London 2012 Olympics


London 2012 Olympics

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zimbos_05
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another gold for Aus, GET IN




spice girls.....not sure how to react.
Joffa
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Joffa
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Quote:
Lisa Wilkinson's Olympic bloopers

From: The Daily Telegraph August 09, 2012 12:00AM

TODAY'S Lisa Wilkinson probably wished she could have brought her autocue to London as she stumbled through MC duties at an Olympic garden party this week.

London correspondent Charles Miranda reports Wilkinson flubbed her way through her speeches in front of a crowd that included several AOC and IOC chiefs, business leaders and around 25 Australian athletes.

First, Wilkinson referred to the chef de mission Nick Green as "deputy chef de mission" and, when an athlete heckler called out why Green had been demoted, an embarrassed Wilkinson apologised and said she "didn't know" who wrote her speech.

She then referred to the Aussie athletes as the "yellow and gold" and proceeded to praise Cathy Freeman who she referred to as one of the "top swimmers from Sydney 2000 Olympics". Oh dear.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/entertainment/sydney-confidential/lisa-wilkinsons-olympic-bloopers/story-e6frewz0-1226447152456

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Kiwi Gold in the Sailing.
zimbos_05
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Ky Hurst failing miserably in the marathon.
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So, rumoured are:
-One Direction
-George Michael
-Take That
-Spice Girls
-Coldplay
-Jessie J
-The Who
-Queen (current incarnation) (Im guessing that means with that *** bloke from American Idol)
-Muse

Jesus Christ, it sounds awful apart from the last 3 (As long as Muse dont play that dubstep ****).
Joffa
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Quote:
Australia's Green and Gold Olympians Bring Home Silver and Bronze

Posted: 10/08/2012 11:07

It all began well enough. Australia won gold in the 4x100 women's freestyle relay on the first day of the Olympic Games placing us towards the top of the medal table. I made a bet with my English girlfriend that Australia would easily finish above Team GB. My friends and colleagues were exchanging good-natured gibes about who invented various sports and who came to perfect them. All was right with the world. And then, something strange happened.



Australia stopped winning. In fact, Australia failed to win any more gold medals in swimming at all - traditionally the country's strongest discipline. This in spite of James 'the missile' Magnussen being regarded as one of the best swimmers Australia has produced in years. Gold continued to elude us until a few days ago when we rallied to eleventh place. Unless something dramatic happens between now and Sunday, this year's Olympics will be Australia's worst performance since the 1990s.



Languishing at the bottom of the table for more than a week the recriminations in Australia began. TV news reports showed only the top nine competing nations in the medal tally after New Zealand (our eternal rivals) broke into the top ten. One paper even went so far to try to conflate Australia and New Zealand into 'Aus Zealand' so as to artificially buoy our medal count. Sacrilege.



Questions have been asked of our Olympic athletes, the head of the Australian Institute for Sport and even the Prime Minister. Australia's Sport's Minister Kate Lundy will be forced to suffer the indignity of paddling down Eton Dorney in Team GB colours after losing a bet with her British counterpart.



And yet, for all the sporting woe my hope is that this might become a moment of recalibration for Australia. My island nation has long performed above its sporting station, winning far more medals and competitions than it should, considering it has a population roughly a third the size of the UK.



Sporting success is unquestionably linked to investment. Countries that do well in sport spend serious money on their athletes. Australian Olympic Committee officials claim that the country's comparatively poor performance at this year's Games is due to a shortage of funding. In preparation for London 2012 the Australian Olympic Committee's request for an extra A$100m per year was turned down in 2009 by the national government.



In an interview on ABC national radio, Kevan Gosper, Australia's most senior Olympic official put it very plainly: "money is the difference between silver and gold"



Yet it seems right to me that Australia should have returned to a position on the medal table that befits a country of our size. I hope that it leads to a reprioritisation away from sporting accomplishment towards other areas of achievement. Australia is crying out for further investment in arts and culture. Not to mention education, health, agriculture and the environment.



As Australia's Federal Arts Minister Simon Crean moves towards unveiling his new cultural policy in the coming months - a policy that is set to be "bigger than anything since Paul Keating's creative nation statement of almost 20 years ago" - it is my hope that money which may previously have been earmarked for sport might be redirected into funding for the arts. If I can't see Australia win gold at the Olympics, perhaps a little bit of wise investment could see us pick up a few more golden gongs at the Academy Awards next February.

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/arion-mcnicoll/olympic-fail-australias-worst-games_b_1763466.html?utm_hp_ref=uk

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Woot sailing guys done us proudly.
sydneycroatia58
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Caroline Buchanan and Sam Willoughby both first in the first run of their semi finals in the BMX.

Aussie girls 1-1 against Finland in their Semi Final of the Elliot 6m match play.

Carmen Marton into the semi finals of the Womens under 67kg category in the Taekwondo, so guaranteed of a shot at a medal.

Edited by sydneycroatia58: 11/8/2012 12:25:52 AM
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Sam Willoughby wins the 2nd run of his semi final. Almost all but assured of a spot in the final with one run left.

Caroline Buchanan also set for a spot in the final after winning her first run and and 2nd place finish in the 2nd run.
sydneycroatia58
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Silver for Sam Willoughby in the BMX, unfortunately Caroline Buchanan couldn't recover from a bad start and was unable to get a medal.
lukerobinho
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BMX is so ridiculous the final is just a lottery and 1/3 of the field end up crashing
sydneycroatia58
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So the girls in the Elliot 6m are into the Gold Medal Final against Spain tomorrow after winning their match race against Finland 2-1.
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sailing boys from wangi :cool:

went for a drive on wednesday afternoon through the main street of wangi (it's a 1 min drive from my house, i'm in the neighbouring suburb) - everything was plastered green & gold for nath & goobs. great scenes. the public school had green&gold balloons covering its fence.
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China:oops:

Quote:
US heading for win over China in both medals races
By Associated Press on August 10th, 2012

LONDON (AP) — With a surge of medals in track and field, the United States has sprinted ahead of China and is poised to finish atop the medals table at the London Olympics – maybe with the most golds ever collected by the Americans on foreign soil.

Heading into the final weekend of competition, the U.S. leads both the gold and overall medals races after trailing the Chinese most of the games.

The Americans pulled further ahead Friday. At the end of the day’s events, the U.S. led China 94 to 81 in total medals and 41 to 37 in golds.

Bill Mallon, a veteran American medals prognosticator, believes the U.S. will win the overall race by 12 to 15 medals and the gold count by three to five.

Four more golds would equal the highest U.S. total on foreign territory in Olympic history – 45 at both the 1968 Mexico City Games and the 1924 Paris Games.

The gold haul in London is already the best for the United States since it won 44 in 1996 in Atlanta. Its highest gold count was 83 at the 1984 Los Angeles Games, which were boycotted by the Soviet Union.

The late U.S. charge in London has been spurred by the track and field team, with 26 medals, including eight golds, through Friday.

The Americans picked up four medals Thursday night with 1-2 finishes by Ashton Eaton and Trey Hardee in the decathlon and by Christian Taylor and Will Claye in the triple jump. They grabbed two more Friday night – gold in the women’s 4×100-meter relay and silver in the men’s 4×400 relay.

Away from the track, wrestler Jordan Burroughs won gold in the men’s 74-kilogram freestyle.

The success could validate the projection of 30 medals by USA Track & Field, the national governing body for the sport, which had been widely maligned as too ambitious.

With two more relays and a few other chances coming up, the United States could exceed 30 medals – even after being shut out in the men’s 200 and 400 meters, two events where the Americans usually excel.

“A lot of people thought 30 medals was crazy,” said Steve Roush, the U.S. Olympic Committee’s former chief of sports performance, who served on USA Track & Field’s “Project 30″ panel.

He added: “It was the big question mark coming in. It turns out we are going to be right there. If there is a surprise, it’s just how well the U.S. has done in track and field.”

Though closely tracked by Olympic teams, fans and the media, the medals race is an unofficial competition. The International Olympic Committee doesn’t even recognize the medal count.

The U.S. Olympic Committee has also been reluctant to talk up the medals chase – until the end of the games, anyway. It stresses that its job is to enable as many Americans as possible to stand on the podium and represent the country.

“We are fortunate to have had success in both team and individual sports,” spokesman Patrick Sandusky said. “The Olympic Games is a competition between athletes, not nations. With that said, we are very proud of our American athletes in London.”

China beat the U.S. in gold medals, 51 to 36, on home soil at the 2008 Beijing Games, while the Americans prevailed 110 to 100 overall.

Many thought China would sweep both lists in London. And the Chinese started strong, racking up medals in their traditional sports of badminton, table tennis and diving. But medal chances are drying up in the final days, and China can’t compete with the U.S. in track and field.

“China’s big challenge is in swimming and track and field,” Roush said. “There are so many medals at stake.”

This is still China’s best gold medal showing outside Beijing, better than the 32 it collected at the 2004 Athens Games. But there is a clear sense of disappointment back home.

The Communist Party’s official Guangming Daily newspaper complained of unfair judging. Several papers cited the result in the men’s gymnastics rings event, in which Chen Yibing settled for silver behind Brazil’s Arthur Zanetti.

“We need to shout out loud: London Olympics, under the Olympic rings, please view all participants equally,” the paper said.

In interviews with Chinese newspapers, the country’s deputy sports minister, Cai Zhenhua, has also accused judges of discriminating against Chinese athletes.

“We need to solve the problem now or risk more judges adopting a biased view,” Cai said.

Britain, meanwhile, is assured of finishing third in gold medals, benefiting from a home-country boost that has produced its best medal performance in more than a century – 25 golds and 57 overall.

Not since the 1908 London Olympics has Britain racked up medals at this pace. Back then, only 22 nations showed up, compared with 204 today.

Britain, heavily promoting its athletes as Team GB, has excelled particularly in rowing and track cycling, thanks in large part to generous funding from the national lottery and the government-backed U.K. Sport body. U.K. Sport allocated $470 million for sports federations and athletes ahead of the London Games.

“GB cycling is a model of what can be done, and the rowing is phenomenal,” Roush said. “It’s been a combination of home-field advantage and U.K. Sport support.”

Britain’s rise has come at the expense of once-powerful Russia, which will finish out of the top three in golds for the first time since before the Soviet Union began competing at the Olympics.

In 1912, the Russian team had no golds and five total. The Soviet Union began competing at the 1952 Helsinki Games. Since then, the Soviet or Russian team has finished in the top three in golds every time – until now.

The Russians had only 15 golds through Friday, compared with 23 in Beijing. They have won plenty of silver and bronze and are third in the overall count with 62, but that’s not good enough for a country that will host the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

“The Russians are rebuilding,” Roush said. “The old Soviet system produced such strong talent and coaches, but the coaches and athletes are starting to retire.”

Perhaps the biggest surprise has been South Korea. The country of 50 million people – roughly the population of California, Washington and Oregon put together – has charged into fourth place with 13 golds, asserting itself as an Asian power.

The South Koreans have invested heavily in Olympic sports, coaches and training and will do even more as they prepare to host the 2018 Winter Games in the city of Pyeongchang.

Japan has performed strongly, with 35 medals, but has failed to turn them into gold, picking up only five.

Australia and Germany have been among the biggest disappointments. The Australians had hoped to finish in the top five in both golds and total medals, but are lagging that pace with only seven and 31. Germany, which had a target of 28 golds and 86 medals, has only 10 golds and 42 total.



Associated Press writer Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed to this report.

http://www.longislandpress.com/2012/08/10/us-heading-for-win-over-china-in-both-medals-races/

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Kiwi Gold female single kayaking

Edited by Joffa: 11/8/2012 07:26:05 PM
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Quote:
Australian Olympic swimmers lucky to be on minimum wage

by:
GRANTLEE KIEZA From:
The Courier-Mail August 11, 2012


AUSTRALIA spent $38 million on swimming in the lead-up to Alicia Coutts winning her Olympic relay gold medal in London but our most successful competitor at the Games will soon be back cleaning out cat litter trays.

Despite the massive amounts of Federal Government funds spent on the sport and a salary close to $500,000 a year for Australian Olympic Committee chief John Coates, most of the Australian swim team survive on less than the minimum wage.

For two years, Brisbane-born Coutts has worked part-time at the RSPCA shelter in the Canberra suburb of Weston to finance her gruelling training schedule.

The 24-year-old will leave London next week with one gold, one bronze and three silver more medals than most countries have collected and despite earning close to $100,000 in medal bonuses from London, she will return to her part-time job with an eye to the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Even though Swimming Australia collected $5.9 million in corporate sponsorships and $8 million in Australian Sports Commission grants last year, Sydney Olympic gold medallist Daniel Kowalski says most of the Australian team faced stormy waters on their way to the London Aquatic Centre.

"Of the 47 Australian swimmers in London, 36 made less than the minimum wage," said Kowalski, the boss of the swimmers union.

"Most have to survive on less than $20,000 a year."

Kowalski was involved in a bitter dispute with Swimming Australia in the lead-up to London after officials decided to pay the 47 swimmers $10,000 each out of the organisation's $5.9 million sponsorship money and offer bonuses of up to $15,000 extra for world-beating performances.

"The swimmers did not need the cash incentives,'' Kowalski said.

"The chance at swimming in the Olympics was the incentive but we wanted a fairer share of the sponsorship and television money so that the swimmers could support themselves in the lead up to London. Now they have to meet those living expenses and achieve their goal to be the No.1 swimming team in the world at the 2016 Olympics.''

Kowalski said a survey of the Australian swim team showed 42 per cent were studying, 24 per cent were working and 30 per cent were doing both. A third of them were training 30-35 hours a week and the rest at least 20-25 hours.

Kowalski said he believed the reason women tended to dominate the swimming medals for Australia was that many promising male athletes were being lured away to other sports such as football and cricket where the earnings potential was far greater.

Samantha Riley, who won Olympic silver and bronze in Barcelona and Atlanta, said swimming had always been a sport that taxed competitors and their families heavily from a young age with early morning starts.

"I was lucky when I was swimming that I had good sponsors," she said.
"But it's not a sport you would ever go into thinking you will make a lot of money."


http://www.perthnow.com.au/sport/london-olympics/australian-olympic-swimmers-lucky-to-be-on-minimum-wage/story-fn9dj0r8-1226447866084

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Quote:

Cyclist stripped of 2004 gold medal

DateAugust 10, 2012 - 9:53PM

American cyclist Tyler Hamilton was officially stripped of his Athens 2004 time trial gold medal on Friday ending an eight-year doping case, the International Olympic Committee said.

"I can announce that we have communicated to Tyler Hamilton that he has been disqualified and we will reallocate the medals," IOC spokesman Mark Adams told reporters after a disciplinary commission meeting in London.

The IOC was eager to close the case before the end of the eight-year statute of limitation but had waited for information from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency in case there was involvement of other riders or coaches in that race.

Retired Russian rider Viatcheslav Ekimov will be awarded Hamilton's gold medal with American Bobby Julich upgraded to silver and Michael Rogers of Australia moving up from fourth to bronze.

Hamilton was initially allowed to keep his medal in 2004, after testing positive for blood doping, because the laboratory accidentally destroyed his B sample by deep-freezing it.

The following year, Hamilton tested positive for a blood transfusion and was banned for two years.

In 2006 he was linked to the Spanish doping scandal dubbed "Operation Puerto" before testing positive for steroids three years later. He was given an eight-year ban after he said he had taken an over-the-counter treatment for depression.

In an interview last year Hamilton ended years of denials by admitting he had used performance-enhancing drugs.

Reuters



Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/olympics/cycling-london-2012/cyclist-stripped-of-2004-gold-medal-20120810-2409a.html#ixzz23EMNeKnp

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girtXc wrote:




this one fails as it is from beijing
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sydneycroatia58
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SO Matthew Mitcham fucks up the dive that won him gold 4 years ago and will miss the final in the Mens 10m Platform.
zimbos_05
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sydneycroatia58 wrote:
SO Matthew Mitcham fucks up the dive that won him gold 4 years ago and will miss the final in the Mens 10m Platform.


i know. It seems everyone who was meant to be in the water for Australia just couldnt bother to fucking turn up.
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Vladimir Putin currently leading 50k walk.
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zimbos_05 wrote:
sydneycroatia58 wrote:
SO Matthew Mitcham fucks up the dive that won him gold 4 years ago and will miss the final in the Mens 10m Platform.


i know. It seems everyone who was meant to be in the water for Australia just couldnt bother to fucking turn up.



It is the Commonwealth Games that really matter, not the Olympics.
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The walk is such a wank of an event. They all break the foot in contact with the ground rule.

Replace the event with the 75km hop.
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ozboy wrote:
The walk is such a wank of an event. They all break the foot in contact with the ground rule.

Replace the event with the 75km hop.

I'm all for the Olympic three-legged race

He was a man of specific quirks. He believed that all meals should be earned through physical effort. He also contended, zealously like a drunk with a political point, that the third dimension would not be possible if it werent for the existence of water.

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Aussie currently second in the walk with less than 4km to go.
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Malcolm Page, after winning a sailing gold medal, will carry Australia's flag in the London Olympics closing ceremony by:
Lucy Carne in London From:
News Limited Network August 11, 2012

A DELIGHTED but dusty Malcolm Page woke today to discover he would be Australia's flag bearer at the London 2012 Olympic Closing Ceremony.

The Sydney sailor, 40, was honoured with the role after his historic back-to-back Olympic gold medal wins in the 470 in London and Beijing in 2008.

Page said he was numb when Australia's chef de mission Nick Green told him over the phone.

"I said to Nick of course, this is incredible," Page said. "I thought he was just calling to congratulate me on our performance."

He said the honour came on top of "dreams coming true" when he won his nation's third sailing gold medal.

"I love wearing the green and gold, we are the best team in the world and I cant wait to get out there," Page said.

"I have had so many great moments in sport, especially the last couple of days, but this is something that is really quite overwhelming."


Page confirmed that London was the last Olympics he would compete in.

"This is a sport I fell in love with when I was just a kid, I seemed to be good at it and I sacrificed a lot and worked hard at it," he said.

"I think of my family and what they did for me as a kid and my wife and what she does every day so I can be a full time athlete.

"While Im carrying and waving that flag I want the entire sailing team behind me, pushing me on.

"I am so very proud to be a part of this team."

The three-time Olympian had spent the night before celebrating Australia's sailing success in a police hat and handcuffs at the Olympic sailing venue in Weymouth.

"Surprisingly he was in good shape this morning," Green said. "He said it was a great honour and he would be very, very proud to do it."

Green said his chose the long-serving athlete to lead the nation through the Olympic Stadium because of his Olympic spirit and dedication to sailing.

After winning the bulk of the nations medals, the Australian sailing team had now surpassed Great Britain as the world's most successful sailing team.

"He is a great leader and a great role model," Green said. "The sport of sailing has continued to deliver and he is a very proud member of our sailing team.

"I'm pleased also to help recognise sailing for the contribution to the Games.

"The focus on Mal is on his achievement as an athlete and what he does for the Olympic movement."

Green said he used "different" criteria than used in past Olympics to pick basketball player Lauren Jackson and
Page as the Australian flag bearers.

But he admitted Page had tough competition from other Australian athletes who had triumphed at the London Games.

"He was in tough company because of the likes of Anna Meares and what she has done; Alicia Coutts with the amount of medals that Alicia won," Green said.

"But I think Mal to me is a great example of a great Australian who has done extraordinary things in sport."

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/london-olympics/malcolm-page-after-winning-a-sailing-gold-medal-will-carry-australias-flag-in-the-london-olympics-closing-ceremony/story-fn9dirj0-1226448243119

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