Latvia’s hopes for a medal in the last few days at London

A day after Martins Plavins and Janis Smedins stunned the United States in an upset win in the beach volleyball quarter-final, the two were beaten in the semi-finals by the world’s top pair from Brazil. Latvia now plays the Netherlands for the bronze medal on Thursday with the loser taking fourth place. It is worth noting that Plavins and Smedins swept the same Dutch pair 2:0 in the preliminary round. But win or lose, Latvia was in the news. Millions took note and you can’t buy that type of publicity.

Heading into the last four days of competition, the majority of Latvia’s athletes have competed and failed to advance. A number are still competing or coming up and could bring in a medal.

Ineta Radevica advanced to the finals in the women’s long jump being held on Wednesday. She won the bronze at the world championships in 2011 and was the European champion in 2010. The BMXers led by Beijing gold medalist Maris Strombergs kick-off three days of competition starting on Wednesday. Latvia will also be competing in a number of other track and field events, the pentathlon, wrestling and weight lifting.

Among those through, Laura Ikauniece finished 9th in the heptathlon while Polina Jelizarova placed 13th in the 3000m steeplechase. Latvia’s other beach volleyball pair Aleksandrs Samoilovs and Ruslans Sorokins also finished 9th although they were tied with eight other countries who did not get past the round of sixteen.

Empire State Building features Latvia

The north side of the Empire State Building in New York City will be illuminated with the colors of Latvia’s flag the night of Aug. 7, according to the structure’s official website.

The tribute is part of the building management’s celebration of the 2012 London Olympics. Sharing the spotlights will be Colombia on the west side, Uzbekistan on the south and Ethiopia on the east.

The other two Baltic nations will be highlighted Aug. 10, with Lithuania’s flag colors viewable on the north side and Estonia’s on the south.

The building, which opened in 1931, is owned by investor Peter L. Malkin.

Empire State Building

The Empire State Building is in New York City. (Photo copyright 2007 by David Sim, used under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license)

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

American media stunned by U.S. loss to Latvia in beach volleyball

Whatever else might happen to the Latvian team of Mārtiņš Pļaviņš and Jānis Šmēdiņš as they proceed into the semi-finals of beach volleyball competition in the 2012 Summer Olympics, it appears clear they have left an impression—especially on the Americans.

It was in California, after all, that the sport was born. And just like four years ago in Beijing, when Māris Strombergs took the gold in the all-American sport of BMX cycling, the small Baltic nation is making sports fans take notice in London.

Journalists working for American media seemed just as stunned as the American team of Jake Gibbs and Sean Rosenthal, who lost Aug. 6 to the Latvians two sets to one.

Yahoo! Sports blogger Greg Wyshynski offered a sobering fact for fans:

For only the second time in the event’s Olympic history, the U.S. men’s beach volleyball teams won’t win a medal in the tournament.

David Wharton, writing in the Los Angeles Times, found meaning in the slight turn in the weather during the match:

As night descended on center court at Horse Guards Parade, a gentle rain began to fall. In that moment, you could see it and feel it, the gloom that had settled over the American men in beach volleyball.

Michael C. Lewis, writing in the Salt Lake Tribune, started his story with an observation of Utah native Gibb:

Jake Gibb stood slump-shouldered and shell-shocked, staring blankly at the spot where the volleyball had just landed in the sand and ended his gold-medal dreams at the London Olympics.

For Gibb, the defeat was “most disappointing loss of my career,” according to a story posted on Team USA’s official website.

Over at NBC Olympics, Jon Ackerman summed up the “stunning end” for the American beach volleyball team and the meaning of these Olympics: “It’s a cruel place for a hot streak to come to an end.”

The Latvians now are guaranteed at least a fourth-place finish as they head into the Aug. 7 semi-finals, facing Brazil’s Alison Cerutti and Emanuel Rego.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.