SOCHI, RUSSIA
The security breach happened Thursday night, only 15 minutes before Sochi's Olympic Park played host to its initial event of the Winter Games. No one saw her slip in. Her identity was unknown, and she fit only the most general description: brown eyes, sandy hair, medium height.
All the considerable security surrounding these Olympic Games — and worldwide publicity about her fugitive pack — could not stop her from sizing up her mark and making her move. And no volunteers, police or Cossacks tried to capture her when she plopped down on the ground, wagged her tail and cadged bits of chicken kebab from a table of twentysomething Russians. On the eve of the Opening Ceremony of the Sochi Games, the controversy over stray dogs — and related worries about toothpaste bombs, terrorist infiltration, hostility to gays and unfinished hotel rooms — finally ceded some of the spotlight to the athletes.
Though the Olympics officially begin Friday, 12 new medal events forced these overstuffed Games into an early start. The Caucasus Mountains, part of the territory inhabited by separatist insurgents, became a playground Thursday for men's and women's slopestyle snowboarders and women's moguls skiers. Home-country hero Evgeni Plushenko put on a dazzling show at the Iceberg Skating Palace on the opening night of team figure skating.
The troubles did not disappear entirely. The heavy security presence was reflected in the military boats that plied the waters of the Black Sea, just off the coast near the Olympic Village, and in the excited barking of police dogs at an Olympic Park vehicle checkpoint. A tangle of razor wire lay just outside the fenced perimeter — the Ring of Wire inside the Ring of Steel — near the hockey arenas.
Russia's deputy prime minister, Dmitry Kozak, said Thursday, "We can guarantee safety and security in Sochi." U.S. women's hockey player Gigi Marvin, a former Gopher from Warroad, Minn., was among several athletes to say she was not thinking about the multiple controversies at all.
"Our excitement level is through the roof, to the moon," Marvin said after practice at Shayba Arena, where the Americans open the women's tournament Saturday against Finland. "We're ready. Let's get going."
The Sochi organizing committee has kept the details of the Opening Ceremony as closely guarded as a state secret. It has been running tests of its pyrotechnics, setting off nightly explosions that generate anticipation rather than apprehension.