Showing posts with label London Olympics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label London Olympics. Show all posts

Friday, July 27, 2012

Olympics 2012 Opening Ceremony time, schedule: London welcomes world tonight with massive event

One of the biggest secrets in London will finally be revealed Friday: what will happen at the opening ceremony for the Summer Olympic Games.

Friday night perhaps a billion people will finally get to see the extravaganza created by Danny Boyle, best known for the Oscar-winning film "Slumdog Millionare."

The day got off to a resounding start as bells around the country, including London's famous Big Ben, pealed for three minutes.

The Olympic torch, which has traveled around the United Kingdom over the past 70 days, then set off on the final leg of its journey toward the stadium, aboard the royal barge Gloriana.

Rowers will propel the barge, which played a central role in Queen Elizabeth II's diamond jubilee celebrations, down the River Thames from Hampton Court to Tower Bridge.

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Former Olympian rower Matthew Pinsent, tasked with carrying the flame on to the barge, said this was "a huge day for London."

Crowds lined the river's banks to cheer the torch along, adding to the more than 13 million who've turned out to watch it pass in the course of its 8,000-mile journey, according to the government.

Forecasters at Britain's Met Office say rain showers over London should clear by evening, allowing those watching the opening ceremony at the stadium to stay dry.

Few specifics have been released about the three-hour show -- but keeping the details quiet has been a challenge taking into account the thousands of performers and technicians involved, plus two dress rehearsals held this week.

A Twitter hashtag, #savethesurprise, was started by Olympic organizers to help keep details private, but some aspects of the show have leaked out nonetheless.

What the organizers have made public is that the show's opening scene is dubbed "Green and Pleasant," after a line from poet William Blake's Jerusalem and will showcase an idyllic view of a British countryside.

The elaborate set will comprise rolling hills, fields and rivers, complete with picnicking families, sport being played on a village green and real farmyard animals.

Not many names of the celebrities that will be part of the ceremony have been released. But star footballer David Beckham has said he has a role in the spectacle.

It will begin at 9 p.m. local time (4 p.m. ET) with the tolling of the largest harmonically tuned bell in Europe, cast by the nearby Whitechapel Foundry.

The torch will reappear during the show's grand finale, when it will be carried into Olympic Stadium and used to set the Olympic cauldron aflame, symbolizing the beginning of the Games.

On Thursday, the torch was taken past iconic London landmarks.

Crowds joined British Prime Minister David Cameron and his wife as the torch reached the doorstep of their Downing Street home. Next, the torch went past the Big Ben clock tower, carried by 81-year-old native Londoner Florence Rowe, who says she fondly remembers the excitement of the 1948 London Olympics.

The last major stop was Buckingham Palace, where Prince William, his wife Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, and Prince Harry greeted the torchbearers.

Fake ticket warning

Some Olympic competition commenced ahead of the official opening ceremony.

All 128 competing archers are taking part Friday in a preliminary round at Lord's Cricket Ground to determine seedings for the individual and team competitions.

UK media reported Friday that hundreds of disappointed people had been turned away from the site Friday morning, however, after the apparent sale of some fake tickets and confusion over whether the event was open to the public.

The London organizing committee, LOCOG, said tickets had neither been advertised nor sold.

"We think we have made it very clear that this is not a free event, like the Road Races or Marathon which have been advertised as free events," a statement said.

"This is a ranking round and there is no spectator access at all. We are dealing with this at the venue, along with some people who have turned up with fake tickets purchased from a fraudulent website."

People are urged to "be extremely cautious and vigilant when attempting to buy tickets and only purchase from an official source," the statement says.

Thursday saw the start of the men's football competition, with global favorites Spain and Brazil playing, though not against each other.

Spain, which won the European Championship this year and the last World Cup, suffered a surprising 1-0 defeat to Japan in one of eight games scheduled Thursday.

Brazil -- which, like Spain, is considered a likely contender to win Olympic gold -- beat Egypt 3-2. Great Britain, playing football in the Olympics for the first time since 1960, scored a 1-1 draw in its match against Senegal after letting in a late goal.

Two notable absences are Argentina and the United States, neither of which qualified.

Opening Ceremony London 2012 Guide

The Summer Olympics is the biggest stage for the greatest athletes on earth.

Up to a billion fans will enjoy athletics, swimming and basketball to gymnastics, volleyball, diving and tennis.

But for some - the main event is the Opening Ceremony.

WHEN:

London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony can be seen at 7:30 pm ET on NBC.

WHERE:

Olympic stadium is the centerpiece of London's Olympic Park, which is hosting all of the athletics and paralympic athletics events.
The Stadium seats up to 80,000 people, and 55,000 of the seats are removable. About 10,000 tons of steel were used to build the venue, compared to the 42,000 used by Beijing for their ‘Bird’s Nest’.

THE SHOW:

This year's show is called the 'Isle of Wonder.' A celebration of British culture, with a touch of Shakespeare, pop music, James Bond — and even some farm animals. Up to a billion people are expected to tune in to the $42 million, three-hour extravaganza.

Over 15,000 volunteers have worked together on the show that will bring you through the rich and textured journey through British history.

The man behind the massive Opening Ceremony effort is Director Danny Boyle.

Boyle says there will be sheep, horses, a cricket game, and Paul McCartney.

Reports are also suggesting a pre-recorded segment filmed inside Buckingham Palace featuring actor Daniel Craig as Bond, and a stuntman dressed as 007 who will parachute into the stadium to start the show.

Each of Great Britain's four nations — England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland — will be represented by a maypole topped with their national flowers, according to the Associated Press. "A pagan folk symbol, the maypole is still commonly erected in British villages during May Day celebrations (as well as elsewhere in Europe) to celebrate the return of warmer weather."

Expect dancing nurses.

Boyle says dancing nurses will be used to celebrate the National Health Service, the country's universal health program.

#SAVETHESURPRISE:

Oscar winning film director, Boyle pulled out all the stops in attempting to keep the Opening Ceremony a secret.

During rehearsals, the hashtag #SAVETHESURPRISE was put on all of the stadium's big screens. Lord Coe, the chairman of the Olympic games,also made a personal appeal to the the crowd sealed about the show.

According to the Telegraph, although there have been aerial photographs of the rehearsal. Most tweets from show volunteers point to a spectacular show.

Jill Lawless tweeted: “I will #savethesurprise, but will just say that Danny Boyle's #London2012 opening ceremony is splendidly British and magnificently bonkers.”

TORCH LIGHTING:

The identity of the person who will light the Olympic cauldron is still a mystery but many believe it will be an Olympic champion. Roger Bannister is the favorite. Bannister broke the 4-minute barrier in the mile in 1954.

The Olympic cauldron will be lit with a flame that was kindled May 10, at the birthplace of the ancient Olympics in Greece.

Since then, 8,000 torchbearers, mostly Britons, carried the flame on a 70-day, 8,000-mile journey throughout the British Isles.

Olympics Schedule 2012: live stream online and TV has tennis, swimming Saturday

The Olympics schedule 2012 edition will kick off the latest summer games from London, England, with multiple events shown on Saturday, July 28th. These will include tennis and swimming events both televised, as well as live streaming online coverage. Among those competing are Team USA's Michael Phelps, Venus Williams and Andy Roddick in these first events of the London Olympics.

The Olympics live stream coverage will be shown via internet feeds courtesy of NBC Olympics website, while television programming will be seen on NBC affiliates, as well as Bravo, NBC Sports Network and Telefutura on cable or satellite providers around the nation.

According to Mercuy News, Michael Phelps looks to continue to add to his impressive total Olympic medal count of 16. He'll be competing in the 400m IM event for the men. There's coverage scheduled for Telemundo from 8:00 a.m. EST through 5:00 p.m. EST, as well as qualifying on local NBC affiliate stations from 1:30 p.m. EST to 2:30 p.m. EST. The swimming finals will be part of the "NBC Primetime" coverage from 8:00 p.m. EST through 12:00 a.m. EST on Saturday night.


Video: 2012 London Olympics preview video for swimming

With the early swimming, Team USA will feature two stars competing against the rest of the world, and each other. Friends Ryan Lochte and Michael Phelps will go head-to-head in the 400 IM event. Phelps needs just three more medals to become the "most-decorated Olympian of all-time." Lochte said of his teammate and opponent:

"Me and him, we've created a great rivalry but also a great friendship after the race. I hope it continues that way."

Round 1 of tennis starts at 6:30 a.m. EST for both the men and women with several times already announced for the Wimbledon courts. In the men's opening round, it will be Andy Roddick taking on Slovakia's Klizan Martin. John Isner will face Rochus Olivier of Belarus at 8:30 a.m. EST on court 2 at Wimbledon. Roger Federer of Switzerland battles Alejandro Falla of Columbia starting at 11 a.m. EST. Novak Djokovic, Federer, and Andy Murray currently lead the Olympics odds on favorite to win the men's side.

Meanwhile, Venus Williams begins round 1 of the Women's Singles tennis playing Italy's Sara Errani, while her sister Serena starts off against Jelena Jankovic of Serbia at 9:00 a.m. EST on the Centre court at Wimbledon. Also in action for the women is Russia's Maria Sharapova, Belarus' Kim Clijsters, and Denmarks Caroline Wozniacki (1:00 p.m. EST).

Televised tennis coverage can be seen on Bravo via Cox Cable channel 41, from 7:00 a.m. EST through 3:00 p.m. EST. It can also be seen live streaming online via the NBCOlympics.com website.

Opening Ceremony 2012: LIVE Updates From The Start Of London Olympics

As far as most people are concerned, the 2012 London Olympics officially begin on Friday with the highly-anticipated Opening Ceremony helmed by Oscar-winner Danny Boyle. That some of the events have already taken place (including a thrilling comeback by the U.S. women's soccer team) won't detract from the "Isles Of Wonder"spectacle unfolding at the Olympic Stadium in London.

With its elaborate -- and somewhat still secret -- production, the 2012 Opening Ceremony will aim to produce moments as memorable as Muhammad Ali's inspiring torch lighting in Atlanta and the breathtaking long-range, pyrotechnic archery of Barcelona.

Stay tuned for live updates, commentary, images and video from the real-time rendition of the spectacle in London all the way through the televised version that airs later on NBC in the United States.

For those waiting for the stateside primetime broadcast, be warned there will be spoilers below.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Opening ceremony of London Olympics is going to be a big affair


ONE DAY to go for the world's biggest sports event - the XXX Olympics event better known as London Olympics to start. London won the right to stage the event in Singapore in 2005 against bids from New York, Madrid, Paris and Moscow. London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) and the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) are jointly organising the summer Olympics 2012. This event is co-chaired by the Minister for Sport and Olympics and the Mayor of London.

During the 17 days of competitions in London Olympics, 26 Olympic sports will be played at 34 venues. Wenlock and Mandeville is the mascot of the Olympic Games 2012, which are scheduled from July 27 to August 12. The opening ceremony of the mega sports extravaganza will kick off at 9 p.m. on Friday July 27 at the Olympics Stadium in London. Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh will officially open the event.

During the opening ceremony the 204 competing nations will parade with their national flag and according to custom, Greece, who hosted the first modern Olympic games in 1896, will lead the parade and the host nation Great Britain will come in last. Other competing countries take part in the parade in alphabetical order. In the Opening Ceremony Olympic flame will ignites the Cauldron.

The name of the Olympic Opening Ceremony show will be called 'Isles of Wonder'. Film Slumdog Millionaire 'Oscar-winning' director Danny Boyle, who is also the Artistic Director of the London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony, and his team will provide an opportunity for the world to view the artistic expression and the culture of London and the UK.

According to the London Olympics official website, the ceremony will kick off with the sound of the largest harmonically tuned bell in Europe, produced by the Whitechapel Foundry, and the Stadium will be transformed into the British countryside for opening scene ‘Green and Pleasant’, which includes real farmyard animals.

During the event the stadium will be packed with 80,000 spectators, 16,000 athletes, 10,000 performers. In the opening ceremony 70 sheep, 12 horses, ten chickens, three cows, two goats and even dogs and geese will also be the part of it. The Republican Presidential nominee of United States, Mitt Romney, will also attend the event. Along with Mitt Romney hundreds of VVIPs will also attend the event from across the world.

Olympics: London gears up for grand opening spectacle


London is all set to dazzle the world with a grand opening ceremony to launch the greatest show on earth featuring over 10,000 athletes over the next fortnight, a spectacle that has seen the cost escalating to £9.3 billion ($14.5 billion).

The British capital will set itself apart, as it has so often down the centuries, by being different. Beijing`s curtain raiser featured 2,008 pounding drummers and a cauldron-lighter who seemed to float in the air of the Bird`s Nest stadium. London will have 70 sheep, 12 horses, 10 chickens and nine geese - recruited by Oscar-winning director Danny Boyle along with a cast and crew of 10,000 to present a quirky, humorous and vibrant vision of quintessential Britain, its history and future to an expected global television audience of 1 billion.

London is not the same as it was when the games were awarded seven years ago. Its serenity and confidence were shaken by riots last year and by terror bombings on the transport network that killed 56 people the day after the International Olympic Committee picked London over Paris in 2005. In London, the Olympic Games have come to a sprawling, historic metropolis that lives and breathes sports, with a population more global and diverse than perhaps any other, but which still feels it needs the Olympic spotlight to help secure its future as one of the world`s great cities.




In depicting Britain, warts and all, Boyle has drawn from William Shakespeare, British pop culture, literature and music, and other sources of inspiration that will speak not just to Anglophiles but to people across the globe. One segment involves actor Daniel Craig`s James Bond, and former Beatle Paul McCartney will lead a sing-along.

Boyle`s Isles of Wonder show will celebrate the green and pleasant land of meadows, farms, cottages, village cricket matches and bird song, but also dwell on Britain`s darker industrial past. That`s not a surprise from a movie director who depicted Scottish heroin addicts in "Trainspotting" and Indian poor in Slumdog Millionaire.

As well as thousands of athletes and performers, some 60,000 spectators will pack the Olympic Stadium. Political leaders from around the world, U.S. first lady Michelle Obama and her daughters, and a sprinkling of European and celebrity royalty will also attend.

According to the Sunday Times, one section will feature characters from children`s fiction classics including Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan - and a showdown between Lord Voldemort, the villain of J.K. Rowling`s Harry Potter books, and a horde of flying magical nannies based on Mary Poppins.

"I would have thought the difficulty is how you cram in all that is great about our country," British Prime Minister David Cameron said Thursday. "Whether it is sport, art, literature, history, contribution to world events, there are so many things to celebrate about our country that packing all that in to these hours must be a pretty tough task. But I am confident they have done a good job."


Many of the juiciest and most significant details from the three-hour show, including the identity of the person or people who will light the Olympic cauldron - if, indeed, there is one - remain secret. That is, in itself, remarkable for the first social media Olympics, where the urge to tweet anything and everything is putting more scrutiny than ever on organisers and the 10,902 athletes from 204 countries.

Most will return home after 16 days of competition as they arrived: the pride of family and friends but still unknown to the wider public, unsung practitioners of sports - think archery, synchronized swimming, wrestling and the like - that get little attention for 206 weeks before blossoming in the two-week Olympic festival.

Medalists will be guaranteed recognition and perhaps fame and fortune for the luckier ones, especially the more than 300 who win gold. A hundredth of a second here, a centimeter there, in the pool or in the shooting gallery could make an athlete a household name. Their gold medals will be largest of any summer games and, at 400 grams (14 ounces), the heaviest, too.

Amputee runner Oscar Pistorius and women boxers will get headlines for being Olympic pioneers. But for other established stars who fail in quests to retain or win more Olympic titles, London will mark the end or the beginning of the end of their careers.

U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps insists these will be his last games. The 14-time gold medalist will go out with a bang, aiming to claim the unofficial title of greatest Olympian ever from Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina. She got 18 medals. Phelps has 16, and seven opportunities in London to overtake her. His rivalry with U.S. teammate Ryan Lochte promises one of the most compelling dramas of London. They will swim against each other twice: in medleys over 200 meters and, on the first full day of competition Saturday, over 400 meters in the Aquatics Center with its ceiling that slopes like the underbelly of a whale.

Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt, the other standout star from Beijing, wants to become a sports legend on a par with Jesse Owens, Pele or Muhammad Ali by retaining his Olympic titles in the 100, 200 and sprint relay. But the World`s Fastest Man faces stiffer competition, this time from countryman Yohan Blake and American rivals Tyson Gay and Justin Gatlin.

In Beijing, the geopolitical significance of China`s rise as a global superpower was as much the story as the sports. London, the first city to host the event a third time after previous games in 1908 and 1948, could in contrast be a purer Olympics, more about the athletes than the context. Could be more fun, too, without the backdrop of international concern over China`s human rights record.

Big questions are how London`s transport system will cope with millions of spectators and whether grumbling Britons will get behind their Olympics as they did for this year`s celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II`s Diamond Jubilee. The monarch will officially open the games at Friday`s ceremony that will start at 9 p.m. with the sound of a 27-ton bell forged at the 442-year-old Whitechapel Bell Foundry, which made London`s Big Ben and Philadelphia`s Liberty Bell.

Lavishing more than 9 billion pounds ($14 billion), triple the estimated cost when London secured the games in 2005, in the midst of severe economic storms in Britain and Europe has provoked pointed and persistent questions about whether the expense can be justified and whether the games will have a lasting positive impact for the host city and for Britain.

The most obvious legacy for London is Olympic Park, with the 80,000-capacity stadium that will host the opening ceremony and other new venues. It is built on formerly derelict, polluted industrial land in the east of the city that bore the brunt of bombing in World War II and, for centuries, concentrated London`s stinkiest industries and its poor.

Other benefits from the July 27-Aug. 12 games, particularly the power of the Olympics to inspire kids to take up sports and to aim high, might not be obvious for years.

Agencies 

Five reasons why London Olympics will be historic


Over 10,000 athletes will participate in the 30th edition of the sporting extravaganza when the 2012 Summer Olympic Games get started with the opening ceremony on 27 July. Following are the five moments which would make London 2012 a historic Games.

London 2012

With the lighting of the Olympic flame on Friday, London will become the first city to officially host the modern Olympic Games three times having previously done so in 1908 and in 1948. London was selected as the host city on 6 July 2005 during the 117th IOC Session in Singapore, defeating bids from Moscow, New York City, Madrid and Paris.

Usain Bolt

Jamaican Usain Bolt took the world by storm at the 2008 Beijing Games by winning three gold medals setting new world records. He rewrote the 100m history books in only his fifth senior run over the distance. He is the Olympic and World Record holder in 100 metres, 200 metres and 4×100 metres relay. However, Bolt faces a stiff challenge from fellow Jamaican Yohan Blake this time around. If he can overcome in-form Blake he will become the first man to achieve the 100m and 200m Olympic sprint double twice. No one has successfully defended the 200m title in Olympics. American Carl Lewis is the only man to win the 100m title back to back (in 1984 and 1988 Games).

Michael Phelps

The American swimmer has 16 Olympic medals to his credit. That included six gold and two bronze at Athens in 2004 and eight gold at Beijing in 2008. He is second only to the Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina in terms of total Olympic medal. Larisa Latynina has 18 medals won over three Olympics. Phelps, who is just two short of that mark, has plenty of chances to bridge that gap as he is competing in seven events in London. This feat is easily achievable for Phelps considering his records over past Games. He holds the all-time record for most gold Olympic medals, at 14, as well as the record for most gold medals in individual events, at nine.

Brazil football team

Brazilian football team is the most successful team in the history of world football with five World Cup titles to their credit. Even though they have won silver in 1984 and 1988, and bronze in 1996 and 2008, an Olympic gold continues to elude them. However, Brazil are determined to end the drought this time around which is evident from their decision to send a strong squad to the Olympics. With the likes of Neymar, Oscar, Lucas, and Alexandre Pato in their ranks, the Brazilians are the team to beat in London.

Oscar Pistorius

The South African, who will compete in the 400m and the 4 x 400 m relay races, is set to be the first double amputee athlete to compete at the Olympics. Oscar Pistorius ran for the first time with able-bodied athletes in 2007. But a ruling by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) made him ineligible to take part in the events with able-bodied athletes in future, which included the 2008 Beijing Olympics. But he was soon cleared after the IAAF`s decision was overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. 

London Olympics: Estimated global audience of 4bn promised spectacular opening ceremony


FOUR billion people are expected to watch the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympics tonight – making it the biggest party the world has ever seen. The spectacular show by Trainspotting director Danny Boyle is guaranteed to wow the global audience with its eccentric and energetic dash through the best of British culture and history.

The £27million extravaganza will celebrate great British institutions such as the NHS as well as our artistic achievements. And apart from fireworks that will explode over the Olympic stadium, sporting heroes including Muhammad Ali and David Beckham will help light up the opening ceremony by taking part in a “parade of stars”.

A 30-second video snapshot was released last night to give people a taste of what’s to come. It showed choreographed dancers in a range of costumes and cyclists with lit-up wings whizzing around the track. The 30th Olympiad will be declared officially open by the Queen. And Paul McCartney will close the show with a huge singalong of Beatles hit Hey Jude. Coverage kicks off on BBC1 at 5pm, with the official ceremony starting at 9pm. It emerged last night that tickets – priced at £1600 and £2012 – were still available for the spectacle.

But, rather than having empty seats, they are expected to be handed out to volunteers. Prime Minister David Cameron promised yesterday that the opening ceremony will be a “spine-tingling” experience.



He said the three-hour curtain-raiser would keep the huge global audience enthralled. He added: “Cramming everything that is great about our country… into those hours must be a pretty difficult task. There is so much. But you will find it spine-tingling.” During a visit to the Olympic Park, Cameron said today would be a “truly momentous day”.

He told the global media gathered at the site: “It gives me great pride to welcome you. “Seven years of planning, building and dreaming are almost over. “Tomorrow, the curtain comes up.”

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

London Olympics: U.S., France tied 2-2 at half in women's soccer


The U.S. has reached the final of every Olympic women's soccer tournament. But now it appears that the rest of the world is catching up to the Americans, who had to rally from two goals down to tie France, 2-2, after the first half of their opening match Wednesday at Hampden Park.

The 12-team field in this summer’s Olympic Games is the deepest ever, featuring eight of the top nine teams in the latest FIFA rankings. One of those is No. 6 France, which hasn't lost since last summer’s World Cup, a span of 17 matches. And it was France that quickly opened a 2-0 lead Wednesday on goals by Gaetane Thiney and Marie-Laure Delie.

Thiney got the first one, in the 12th minute, on a right-footed shot from well outside the area.

The sequence started with a long ball from the French end that U.S. defender Amy Le Peilbet headed away from her goal. But the ball bounced right to Thiney, whose shot deflected off the hand of keeper Hope Solo’s hands and into the top right-hand corner of the net.

A patient Delie doubled the advance for France two minutes later after the U.S. did a horrible job of clearing a loose ball from the edge of the 18-yard box. The ball was touched by at least three U.S. players -- including Le Peilbet and Megan Rapinoe, who got a foot on the ball twice --– before Delie blasted another shot off Solo's hands and into the goal.

That advantage lasted less than five minutes, though, before Abby Wambach headed home a long corner kick from Rapinoe, ending a string of seven consecutive shutouts for France.

In the 33rd minute, Alex Morgan took advantage of a momentous breakdown by the French defense to tie the match. A long goal kick by Solo eluded Wambach's attempt at a header and bounced untouched toward the goal, allowing Morgan to narrowly beat French keeper Sarah Bouhaddi to the ball and volley a soft left-footer over Bouhaddi's shoulder.

That marked the first time this year France has allowed two goals in a match -- much less in a half.

The U.S. seemed to have little answer to the speed of Delie, who nearly put France ahead again just before the intermission, first when she missed high on a right-footed shot from about 15 yards and later when a header toward the left post was snatched out of the air by Solo.

The U.S. got a scare early in the half when Morgan, the team’s leading scorer, was knocked to the turf by French captain Ophelie Meilleroux. Morgan lay on the turf for a couple of minutes before bounding up and remaining in the game.

Not so fortunate was midfielder Shannon Boxx. She went down in the 16th minute and came out of the game in favor of Carli Lloyd.

London Olympics: U.S., France tied 2-2 at half in women's soccer


The U.S. has reached the final of every Olympic women's soccer tournament. But now it appears that the rest of the world is catching up to the Americans, who had to rally from two goals down to tie France, 2-2, after the first half of their opening match Wednesday at Hampden Park.

The 12-team field in this summer’s Olympic Games is the deepest ever, featuring eight of the top nine teams in the latest FIFA rankings. One of those is No. 6 France, which hasn't lost since last summer’s World Cup, a span of 17 matches. And it was France that quickly opened a 2-0 lead Wednesday on goals by Gaetane Thiney and Marie-Laure Delie.

Thiney got the first one, in the 12th minute, on a right-footed shot from well outside the area.

The sequence started with a long ball from the French end that U.S. defender Amy Le Peilbet headed away from her goal. But the ball bounced right to Thiney, whose shot deflected off the hand of keeper Hope Solo’s hands and into the top right-hand corner of the net.

A patient Delie doubled the advance for France two minutes later after the U.S. did a horrible job of clearing a loose ball from the edge of the 18-yard box. The ball was touched by at least three U.S. players -- including Le Peilbet and Megan Rapinoe, who got a foot on the ball twice --– before Delie blasted another shot off Solo's hands and into the goal.

That advantage lasted less than five minutes, though, before Abby Wambach headed home a long corner kick from Rapinoe, ending a string of seven consecutive shutouts for France.

In the 33rd minute, Alex Morgan took advantage of a momentous breakdown by the French defense to tie the match. A long goal kick by Solo eluded Wambach's attempt at a header and bounced untouched toward the goal, allowing Morgan to narrowly beat French keeper Sarah Bouhaddi to the ball and volley a soft left-footer over Bouhaddi's shoulder.

That marked the first time this year France has allowed two goals in a match -- much less in a half.

The U.S. seemed to have little answer to the speed of Delie, who nearly put France ahead again just before the intermission, first when she missed high on a right-footed shot from about 15 yards and later when a header toward the left post was snatched out of the air by Solo.

The U.S. got a scare early in the half when Morgan, the team’s leading scorer, was knocked to the turf by French captain Ophelie Meilleroux. Morgan lay on the turf for a couple of minutes before bounding up and remaining in the game.

Not so fortunate was midfielder Shannon Boxx. She went down in the 16th minute and came out of the game in favor of Carli Lloyd.

Olympic gold medal is the pinnacle: Murray


Andy Murray has vivid memories of Usain Bolt's blistering 100 metres at the Beijing Olympics but the British number one hopes to miss out on watching the sprinter try and repeat that feat in London, by being too busy winning his first tennis gold medal.

At his Olympic debut in Beijing, Murray, who carried the Olympic torch through Wimbledon's Centre Court on Monday, suffered the massive shock of losing his first round singles match to Taiwan's lowly ranked Lu Yen-hsun in straight sets.

"For me, the memory I have from the last Olympics in Beijing was watching the 100 metres final and seeing what Usain Bolt did there was pretty amazing," he told reporters at a Team GB tennis press conference at the Wimbledon Olympic Tennis venue. 

"I got to see the boxing and the badminton but that was because I lost early in the singles so I had some time to do that," he added. "I hope that is not the case this time."

At the London Games, the men's tennis final is being held on August 5 - the same day as the 100 metre final - and on the same court where Murray was reduced to tears after Switzerland's Roger Federer beat him to capture his seventh Wimbledon crown.

Murray, who is seeded third for the tournament after Rafa Nadal's withdrawal through injury, has said preparing for the Olympics has helped him get over that defeat, which also continued the host nation's 76-year wait for a men's grand slam champion and the Olympics title would more than make up for it.

"In terms of achievement, winning a gold medal is the pinnacle of sport and would be right up there with anything I have done so far," the 25-year-old Scot added.

With the tennis event kicking off on Saturday, GB tennis team leader Paul Hutchins said they were still to make a decision about attending Friday evening's opening ceremony.

"We are just going to make up our mind once we have seen the draw to see when people are playing," he said, sat at a podium whose usual distinctive Wimbledon Championships backdrop had been covered over with the London 2012 logo.

"There is this Olympic spirit among all the athletes and they are very conscious they want to go to the opening ceremony because it is a once in a lifetime opportunity. But the first call must be, from the players point of view, their performance the next day."

Monday, July 16, 2012

London Olympics security gaps mount as athletes arrive


Britain's interior minister says the security firm G4S repeatedly assured the government it would exceed its targets for recruiting Olympic staff and only admitted last week it could not meet the terms of its contract.

Home Secretary Theresa May said Monday that G4S had "repeatedly assured us that they would overshoot their target."

Britain is calling in 3,500 extra troops to cover the positions G4S could not fill.

G4S chairman John Connolly says senior managers could lose their jobs over the fiasco.

The company said Monday its loss on the contract would range between $54 million and $78 million US in this financial year.

A loss of $78 million is about 12 to 13 per cent of the company's annual profit, analysts calculated.

The country's Olympic security plans fell under fresh scrutiny Sunday, with a newspaper report that several people on a terrorism watch list have been waved through airport border controls without being flagged and the revelation that the government was warned 10 months ago about the ability of G4S to fulfil its staffing obligations.

With less than two weeks until the opening ceremony, and athletes from around the world starting to arrive for the Games, government ministers are insisting the Games will be secure and dismissing the G4S fiasco as no more than a "hitch." However, those assurances are being increasingly questioned. The Observer reported Sunday that, since the start of the month, immigration staff at London's Heathrow Airport have let through several people on a security watch list. When people on the list arrive in the country, it is supposed to be reported to counter-terrorism police or Britain's domestic intelligence service.

The newspaper cited unions as suggesting staff brought in to help relieve pressure at Heathrow, which has faced recurring problems handling large influxes of passengers, weren't being properly trained. The airport, Europe's busiest, has recently struggled to clear huge lines that build up at immigration checkpoints during peak times, leading to fears of Olympics-related chaos as tourists fly in to watch the games.

London has four other airports, but Heathrow is the only airport where participants can get their Olympic credentials, so it is handling the bulk of arrivals for the Olympics, which start July 27 and end Aug. 12.

The newspaper report left it unclear whether the people on the watch list were still in the country, whether they were intercepted later, or exactly why they had attracted the attention of counter-terrorism officials in the first place. Britain's Home Office declined to comment Sunday on the story.

G4S warning issued 10 months ago
In another development, the Independent on Sunday newspaper reported top Home Office officials had been warned by police nearly a year ago about concerns over the ability of G4S to provide enough staff for the Olympics. The warning came last September in a report by Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary, the national police oversight body.

Some action was taken in the wake of that report, namely increasing to 10,400 from 2,000 the number of security guards requested from G4S. However, the firm confirmed last week it will be unable to supply the needed staff, which will require at least 3,500 additional British troops to be deployed instead — all at G4S's cost.

The British minister in charge of the Olympics appeared on a BBC talk show Sunday to try to contain the scandal. Jeremy Hunt noted that G4S boss Nick Buckles had apologized and would be footing the bill for the last-minute military deployment. Buckles, who is due before a House of Commons committee Tuesday, has admitted he may be forced to quit his $1.3-million-a-year job in the wake of the Olympic debacle.

"I don't think this is a moment for getting into the blame game," Hunt said. "G4S has been quite honourable. They put their hands up. Nick Buckles, their chief executive, has said they got it wrong."

Hunt insisted the government realized only last week that G4S would not be able to meet its targets and that it immediately activated its contingency plans.

Yvette Cooper, the opposition Labour Party's critic for the Home Office, blasted the government for their handling of the situation.

"It is incomprehensible that the Home Office didn't know about this," she said.

Saturday, June 2, 2012

London Olympics: 55 days to go; Belarus coach arrested on suspicion of corruption


Belarus coach arrested on suspicion of corruption
The head coach of the Belarus Olympic track and field team has been arrested on suspicion of corruption, state television reported on Friday. First Channel said Anatoly Baduyev was arrested on suspicion of extorting bribes and embezzling sponsorship funds two months before the London Olympics. Baduyev’s arrest follows a report in the independent sports weekly Pressball that said “a powerful man” in the athletics federation offered athletes who had tested positive in doping tests to “settle” their cases for a fee of $1,500-$2,000. The report said the man, who was not named, pressured athletes who refused his offer.

Indian paddlers to play in Sweden, Brazil
A 14-member Indian team, including London-bound paddlers Soumyajit Ghosh and Ankita Das, will play tournaments in Sweden and Brazil this month. The sports ministry on Friday approved the players’ participation in the Swedish Open at Helsingborg (June 7-10) and Brazil Open at Santos (June 13-17).

Both events are recognised by the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF). The contingent will also comprise veteran Sharath Kamal and reigning national champion Anthony Amalraj.

“After the two events, Ghosh and Ankita will stay back in Austria ahead of the Olympics while the others will come back,” said TTFI secretary-general Dhanraj Choudhary.

Royal purple for Olympic victory ceremonies
Forget gold, silver and bronze. The dominant colour at the Olympic podium ceremonies is going to be purple. Olympic authorities revealed the elements on Friday of the 805 ceremonies that will take place in more than 30 venues of the London Olympics and released photographs of the costumes that will be worn by the presenters. The flower and medal bearers will be male, a first in Olympic history. Students from the Royal College of Art designed the attire. They say they were inspired by Greek mythology and British heritage. Some 4,400 floral bouquets will be presented to the athletes, containing roses, mint, rosemary, English lavender and wheat. Designer Jane Packer says they were intended as an eclectic fragrant mix. All of the flowers and herbs will be 100 per cent British grown.

McCormack fails to make Australian team
Two-time World Ironman champion Chris McCormack’s attempt for an Olympic berth appears to have failed. The Australian gave up the longer Ironman discipline 18 months ago to concentrate on the Olympic distances of a 1.5-km swim, 40-km cycle and 10-km run in an effort to qualify for London. But the 39-year-old McCormack tweeted on Friday, “Back to my day job! I need n Hawaiian holiday again soon. No London for me!” Members of Australia’s Olympic team are expected to be officially named next week. Beijing gold medalist Emma Snowsill is facing a tough battle to win one of three women’s spots for London. Emma Moffatt, the 2008 bronze medalist, has already been guaranteed a London berth by Triathlon Australia.

Britain pick Stevenson for taekwondo
British taekwondo officials on Friday picked Sarah Stevenson for the Olympic team even though the world champion has not competed for months due to knee injury. Stevenson, 29, won a bronze at the Beijing Olympics and has twice won the world championships in the 67 kg division. She last won the world title in 2011. In February, Stevenson tore her cruciate knee ligament during a training camp in Mexico. She flew back to Britain to undergo surgery, and has not competed since. Stevenson is ranked 10th in the world.

Soviet fencing great Midler no more
Legendary Soviet fencer Mark Midler, a two-time Olympic champion, died on Thursday after a long illness. He was 80. Midler was a member of the Soviet squad from 1951-1967, winning gold medals in the team foil event at the 1960 Olympics in Rome and the 1964 Games in Tokyo. He also won the world championships in 1959, 1961-63, 1965 and 1966. After retirement, Midler became coach to the Soviet and then Russian national teams. He guided the country’s squads at the Olympic Games in 1980, 1992, 1996 and 2000.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Sally Pearson begins final stage of Olympics buildup


Star sprinter Sally Pearson will contest the 100 meters sprint and hurdles events at a low-key athletics meeting in Brisbane on Saturday to trigger the final stage of her buildup to the London Olympics.

The world champion will fly to Europe on Monday to compete in the 100 meters hurdles at the Oslo Diamond League meeting on June 7 as part of a carefully measured buildup to the games.

The only other events on Pearson’s pre-Olympic schedule are in Nivelles, Belgium on June 23, Paris on July 6 and London on July 14, when she will meet leading British hurdler Tiffany Porter.

Pearson also used a four-event preparation in the lead up to last year’s world championships in Daegu at which she won the 100 meters hurdles in 12.28 seconds.

Coach Sharon Hannan said Pearson’s program was as close as she could get to last year’s world championships buildup.

“Racing is always different to training but everything Sally is doing in training at the moment is better than 2011_- it’s looking really good,” Hannan told the AAP news agency. “I said four years ago she was a developing athlete and she’s still developing.

“I’ve heard people say she’s hit her peak but I think she’s got another three or four years before she hits her peak. “I think she’s a pinup girl for long-term athlete development.”

The first round of the 100m hurdles at London will take place on Aug. 6 — more than three weeks after Pearson’s last warm up race.

“We also had a three-week lead-in going into Daegu last year and, while Sally found that frustrating, ultimately it worked,” Hannan said. “So we haven’t looked for another meet after London. We’re pretty happy.”

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Friday, May 18, 2012

British soccer player and London Olympic Games ambassador David Beckham lights Olympic torch

The flame for the London Olympics burned brightly on British soil on Friday after David Beckham stepped off a special flight from the Games birthplace of Greece to light a cauldron with a golden torch.

The British Airways ‘Firefly’ Flight 2012 from Athens landed on time at the Culdrose naval air station with Britain’s Princess Anne, Games chairman Seb Coe and the former England soccer captain among the delegation.

The flame will start a 70-day torch relay around Britain on Saturday, with triple Olympic gold medallist sailorBen Ainslie carrying it on the first leg from Land’s End on the south-west tip of England.

The Games start on July 27.

London mayor Boris Johnson, his mane of unruly blond hair trimmed for the occasion, declared the moment to be “a big accelerator of the heartbeat”.

“We’ve got 70 days to go,” he told reporters before heading back to London on the golden-liveried plane.

“For someone in my position this is the final furlong for us and that’s when the horses start to change places and so this is going to make the difference now between a good Games and a great Games.”

British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg welcomed the Olympic torch on behalf of the British government on a clear evening in marked contrast to the torrential rain left behind in Athens.

“It is a fantastic moment for us, particularly at a time when there is so much anxiety and concern about the economy and other things, to be uplifted by this whole experience and to be able to showcase ourselves to the world as an open-hearted, generous, dynamic, positive country,” he told the BBC.

“It’s a wonderful opportunity for the country as a whole.”

British soccer player and London 2012 Olympic Games ambassador David Beckham reacts after lighting the Olympic torch with a cauldron after arriving at RNAS Culdrose base near Helston in Cornwall, south west England May 18, 2012.REUTERS/Toby Melville

CUSTARD COMET

The arrival of the flame, with Princess Anne carrying it in a special lantern down the steps from the plane, was covered live on Britain’s main BBC station with the plane circling overhead before landing to fit in with the schedules.

“It’s only when the torch comes into your possession that you realise,” the Princess said as she handed the lantern to one of the special security team who will guard it.

Beckham soon lit the Olympic torch and ignited a cauldron with the flame, which was then due to be transferred to Lands End for Saturday’s relay start.

Johnson said the manner of the flame’s arrival bodes well.

“The plane landed bang on time, in fact it was early,” he declared enthusiastically.

“We circled over Cornwall like a custard-coloured comet and that is a metaphor in my view for everything that has happened so far in the London Olympics. It’s been either on time or ahead of time and it’s under budget.”

On Thursday, the flame had been handed over at a damp ceremony in the Athens marble stadium that hosted the first modern Games in 1896.

The flame, lit from the sun’s rays at the home of the ancient Games in Olympia a week ago, was presented under grey and rainy skies to former Olympian Princess Anne by the president of the Hellenic Olympic Committee Spyros Capralos.

Coe, who will head off to Munich on Saturday to watch his beloved Chelsea play Bayern Munich in theChampions League final, was confident the torch relay would light the fire for anyone still ambivalent about the Games.

“It does have a big impact,” he said.

“I saw the test event the other day with a cardboard torch going from Leicester to Peterborough and they (the spectators) were three and four deep on the pavement, in the little villages.

“And every week I get letters from people who are talking about the things they are doing to mark the fact the torch is coming through. There’s an emotional connect with this that I’m not sure all torch relays have got.”

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Yahoo aims to be top website for London Olympics

Yahoo plans to double its Olympics presence this summer, aiming to be the top website for the fourth straight Games.

Yahoo is sending 25 people from around the world to cover the Summer Games in London - about "twice as big" as it had in the Winter Games - including US gold medal winners Shannon Miller and Dan O'Brien and many of its sports columnists and reporters. It also plans to cover the games in dozens of languages.

The move is an effort to outshine competitors. Despite not paying for exclusive rights to cover the games, Yahoo says it has been the No. 1 global destination for Olympics coverage for the past three games.

In February 2010, Yahoo Sports had 32 million unique visitors and 254 million page views for the Vancouver Games, it says. Second-place NBC, which paid for exclusive US broadcast rights to cover, had 19 million visitors and 251 million page views.

NBC, a unit of Comcast that has agreed to pay $4.4 billion for the US rights to carry the Games through 2020, lost $200 million on the Winter Olympics. By contrast, Yahoo's Olympics coverage is profitable, says Ross Levinsohn, Yahoo's head of global media.

"These games will be the biggest revenue driver we've ever had for an event by a long shot," he says.

The Summer Games will represent a test of Levinsohn's broadened role of overseeing Yahoo's global media efforts. Previously, he oversaw media for the Americas.

The event also represents Yahoo's bigger push into video. Levinsohn said the site will have five times the video coverage of the previous games. Proctor & Gamble is a key sponsor for various projects, including one that features the mothers of Olympians.

Ring of missiles to protect London Olympics

A ring of ground-to-air missile launchers that will be deployed around London to protect Olympic venues will be unable to locate aircraft in bad weather, experts said yesterday (Monday).

The Ministry of Defence confirmed that six sites, including two residential blocks of flats, were being tested as launch pads for missile systems capable of thwarting airborne attacks.

The Starstreak and Rapier systems, which have a range of around four miles, would be deployed as a "last resort" to shoot down any low-flying aircraft intending a 9/11 style suicide mission at one of the Olympic venues.

But experts have claimed the systems are useless in poor weather as they rely on the operator being able to see the target. Nick Brown, editor-in-chief of Jane's International Defence Review, said: "The missiles are laser-guided, steered onto their target by the soldier keeping his sight on an aircraft.

"So if the soldier can't see an aircraft, they can't hit it. As a result, the missiles can be badly affected by weather and would also not be able to engage targets 'masked' by buildings."

People living close to where the missiles are to be housed have also expressed concern about the dangers of using such weapons in built-up areas.

The systems will be tested in the coming days as part of a military exercise organised to check security preparations, although no test missiles will be fired.

Six sites have been identified as potential locations for the missile launchers, including two in east London; an apartment block overlooking the Olympic stadium in Bow and a 16-storey residential tower block in Walthamstow.

Gen Sir Nick Parker, who is in charge of all military aspects of Olympic security, said the aim was to provide an "effective layered plan that provides a proper deterrent".

Responding to the experts' claims, an MoD source said: "These are laser-guided missile systems and that is why we have chosen high vantage points for the launchers. But also it is important to remember that the missile systems are part of a much wider layered defence system including RAF radar facilities, Typhoon aircraft, Royal Navy Sea King helicopters and other helicopters with snipers, so it is not something we are too concerned about."

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Diving test event tickets to go back on sale

Diving fans will have another opportunity to buy tickets for the 18th FINA Visa Diving World Cup 2012 when tickets go back on sale tomorrow (Tuesday 17 January) from 10am.

Spectators will see world-class sporting action, including Britain’s best divers competing in a team that may include Tom Daley and Pete Waterfield.

Part of the London Prepares series, the 18th FINA Visa Diving World Cup 2012 takes place from 2026 February in the iconic Aquatics Centre on the Olympic Park.
After finalising seating plans, the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) has been able to put more tickets on sale for the event. Tickets will be available via Ticketmaster and will be priced from £10-£30 for full price tickets and £5-£15 for young people and seniors.

The competition is the last opportunity for athletes to qualify for Individual and Synchronised Diving at London 2012. The event is supported by UK Sport as part of the World Class Events Programme.Tom Daley 1 year to go
'World-class sport'
Debbie Jevans, LOCOG Director of Sport said: ‘The FINA Visa Diving World Cup will be a top-class event and we have worked hard to enable more people to have the opportunity to watch world-class sport in the Olympic Park.’
The London Prepares series is made up of 42 elite competitions in London 2012 venues to test vital areas of LOCOG’s operations, focused on the field of play, results, scoring and timing and workforce.
As a proud sponsor of London 2012, Visa (debit, credit, prepaid) is the only card accepted for online ticket sales for London Prepares series events.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

London 2012 Olympics: 100 days to go - share your views


Wednesday marks 100 days to go until the beginning of the London Olympics and a series of special events are taking place around the UK and internationally to start the countdown.

It's a chance to look ahead to the games and all the activities planned around them for spectators, the public and visitors to the UK and tell us what you think of the build-up.

As the event draws closer we want to hear how this year's Olympics will affect you:
• Are you travelling to London to watch an event or soak up the atmosphere?
• Will you be keeping tabs on the torch relay if it comes to where you live?
• Are you concerned about plans for transport in London, security at the games or protests against them?

Tell us if there are events you are looking forward to in particular or if you are involved in something as part of the 100 days celebrations.

Alternatively, if the Olympics makes you want to run as far as you can in the opposite direction, tell us why and what aspects of the London games could have be changed to get you interested.




Celebrations mark 100 days until London 2012


London Olympic organisers will on Wednesday hold a series of events to kick off the Games' 100-day countdown as preparations for the showpiece event enter the final straight. 

The milestone will be marked across the country and internationally with a host of ceremonial activities and an array of test events to iron out any operational problems before the flame is lit on July 27. 

London 2012 chief executive Paul Deighton insisted that preparations were on course with dress rehearsals for Wheelchair Rugby, Synchronised Swimming and Shooting all set to begin on Wednesday. 

Olympic fever will spread beyond Britain's borders as expats around the globe join in the countdown. 

In the United States, former heavyweight boxing champion Lennox Lewis will lead one hundred cyclists and an open top London double decker bus on a ride down Miami's South Beach. 

One hundred British Embassies and High Commissions will hold events with Turkey, Venezuela and New Zealand all entering into the Olympic spirit, Britain's Foreign Office revealed on Tuesday. 

There will also be a series of 100 metre races at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate, the 1984 Olympic Stadium in Sarajevo and in the Palace Square in St Petersburg. 

"I'm delighted that British Embassies around the world have come together to mark 100 days to go to the opening ceremony of the greatest show on earth," said Foreign Office Minister for the Olympic and Paralympic Games Jeremy Browne. 

Organiser Deighton insisted the British capital was well-prepared to become the world's focal point. 

"We are absolutely where we want to be with 100 days to go - we are ready to welcome the world to London," he said. 

"Millions of people around the UK are getting ready to celebrate the biggest event in sport." 

Queen Elizabeth II will open the Games, giving London the honour of being the first city in the modern era to host the Olympics three times, having already held them in 1908 and 1948. 

The event is set to give Britain's ailing economy a much needed boost, but the general mood of austerity will be reflected in the Games, albeit to a far lesser extent than in 1948, when competitors were housed in military barracks and university dormitories. 

Organisers conceded long ago that, despite a budget of £9.3 billion ($14.8 billion, 11.2 billion euros), they would be unable to compete with the spectacle provided by the 2008 Beijing Olympics. 

Instead, the opening and closing ceremonies will bring to together the country's most creative minds to produce a celebration of Britishness. 

Responsibility for the opening ceremony lies with " Slumdog Millionaire" director Danny Boyle, who has promised a fitting curtain-raiser before 10,500 competitors from 204 countries do battle. 

However, two substantial hurdles still loom. 

Doubts remain about how London's already stretched transport system will cope with ferrying spectators and athletes around the congested city. 

Also, there are fears over whether Britain's security services will be able to prevent incidents such as the bloody hostage-taking of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics and the bombing of the 2004 Atlanta Games. 

Some £6.5 billion has been spent on modernising the transport system, including the world's oldest underground train system, and 48 kilometres (30 miles) of Olympic road lanes should help speed the travel of VIPs. 

Security has cast a shadow since the day after London was awarded the Games, when suicide bombers killed 52 people on the transport system. 

Security expert David Hunt, from the Exclusive Analysis think-tank, warned that the main threat by jihadist militants was likely to come from domestic, lone wolf actors. 

A combined force of more than 40,000 soldiers, police and private security guards will be mobilised for what Prime Minister David Cameron called the "biggest and most integrated security operation in mainland Britain in our peacetime history."

 
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