Friday, July 1, 2011

A pictorial analysis of why South Korea will get the 2018 Olympics

The three cities vying for the 2018 Winter Olympics will make presentations Wednesday in Switzerland in hopes of selling IOC members on the strength of their respective bids.

Pyeongchang, South Korea is considered the overwhelming favorite to win the July 6 vote, with Munich and Annecy, France trying to pull the upset and bring the Winter Games back to Europe for what would be the second consecutive Olympics. When the strength of the Pyeongchang bid is discussed, there are two factors usually involved: It's the third consecutive Games for which the city has bid (and each prior bid has been considered flawless) and the city isn't in Europe.

There's also these pictures, taken during a recent celebration of the city's bid presentation:

A chorus of 2,018 people (get it?) performed in Seoul during a celebration earlier this week that was broadcast live on national television. Thousands more attended the concert, which was the second held by South Korea since Pyeongchang was announced as a bid finalist.

France also had a recent meeting to support its Olympic bid.

That's president Nicolas Sarkozy in the middle. Cheer up, Nick! You're trying to sell the world on the merits of France. If not for Dominique Strauss-Kahn, I'd say he was the unhappiest looking Frenchman in the world.

And then there's the Munich festival that looked like it was attended by dozens:

I kid about the support of the French and German bids, but there's some truth behind it as well. The IOC wants nothing more than to feel wanted (well, other than the feel of money and a superior sense of self-importance) and seeing thousands of people gather in Seoul is likely to affect their vote more than a solid infrastructure plan. Look at Rio vs. Chicago. The IOC commissioned a poll that said 92 percent of residents of Rio wanted the Games against 67 percent of Chicago citizens. Guess who got the Olympics despite an inferior plan?

Pyeongchang isn't Rio, though. The bid and the support are strong. Nationally, it has the support of 87 percent of the country compared to 62 and 56 for France and Germany, respectively. If the bidding is close, the will of the people may be the deciding factor.


Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/vancouver/blog/fourth_place_medal/post/A-pictorial-analysis-of-why-South-Korea-will-get?urn=oly-wp250

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London?s Olympic countdown clock malfunctions on first day

London got its first Olympics snafu out of the way in a hurry.

On the same day a steel clock was unveiled in Trafalgar Square to countdown the 500 days to the 2012 Olympics, the timepiece malfunctioned and stayed stuck on one number for hours. Officials scrambled to fix the 21-foot-high countdown clock, which displayed 500 days, 7 hours, 6 minutes, 56 seconds until it was fixed.

Omega, the maker of the clock, said it was disappointed in the technical fault and quickly corrected the problem.

Four British gold medalists took part in Tuesday's ceremony, which launched the official countdown to next year's Opening Ceremony. London's Olympics will begin on July 27, 2012.

The application process for 6.6 million Olympic tickets also began on Tuesday. Fans will have 42 days to apply for tickets to events, which range from $32 to $3,229. The high price point equals �2,012. (Get it?)

Ticket sales are going "very well" according to Sebastian Coe, the chairman of London 2012.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/vancouver/blog/fourth_place_medal/post/London-s-Olympic-countdown-clock-malfunctions-on?urn=oly-wp6

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Music Nation on track for sporting high

Music is high on the 2012 agenda at the moment. We've been debating with our external partners what the right song is to mark the One Year To Go celebrations next month; and today we're making public a huge array of classical music-making to complement the Hackney Radio 1 event that we announced in May.

You can read more about Music Nation - which will take place on the first weekend of March 2012 - here.

Hackney was unashamedly targeted at the Olympic boroughs: we want to create a fantastic weekend for 100,000 young people in East London that's then shared by TV and radio.

But Music Nation is, as the title suggests, about offering everyone in the UK a chance to take part in something near them - so it takes in Land's End as well as Shetland.

It's not fair to single out one event, but I'm going to. The one I most like the sound of is the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra's concert for the Clyde Auditorium on the night of Saturday March 3rd.

It's because it explicitly aims to link music and sport, saying it wants to celebrate sporting and musical heroes; and it combines new music - an essential part of the 2012 legacy - with familiar pieces that people can simply enjoy.

I'm not one of the school that thinks culture is only good for you if you feel some pain.

I know from Gavin Reid, the SSO's director, that he has two out-and-out Olympic pieces in mind for the evening.

One is John Williams' Olympic fanfare and theme from Los Angeles 1984.

Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caball� singing Barcelona

Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caball� singing Barcelona

It's unmistakably Williams but it sounds like a composition that goes back to the birth of the modern Olympics in Athens in 1896 if not to Ancient Greece: just part of the Olympic heritage.

The SSO will also be performing Ravel's Bolero, as skated to by Torvill and Dean and watched by 20 million Britons during the Winter Olympics in Sarajevo.

It's one of those pieces that's become overfamiliar in excerpt form and on "Dancing On Ice", but I heard it in full at a BBC Prom three or four years ago and it repays listening with a fresh pair of ears.

This set me thinking about what music we believe is essential to celebrating the Olympics. I know from past comments here that "Barcelona" performed by Montserrat Caball� and Freddie Mercury as a meeting of classical and rock has its fans, and BBC title sequences picked up the theme.

Or there is, of course, Vangelis's score for Chariots Of Fire which was an official song for LA and was again used by the BBC in both 1984 and 1988. I wouldn't be surprised if it's heard in the Clyde Auditorium next March.

If you'd like it to be part of Music Nation's repertoire, do let us know - as I'm sure you will if you think I've missed anything.

We'll be returning to pop and contemporary music before too long because I think One Year To Go will move in that direction, but in a whole year of events the pledge remains there will be music for every taste - and some pieces, we hope, that will become new classics.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/rogermosey/2011/06/music_nation_on_track_for_spor.html

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Music Nation on track for sporting high

Music is high on the 2012 agenda at the moment. We've been debating with our external partners what the right song is to mark the One Year To Go celebrations next month; and today we're making public a huge array of classical music-making to complement the Hackney Radio 1 event that we announced in May.

You can read more about Music Nation - which will take place on the first weekend of March 2012 - here.

Hackney was unashamedly targeted at the Olympic boroughs: we want to create a fantastic weekend for 100,000 young people in East London that's then shared by TV and radio.

But Music Nation is, as the title suggests, about offering everyone in the UK a chance to take part in something near them - so it takes in Land's End as well as Shetland.

It's not fair to single out one event, but I'm going to. The one I most like the sound of is the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra's concert for the Clyde Auditorium on the night of Saturday March 3rd.

It's because it explicitly aims to link music and sport, saying it wants to celebrate sporting and musical heroes; and it combines new music - an essential part of the 2012 legacy - with familiar pieces that people can simply enjoy.

I'm not one of the school that thinks culture is only good for you if you feel some pain.

I know from Gavin Reid, the SSO's director, that he has two out-and-out Olympic pieces in mind for the evening.

One is John Williams' Olympic fanfare and theme from Los Angeles 1984.

Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caball� singing Barcelona

Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caball� singing Barcelona

It's unmistakably Williams but it sounds like a composition that goes back to the birth of the modern Olympics in Athens in 1896 if not to Ancient Greece: just part of the Olympic heritage.

The SSO will also be performing Ravel's Bolero, as skated to by Torvill and Dean and watched by 20 million Britons during the Winter Olympics in Sarajevo.

It's one of those pieces that's become overfamiliar in excerpt form and on "Dancing On Ice", but I heard it in full at a BBC Prom three or four years ago and it repays listening with a fresh pair of ears.

This set me thinking about what music we believe is essential to celebrating the Olympics. I know from past comments here that "Barcelona" performed by Montserrat Caball� and Freddie Mercury as a meeting of classical and rock has its fans, and BBC title sequences picked up the theme.

Or there is, of course, Vangelis's score for Chariots Of Fire which was an official song for LA and was again used by the BBC in both 1984 and 1988. I wouldn't be surprised if it's heard in the Clyde Auditorium next March.

If you'd like it to be part of Music Nation's repertoire, do let us know - as I'm sure you will if you think I've missed anything.

We'll be returning to pop and contemporary music before too long because I think One Year To Go will move in that direction, but in a whole year of events the pledge remains there will be music for every taste - and some pieces, we hope, that will become new classics.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/rogermosey/2011/06/music_nation_on_track_for_spor.html

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Sunday's slight back strain

Over the last six weeks or so my back has been gradually getting more and more stiff and on Thursday, I strained it with a 95kg Snatch. It was nothing major, but it was the same area that has been at me since I got back from holiday. I felt it go with a light Snatch and it got worse as the day went on; I definitely strained it. I went for a swim in the sea both days after and took the appropriate anti-inflammatories and fish oil etc. I felt ok and I did some bar work on the Friday and felt fine and had another swim in the delightfully cold sea to help things along.

I drove up to Belfast hoping to compete yesterday and fifteen minutes into the warm up, I had to call it a day. Lifting from the floor was painful and I could not generate any power at all. I left it at 100kg and I was disappointed, but I knew that if I lifted I would have injured myself badly, rather than having a simple enough strain. Also, I am going to California Strength with Zag tomorrow for two weeks and that is definitely the priority. I am glad i listened to my body, because usually my default position would be to dig in my heels and "man up" even when it would be silly to do so.

I am seeing a physical therapist today and hopefully he can help me before I leave for California so that I can train to a full extent. Last year I went over to train with the lads and do as many sessions as I could with them. I knew it would burn me out, but I wanted to experience it anyway. This time, I will formulate a plan with Glenn; myself and Sami will go over with specific goals in mind, rather than to lift as often and as heavy as we can. Last year I came back in a heap and this year I want to build on my last few months training and take it from there.

I am still worn out from the last few months, but so is everyone else reading this blog! I will get my energy back in a few days and then hopefully I will have loads to write about in California. Bring it on!

If this does not make you laugh, God help you:

Source: http://weightliftingepiphanies.blogspot.com/2011/06/sundays-slight-back-strain.html

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GB sailors scrap for 2012 selection

The focus on London 2012 has just got sharper for some of Britain's Olympic sailing hopefuls. For others, the dream may be starting to blur.

The first major milestone on the road to 2012 has been reached, with the team named for the pre-Games test event in August.

Victory in the summer under Games conditions, and you would have to think the 2012 tracksuit is in the bag.

A podium place even, and you're still looking good. But trip up, and the sharks - in the shape of Olympic-hungry team-mates - will be circling.

For now, though, for those not selected, a place in a home Olympics must seem just that little bit further away.

"The Olympic test event is just one of the hurdles on the way to the Games," said British Olympic sailing manager Stephen Park.

"We haven't made any decisions as regards to selection and it is going to rumble on for some months yet.

"Those sailors who have missed out need to make sure they continue to train hard, to race hard and to deliver results at the Europeans in July and prepare well for the worlds in Perth in December."

Park and his management team have set a target of four medals, including at least one gold, from the 2012 London Olympics as they aim to continue Britain's place at the top of sailing's medal table in every Games since Sydney in 2000.

The forecast is based on their belief that they are likely to convert 50% of their realistic chances on any given day.

At the Sail for Gold regatta in Weymouth, British sailors delivered seven medals - two golds, three silver and two bronze - from six of the 10 Olympic classes (plus two from the three Paralympic disciplines).

That's compared to one gold, one silver and four bronzes in the same event last year.

Bear in mind, though, that at the Olympics there will only be one British boat on each start line, but in Beijing that yielded four golds, a silver and a bronze.

"We hope by the time we get to the Games we'll be medal-competitive in all 10 events," said Park.

Sail for Gold was used as the filter for the test event, and though Park insists it was not the sole criteria for selection, the top British boat in each class was chosen for the Olympic rehearsal.

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Some selections were a foregone conclusion. Two-time Olympic champion Iain Percy and winning Beijing crew-mate Andrew Simpson are world champions and clearly Britain's number one Star crew despite only finishing fifth at Sail for Gold.

Nick Dempsey, the Athens bronze medallist who won in Weymouth, and Bryony Shaw, the Beijing bronze medallist, are the only two realistic windsurfing contenders.

Lucy Macgregor's match-racing crew, second to the Americans in Portland harbour, was another shoo-in.

Elsewhere, sailors were scrapping for their Olympic futures and a number of big-game performers stepped up.

There was much talk about three-time Olympic champion Ben Ainslie's place being under threat after his younger rivals Giles Scott and world champion Ed Wright flourished while the 33-year-old pursued his America's Cup dream after Beijing.

But Ainslie, who has put on 10 kilos since November to get back in shape for the Finn, demonstrated why he is Britain's most decorated Olympic sailor by delivering at the right time to reassure the selectors that he is still the king.

The two-time Finn gold medallist was pushed extremely hard by 23-year-old Scott but Ainslie bared his teeth in the final medal race in Weymouth and sailed his young rival to the back of the fleet to snuff out his chance.

Courteous and obliging on shore, Ainslie's will-to-win on the water is almost demonic. A shot at a fifth Olympic medal looks in the bag, barring any unforeseen circumstances.

"It's great to see Giles come and take on someone who is as successful as Ainslie but this is Ben's third World Cup win in a row and he's looking back at the top of his game," said Park.

Britain's embarrassment of riches in the Finn highlights the harsh reality of the Olympic rules.

Ainslie and Scott were "head and shoulders above the rest of the fleet" in Weymouth, according to Park, and Scott may well be the second best Finn sailor in the world.

But with only one boat per team allowed in each class, he will likely have to watch the Olympics from the sidelines.

Ben Ainslie wins gold in the Finn class in Weymouth on Saturday. Photo: PA

Olympic Laser champion Paul Goodison didn't have an easy ride either, but saw off the challenge of up-and-coming rival Nick Thompson, who was second in the 2010 worlds, to finish third in Weymouth.

Goodison, though, faces a dilemma: bulk up to compete with Australia's world champion Tom Slingsby in strong winds, or continue as an all-rounder and hope August 2012's breezes are lighter than last week in Weymouth.

The high-performance 49er dinghy and the men's 470 have been the most fiercely contested of classes for the British over the past few years. Five GB 49er crews made the top 10 at the 2010 world championships and in another competitive season, five boats reached the final medal race in Weymouth.

Stevie Morrison and Ben Rhodes came out onto of the domestic dust-up, winning bronze to get the nod for August.

The pair were world champions in 2007 and won the pre-Olympic test event the same year to earn selection for the 2008 Games.

But they received a bloody nose in Beijing, placing only ninth, and have been plotting revenge ever since.

Third again in Sail for Gold last year and a victory in the last World Cup event in Holland, beating the red-hot Australian crew of Nathan Outteridge and Iain Jensen, will also have impressed the selectors.

In the men's 470 two-time Olympic silver medallist Nick Rogers, who retired in 2010, returned this season with new crew Chris Grube and finished top British boat - in fourth - in Weymouth.

The 33-year-old Rogers is outside the performance squad and therefore receives no funding and has had to scrimp together his own finances to compete this season.

The class was considered a shoot-out between Luke Patience/Stuart Bithell and Nic Asher/Elliott Willis, but Rogers' return with former development squad sailor Grube has upset the applecart.

"It was a difficult decision and one that is likely to rumble on in the selectors' minds for some time," admitted Park.

With the women's 470 of Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark also securing silver, Scotland's Park insists British sailing is in good shape going into the final phase of Olympic selection, but he admits the rest of the world is catching up fast.

"It is getting tougher and tougher every week to maintain our top spot but at the moment we are just maintaining our edge," he said.

"As we all know it doesn't matter if you win by an inch or a mile, a win is a win and we look forward to delivering four medals, maybe more, to add to the Team GB tally in 2012."

Dempsey has tasted success and failure at the Olympics and was "hurt" by the fourth place in Beijing.

Inspired by his wife, the now retired two-time gold medallist Sarah Ayton - who Dempsey describes as his own "in-house legend" - the 30-year-old is targeting his fourth Olympics.

But while his team-mates can take time out from their Olympic campaigns to re-energise and boost their earnings on the lucrative big-boat circuit, Dempsey is single-minded in pursuit of his "lifelong ambition".

"It's about Olympic gold," he said. "Always has been, always will be. I train hard, day-in, day-out. I spend a lot of time on the water and a lot of time on the bike.

"I can't have a couple of weeks off sailing big boats as you just lose fitness. It's all about performance and being the best I can be. That means being 100% committed to my Olympic programme, and really putting in everything I've got.

"I don't have time to go and do anything else. Anything that detracts from winning that gold medal is worthless. I keep focused and keep moving forward. That's why I am poor. Unlike them!"

Dempsey's attitude shows that the Olympic dream is still very real. And for the chosen few it has just moved a tiny bit closer to becoming reality.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/robhodgetts/2011/06/gb_sailors_scrap_for_2012_sele.html

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Win at Momentum I-flex duathlon IN P.E

Success at my faverouite venue P.E My local racing seen has picked up and training has been going very well here in Pretoria with team mates and coach – Lindsey Parry. � I made my way to Port Elizabeth for the 3rd event in the Momentum I-flex duathlon series and boy would I let the [...]

Source: http://richardmurray.wordpress.com/2011/05/18/win-at-momentum-i-flex-duathlon-in-p-e/

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