SOCHI, RUSSIA – A day after Russia opened the Winter Olympics with a patriotic snapshot of its history and culture, it seemed the home country had the place mostly to itself. Thousands came to Olympic Park on a bright, springlike day to cheer on hockey players and speedskaters, watch hip-hop dancers, and take photos with the Olympic rings and cauldron.
The vast majority were Russian, save for a few others recognizable by language or national colors: a clump of Italians, a handful of Germans, a cluster of orange-clad speedskating fans from the Netherlands. And exactly one individual wearing the Stars and Stripes.
Sporting one of the crazy-quilt Ralph Lauren sweaters worn by the U.S. contingent in Friday's Opening Ceremony, the man was exuberantly high-fiving passersby, with his attire and behavior making him the only obvious American in the entire 480-acre place.
Except that he wasn't American, at all.
"I don't speak English,'' he said, when asked where he got the sweater. "I'm Albanian.''
Worries over terrorism caused many Americans to stay home from these Olympics, and there had been speculation that a bevy of other serious issues would dampen the mood. The buildup to Friday's Opening Ceremony focused primarily on Sochi's lack of readiness for these Games — from crummy hotel conditions to unfinished construction projects to an abundance of stray dogs roaming the city.
But with Saturday's official start of competition along the subtropical Black Sea coast and in alpine venues in the picturesque Caucasus Mountains, the spotlight finally shifted to the athletes and their pursuit of medals.
And with that, the Games finally felt like a party.