12
RED BULL
AMERICAN
RUNNER
NICK SYMMONDS
IS A WORLD-CLASS
PROVOCATEUR
8
He may be a long shot to medal in the 800 meters but his racing is the
least interesting thing about Nick Symmonds. The six-time U.S. national
champion is best known for taking bold stands â appearing on Russian
TV to speak against that countryâs government homophobia being
quoted in a magazine in favor of banning assault weapons starring in a
PETA campaign with his own pet bunny and proclaiming his affection
for Paris Hilton. So when Symmonds runs in Rio this summer all eyes
will be on the big ugly white tape on his shoulders a covert protest
against Nikeâs monopoly-like dominance of American track and field.
The short version is that USA Track & Field sells Olympic team
sponsorship to Nike for a reported $20 million a year but gives only a
fraction to its athletes leaving elite runners below the poverty line
while USATF paper pushers earn six figures. USATF also guarantees
Nike that Olympic team members regardless of their individual
sponsors wear only Nike at official team functions. Symmondsâ
frustration boils over when they wonât even define those functions.
âSo Iâll be eating my breakfast and Iâll have some asshole from USATF
screaming at me that Iâm not wearing team gearâ he says.
The IOC even forbids athletesâ sponsors from mentioning the
Olympics in advertisements meaning that Brooks Symmondsâ primary
sponsor canât even run an ad that says âGo for the gold Nick!â That
has put such a damper on his earning potential that Symmonds started
his own company â Run Gum caffeinated gum â and resorted to
auctioning tattoo space on his body. T-Mobile recently paid $21800
which is where that ugly white tape comes in: Olympic rules require
Symmonds to cover up non-Nike brands on his own skin.
Symmondsâ company sued USATF this year for restricting sponsor
advertising but a judge dismissed the case. Heâs now pushing an
alternative plan for the financial salvation of track stars everywhere: a
pro circuit like the tennis Grand Slam. Running races can be a little
uneventful but Symmonds has a fix for that too: âBasically turn it into
human horse racingâ he says. âGambling and booze are so intertwined
in American sports that trying to create a successful business model
without those things would just be dumb.ââDANIEL DUANE
CROSSFIT MADE AMERICA AN OLYMPIC
WEIGHTLIFTING POWERHOUSE AGAIN
The CrossFit craze has had
one curious consequence:
the promotion of Olympic
weightlifting a sport
we havenât medaled in since 2000.
Because CrossFit utilizes
Olympic-style âsnatchâ and âclean
and jerkâ lifts more athletes who
have mastered those techniques
are flooding the ranks of USA
Weightlifting. In 2008 USAW
membership was at 3383; now itâs
above 10000. This year Morghan
King a former college soccer
player who didnât seriously lift
until she was introduced to
CrossFit in 2012 is going to Rio.
âThe CrossFit community has been
able to bring in way more peopleâ
says one USAW coach.
7
SEPTEMBER 2016 85 MENâS JOURNAL
If Nike Were a Nation It Would Dominate
Picture this: The Nike swoosh emblazoned across an orange flag
flying high over the podium. You would see that scene in Rio a lot
if athletes played for their corporate sponsors rather than their
countries. At the last Summer Games in London in 2012 Nike
athletes won a field-crushing 161 medals making the U.S. by comparison
seem as powerful as Azerbaijan. At this yearâs Games the swoosh will
appear even more ubiquitous. Nike is the midst of a multiyear sponsorship
deal that includes not only individual athletes but also the entire USOC
roster (a pact that runs through 2020).
6
161
NIKE
12
UNDER ARMOUR
104
USA
King can lift
more than
double
her body
weight.
2012 SUMMER OLYMPIC MEDAL TOTALS
FROM TOP: HAYLEY YOUNG; NAT AREM/HOOKGRIP