Sometimes It's True: Winning Isn't Everything.

AuthorVilbig, Peter
PositionBrief Article

Based on recent headlines, it would be tempting to think of the Olympic Games as a big business in which professional athletes, sometimes pumped up on performance-enhancing drugs, compete for lucrative commercial contracts.

But before you let your cynical imagination run wild, consider the case of two American athletes competing recently for one spot on the U.S. Olympic tae kwon do team, Esther Kim and Kay Poe.

After all the preliminary bouts, the final match came down to Kim and Poe, close friends who had trained together for 13 years. The winner would qualify for the Olympic Games in Australia this September; the other would stay home.

Trouble was, Poe, 18, had dislocated her knee in an earlier match. Unable to fight, she was compelled to forfeit, despite having previously beaten Kim. That's when, for one brief shining moment, the Olympic spirit flared up in Kim's heart. The 20-year-old told her friend she would drop out of the match, guaranteeing Poe a chance in Australia for a gold medal.

"It felt like the only right thing to do," Kim says. "It did hurt, but winning a gold medal...

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