Had it been a dedicated snowboarding programme on an obscure channel I would have been more tolerant but it was Olympic coverage on mainstream TV to a very broad audience.
I was surprised at the amount of positive feedback on here and from Facebook.
I was shouting at them to shut up and focus on what was going on and keep their silly, squeally opinions to themselves. They were getting far to involved and totally lacked objectivity. IMHO.
I've tried, oh how I've tried to get into these "games". I was pleased for the Great Britain woman who won the bronze medal in the "showing off on a snowboard" EVENT (it's not sport), but the whole idea of watching kids ****ing about in the snow doesn't do it for me, I'm afraid.
It makes a change to have the youth events e.g. snowboarding commentated upon by younger people who know what the sport is about - but the language in this particular event seems inappropriate.
Unlike JJ, I can't get excited by snowboarding, it's like skateboarding on snow.
I haven't watched a great deal of the Winter Olympics, but the bits I saw because OH was watching the snow-boarding I enjoyed, the enthusiastic commentators seemed to add to the youth-feeling of it. As for those disparaging it as "not a Sport", how insulting is that to the youngsters who've worked so hard to get there! What defines a "sport"? Kicking a ball of air around? Shoving balls around a table with a long stick? Throwing little pointy things at a round board?
Kicking a ball into a net is inherently ridiculous. A football team can still win if one or two players have a bad day, or even get sent off. How can that be called a proper sport?
With snowboarding, it's you on your own. No team mates to help you out.
And going off the top of the ramp is like jumping off a multi storey car park and landing on ice.
Maybe snowboarders and footballers should try each other's sports for a day?