Hope Solo reveals "Olympics Secret"

Henry Orbit

Finesser
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
11,226
Reputation
3,878
Daps
55,801
Reppin
The Old North State
The Olympic Village :krs:

Gold Medalist Hope Solo Reveals 'Olympics Secret' - ABC News

The buff and beautiful U.S. gold-medalist Hope Solo reveals the secrets of life among athletes in the Olympic Village, telling ESPN about a few key moments of the 2008 Beijing games that were not so solo at all.

Solo, who was the goalkeeper at Beijing 2008 and helped lead the U.S. team to a 1-0 victory over Brazil, told ESPN magazine that one night during the Beijing games she sneaked an unnamed celebrity back to her room in the Olympic Village, which was a major violation of the rules.

Solo calls this her "Olympics secret."

"When you mix great bodies with considerable confidence, and in some cases substantial wealth, you have a recipe for a very effective game," ESPN writer Sam Alipour told ABC News.

Solo, 30, also discussed the level of partying that some young athletes do while at the event, particularly after a big win. After the U.S. women's soccer team won the gold that year, Solo says she and her teammates went on an all-night bender with actor Vince Vaughn.

"When we were done partying, we got out of our nice dresses, got back into our stadium coats," at which point, she says, they went on live television, still drunk.


Solo even flubbed the interview, answering a question, "There is no pressure going into the game, other than it being a World Cup -- I mean an … an Olympic Final."

Alipour says that rules of conduct while representing one's nation at the games vary between teams and countries.

"Some enforce a curfew -- an 11 p.m. noise curfew -- others have chaperones," he says. "But where there is a will, there is a way."

"In many cases it's celebratory sex for the winners, in the case of the losers, it's a consolation prize," Alipour added.

Solo is just one of many athletes now spilling stories to ESPN about the Olympic Village -- a place where officials reportedly regularly stock a hundred thousand condoms.

American javelin thrower Breaux Greer tells ESPN he had sex with three women a day during the 2000 Olympics. Skier Carrie Sheinberg says in 1994, German bobsledders offered her their gold medals in exchange for sex.

Swimmer Ryan Lochte estimates that 70-75 percent of all Olympians are having sex, as he points it poetically, "Hey, sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do."


"You're taking those athletes out of their natural habit, and you're dropping them into the world's largest coed dorm," USA Today Columnist Christine Brennan said.

John Godina, silver and bronze medalist in shot-put tells ABC News that sex isn't necessarily the first thing on the minds of these Olympians.

"Athletes go there focused and once their job is done, they have fun," Godina said. "They don't necessarily go there looking for it, but things happen ... you learn not to ask a lot of questions."
 

Rev

Bong
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
22,600
Reputation
3,712
Daps
73,128
Reppin
Uptown
In many cases it's celebratory sex for the winners, in the case of the losers, it's a consolation prize," Alipour added.

Solo is just one of many athletes now spilling stories to ESPN about the Olympic Village -- a place where officials reportedly regularly stock a hundred thousand condoms.

9aocv7.jpg
 

Kunty McPhuck

Scust Szn has Returned
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
34,131
Reputation
3,942
Daps
67,993
Reppin
Books and Pencils
I would be stationed outside of the Jamaican women track team quarters

cock in hand asking for little Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce

after her, im taking down the US women track team.

You cant do it, but I can. :stylin:

Not gunna wank till the track and field starts :shaq:

Till then only time my cock is in hand is to :piss:
 

HiphopRelated

In Broad Daylight
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
21,315
Reputation
2,589
Daps
48,985
Reppin
My brother's keeper
AMERICAN TARGET SHOOTER Josh Lakatos faced a conundrum. Halfway through the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, he and his rifle-toting teammates were finished with their events, and the U.S. Olympic Committee and team officials had ordered them to turn in the keys to their three-story house and head back to the States. But Lakatos didn't want to leave. He knew from his experience four years earlier in Atlanta, where he'd won silver, that the Olympic Village was just about to erupt into a raucous party, and there was no way he was going to miss it. So he asked the maid at the emptied-out dwelling if she'd kindly look the other way as he jimmied the lock. "I don't care what you do," she replied.

Within hours, word of the nearly vacant property had spread. Popping up once every two years, the Olympic Village is a boisterous city within a city: chock-full of condos, midrises and houses as well as cafés, barbershops, arcades, discos and TV lounges. The only thing missing is privacy -- nearly everyone is stuck with a roommate. So while Lakatos claimed a first-floor suite for himself, the remaining rooms were there for the taking. The first to claim space that night were some Team USA track and field fellas.

"The next morning," Lakatos says, "swear to God, the entire women's 4x100 relay team of some Scandinavian-looking country walks out of the house, followed by boys from our side. And I'm just going, 'Holy crap, we'd watched these girls run the night before.'"

And on it went for eight days as scores of Olympians, male and female, trickled into the shooter's house -- and that's what everyone called it, Shooters' House -- at all hours, stopping by an Oakley duffel bag overflowing with condoms procured from the village's helpful medical clinic. After a while, it dawned on Lakatos: "I'm running a friggin' brothel in the Olympic Village! I've never witnessed so much debauchery in my entire life."

TAKE YOUR MARK
Home to more than 10,000 athletes at the Summer Games and 2,700 at the Winter, the Olympic Village is one of the world's most exclusive clubs. To join, prospective members need only have spectacular talent and -- we long assumed -- a chaste devotion to the most intense competition of their lives. But the image of a celibate Games began to flicker in '92 when it was reported that the Games' organizers had ordered in prophylactics like pizza. Then, at the 2000 Sydney Games, 70,000 condoms wasn't enough, prompting a second order of 20,000 and a new standing order of 100,000 condoms per Olympics.

Many Olympians, past and present, abide by what Summer Sanders, a swimmer who won two gold medals, a silver and a bronze in Barcelona, calls the second Olympic motto: "What happens in the village stays in the village." Yet if you ask enough active and retired athletes often enough to spill their secrets, the village gates will fly open. It quickly becomes clear that, summer or winter, the games go on long after the medal ceremony. "There's a lot of sex going on," says women's soccer goalkeeper Hope Solo, a gold medalist in 2008. How much sex? "I'd say it's 70 percent to 75 percent of Olympians," offers world-record-holding swimmer Ryan Lochte, who will be in London for his third Games. "Hey, sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do."

http://espn.go.com/olympics/summer/...s-dirty-secrets-olympic-village-espn-magazine
 

charknicks

All Star
Joined
May 6, 2012
Messages
5,242
Reputation
411
Daps
11,393
Damn, the Olympic Village will be looking like Calligula!

I would love to be around all those fine, in-shape women from around the world, looking to release some steam.:ohlawd:
 
Joined
May 31, 2012
Messages
3,019
Reputation
26
Daps
1,507
:manny: it makes sense. Because sex releases those endorphins and these competitions are not long. But if this was NBA or NFL then it would be a nono. Plus you have to consider these people are probably soo undersexed from training so much that thirstiness combines and creates an sexplosion.
 
Top