[clari.sports.misc] Soviet sports face flagging interest

clarinews@clarinet.com (BENJAMIN ROE) (02/04/90)

	MOSCOW (UPI) -- An unprecedented gathering this week reunited 500 of
the Soviet Union's former Olympic medalists.
	Besides the banquets, balls and speeches, the champions were
recruited for some urgent work: the restoration of Soviet amateur
sports.
	While celebrated abroad, the Soviet sports machine has become a
turn-off at home, tarred by its traditional rhetoric, sloganeering and
close links with the Communist Party.
	Officials, coaches and athletes fret openly about falling
attendance, trimmed budgets and outmoded training techniques and
facilities.
	``The situation has changed greatly,'' said Mikhail Krepkino, 65,
who has been training athletes for more than 35 years. ``The public used
to idolize sportsmen. But in the last 10 years interest has been
constantly declining.''
	Krepkino blamed both bureaucracy and drug scandals, both at home
and abroad, for contributing to the decline.
	``When parents hear of drug abuse, they just do not want their
children involved,'' he said.
	He and his wife, Vera, a four-time Olympian who won the long-jump
gold medal at the 1960 Olympics, were guests of honor at one of the
legendary Soviet ``Schools of Olympic Reserve,'' designed to produce
world champions.
	Their visit afforded a rare Western glimpse into the elite web of
55 high schools around the country that feed the vaunted Soviet sports
juggernaut.
	The 400-student school, an hour's drive from the center of Moscow,
is more selective than most American colleges, accepting about 10
percent of its applicants, according to headmaster Valeri Aseev.
	The principal proudly recites the school's accomplishments.
	``In 19 years, we've had 1,500 graduates,'' he said. ``We've
produced 800 Masters of Sport, and 440 members of Soviet National Teams.
Our graduates have won 22 gold, 17 silver and three bronze medals at the
Olympics.''
	The school's walls are lined with trophies, plaques, slogans and
pictures of Olympic champions. The centerpiece is a huge green-and white
banner, emblazoned ``For the Honor of the Country, for the Glory of
Sport'' above the five interlocking Olympic rings.
	The Krepkinos' message to the packed assembly is simple, and meant
to refute any notions Soviet athletes are spoiled or privileged.
	``We're not actors or artists, we're just ordinary people,'' they
said.
	Their talk was received with polite interest until the
question-and-answer session, when they were asked their opinion of
drug-taking by athletes.
	``Disgust,'' Vera Krepkino said. ``In our time, the only drug was
black coffee. Sometimes I drank half a cup before a big match.''
	Privately, school officials dismissed any notions of drug abuse by
students. And they insisted Soviet athletes do not receive any of the
favoritism that has inspired a backlash against their East German
counterparts.
	``Some privileges existed early on, but we didn't make a policy of
this, like the East Germans did,'' Aseev said.
	``Now, sportsmen might get a car, and an apartment, but that's just
the state helping to solve social questions -- no more than that,'' he
said.
	But all readily acknowledged the Soviet sports apparatus, called
Goskomsport, is choked with appartachiks and badly needs overhauling.
Some have called for its complete dismantling.
	``In this time of perestroika we're trying new ways,'' Aseev said.
``But we have no one to tell us what to do.''