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A little kindness goes a long way at Olympics
Daily Herald ^ | Saturday, February 16 2002 | Tad Walch

Posted on 02/22/2002 2:25:44 PM PST by UnsinkableMollyBrown

The Olympic ideal played out in real life here over the past week as a small group of Utahns embraced the struggling women's hockey team from Kazakhstan.

When the team showed up in grubby gear for a practice at The Peaks Ice Arena on Feb. 8, Orem's Shannon Arnoldsen and other volunteers couldn't help but notice.

"Sweden gets off the bus with matching berets and Versace outfits," said Matthew Hemmert, a volunteer who supervises team transportation. "Then Kazakhstan gets off in hospital scrubs or sweat pants with holes in them."

The bus driver told Arnoldsen a sobering tale. He had taken the team shopping for souvenirs at a local mall, but the players had returned to the bus after 10 minutes.

"Too expensive," the players told the driver.

He next took them to Wal-Mart. A few players made purchases, but most said the same thing: "Still too expensive."

Finally, the bus arrived at a dollar store.

"Not exactly where you want Olympians to pick up Olympic souvenirs," Hemmert said.

The story gnawed at Arnoldsen, who took three years of Russian at BYU and felt a kinship with the women from this impoverished former Soviet Republic. She went shopping that night in search of souvenirs for the team. She thought about Olympic pins, but wanted the gift to be from Provo. It didn't go well at first.

"We just couldn't afford anything because there's 25 players and coaches," she said.

At the Olympic Spirit store, fittingly, she backed into one of her neighbors in northeast Orem, and told him the story.

Arnoldsen turned the project over to another neighbor, Susan Randall, and returned to work at The Peaks. Before she knew it, Roger Utley and Gordon Brown at the bookstore agreed not to a discount, but to a donation of 25 hooded BYU sweatshirts worth $750. Friends raised $400. The man with the $100 bill arranged for a gift of 25 button-down dress shirts from the Utah Homebuilders Association.

There was more: Randall's daughter created Valentine's Day cards for each team member. A Provo official provided the city's Olympic pins and colorful magazines with beautiful pictures of the area. Children wrote letters of friendship.

Arnoldsen found the players' names on the Internet and personalized the Valentine's cards, then placed $20 in each.

Meanwhile, Kazakhstan had lost 7-0 to Canada on Monday. While they lost another 7-0 game Wednesday at The Peaks, Arnoldsen and Hemmert laid out the gifts on each seat of the team bus. Arnoldsen happened upon a young man who had served a two-year LDS church mission in Russia and he agreed to translate her letter to the team:

"We were impressed and inspired by the obstacles you overcame to come to the Olympics," Arnoldsen wrote. "We wanted you to have something to remember your time here."

It was signed, "From your American friends."

The first player onto the bus was goalie Natalya Trunova. Her face was blotchy from crying over the team's second lopsided loss. She found Arnoldsen's letter and read it, then began to sob and shake. She went back into the building to bring out her teammates, who were overwhelmed.

"We were very grateful to get the gifts," Trunova said through a translator Friday after making 48 saves in a 4-1 loss to Russia. "We've been grateful for the cheering of the crowds. It made our day to get those gifts, to know there were people happy to see us and have us here."

The team's coach, Alexandr Maltsev, confirmed that the women's program, making its first Olympic appearance, has a limited budget and no corporate sponsors. Trunova, who managed to bring just $30 to the Olympics, mentioned that the team's Olympic uniforms had barely arrived in time.

Arnoldsen's concern for 25 people from the other side of the world struck a chord of international goodwill, said Natalya Yakovchuk, who scored Kazakhstan's only Olympic goal on Friday.

"I'm glad to have this opportunity to thank the citizens of America for the exceedingly warm reception, excellent hospitality, the way they treat our team, which is especially wonderful because we're not known as the best team," Yakovchuk said. "Thank you on behalf of our entire team."

Said Maltsev, "I'm honored the team touched the heart of the people here."

Randall, like Arnoldsen, was uncomfortable with the idea that a reporter knew about the good deed.

"We wanted to extend our friendship because we thought they were young and poor and beat up and needed friends," Randall said. "We have a lot here, so it's kind of nice to share. And we're grateful BYU came through."

Hemmert is grateful to have worked as a volunteer with Arnoldsen.

"This is what the Olympics are all about," he said. "Shannon is just incredible. She deserves a gold medal."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: olympicslist
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To: UnsinkableMollyBrown
What a wonderful example of the 'true Olympic spirit'. I think those players will always remember the kindnesses of Americans who gave them such great souvenirs and acknowledged their achievement in competing in their sport.
81 posted on 02/23/2002 11:10:25 AM PST by JulieRNR21
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To: NotJustAnotherPrettyFace
Thanks...
82 posted on 02/23/2002 11:40:50 AM PST by andysandmikesmom
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To: Great Dane
After I had posted my reply, I remembered about Eddie....didnt they call him Eddie the Eagle? He was wonderful, with his great spirit, and he actually developped a great following , simply because he was so enthusiastic about participating...didnt he also actually have very poor vision, and had to wear very thick glasses? Was his sport ski jumping? What a guy he was....
83 posted on 02/23/2002 11:44:56 AM PST by andysandmikesmom
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To: andysandmikesmom
BUMP
84 posted on 02/23/2002 2:23:42 PM PST by Publius6961
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To: UnsinkableMollyBrown
This story makes me proud to be a resident of Provo. There are so many good people here with hearts of gold. BTW, I used to work for Roger Utley at the BYU Bookstore 30+ years ago. I remember when he was first hired. Glad the BYU Bookstore could help the team out, too.
85 posted on 02/23/2002 3:02:43 PM PST by Nan48
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To: Crowcreek
I'm 25% Scotch

Congratulations, sounds like your night's off to an early start.

86 posted on 02/23/2002 3:04:48 PM PST by JamesWilson
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Comment #87 Removed by Moderator

To: don-o
#66....... I think you have a lot of competition for that title. :-}
88 posted on 02/23/2002 5:54:01 PM PST by Great Dane
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To: andysandmikesmom
#93...... Yes, it was Eddie the Eagle, some people said he had no business in the Olympics, I say he was the best his country had, and he had every right to be there.
As I remember, he was on his own with lodging and food, he too got help from a lot of kind souls.
The ski jumper Eddie the Eagle will be remembered with fondness by lots of folks.
89 posted on 02/23/2002 5:59:51 PM PST by Great Dane
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To: All
bttt
90 posted on 02/23/2002 8:23:20 PM PST by UnsinkableMollyBrown
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To: UnsinkableMollyBrown;demnomo
Two of my closest female friends are from Kazakhstan, and I have been told of the poverty that those girls will have to return to.

It must have been a moral victory to the Kazakhs as a group to lose to the Russians by only three goals, and to Trunova personally to have a 48-save game even in a loss. That girl his guts -- as well as beautiful eyes.

I wonder if the folks at the LA Times would be interested in this story, since it shows what kindness people from Utah are capable of in-between popping happy pills. </sarcasm>

91 posted on 02/23/2002 9:20:18 PM PST by L.N. Smithee
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To: UnsinkableMollyBrown
How wonderful!
We are a nation of givers when an opportunity presents itself.
Bravo to the kind souls who showed such a spirit of love to those who were less fortunate then themselves!
Does my heart good to read such stories, thanks!
92 posted on 02/23/2002 9:29:13 PM PST by ladyinred
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To: Benjamin Dover, Junior, JamesWilson
Wish I had a bottle of Bushmills or Johnny Walker in the cupboard --I haven't had any Scotch in a coon's age!

"The more Scotch I am, th' bedder I drive !!" ;^P

93 posted on 02/24/2002 9:47:45 AM PST by Crowcreek
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To: Crowcreek
Wish I had a bottle of Bushmills or Johnny Walker in the cupboard --I haven't had any Scotch in a coon's age!

"The more Scotch I am, th' bedder I drive !!" ;^P

Maybe you should just whip up a batch of Glen Crowcreek.

94 posted on 02/24/2002 10:07:17 AM PST by JamesWilson
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To: VOA
American (not Olympic) spirit! You got that right, brother!
95 posted on 02/24/2002 8:46:18 PM PST by mrustow
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To: UnsinkableMollyBrown; Sabertooth
Thanks for the post and the ping!
96 posted on 02/24/2002 8:48:59 PM PST by mrustow
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To: mrustow
American (not Olympic) spirit!

I guess I'm just a bit cynical after the pairs figure-skating bru-ha-ha and
then seeing the segment last night on Sixty Minutes in about the "gifts"
(BRIBES) that it takes to land a spot as an Olympic venue.
(I'm not standing in judgement of the fine folks in Salt Lake City for
doing what they had to do...I hold all the Eurotrash and African brigands of the
"Olympic Movement" responsible for this Bravo Sierra.)

While I identified the good, unscripted kindness of the folks in Utah to the
Kazakhstan (sp?) team, I'd rather call it an outpouring of American Spirit, or just
plain old good human kindness.
Associating these random acts of kindness with the trademark of "Olympic" is
tantamount to slander/libel these days.
97 posted on 02/25/2002 12:29:12 PM PST by VOA
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To: VOA
Funny, now that you mention it, and the WAY you mention it, the international Olympic thieves look an awful lot like the good folks at the U.N. Makes me wonder if any of them are related.
98 posted on 02/25/2002 3:25:43 PM PST by mrustow
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To: don-o
Ditto

I think that every cynic is susceptible to schmaltz in it's pure form.

And yes, I had to reach for a tissue as well.

99 posted on 02/25/2002 3:51:27 PM PST by Ronin
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To: Ronin
Great to hear a great story like this. I have a mirror story that happened regarding some Kids from Ukraine.

About 3-4 years after the break up of Soviet Union. In a boys hockey tournament (several age groups from 9-14) at Piney Orchard Ice Arena (practice facility for Washington Capitals) ...the Ukraine kids ...came in. Initially, it was USA chants. But the chants stopped for 2 reasons: 1)They didnt have uniforms, they had a medley of tattered multi colored unis nor did they have proper safety equipment 2) the first round game where they defeated one of our teams 14-3 displayed jaw dropping skating and passing ability.

After the 4th day and Championship Round of the tourney, which they won 8-1...when the Ukrainian kids went to the lockerroom, they were greeted with bueautiful new color authentic "Ukrania" uniforms and proper safety equipment. It cost alof of money but it was worth it. Those young boys had big smiles on their faces and their coaches tears (along with many in the stands). they adorned the winners circle looking like proud kids. It was our "olympic" moment.

100 posted on 02/28/2002 8:51:01 AM PST by rbmillerjr
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