekwondo fighter Pita
Taukatofua sent social media into meltdown when he carried the Tonga flag with
no shirt - completely covered in baby oil. Pita Nikolas Taufatofua, 32, who
qualified for the Olympics through the Oceania taekwondo qualification had
fallen short in his two previous attempts to make the Olympics. According to
his official biography, he was born in Australia but chose to compete for
Tonga.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
6th Aug 2016.
6th Aug 2016.