saaduiri
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The Rio Olympic coordinators appear to need everybody to realize that in spite of the Zika concerns, tarnished water venues and defilement examinations encompassing foundation extends, the Olympic Games will proceed as planned this August. With 52 days to go until the Opening Ceremonies, the coordinators uncovered the configuration of its Olympic awards Tuesday in a service went to by International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach. Edited by saaduiri: 15/6/2016 05:10:18 PM
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quickflick
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Her ladyship is making even more friends Anthony Sharwood for the Huffington Post Australia, appearing on 21 June, 2016 wrote:Australia's Olympic Games Boss Kitty Chiller Demands Deployment Of 100,000 Troops In Rio Chef de Mission Kitty Chiller urges Brazilian authorities to deploy their troops. Kitty Chiller, Australia's Chef de Mission for the Rio Olympics, has urged Brazilian authorities to deploy security forces ahead of schedule in the wake of the gunpoint attack on Australian Paralympian Liesl Tesch and a team official in Rio overnight. Chiller was talking tough outside the Australian Olympic Committee's Sydney headquarters as she demanded the early deployment of the 100,000 strong security force (made up of police, armed forces and security professionals) earmarked for the Olympic Games which run from August 5 to August 21. "The Rio organisers need to introduce the extra security precautions as soon as possible before an athlete gets hurt. We have written to them today asking them to address this issue," Chiller said in an official statement. She used much tougher language than that at her press conference. "We are demanding that the organising committee and the City review whether the [security measures] they have in place are sufficient." ... http://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/2016/06/21/australias-olympic-games-boss-kitty-chiller-demands-deployment/
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quickflick
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In happier news there was a nice story on the 7.30 Report (or 7.30) about two brothers and their neighbour who are all apparently going to be part of the men's pursuit track cycling team.
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Drunken_Fish
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Just heard a statistic, per head of population Australia has had twice as many positive drug tests as Russia. Anybody who thinks Australians are any cleaner than any other nation are dopes Edited by Drunken_Fish: 26/6/2016 10:51:02 AM
I used to be Drunken_Fish
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Roar_Brisbane
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Kitty Chiller. :oops:
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quickflick
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What now? No alcohol for the next four decades for all members of the Australian Olympic team?
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quickflick
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There's an article in the SMH by Andrew Webster on 15 July, 2016, about Kitty Chiller. http://www.smh.com.au/sport/olympics/rio-2016/that-threw-me-over-the-edge-sledge-from-kyrgios-that-hurt-chiller-the-most-20160714-gq69dg.htmlFor all the criticism I've made of her, in fairness she has had a tough life. I feel really sorry for her. And I really respect her achievements. But I do think she has been a wee bit puritanical about Nick Kyrgios and disproportionately unfair (sending him a 16 page dossier of criticism). I feel sorry for her but she shouldn't have made such a fuss, imo, especially not with an athlete that young. She clearly doesn't know him. That's the main problem.
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quickflick
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Gideon Haigh, appearing in the Guardian on 20 July, 2016 wrote:Russia's Olympic crisis lays bare a prevailing political apathy in sportThat Russia’s participation could only be threatened by doping transgressions ignores what might be the least politically appealing Games in a generation It's hard work for a country to get turfed out of the Olympics. You must seriously dedicate yourself to the task. It’s not enough to have a brutal, devious autocracy that flagrantly intimidates its domestic critics and is author of miseries all over the world. It’s not even enough to dope your athletes until they virtually glow in the dark. You really need to get caught in the act so egregiously that the professional Pontius Pilates of Olympism can’t continue ignoring it – and even then, there is no certainty of their acting. After all, the movement has truckled to tyrants since its inception, with the justification that it sits at an Olympian remove from politics. The opening ceremony is a giant parade in which highly-trained, uniformed, national representatives march behind their country’s flags – nope, nothing political going on here, no respectability being conferred, no prestige on offer, all just citius, altus, fortius. But then, perhaps the Olympics in this respect reflects our own prejudices, our ambivalence about sport’s political quotient, of which we’re queasily half-aware, while preserving a touching naivety about. In the recent eulogies for Muhammad Ali, one encountered a note of profound nostalgia. Here was a proud, outspoken, racially defiant, politically engagé Caesar. When, some wondered, comes such another? It’s certainly possible to argue never, not least because for many of the convictions Ali held he would now be anathematised. Conversion to Islam? Conscientious objection? Sympathy for enemy combatants (“No Viet Cong ever called me nigger”)? In the 1960s Ali had at least a counterculture in his corner. The social media shitstorms round an Ali figure today would leave us needing a new internet. Ali was the harbinger of decades in which sport and politics seemed unavoidably, sometimes unapologetically, entwined. Sport was a forum for the dramatisation of Cold War rivalry and for the damnation of apartheid. Cricket could draw the Caribbean together, and ping-pong symbolised the thaw between the US and China. Football could pitch Honduras and El Salvador into war, and England into European disgrace. Yet at some point there began a tilt back towards the ancient pretence, which flourished before Ali, that sport was most desirably a world unto itself – a tilt now so pronounced that an Adam Goodes or a David Pocock reminding us of the world beyond sport in even the most glancing fashion is received as the shrillest of campaigners. So what happened? The simplest explanation for the seeming divergence of sport and politics is the interposition of business, with its preference for stable properties on which to project corporate messages and its partiality to the values of the entertainment industry. When the end of Cold War apparently ushered in a post-ideological age, only “causes” seemed to stand between sport and money, and these could usually be co-opted. The emblematic athlete of the ensuing decade became Michael Jordan, reported to have recoiled when asked to endorse a black Democrat with the words: “Republicans buy sneakers too.” Sport’s “rebels” became those with colourful private lives, not those whose beliefs were at odds with the regnant culture. Under the surface, sport was actually barely less political: its stealth neo-liberalism was merely less outwardly recognisable, more supple and pervasive. And on it everyone was unselfconsciously in: governments advancing electorally-appealing nationalisms, athletes burnishing shiny brands, corporates laundering mucky reputations, fans assuaging underlying anxieties, media enjoying and profiting from the spectacle. Sport was menaced more clearly by issues – doping, gambling, corruption, violence – than by state actors. These could, it was believed, be counterweighted by an expanded managerialism. It’s this, I suspect, that has worsened sport’s susceptibilities in the face of the slow-motion collapse of the pre-9/11 order, during which countries have raced one another to moral bottoms and routinely abrogated international human rights protections while falling behind super-rich oligarchs. For these, sport is an avenue to global legitimacy, a salve for wounded national prides. No wonder marquee events have been pursued so covetously by regimes among the world’s murkiest – Russia, China, the states of the Gulf, the republics of Eastern Europe. Far from resisting this embrace, sport has returned it, one of managerialism’s characteristics being that it always thinks it can do a deal. “Less democracy is sometimes better for organising a World Cup,” said Fifa’s erstwhile secretary-general Jerome Valcke not so long ago, in the spirit of Formula One’s Bernie Ecclestone praising Hitler being “able to get things done”. And so impends an Olympic Games that is probably the most politically unappealing in more than a generation, in a tormented country wrung out just two years ago by the cost of a World Cup – yet there’s a strange reluctance to ponder the event’s deeper implications. Our interest in Rio has been confined to speculating about the completion of facilities, indifferent to the favelas flattened, the public land gouged and the exchequer plundered in the process. Our interest in Brazil has been restricted to the minimal threat of the Zika virus to participants, rather than to the poverty, inadequate sanitation, uncontrolled land use and pauperised public health systems that have helped spread it among Brazilians. The Brazil of the XXXI Olympiad is a shadow of the nation that signed up for it, impoverished by a plunging oil price and the depredations of a kleptocratic elite. Yet the International Olympic Committee has no stake in affordability: its interests are selfish and transient. The people of Montreal spent 30 years paying off their Games. What burden awaits Rio’s disillusioned citizenry? Our party; their hangover. So while the belated meting out of justice to Russia might offer a brief pang of righteousness, satisfaction should be short-lived. It is a truism that sports reflects the societies that play them. At the moment that has some worrying entailments. https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/jul/20/russias-olympic-crisis-lays-bare-a-prevailing-political-apathy-in-sport
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Condemned666
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Friday week \:d/
daytime sessions are no good to our part of the world
The evening sessions, where there are lots of medals are on from first thing in the morning to lunch time for us
Edited by condemned666: 25/7/2016 11:16:40 AM
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Toughlove
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Could Australia's Chef de Mission being any less gracious?
Ridiculous way to carry on as a guest in someone else's country. (And a developing one at that.)
Granted there are issues but how about 'there's a few things that need sorting out and we're hoping they get fixed shortly' rather than slagging them off straight off the bat.
Just an awful performance by her.
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Condemned666
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Toughlove wrote:Could Australia's Chef de Mission being any less gracious?
Ridiculous way to carry on as a guest in someone else's country. (And a developing one at that.)
Granted there are issues but how about 'there's a few things that need sorting out and we're hoping they get fixed shortly' rather than slagging them off straight off the bat.
Just an awful performance by her. ^ aren't olympians just all age college students these days?
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Glory Recruit
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What times will the olympics be on AWST?
Edited by iridium1010: 25/7/2016 10:00:25 PM
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paulbagzFC
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These games will be a farce. -PB
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Carlito
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paulbagzFC wrote:These games will be a farce.
-PB Hence why the ioc wanting duel or triple host cities. Due to the fact one city can go broke
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Condemned666
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paulbagzFC wrote:These games will be a farce.
-PB So what if they are? Thats their problem
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Roar_Brisbane
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Toughlove wrote:Could Australia's Chef de Mission being any less gracious?
Ridiculous way to carry on as a guest in someone else's country. (And a developing one at that.)
Granted there are issues but how about 'there's a few things that need sorting out and we're hoping they get fixed shortly' rather than slagging them off straight off the bat.
Just an awful performance by her. Now what has she done?
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Toughlove
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Roar_Brisbane wrote:Toughlove wrote:Could Australia's Chef de Mission being any less gracious?
Ridiculous way to carry on as a guest in someone else's country. (And a developing one at that.)
Granted there are issues but how about 'there's a few things that need sorting out and we're hoping they get fixed shortly' rather than slagging them off straight off the bat.
Just an awful performance by her. Now what has she done? http://www.news.com.au/sport/olympics/rios-olympic-village-in-crisis-less-than-two-weeks-from-start-of-the-games/news-story/da72d4aa09bed8a97c50f2e1dbfc98b5British response: Britain said in a statement that it had found “some maintenance difficulties”, but many team members would be preparing in a training camp in the city of Belo Horizonte and would not need the village immediately.US response: The United States Olympics Committee has also acknowledged there are problems. “As is the case with every games, we’re working with the local organisers to address minor issues and make sure the village is ready for Team USA athletes,” spokesman Patrick Sandusky told AP.Australian response. Well, read and listen for yourself.
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Roar #1
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Toughlove wrote:Could Australia's Chef de Mission being any less gracious?
Ridiculous way to carry on as a guest in someone else's country. (And a developing one at that.)
Granted there are issues but how about 'there's a few things that need sorting out and we're hoping they get fixed shortly' rather than slagging them off straight off the bat.
Just an awful performance by her. Her treatment of Kyrgios and Tomic was disgraceful. She was never going to let them be on the team and she got off on the fact she had the power to do it. They both made the smart call to withdraw before she had the pleasure of ruling them out. But that's all good millman and an injured kokkinakis will give us the same chance of a medal :roll:
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Roar_Brisbane
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Toughlove wrote:Roar_Brisbane wrote:Toughlove wrote:Could Australia's Chef de Mission being any less gracious?
Ridiculous way to carry on as a guest in someone else's country. (And a developing one at that.)
Granted there are issues but how about 'there's a few things that need sorting out and we're hoping they get fixed shortly' rather than slagging them off straight off the bat.
Just an awful performance by her. Now what has she done? http://www.news.com.au/sport/olympics/rios-olympic-village-in-crisis-less-than-two-weeks-from-start-of-the-games/news-story/da72d4aa09bed8a97c50f2e1dbfc98b5British response: Britain said in a statement that it had found “some maintenance difficulties”, but many team members would be preparing in a training camp in the city of Belo Horizonte and would not need the village immediately.US response: The United States Olympics Committee has also acknowledged there are problems. “As is the case with every games, we’re working with the local organisers to address minor issues and make sure the village is ready for Team USA athletes,” spokesman Patrick Sandusky told AP.Australian response. Well, read and listen for yourself. All about her ego.
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Condemned666
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Anyone looking forward to watching this shit on channel 7's coverage (which channel has the olympics again? I dont care)   Churlish white snobbery, I dont see any african nations playing this, do you? Livetv and Sportstream for me fuck you very much
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Glory Recruit
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Condemned666 wrote:Anyone looking forward to watching this shit on channel 7's coverage (which channel has the olympics again? I dont care)   Churlish white snobbery, I dont see any african nations playing this, do you? Livetv and Sportstream for me fuck you very much Id really love to watch one of those horses have its way with you though
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paulbagzFC
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2015 Asian Champ shotputter from India now banned for doping, as was the Russian rowing team solely based on one of them being positive as well (and thus Aussies get their team in). Fucking lol, what a farcial event. -PB
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sunsetsunrise
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Well according to this medal table- Australia are more successful in the Olympics than Great Britain, the USA and China! :p http://www.findmeagift.co.uk/topics/real-olympic-champions/
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paladisious
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paladisious
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Baseball/Softball, Karate, Skateboard, Sports Climbing and Surfing to be added for the 2020 Olympics.
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Condemned666
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Edit wrong thread
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Aikhme
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Why is the Australian Olympic Team whingeing all the time?
I mean harden up princesses!!!!
Sick of all the whingeing!
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Condemned666
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+xWhy is the Australian Olympic Team whingeing all the time? I mean harden up princesses!!!! Sick of all the whingeing! Theres a few upper class types representing this Australia im guessing The common people have had their dreams crushed but because theyre common people, they will support Australia blindly regardless
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Condemned666
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only 2 events in the world do all the nations of the world get together
the un convention
and the olympics
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Condemned666
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Of course team USA is the best looking team at the opening ceremony*
it is the land where they make movies - der
*the athletes have access to the best health care and cosmetic dentistry
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