The U.S Olympic Committee plans to bring its own food to Beijing for this summer's Olympics.
Wary of food quality in China following recent incidents of tainted products and reports of the heavy use of drugs and insecticides in food production, the USOC is planning to transport tons of meats and other foods to a training camp at Beijing Normal University.
The move has irked the head of food services for the Summer Games.
jesteinf wrote:I think at least part of the issue is that some people who work for the USOC went to China to check out the food, and found some that had been treated with so many steroids that athletes who ate them probably would have failed drug tests (under anti-doping rules you're responsible for whatever goes into your body, knowingly or unknowingly). I read a story about a month ago (can't remember where, maybe ESPN) talking about how someone from the Olympic Committee went to a market and found chicken breasts that were so large they could feed something like 8 people.
I've also read that athletes are more than encouraged to go out and sample the local food after they have finished competing.
When a caterer working for the United States Olympic Committee went to a supermarket in China last year, he encountered a piece of chicken — half of a breast — that measured 14 inches. “Enough to feed a family of eight,” said Frank Puleo, a caterer from Staten Island who has traveled to China to handle food-related issues. “We had it tested and it was so full of steroids that we never could have given it to athletes. They all would have tested positive.”
jesteinf wrote:Found it, from the NY Times:When a caterer working for the United States Olympic Committee went to a supermarket in China last year, he encountered a piece of chicken — half of a breast — that measured 14 inches. “Enough to feed a family of eight,” said Frank Puleo, a caterer from Staten Island who has traveled to China to handle food-related issues. “We had it tested and it was so full of steroids that we never could have given it to athletes. They all would have tested positive.”
Full article here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/09/sports/othersports/09olympics.html
NY Times wrote:And the men’s weight lifting team was served barbecued guinea pig before a competition in Peru.
NY Times wrote:In the past two years, the U.S.O.C. has tried to figure out how to avoid such dangers at the Olympics. It has made arrangements with sponsors like Kellogg’s and Tyson Foods, which will ship 25,000 pounds of lean protein to China about two months before the opening ceremony, but will hire local vendors and importers to secure other foods and cooking equipment at the Games.
jpschust wrote:Just as an FYI- this is not terribly uncommon, though the reasons are being sensationalized. Very often professional athletes eat very specialized diets that require constant monitoring- I know the runners stick to some very odd diet. Often times coaches just want to make sure that nothing about the diet of their athletes ever changes so they can be in peak form.
Kennyz wrote:jpschust wrote:Just as an FYI- this is not terribly uncommon, though the reasons are being sensationalized. Very often professional athletes eat very specialized diets that require constant monitoring- I know the runners stick to some very odd diet. Often times coaches just want to make sure that nothing about the diet of their athletes ever changes so they can be in peak form.
I agree. There's no story here, other than the Times continuing its move toward National Enquirer type journalism.
Kennyz wrote:If there is "ugly Americanism" here at all, I think the culprit is our press in this case, and not any official American organization.
happy_stomach wrote:I stopped reading anything about China in the NYT a while ago. I got fed up with the alarmism. However, food for optimizing athletic performance and the portability of food for athletes are topics that interest me a lot...
The shipment of 25,000 pounds of meat to China is newsworthy because I think it is unusual (OK, ridiculous...).
In preparing to take a delegation of more than 600 athletes to the Summer Games in Beijing this year, the U.S.O.C. faces food issues beyond steroid-laced chicken. In recent years, some foods in China have been found to be tainted with insecticides and illegal veterinary drugs, and the standards applied to meat there are lower than those in the United States, raising fears of food-borne illnesses.
Cynthia wrote:Plus, think of all the "official (whatever) of the Olympic team" advertisers who'd get left home!
Mhays wrote:Cynthia wrote:Plus, think of all the "official (whatever) of the Olympic team" advertisers who'd get left home!
I think Cynthia may have hit the nail on the head, here - considering they're not using mom-n-pop US suppliers.
Kennyz wrote:Mhays wrote:Cynthia wrote:Plus, think of all the "official (whatever) of the Olympic team" advertisers who'd get left home!
I think Cynthia may have hit the nail on the head, here - considering they're not using mom-n-pop US suppliers.
There are serious import rules when it come to bringing large quantities of food into China (and most other countries). Thousands of pounds of mom and pop meat would have a much harder time passing than would major name brand products.