I am curious about the logistics behind choosing events to photograph. Can you walk me through the process of being a photographer at the Winter Olympics? What does a normal day look like for you?
First you must get credentials. It is not that everybody who wants to go to the Olympics can apply for credentials. You must be a member of the national sports press association and also be a member of the AIPS, the international Sports Press Association. About 18 months in advance the National Olympic Committee asks who wants to come. The problem is that there is a special quota on how many from each country can participate. This depends on the number of athletes a country sends to the Games. So a small country like Austria normally does not get more than 5 or 6 photographers to the Games. Germany always sends a huge number of athletes, so they normally get around 35 photographers to the Olympics.
But normally there is a demand of at least 100 photographers. Now the National Olympic committee together with the National Sports Association decide who gets the tickets. The next problem is the Hotels. The closer they are to the events the more expensive they are. And you have to pay the room charge at least 9 months in advance.
Now when I am at the Games, I decide every day which event I will go to. This depends on the chances the German athletes have on a specific event. For example if there is Cross Country and Alpine Skiing, I would choose Alpine because there we have more chances to get a medal. It is always easier to sell their own athletes.
Sometimes events are at the same time or they are so far apart that you have no chance to make it. Transportation is always a big problem. With the buses you lose hours of waiting. To rent a car is normally very expensive. But that is not all. At the event you need a parking place, because you go to different events you need more parking spaces and they charge you for every place. In Nagano (1998) I paid over 2.500 Marks just for parking. This is in my opinion outrageous.