Friday, July 27, 2012
London Olympics 2012 kicks off in style!
London Olympics 2012: Danny Boyle excited for the volunteers as the Opening Ceremony approaches
Posted in: London Olympics 2012Opening Ceremony London 2012: World ready for Olympics opening Ceremony
The stage is set and the athletes are primed as the seven-year countdown to the London 2012 Olympics reaches its finale with Friday's much-anticipated opening ceremony.
The three-hour spectacle, expected to be watched by a global television audience of up to one billion, will mark the beginning of 17 days of athletic endeavour which will create heroes, shatter dreams and fire national pride.
But London is preparing for its own intense examination as questions over the city's creaking transport system and the ever-present security threat hang over the event, ready to overshadow on-track achievements.
Prime Minister David Cameron insisted on Thursday that Britain would deliver a memorable Games after US presidential hopeful Mitt Romney backtracked on barbed comments he made about the preparations.
The Republican hopeful, in London to attend Friday's opening, said the build-up had been "disconcerting", pointing to the failure of a private security contractor to provide the number of guards it had promised.
Cameron responded by saying he was sure Britons would get behind the Games despite an economic downturn -- and took an apparent swipe at Romney's past as head of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.
"We are holding an Olympic Games in one of the busiest, most active, bustling cities anywhere in the world," Cameron said.
"Of course it's easier if you hold an Olympic Games in the middle of nowhere."
Sneak previews of the £27 million ($42 million, 35 million euros) opening ceremony -- filmed at Wednesday's final rehearsal -- suggest it will be a grand but quirky production, reflecting the philosophy of director Danny Boyle.
The Slumdog Millionaire Oscar-winner has promised to create a "picture of us as a nation" and revealed the eccentric show will feature live sheep and dancing surgeons from the National Health Service.
Thousands of VIPs including some 120 national leaders are in town for the event, with guests ranging from Angelina Jolie and US First Lady Michelle Obama to the king of Swaziland.
Germany's Angela Merkel and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda are among the leaders set to attend while Michelle Obama will head the US delegation.
Prince William and his wife Catherine along with a flock of European royals including Prince Albert of Monaco will watch Britain's 86-year-old monarch Queen Elizabeth II officially open the Games.
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev will lead Russia's delegation although President Vladimir Putin has indicated he may fly in later to watch the judo, in which he is a black belt.
British football legend David Beckham said he will perform some role at the ceremony despite not being selected for Team GB, fueling gossip he may be given the honour of lighting the Olympic cauldron.
From the world of showbusiness, Hollywood mega-couple Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt will attend after hosting a star-studded charity dinner for boxing icon Muhammad Ali on Wednesday, which counted racing driver Lewis Hamilton and actress Rosario Dawson among its guests.
Audience members at Wednesday's rehearsal promised the show would be a spine-tingling extravaganza.
The crowd at the 80,000-seater Olympic Stadium in Stratford, a previously run-down area of east London, were filled with enthusiasm as they flooded out.
"That was absolutely amazing. I wanted to whoop," said Hilary Midgley from Darwen in northwest England. "It was beyond my wildest expectations."
But with the spotlight of the world on Britain, authorities are acutely aware of the terror threat.
An additional 4,700 troops have been deployed in recent days to make up the shortfall in guards supplied by giant contractor G4S.
Anti-aircraft missiles have been placed on rooftops and a warship is anchored in the River Thames as part of the country's biggest ever peacetime security operation.
A force of more than 40,000 military and civilian personnel, backed by a huge intelligence operation, has turned the British capital into a fortress to protect venues, athletes and millions of visitors.
Cameron on Thursday stressed that security "matters more than anything else".
"I think we've made as many preparations as we can. I think we have very good contingency plans in place," Cameron said at a press conference with chief Games organiser Sebastian Coe in front of the Olympic Stadium.
Ten times Olympic medallist Carl Lewis captured the building sense of anticipation on Thursday.
"The Olympics is the only event where the world stops," he said.
"If you're the smallest country with the fewest people in the world or the biggest country with the most people in the world, everyone's allowed and everyone is invited, so it's a great thing because you get to see the world and the world sees you," he added.
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
Monday, July 16, 2012
London Olympics security gaps mount as athletes arrive
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Samsung India launches digital campaign to support the Indian team in London Olympics 2012
Posted in: London Olympics 2012Sunday, July 1, 2012
London Olympics 2012: David Beckham will be missed by London after being snubbed by Team GB
Saturday, June 2, 2012
Former Olympian expresses confidence that India will do good
Youngest Indian boxer qualifies for London Olympics
Commersials on London Olympics 2012
London Olympics: 55 days to go; Belarus coach arrested on suspicion of corruption
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.”
Thursday, May 3, 2012
London Olympics anti-terrorism tactics bring missile launchers to Blackheath
Posted in: London Olympics 2012Tuesday, 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
London 2012 Olympic Football tickets go back on sale.
Tickets for the London 2012 Olympic Football Tournament are now on sale on a first come, first served basis.
Team GB coaches Hope Powell and Stuart Pearce pictured at Wembley Stadium, one of the six venues used for the London 2012 Football competition.
In the UK and within the EU, approximately 1.5 million tickets are available through the London 2012 ticketing website. Sales will take place on a ‘live’ basis, with payment taken immediately.
Prices start at £20 for adults, with ‘pay your age’ prices for young people aged 16 and under, and £16 tickets for seniors aged 60 and over available for most sessions.
Tickets are available for Team GB fixtures and all rounds of the competition, with matches taking place at the City of Coventry Stadium, Hampden Park, Millennium Stadium, Old Trafford, St James’ Park and Wembley Stadium.
LOCOG CEO Paul Deighton commented: ‘The Olympic Football Tournament features some of the world’s best young and up and coming players in the men’s game and the cream of the women’s game.
'With ticket prices for adults starting at £20 and our great special prices for young people and those over 60, I’m sure for many these tickets will be the perfect Christmas present.'
Team GB fixtures announced
Earlier this month the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) announced where Team GB will be playing their group fixtures. The men’s team, coached by Stuart Pearce, will begin their London 2012 campaign at Old Trafford on Thursday 26 July, followed by Wembley Stadium on Sunday 29 July. Their final group game will be at the Millennium Stadium on Wednesday 1 August.
Coached by Hope Powell, the women’s team will kick off the tournament on Wednesday 25 July at the Millennium Stadium, with their following match at the same venue on Saturday 28 July. Their final group stage match will take place on Tuesday 31 July at Wembley Stadium.
The official draw for the Olympic Football Tournament will take place on 24 April 2012 at Wembley Stadium, when all group fixtures will be decided for all venues.
Tickets are also available via telephone on 0844 847 2012. As a proud sponsor of London 2012, only Visa (debit, credit and prepaid) can be used to purchase tickets.
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 20–26 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.
'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 Olympics still faces three challenges in 100 days
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Palmer bounces back to earn a ticket to Olympics
North Shore sprinter Hayley Palmer, hospitalised with glandular fever last year, bounced back to grab a ticket to the Olympics on the last night of finals at the State New Zealand Swimming Championships in Auckland.
The 22-year-old produced her best time in two years to equal the qualifying standard of 25.27s to win the final of the 50m freestyle at the event that doubled as the Olympic trials at the West Wave Aquatic Centre in Waitakere.
The number of individuals under the qualifying time for London is eight in 14 events along with the women’s 4x200m freestyle relay, bringing the total to 12.
The men’s 4x200m freestyle, women’s 4x100m freestyle and men’s 4x100m medley relay teams have met the New Zealand Olympic Committee criteria and will await final FINA invitation in June as one of the four remaining fastest nations.
Experienced North Shore swimmer Melissa Ingram will be heading to her second Olympics after going under the qualifying time in the 200m backstroke. The 26-year-old clocked 2m 10.56s to be 0.3s under the qualifying mark for London.
The evening was sealed with a remarkable 3m 35.09s effort by the men’s quartet of Gareth Kean, Glenn Snyders, Hawke’s Bay-born Daniel Bell and Carl O’Donnell in the 4x100m medley relay.
The time would have placed them sixth at last year’s world championships, and earned them selection for London, pending final invitation from FINA.
“It was a fantastic feeling. When you put four guys together they do everything for each other and can achieve great things,” said Snyders.
“I was in the team that got fifth at Beijing and I think we can do amazing things again in London, given the chance.”
There was further celebration when Olympic open water hope Kane Radford eclipsed the last of the great Danyon Loader’s national records when he won the men’s 1500m freestyle in 15m 27.13s, just 23/100ths of a second under the old mark that has stood since 1994.
Radford, still untapered for this meet as he prepares for the final Olympic open water qualifying race in Portugal in June, had to fight to dispose of training mate Nathan Capp.
Ingram had already bettered the qualifying mark last year at the world championships and had to wait for the final night which was a test of her focus and resolve. She clocked 2m 10.56s to be under the qualifying mark by 0.3s.
North Shore’s Daniel Bell had to dig deep over the final 15m to come from behind to edge Australian-based Roskill Magic sprinter Paul Benson in the final of the 100m butterfly.
Benson led at the turn with Bell getting up to win in 53.57, with Benson just 6/100ths of a second behind with Corney Swanepoel (Roskill) third.
Earlier Roskill Magic’s Nielsen Varoy defended his men’s 50m freestyle title in a powerful burst in 22.92s, edging out Australian-based top qualifier Cameron Simpson (Templeton, Chch) by 4/100ths of a second with the 100m freestyle champion Carl O’Donnell (North Shore) third.


7:53 PM
Shweta Pandey