4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
This situation has been on the cards for some time.
Matti has had suspended prison sentences before, but this time he is going to jail.
http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Matti+ ... 5259580685
How did he manage to so piss up his life?
Was there nobody able to keep him out of the tabloids, no mentor?
Why not?
Did he not deserve some help when the price of fame was too much for him?
Matti has had suspended prison sentences before, but this time he is going to jail.
http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Matti+ ... 5259580685
How did he manage to so piss up his life?
Was there nobody able to keep him out of the tabloids, no mentor?
Why not?
Did he not deserve some help when the price of fame was too much for him?
People do not become more irritable as they grow old - they simply stop making the effort to avoid annoying others.
Re: 4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
He's been to jail before. He got two years and change in 2004, and a further 4-month sentence that was commuted to community service in 2006.
Re: 4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
I stand corrected I thought that 2 year sentence was suspended, but just checked and of course you are right.otyikondo wrote:He's been to jail before. He got two years and change in 2004, and a further 4-month sentence that was commuted to community service in 2006.
It was reduced to one year but he went inside.
People do not become more irritable as they grow old - they simply stop making the effort to avoid annoying others.
Re: 4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
Well... just because he was good in ski jumping does not mean he was incapable of wanting to be reckless or anything like that - don't get me wrong, I don't think he should carry all the blame himself but I just think it's equally unreasonable to try and see him as an "innocent victim" only. Yes, he probably was young and naive; yes, someone quite probably even told him not to piss up his life - but alas, as often is the case he probably did not want to listen in the first place... and you can't change people by force - why some people seem to want to choose the hard way... I just don't know. Elämä on laiffii...sinikettu wrote:How did he manage to so piss up his life?
Was there nobody able to keep him out of the tabloids, no mentor?
Why not?
Did he not deserve some help when the price of fame was too much for him?
Re: 4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
Just found a quote attributed to him
"On kaksi osaa ihmisiä. Joku vetää huumeita, joku urheilee, joku vetää itsensä loppuun ja joku vaan nukkuu. Minä kuulun siihen porukkaan, joka nukkuu, urheilee, rakastelee ja hakkaa itseään ja voipi olla, että siinä joskus osuu toiseenkin ihmiseen."
"There are two parts of people. Some take drugs, some do sports, some rushes into burn-out and some just sleep. I'm one of those people who sleep, do sports, make love and beat themselves, and sometimes one may accidentally hit someone else, too."
"On kaksi osaa ihmisiä. Joku vetää huumeita, joku urheilee, joku vetää itsensä loppuun ja joku vaan nukkuu. Minä kuulun siihen porukkaan, joka nukkuu, urheilee, rakastelee ja hakkaa itseään ja voipi olla, että siinä joskus osuu toiseenkin ihmiseen."
"There are two parts of people. Some take drugs, some do sports, some rushes into burn-out and some just sleep. I'm one of those people who sleep, do sports, make love and beat themselves, and sometimes one may accidentally hit someone else, too."
People do not become more irritable as they grow old - they simply stop making the effort to avoid annoying others.
Re: 4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
One of the most bewildering Nykänen quotations in terms of fuzzy logic is this one...
"Tekemätöntä ei saa tekemättömäksi"
...could perhaps be translated as "what's not done can't be undone". Maybe this answers your original question by the way? For, intentional or not, there's wisdom of sorts in it
"Tekemätöntä ei saa tekemättömäksi"
...could perhaps be translated as "what's not done can't be undone". Maybe this answers your original question by the way? For, intentional or not, there's wisdom of sorts in it

Re: 4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
Fine quotes from Matti: http://fi.wikiquote.org/wiki/Matti_Nyk%C3%A4nen
And lets not forget Seppo: http://fi.wikiquote.org/wiki/Seppo_R%C3%A4ty
And lets not forget Seppo: http://fi.wikiquote.org/wiki/Seppo_R%C3%A4ty
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Re: 4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
Not just Matti look at Gazza.
Re: 4 Olympic Gold Medals and 16 months in prison
Was he claiming he had a reputation based on (or stood accused of doing) many things he actually hadn't done in the first place?sammy wrote:One of the most bewildering Nykänen quotations in terms of fuzzy logic is this one...
"Tekemätöntä ei saa tekemättömäksi"
...could perhaps be translated as "what's not done can't be undone". Maybe this answers your original question by the way? For, intentional or not, there's wisdom of sorts in it
Seems a little sophisticated for Matti, doesn't it? Now if it were Yogi Berra who said that, we'd consider it both clever and profound.
But I can see someone saying "I can't undo something I never did in the first place." Or someone in a court trial saying "I can't apologize for something I didn't do to begin with," explaining his lack of repentance for a horrifying crime of which he claims to be innocent.
As he persisted, I was obliged to tootle him gently at first and then, seeing no improvement, to trumpet him vigorously with my horn.