Sunday, December 13, 2009

Duke's Coach K To Direct Team USA At 2010 Olympic Basketball Play In London

Las Vegas, NV (AHN) - After helping restore pride and respect to the national team, coach Mike Krzyzewski has decided to return as Team USA's coach, believing there's more work to be accomplished.
A Hall of Fame coach from Duke, who steered the national team to several successful campaigns, including the Olympic gold in the Beijing Games, announced a second-straight three-year tour of duty Tuesday.
In a news conference Tuesday at Las Vegas, Krzyzewski was formally introduced as Team USA's coach for the 2012 London Olympics.
Krzyzewski, 62, who guided the Blue Devils to three NCAA Championships, will also be calling the shots for the national squad at the 2010 FIBA World Championships in Turkey.
His previous coaching staff will remain intact.
Portland Trail Blazers coach Nate McMillan, Syracuse's Jim Boeheim and the New York Knicks' Mike D'Antoni will be back on the bench assisting Krzyzewski.
As coach of the national squad, Krzyzewski has compiled an impressive 36-1 record from 2006 to 2008.

Critics wary of London Olympics ads plan

LONDON, July 21 (UPI) -- A law giving police the power to remove unauthorized ads from private property near Olympic venues can be used to stifle dissent, critics said Tuesday.
Government officials say the powers, buried in a law passed in 2006, only apply to advertising that could lead to "over-commercialization" of the 2012 Summer Games, The Guardian reported. The law requires a warrant before action can be taken but allows police officers and the Olympics security force to take action.
Chris Allison, assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said officers would not be going after protest posters or political signs, The Daily Mail said. But critics said the law gives them too much power and was reminiscent of the Chinese effort to clamp down on open protest during last summer's the Beijing Games.
'Powers of entry should be for fighting crime, not policing poster displays," said Anita Coles of the civil liberties group Liberty. "Didn't we learn last time that the Olympics should not be about stifling free expression? The cops need to focus on public safety at such a large event; not big business disputes about who owns the spirit of the games."


LINFORD'S NIECE CROWNED MISS ENGLAND

Rachel Christie, 20, plans to clinch two titles after being crowned Miss England.


She is being trained by Olympic 100-metres champ Linford, 49, and is tipped for success in the heptathlon at the 2012 London Olympics.


But first she wants to capture the Miss World crown in South Africa in December after becoming the first black Miss England.


Yesterday she said: “I still can’t believe I’m sitting here with a crown and a sash on.”


Rachel, who has already won medals at major UK race meets, including the AAA and South of England championships, said she entered the contest hoping to find modelling work to fund her sports career.



She added: “I’m just an athlete at the minute, which means I’m unemployed and broke. Modelling could fit round training in a way other jobs couldn’t.


“I wanted to show the younger generation you can do something positive with your life.


“Whoever you are, you can be who you want and whatever you want to be if you just put your mind to it and have ambition and determination.”


China's Guo Jingjing hopes to compete in London Olympics


ROME, July 21 (Xinhua) -- China's diving legend Guo Jingjing said on Tuesday that she hopes to compete in her sixth Olympic Games in 2012 at London.
    The 27-year-old, who has won four Olympic gold medalist and nine world titles, said, "I want to compete in London. I will continue to work hard and improve."
    Guo was satisfied with her performance in winning her fifth consecutive springboard title at the world championships on Tuesday.
    "I think I did better today than last year's Olympic Games," Guo said. "I feel I will be able to dive better. I still have the potential. My best days are still ahead of me," she said.
    With nine world titles and four Olympic gold medals, Guo has set a world record and become an all-time great in diving history. But the "record" is not the drive force.
    "I have never thought of setting a world record. I still enjoy diving. I enjoy the moment when I stand on the springboard and dive."

Bolt aims for improvement in London event

LONDON, England (CNN) -- The fastest man on the planet, Usain Bolt, admitted he is still fine-tuning his on-track performance ahead of next month's world athletics championships in Berlin in an exclusive with CNN.
Usain Bolt will be seeking to win his first world titles at the championships in Berlin.
Usain Bolt will be seeking to win his first world titles at the championships in Berlin.
The triple Olympic champion said he is making up for lost time this season, having been injured in a car crash in late April.
The 22-year-old needed minor surgery, but quickly bounced back to win the 100 meters and 200m at the Jamaican national championships and qualify for the August 15-23 showpiece in Germany.
His 100m time of 9.86 seconds was the fastest in the world this year until world champion Tyson Gay smashed it with 9.77 at a Golden League meeting in Rome earlier in July. Video Watch Bolt's interview with CNN. »
Bolt will not be going head-to-head with the American in the 100m at the London Grand Prix on Friday, but they will do battle in the relay.
"For me, it will be about getting everything together. I've had some bad starts during the season and I think I really need to work on that, so that's my main aim for London," Bolt told CNN on Tuesday.
"We've actually had some setbacks this year, so we didn't get to work as much as we wanted on the starts The first 30 [meters] have been the main problem for me, and I'm working on that. Once I get that together I should be good, so I'm working on that very hard."
Bolt, who set the world 100m record of 9.69 in winning the gold medal in Beijing last year, said that the car accident had set back his schedule for 2009.

It didn't affect me mentally in any way, but physically it set me back in training -- 200 training mainly -- practically for maybe a month," he said.
In London, Bolt will be running against compatriot and former world record-holder Asafa Powell in the 100m, and with him in the relay.
"We're cool guys, we're friends," Bolt said. "So it's not really hard, because when you're on the track and lined up against each other then we're enemies, but off the track we're good friends. It's easy, we see each other and we laugh."
A fiercely-motivated individual in his own events, Bolt said the 4x100m relay was "all about the team."
"I'll run any leg. I've never started the 4x100 but I've always wanted to," said Bolt, who won silver in the 200m and 4x100 relay at the last world championships in Osaka in 2007.
"Anywhere is OK for me as I can run the corner and the straight. It's always about the team. It's not about individuals saying 'I'm strongest.'"
Bolt said he would prefer to face his biggest rivals such as Gay and Powell more than he has been able to so far.
"It's always good to compete against the person who's your main rival before the championships so you can determine what you need to do," he said. "If he's beating you, you know what you need to do to get better. If you're beating him, you know what you need to do to stay on top."
He insisted that he doesn't set target times in training, but focuses on honing his technique.
"It's always about technique in every event for me. I'm always staying focused. In training it's about getting everything right, getting it correct and going out there and executing it."
With London to host the next Olympics in 2012, Bolt is well aware of what he will be bringing to the spectacle as he prepares to defend his titles.
"My personality's great and people look forward to seeing what I'll be doing every major championship," he said. "I've always been the best because I'm always working hard and staying focused. I have a championship to defend and I'm just looking forward to it, going out there and doing my best when it comes."


Young US softball players hold out hope for 2016

OKLAHOMA CITY — For years, the likes of Jennie Finch, Cat Osterman and Lisa Fernandez have been carving out a niche for U.S. softball and giving young women a chance to reach the Olympics.
With softball dropped from the 2012 Games in London, the players who grew up admiring the pioneers feel the heartache the worst.
"It's devastating because that's definitely been a dream, but I think that we're just fighting to get it back into the Olympics for the younger girls that can play," Jenae Leles said during the Americans' run to the World Cup of Softball title here over the past week.
Leles won Women's College World Series titles at Arizona in 2006 and 2007 and was on track to play for the U.S. in 2012. She made the U.S. national team this year but now faces at least a seven-year wait for her chance at the Olympics, if it ever comes.
The International Olympic Committee caused an uproar in U.S. softball by excluding the sport from the London Games. Next month, the IOC executive committee is expected to recommend two sports to be added into the 2016 Olympics.
The full IOC then decides in August which sports among softball, rugby, baseball, golf, roller sports, squash and karate will get in.
For Leles and nine other rookies on the U.S. squad, along with countless other women, that decision is key to whether they will fulfill their Olympic dreams.
"If it comes back for us in 2016, I'm going to be there as long as they give me the uniform," said U.S. outfielder Kaitlin Cochran, who won the NCAA title with Arizona State in 2008. "It doesn't matter. I'm going to find a way to get there."
The pursuit of the Olympics is a sacrifice for softball players, since it's difficult to earn a living playing a sport that does have two professional leagues in the U.S.
Alissa Haber, who finished her junior year at Stanford before making the U.S. team this year, finds herself facing a tough decision.
"The more and more I play, the more and more I think about it. I thought when softball was taken out of the Olympics I wasn't going to be around for 2016," Haber said. "But just being out here playing and seeing all these older players that still continued playing even though they don't have college teams to play for -- they still play for the pro leagues, so I know there are opportunities out there for me."
And if softball doesn't get into the Olympics in 2016?
"I'd take on the world in other avenues," Haber said.
At this point, there's not much the players can do but cross their fingers and hope the IOC rules in their favor. The International Softball Federation has put together a "Back Softball" campaign and, along with the other six sports, made its pitch to committee members last month.
Former U.S. pitcher Michele Smith joined Danielle Stewart of Australia and Saskia Kosterink of the Netherlands in asking the crowd here to support the cause. Stewart -- a current player -- even passed out fliers to fans.
"We just need to get the word out there. That's the biggest thing we can do right now," U.S. third baseman Andrea Duran said.
The U.S. national team has already turned toward the future, following the retirement of seven players who'd played in at least the last two Olympics. The question is what that future holds.
"When I was so young and wanted to play softball, I wanted to play for this team. This was my dream and 2012, I always thought was going to be my year," Cochran said. "But, hey, things change and hopefully 2016 will be it now."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Hornby wins London Olympics toys contract

Hornby, the models and collectables group, has secured itself a gold medal in the run-up to Christmas by winning the race to develop a range of toys around the London 2012 Olympic Games.

The company will produce Corgi versions of London taxis and buses, Hornby trains linked to the 2012 transport network, an Airfix kit of the Olympic Stadium, and Scalextric versions of the velodrome.
The models will be available by the end of the year and Frank Martin, Hornby chief executive, said it was a "great honour" for the company.
The contract is the first to be awarded by Locog, the organising committee for the Olympics, in what is expected to be a lucrative souvenir market for the event. The deal runs for the three years until the 2012 Olympics and beyond. The financial terms were not disclosed.
Mr Martin said: "This is a great honour for Hornby and an important development for the group.
"This licence represents a major opportunity for Hornby to grow our sales and to extend the appeal of our products with new consumers.
"We look forward to launching the London 2012 ranges, which we are confident will be very popular, both with 1collectors in the UK and with overseas visitors."
The first products, the bus and taxis, will be on sale by Christmas with the velodrome, stadium and trains scheduled for launch in 2011.
The contract is a boost for Hornby, which was forced to scrap its dividend last month after a stall in sales. Hornby shares rose 6, or 6pc, to 107p in early trading after the announcement.
Paul Deighton, chief executive of Locog, said: "We are proud to be working with a truly iconic British company, which can offer us a great range of products across its brands that will celebrate the Games in 2012 and live on for generations after as collector's items."


Usain Bolt at '85 percent' in run-up to worlds

LONDON — Usain Bolt still has more to give this year going into his final meet before next month's world championships.
"Yes, I'm not in the best shape of my life but I'm still in good shape," Bolt said ahead of the two-day London Grand Prix. "I think I'm probably close, probably 85 percent."
Bolt runs in the 100 meters Friday, one week after he ran a season-best 9.79 seconds in poor weather in Paris -- just .10 off the world record he set, slowing near the finish of the Olympic final last August.
After having surgery on his left foot following a car accident in April, Bolt believes the interruption to his training means he won't be at his best until the August 15-23 worlds in Berlin.
Still, he would not rule out a record time at the Crystal Palace track Friday.
"You never know for me what's possible if the weather is good -- I doubt it will be. I'm bringing the rain wherever I go," he said. "For me, it's not all about time, it's all about performance. It's just to see where I'm at and what I need to do."
Bolt's biggest challenge Friday should come from Asafa Powell, a teammate on Jamaica's world-record 400-meter relay team in Beijing.
Powell was the last man to beat Bolt, winning in Stockholm exactly a year ago, and has a best of 9.72 set last September.
"He's a great athlete and a great performer," Bolt said of Powell. "Our (personal best times) are not very far apart."
Track fans must wait until Berlin for a showdown over 100 between Bolt and Tyson Gay, the current world champion and fastest man in the world this year.
"I have never backed down from any challenge out in front of me," Bolt said. "Rivalry is always good. It excites me in a way to know that there's somebody out there that could beat me."
Gay's 9.77 in Rome earlier this month matched his own United States record, while the 26-year-old from Kentucky posted a 19.58 over 200 in New York in May -- one-hundredth faster than Bolt over the distance this year.
Gay will run the 200 at the London GP on Saturday, before the two step on the same track for a 400 relay to close the meet.
Bolt said he would analyze his two 100 runs in London to "get it right" for the worlds, but would concentrate more on his 200 before Berlin.
"I didn't do so much work after my accident in Jamaica," he said, though the damage was done by stepping on thorns walking away from his wrecked BMW. "I had to do mostly 80 meters, 110s. Leaning into the corner was really hard for me. I didn't do anything like curves. I have got a lot of catching up to do."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Fun ways to engage with 2012 Olympic Games


BRUMMIES are being encouraged to grasp the excitement as the 2012 London Olympics gets ever more closer.
City museums, arts centres and parks will be holding a series of fun activities this weekend to promote the count down to the games.
Gold medallist Denise Lewis, OBE, who was born in West Bromwich, will be talking about her personal experiences of the Olympics before launching ‘50 Ways to Engage with 2012’ at the Town Hall on Friday
The web-based resource outlines how people in the West Midlands can have their own ‘Olympic Moment’.
Visitors can enjoy an exhibition exploring Birmingham’s Victorian manufacturing heritage in Centenary Square, Broad Street, Birmingham.
Families can enjoy a series of arts and crafts based fun topped off with a Family Day at Handsworth Park.
Young musicians will be showing off their talents during a series of shows at 104 Hagley Road, Birmingham, throughout the weekend.



Golden chance to celebrate the Olympics

A CELEBRATION of art, culture and sport takes place in parks, museums and venues across the county this weekend.

The Open Weekend is part of a series of events across the UK to mark the London Olympics and Paralympics, with everything from jazz to martial arts on offer.

Organisers say it will be "celebrating art, culture, sport, and everything that makes up the London 2012 Games".

Last year more than 700,000 people in the UK enjoyed the inaugural Open Weekend, and organisers hope even more will take part this year.

The Cambridgeshire and Peterborough event, a collaboration between Cambridgeshire County Council and the East of England Development Agency, is ready to entertain thousands of people over the weekend.

The theme is "Open Up", with a focus on encouraging people to engage in activities they may not otherwise take part in.

The three-day "Cultural Olympiad" was launched last month at London's National Gallery by Olympic gold medallist and 2012 chief executive Lord Coe, who was keen to point out that the Olympic experience was about "more than just sport"."Open Weekend is part of our vision for the Games to inspire lasting change," he said. "The fantastic range of events provides opportunities for everyone to access excellence across sport, art and culture, and try something new."

The event, entirely not-for-profit, has an exciting mix of activities on offer.

On Saturday, Cambridge Corn Exchange opens its doors from 11am-2pm, with a variety of sport taster sessions and tours of the venue.

Also from 11am-2pm, Anglia Ruskin University is offering free language and cultural sessions at its East Road centre.

Events stretch across the News region, with tours of Ely available, beginning at Oliver Cromwell's house and taking in various sites and areas usually closed to the public.

Peterborough Museum hosts a free interactive dinosaur exhibition between 10am-5pm on Saturday.

On Sunday, Milton Country Park opens its doors for a sporting extravaganza, with fencing, orienteering and golf just a few of the activities available to try.

Cambridgeshire County Council arts officer Joanne Gray, one of the organisers of the event, said: "We are most definitely looking forward to what will be a wonderful weekend".

Bradley in 2012 Snub

BRADLEY WIGGINS may snub London 2012 in a bid to become the first Brit to win the Tour de France.

Wiggins, 29, who won three Olympic gold medals on the track, has been the surprise package of this year's Tour, currently lying third overall ahead of Sunday's finish.
And The Modfather admits his display has seen him reassess his future goals.
Wiggins said: "The last few weeks have shown me what I want to do for the next four years of my life.
"The Olympics are fantastic but the Tour is where it's at. It's fantastic to be a part of the race and I want to see how far I can go."

Usain Bolt targets London 2012 glory

Usain Bolt has targeted the 2012 Olympics in London as the time and place when he will deliver the ultimate performance of his athletics career.
He told The Times that, before the Games come to Britain, he expects to lower his existing world record of 9.69sec and that he believes that, eventually, he can edge the time to below 9.60. And he hopes and expects to grace London 2012 with that all-time peak performance “because that's when I'll really need to work to defend all my titles”.
He might need Tyson Gay to help him to hit that highest of high notes, but he believes that the American is already carefully avoiding him. Gay will come later. Presently, he has London in mind.
Bolt uses the capital as his base for much of the summer and the Jamaican will run in Crystal Palace in the London Aviva Grand Prix on Friday and Saturday, but he has greater ambitions for the next Olympics. He broke the world 100 metres record at the Beijing Games last summer when he was 21 and it is the good fortune of London 2012 that, fitness permitting, his body and mind will have reached maturity for a world-class sprinter in three years' time.
Bolt's talent, which so astonished the watching world last year, is not only record-breaking, but also increasingly consistent. Last summer was not a one-off - with Bolt repeatedly delivering the same high standards this year, talk of records and when and where they will be broken does not appear to be misplaced.
He estimates that, in the past year, he has probably missed a month of training because of post-Olympic celebrations and other problems, “like the car accident [Bolt crashed his BMW in Jamaica in April]”. He therefore says that he has “a lot of work to do to get to where I should be” but that “if I put my mind to it, I should be OK”.
So, on these terms, does he believe that his record could fall at the World Championships in Berlin next month? “I think so,” he said. “If I get myself to where I want to be, I should be in good shape to break the world record there.”
It sounds a little preposterous to be discussing the 100 metres world record so presumptuously, but it is not a topic of conversation that Bolt particularly welcomes because in private he derives little pleasure from talking up his achievements and also because it is not the record that motivates him.
“A lot of people want times,” he said, “but for me it's about winning championships.” To see the best on the clock from Bolt, therefore, it stands to reason that someone else - and not the stopwatch - will have to push him. This is where Gay comes in. The fastest times this year over 100 and 200 metres have been run by the American, who completed a sprint double at the previous World Championships in Osaka two years ago.
Bolt's rivalry with Gay is potentially one of the all-time great head-to-heads. “Tyson's shown that he is ready to come at me,” Bolt said. “And I'm trying to get myself into shape so I am ready to compete with him.”
The Jamaican would certainly relish it. “I wouldn't mind if I ran against him two or three times a year,” he said. “That way, if he beat me, then I can say: ‘This is where I need to be and what I need to work on.'
“For me, it's good to run against your competitor. That way, when it comes to your big race, you'll be so used to him, you'll know what you need to do to beat him, so there will be no pressure.”
There is no doubt how much athletics would love to have these two racing each other regularly. Talking at a Gatorade science and sprinting masterclass for children recently, Bolt said that he hoped Gay would run the 100metres at Crystal Palace.
Almost the next day, Gay signed a contract to compete in the 200 metres at the South London track instead.
Recent history shows how rival athletes have gone out of their way to avoid direct competition. Before the Beijing Olympics, Gay and Asafa Powell were the headline sprinters, yet their rivalry was disappointingly limited. Likewise this summer, the mouthwatering Bolt-versus-Gay clash will remain under wraps until Berlin.
The obvious interpretation is a fear of defeat. Bolt would not claim that Gay is running scared, but he did say: “I'd run against him as much as possible. I don't think he wants that, but every race would be good for me.”
Does he believe that fear of defeat is a justifiable reason for one athlete avoiding another? “I don't think so,” he said. “You've got to face your fears.”

London 2012 adds millions to anti-terrorist budget

LONDON (AP) — Organizers of the 2012 London Olympics will spend $31.4 million of reserve funds to help secure games venues from terrorist attacks, the British government said Monday.
The need to modify Olympic Park facilities "to make them more secure and resilient to attacks" was the only dip into contingency funds in the past three months.
In its latest quarterly report, the government said other savings meant the extra security spending would not affect the anticipated final cost of the Olympics, which was unchanged at $11.9 billion.
Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell said the project was on time and on budget, with events planned next week to mark the three-year countdown to the opening ceremony.
"The overall funding package for the games remains the same and the anticipated final cost of the Olympic Delivery Authority budget is the same at it was at the end of March," Jowell said in a statement.
A total of $2.098 billion in contingency funds remains unallocated, even after more than 1.15 million pounds of the fund has been spent in offsetting the effects of the global financial crisis.
Jowell said more than 4,000 workers were now on the Olympic Park site involved in building venues and infrastructure such as roads and bridges.
"The project continues to provide jobs and millions of pounds worth of business opportunities to companies around the UK in a challenging time," she said.
ODA chairman John Armitt said it had hit all its targets in the past year.
"Though we are making strong progress we are not complacent," Armitt said. "The year ahead is a challenging one as activity on site reaches its peak."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Young NBA players take first step on 2012 Olympic path

LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Kevin Durant and Derrick Rose, the past two NBA Rookies of the Year, will be among 23 players who will gather here for the USA Basketball men's national team mini-camp that opens on Thursday.
Three days of workout sessions that amount to a first step on the road to assembling a 2012 London Olympic squad will culminate with the participants split into blue and white squads for Saturday's USA Basketball Showcase game.
Chicago Bulls guard Rose was the 2009 Rookie of the Year while swingman Durant of Oklahoma City won the top newcomer award in 2008.
Four players who had been expected to attend - Trevor Ariza of the Houston Rockets, Portland forward LaMarcus Aldridge and Portland guard Brandon Roy and Boston's Glen Davis - will not participate in the camp, USA Basketball said.
Eric Gordon of the Los Angeles Clippers and Golden State forward Anthony Randolph have been added to the original camp roster while Indiana's Danny Granger and New York's David Lee will attend but not take part in workouts.
Among those taking part will be Portland's Greg Oden and Jerryd Bayless, Memphis' Rudy Gay and O.J. Mayo, college standout Blake Griffin, New Jersey's Devin Harris, Philadelphia's Andre Iguodala and Thaddeus Young and Russell Westbrook of Oklahoma City.
"While we look to continue to build continuity within the USA National Team program and continue to improve, in 2009 we will get a look at some of the top young NBA players who haven?t been involved in USA Basketball at the top national program level," USA Basketball chairman Jerry Colangelo said.
"This is their opportunity to be considered for the next generation of players who will help make up the USA Basketball national program."
A select squad of US NBA stars reclaimed Olympic gold last year at Beijing after finishing third at the 2004 Athens Games.
US teams with NBA talent will compete at next year's World Basketball Championship in Turkey, the 2011 Americas Olympic qualifying tournament unless they win the world title and the 2012 London Olympics.
"The roster for the national team program will be fluid in 2010-2012 and we will make adjustments to the roster each year to help insure we have the strongest program and the strongest teams possible," Colangelo said.

Also-rans try to get in the running for 2012 Olympics

The London Olympics are three years away, but these athletes are already getting ready by training on an East End running track.
They need to: this is the Indian team - the weakest in Games history.
In a drive to overcome that dubious distinction they have set up a training camp down the road from the Olympic Park. The mission: to win India its first athletics medal since 1900.
The nation has won only 20 medals including that year. Beijing last year was their best - two bronzes and a gold - but with a population of a billion, that's roughly one medal for every 333million people.
Over the next six weeks, some 40 leading athletes will be put through their paces at Terence McMillan Stadium in Plaistow, following high-level orders to bring home titles from the world's greatest sports event. The team has 22 coaches, physiotherapists and dietitians. Under a strict regime, athletes train twice a day, six days a week, and are early to bed at their hotel in Epping Forest. They are acclimatising to unpredictable weather and learning to switch to high-protein European diets.
And they will be able to see the stadium they hope to compete in rising long before their rivals do.
Team manager Rahul Pawar, 32, said: "We want an athletics medal in 2012. That is our target and that is why we have come here. We are getting used to the weather - some of these athletes have come from temperatures of 40C - and are familiarising ourselves with the area. It gives you an important psychological edge. We will leave no stone unturned for 2012."
Mr Pawar said it was too early to identify a potential 2012 medallist. The top achievement of their best 400metres runner, KM Binn, was to get to the semi-finals at the 2004 Athens Games.
For most of the athletes their best early chance of success will be on home turf next year at the Commonwealth Games in Delhi. Shotputter Omprakash Singh, 22, said: "I want gold at the Commonwealth Games but the pressure is really on us for the Olympics. It's been all about cricket for so long in India, but the Olympics is the big international stage."
India's leaders, prompted by the state-sponsored sporting excellence of China, have been investing about £150million a year in sport. India is rated the poorest Olympic nation judged by medals per head of population.
Track and field has not delivered a medal since 1900, when it was under British rule and Calcutta-born Norman Pritchard came second in the 200metre sprint and 200metre hurdles. The 1988 Seoul and 1992 Barcelona Games passed without a single medal. There was further ignominy when the men's hockey team, with eight golds since 1928, failed to qualify for Beijing. It prompted national soul searching.
Even so, Beijing was a relative success. There were two bronzes and Abhinav Bindra won the 10metre air rifle.
Mr Pawar said: "Up until now the government has had other priorities such as education and infrastructure. We were dependent on agriculture and the main concern was when it was going to rain. Now we want it to rain medals."

Donovan enjoying role as 'second head coach' for Liberty

One year ago, Anne Donovan went to Beijing and guided Team USA to its fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal. The WNBA was nowhere in her thoughts.
But a year later, one of the most successful coaches in league history and one of the early stars of women's basketball is back on the sidelines of the WNBA, enjoying her role as an assistant coach with the New York Liberty.

LIBERTY PREVAIL: Christon's 32 doom Dream
"I was in a position where I was really missing being on the floor again and I wasn't sure what my next move was going to be," said Donovan, a 1995 Naismith Hall of Fame inductee. "It looked like I might be sitting at home again for another summer.
"When New York called, my history with both (president and general manager) Carol Blazejowski and (head coach) Pat Coyle made it an easy decision."
Donovan's main duties include helping the Liberty develop their skills, game preparation and scouting — but her presence creates a unique situation for the team.
The combined experience of Donovan and Coyle has been needed at times for the young Liberty, who have struggled to a 4-8 record.
"It is like having a second head coach," Coyle said. "Anne's been nothing short of being terrific. You know what I really appreciate is the experience that she brings."
Before leaving the Seattle Storm in 2007 to focus strictly on the Olympics, Donovan put together a string of memorable seasons as a WNBA head coach.
She amassed a 93-77 regular-season record from 2003 to 2007 in Seattle, leading the Storm to the 2004 WNBA championship, and was the first female head coach in league history to reach 100 wins. Her WNBA success followed a standout career as a three-time All-American center at Old Dominion and winner of the 1983 Naismith Award, given to the country's best college basketball player.
Even with all the accolades, Donovan said winning the gold medal in 2008 stands above the rest.
"The gold medal in Beijing ... was really difficult and challenging and I think a lot of people thought we'd go over there and just expect to win that," Donovan said. "Anybody that's really close to the program saw that the rest of the world is catching up.
"In order to walk away with that gold medal a lot of things had to fall into place, and the women had to really commit. And they did that."
Donovan, who won gold medals as a player at the 1984 and 1988 Olympics and as an assistant coach in 1996 and 2004, will not be the head coach of Team USA when it tries for its seventh overall gold medal at the 2012 Olympics. University of Connecticut head coach Geno Auriemma has taken over as the head coach and will lead the team through the 2012 Olympics in London.
Donovan, who turns 48 on Nov. 1, is focused this season on helping the young Liberty and wouldn't say if she wanted to be a head coach in the league again.
"Just one day at a time," she said. "I'm enjoying what I'm doing for now."

London 2012: Stuck on the blocks?

The countdown to Britain's Olympic Games is being overshadowed by concerns that the 2012 showpiece will fail to deliver a lasting legacy for wider participation in sport.
With the opening ceremony of the London Games three years away next week, claims are being made that funding for grassroots projects has failed to materialise, despite the promises made by ministers more than two years ago.
Lord Patten, the former cabinet minister who is a member of the British Olympic Association advisory board, has warned of a lack of coordination in meeting what has been described by Whitehall officials as the greatest anti-terror challenge yet faced on British soil.
A week tomorrow, on 27 July, there will be three years remaining until the opening ceremony.
A poll for The Independent on Sunday has found that people are optimistic about London 2012 – referred to by ministers and organisers as the "compact Games". The ComRes survey shows 54 per cent of voters agree that the Games "will be worth the expense in the end", while 42 per cent disagree.
At the same time, the IoS has found that while some areas of the Games are on schedule, others are months behind. For example, while construction of the stadiums and roads is just four days behind schedule, a plan to get disadvantaged youngsters interested in community sport has been shelved amid the economic crisis.
Yet encouraging wider participation in sport, particularly among the disadvantaged, was one of the keys to London beating its rivals to the staging of the 2012 Games.
Lord Newby, a Liberal Democrat peer who is chairman of sport for the Prince's Trust, the country's leading youth organisation, said that up to £30m was promised by ministers two years ago for the Active Generation project involving the Trust and the Duke of Edinburgh's Awards scheme. However, the money has so far failed to materialise, leaving both organisations short of funding for encouraging young people not in employment, education or training (Neets) to take part in sport and community activities.
The Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) said last night that Active Generation had been merely a "proposal" discussed with the Prince's Trust. It denied that there were problems with the legacy, and said an "ambitious new campaign" to encourage grassroots sport was being drawn up, although this would not be launched until next year.
Lord Newby raised the issue in the House of Lords last month, but ministers refused to address his concerns.
The Active Generation programme was supposed to help more than 10,000 young people to become more socially and physically active and play a positive part in their communities.
The peer told the Lords: "It is the Trust's view that LOCOG [the London Games organising committee, chaired by Lord Coe, below] and the DCMS have not managed to create a coherent campaign behind which the third sector could unite to deliver legacy ambitions."
Lord Newby said last night: "This is something the trust is very concerned about. There are a lot of opportunities for working with sport in disadvantaged areas. Now it seems there isn't any money for this."
The Prince's Trust and other bodies are also in a catch-22 situation with the "Inspire" programme, a kitemark linked to the Olympics that is awarded to non-profit organisations. Lord Newby said while having the Inspire mark was prestigious, it stopped organisations from approaching businesses for corporate support.
Statistics from Sport England show that the target of getting a million more people playing more sport by 2012 has stalled. No progress has been made towards achieving the target, and there is a significant decline in participation in a number of sports, including swimming, football, golf, rugby union, dance, sailing, gymnastics, rowing and rugby league.
The decrease in participation is especially noticeable among target groups including women, those with a disability and the over-55s. Membership numbers at local sports clubs are also falling.
Don Foster, the Liberal Democrat culture spokesman, said of the figures: "[They] show that not only is the Government failing to make progress in getting Britain active, but the situation is actually getting worse among some groups.
"It increasingly looks as if the key Olympic legacy pledge of increasing sports participation will be a complete non-starter.
"With many community sports clubs threatened with closure and membership falling, the Government must take urgent action to protect local facilities and playing fields if they are to have any chance of delivering a sports legacy for the Games."
A spokesman for the DCMS said: "Legacy has always been key to London 2012 from the outset and, with just over three years to go until the start of London 2012, we already have firm foundations for a lasting legacy from the Games.
"In east London, the Olympics are creating better transport links, new homes, world-class sporting, educational and cultural facilities and jobs. Over the next few years more than 30,000 people will help build the Olympics and the Olympic Village, with more than 2,000 apprenticeship and training opportunities.
"We recognise that the London Olympics are a unique opportunity to get people excited and inspired by the Games. Wider investment in sport has helped us achieve a record medal haul in Beijing and half a million more people taking part in sport at grassroots level.
"Some people say this would have happened anyway. It wouldn't. The Government's commitment, the investment of public money and the public's enthusiasm for sport have all been boosted by the Games.
"We also want to use the power of the Games to encourage people to play a positive part in their communities, and the Active Generation scheme was one of a number of proposed solutions.
"We are currently working on an ambitious new campaign to increase participation in all projects inspired by the Olympics in communities right across the country, through local projects linked to the Games. This will launch next year."
On the issue of security, Jacqui Smith, then Home Secretary, launched an Olympic Security Directorate in March to oversee anti-terror plans for the three-week event.
Yet a Whitehall source claimed that the Centre for the Protection of National Infrastructure, an arm of MI5, had carried out a series of threat assessments for the Olympic park and other venues, as well as transport links, which has not been properly followed by planners.
Lord West of Spithead, the sole remaining member of Gordon Brown's "government of all the talents", is the lead minister for Olympic security, although the Home Secretary is responsible for a safe and secure Olympics, the Home Office said.
The Metropolitan Police appointed Assistant Commissioner Chris Allison in May to take the lead in coordinating and delivering operational policing.
But Lord Patten told the Lords last month that he had heard "continuing murmurs" about a lack of proper security coordination for 2012.
Asked whether the MI5 threat assessment was being adhered to, a Home Office spokesman said: "The Home Office, ODA [Olympic Delivery Authority] and LOCOG have a fully integrated 2012 security strategy in place. In delivering our strategy, we are successfully working with a range of partners to ensure 2012 venues are safe and secure."
Last week, the Olympic Delivery Authority's annual report showed a huge increase in bonuses paid to outside consultants working on the London Games. At the same time, money from the Games' contingency fund has been diverted into paying for the media centre and Olympic Village, after private companies hit by the recession pulled out.
Some £7.5m spent on designing the media centre had to be written off because of the shortfall in investment. Nearly £5m has been wasted on the Olympic Village after a deal with the contractor Lend Lease collapsed.
However, construction overall – covering transport links, stadiums and other venues – is just four days behind schedule, according to an inside source. The recession has also driven down inflation for construction materials, and just 30 per cent of the £2bn contingency fund, part of the overall £9.3bn budget, has been spent, the source claimed.
The source added: "The cost pressures on things like the Olympic Village, the International Broadcasting Centre/Main Press Centre have been huge. A lack of private-sector funding means that the ODA is now providing £355m for the centres rather than the £220m budgeted for.
"However, we're not spending contingency money at the rate forecast, so we've created some headroom [should anything go wrong]. As of the end of June, the overall construction is 39 per cent complete, and we're about four days behind schedule. The contingency money spent is closer to 30 per cent.
"We've made savings from pressures on construction inflation throughout the programme. The Olympic stadium is budgeted at £547m, but we're coming in at about £535m."
Additional reporting by Mark Leftly and Emile Mehmet


Wiggins doubt over track at London 2012

Bradley Wiggins says the final week of the Tour de France will go a long way to determining whether he returns to the track to bid for more Olympic medals in London in three years time.

The 29-year-old lies sixth overall as the race enters the Alps on Sunday, and a top ten finish in Paris could lead to him turning his back on the track.

"The last two weeks has shown me what I want to do for the next four years of my life," he told Cycling Weekly. "The Olympics are fantastic for the two weeks they're on every four years, but the Tour de France is where it's at. It's fantastic to be a part of the race, and I want to see how far I can go.

Does that mean he may not try for a third successive gold in the individual pursuit at the London Olympics?

"I really don't know. I can't see it now. I don't have to go back but it all depends on this week really. A lot has changed in the past two weeks for me. If I can finish in the top five, or top 10 or even top 15, it opens the door for the future. I've seen enough to come back next year and try again.

With a week to go, Wiggins is eyeing a high finish overall, and hasn't ruled out the chance of being in the top three come Paris.

"I was one of the strongest guys on Andorra. There were guys who were in worse condition than me. I might not be able to stay with [Alberto] Contador, or Andy [Schleck] but I feel good, I feel fresh. Even if I have a horrendous day and finish 15th overall, I have seen what could be possible.

"But I'm aiming high. I still feel fresh. Contador and Andy are going to be difficult to stay with in the mountains, but Andy's a minute behind me at the moment, so he's got some time to make up. We still don't know what Lance [Armstrong] has got. But can I climb with Nibali, or Evans, or those guys? I think I can.

"I'm aiming high, so why not think about the podium? Last year I said I wanted three gold medals at the Olympics and I came away with two. I am going to give it everything this week and see what happens, because I don't want to reach the end of this Tour thinking 'what if'. If that means I have a bad day and slip down, then it won't be because I've not tried my hardest."

And his progress on the road this season will dictate how the rest of his career turns out. Although success on the track can bring Olympic medals and fame, finishing in the top 10 of the Tour would open doors for Wiggins and enable him to structure his season around specific races.

"I'm not going to stick my neck out and say I can win the Tour in the next four years, but can I win the Vuelta? Maybe. Can I win the Dauphiné Libéré, or Paris-Nice or the Tour of Switzerland? Why not," he said.

"Me talking about winning a grand tour like the Vuelta, I'm sure it'll make people laugh, but if you set the bar high enough maybe I'll come close to it. People who don't set the bar so high will maybe meet their goals, but they won't go to the next level."

Wiggins goes into Sunday's 15th stage in fourth place overall, 46 seconds behind the race leader Rinaldo Nocentini of AG2R.

After the Tour de France he will ride the ENECO Tour in Holland and Belgium, then home fans will get a chance to see him at the Tour of Britain, before he has a serious crack at winning a medal in the World Time Trial Championships in Switzerland.

Olympic Removals may face closure after threat from organisers of the 2012 London Olympics

A FAMILY business in Waltham Abbey which uses the Olympic rings as a logo has been threatened with legal action by the organisers of the 2012 games.
Olympic Removals, which sits opposite the White water rafting site in Lee Valley Park has been told to pick another logo or face the consequences.
The family-run firm admit they are struggling in the face of the recession and fear that the court battle could see them close for good.
Business Manager Joe Kennedy said: "(company owner)Steve Tanner picked the Olympic rings because he wanted to be the best of the best. We've been using the symbol since 1987, I just think it's disgusting that we're being bullied like this."
The company, based in Station Road, has been told to remove the symbol from nine removal vehicles, company advertising and letterheads - at a cost of thousands, or be sued by 2012 organisers.
Mrs Kennedy said that the company will fight the case via the courts.
She said: "If it came to it and they did take legal action, we would have no choice but to fight it, we've had several supportive calls from people around the country.
"We've also had a firm in an Olympic borough who have said that they will make a donation to our fees if we require it."
"We don't have the millions of pounds they have behind them, but we won't give up."
A London 2012 Organising Committee spokesman said: “The Olympic symbol is the most valuable asset of the Olympic movement, and is integral to us privately raising the £2bn needed to stage and host the Games.
"We are obliged to prevent its use by third parties who do not have an official association with the Olympic movement, whilst respecting the rights of those who are able to do so under the law.
"We are unable to comment on individual cases. However, LOCOG deals with every matter on a case by case basis and will always take a reasonable and pragmatic approach.”

Whitehall ‘fails Scotland’ over 2012 Olympics

An independent report has accused Whitehall of denying Scotland a fair share of the £3.5billion which UK taxpayers are contributing towards the 2012 London Olympics.
A Lords committee said planned expenditure on the games had been classified by the Treasury as “UK-wide” rather than “England only”, preventing it being taken into account in the Barnett Form-ula, the mechanism by which Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland each get a fixed share of Whitehall spending.
Committee chairman Lord Richards said the spectacle of the Olympics and the competition would be of genuine benefit to the whole of the UK, but not the huge sums within the total being spent on the regeneration of rundown areas of east London.
The report, which demands the scrapping of the 30-year-old formula and its replacement by an up-to-date needs assessment by an independent commission, said the treatment of Olympics spending exemplified “a subjective application of the formula by the Treasury”.
Liberal Democrat Scottish affairs spokesman Alistair Carmichael, MP for Orkney and Shetland, said: “The report offers a fascinating insight into the way in which Treasury ministers fiddle the figures to suit their own political needs and whims.”
SNP Treasury spokesman Stewart Hosie, MP for Dundee East, said spending on regeneration projects in London in advance of the Olympics should come within Barnett, adding: “It is clear current arrangements are not working, and we want to be sure Scotland has not been swindled out of our Barnett share.”
SNP culture and sports spokesman Pete Wishart, MP for Perth and North Perthshire, said the report had “lifted the lid” on what was going on, voicing concern to ensure “Scotland has not been shortchanged out of our proper Barnett share”.
The report followed a detailed examination of the funding formula, renounced by its own author Lord Barnett, which labelled it “arbitrary and unfair” because it is based on a population share of increases in similar spending in England from a base line when he was Chief Secretary of the Treasury in a Labour government.
It called for the creation of a new independent UK funding commission to assess the relative needs of the different parts of the UK every five years and recommend a fairer share-out.
It also warned the current system benefits Scotland compared with Wales or Northern Ireland. Two Treasury studies in 1979 and 1993 showed Scotland received a lot more than officials believed was needed.
Lord Richards denied it opened up a can of worms but agreed it could only be implemented after the next general election because of the political implications.
It follows a report from the Calman Commission on the need for the Scottish Parliament to have some tax-raising powers which could be used to fund higher levels of public spending in Scotland.
The committee contrasted the Olympics decision with one classifying spending on a new underground mainline across London as “England only”, generating an extra £500million for the Scottish budget.
There is also continuing controversy over how the huge cost of a new Forth Road Bridge should be treated.

CLM, cost controllers for London Olympics, paid £151 million last year

Consultants tasked with keeping the bill for the London Olympics under control cost the taxpayer £151 million last year, including a £60 million bonus, it was revealed yesterday.
CLM, a consortium of surveyors overseeing the £8.1bn Olympic construction project, received the fee in a year when the taxpayer was forced to bail out the Athletes’ Village and the media centre after the collapse of a private financing deal.
The amount was nearly double the £87 million previously paid to the consortium, which includes Laing O’Rourke, the developer, Mace, the British management company, and the programme manager CH2M Hill.
The size of the fee emerged as Olympic chiefs awarded themselves generous pay rises, with three years to go until the start of the Games in 2012.


Staff at the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) shared £30 million, including £2 million of bonuses, according to the annual report for the year to March 31.
David Higgins, the chief executive, took home £537,000, although he bowed to the prevailing public mood and deferred half of his annual £210,000 bonus until 2012.
The Australian is still one of the best-paid public sector employees in Britain. Hugh Robertson, the Tories’ Olympic spokesman, said: “He’s doing an extremely good job but in the current climate everybody in the public sector must be aware of the need to bear down on bonuses and expenses.”
Mr Higgins and seven fellow directors collectively claimed £100,000 in expenses. Howard Shiplee, director of construction, was the highest spender, claiming £19,343, including £11,478 on hotels and nearly £2,280 on taxis.
Tom Brake, the Liberal Democrat Olympics spokesman, said: “These bonus and expenses arrangements are from a different era. We are now in tougher times where costs have to be more tightly controlled.”
The figures were released on the day the outer shell of the £547 million Olympic stadium was completed.
Olympic chiefs justified their pay because the complex 2012 project remains on schedule and on budget despite the recession.
John Armitt, the chairman who earned £250,000, said: “We have hit all, and exceeded some, of the ten milestones we set ourselves last year.”
By 2012, the estimated total paid to consultants will have reached nearly £680 million. Ministers have argued that the sum will prove value for money if there are no delays to the building programme.
The closer the completion deadline, the more quickly costs tend to escalate.
An ODA spokesman said: “We are not talking about consultants in suits. These are very experienced engineers, planners and construction experts who have worked on several Olympic Games. CLM’s contract is also heavily incentivised. Every penny earned is dependent on meeting strict performance measures tied to delivering on time, to budget and to a high standard.”
However, taxpayers may baulk at the cost, after they came to the rescue of two of the biggest venues on the Olympic Park. In May, the Government approved a further injection of £324 million into the £1 billion Village, which will house 17,500 athletes and officials during the Games, bringing public investment in the project to £650 million. The £355 million media centre had already been nationalised after private financing failed to materialise.
Ministers have insisted that the overall £9.3 billion public sector budget for the Olympics will not be exceeded.
The latest accounts revealed that the ODA wrote off £7.5 million in design and professional fees for work on the media centre. It also bore the cost of £2.5 million in legal fees incurred on behalf of Lend Lease, the property developer that pulled out of the Village financing deal.
A further £1.1 million in design fees were written off when the site of the canoeing venue was changed.

Rowing: Britain name World Championship team

There were few surprises in the nineteen crews selected on Thursday for August's world rowing championships in Poland, and confirmation that the top Olympians will be remaining in the smaller boats.

Olympic champions Andy Triggs Hodge and Peter Reed are staying in the men's pair, despite the fact that they have now lost four times in succession to New Zealand's quick pair.
"All we can do is keep in our boat and do everything we can to go as fast as we can", said Hodge. "I've no idea if we can push on enough to close the gap. If I want to be first I know what I have to do. There's no secret behind always believing you're first and therefore somehow it will magically happen."
The plain fact is that if the world championships were raced tomorrow, Hodge and Reed would likely be well ahead of the pack, but second behind the New Zealanders. But the pay-off is longer-term. By keeping the pair intact, even if it risks a silver medal, chief coach Jurgen Grobler not only allows his top oarsmen to learn more about how to move boats skilfully, but also maintains the coxless four of Matt Langridge, Alex Gregory, Ric Egington and Alex Partridge, who have a chance of glory in one of the more open events this year.
Katherine Grainger has also come to terms with the possibility that aspiring to the top results may be difficult this year, since she is remaining in the single scull in which she came fourth at two of the World Cups. "It's a risk and it is calculated. I'm prepared to take the drop in funding [if I don't medal]", she said. "Because my real goal is as everyone knows, come three years time at the London Olympics, I want that gold."
The three adaptive crews which raced in Munich go to the worlds unchanged, Paralympic champion Tom Aggar having seen off a feisty challenge from new arms-only sculler Andy Houghton. The lightweight crews are also unchanged, World Cup champions Sophie Hosking and Hester Goodsell spearheading the team, with a lightweight women's quad and light men's single added in the non-Olympic events. Unless a lightweight men's pair is also selected later, these are the only non-Olympic crews going to the world championships.
GB team
(World Championships, Poznan, Poland, Aug 23-30)
Men
Single: A Campbell (Tideway Scullers).
Double: M Wells & S Rowbotham (Leander).
Quad: C Cousins, M Bateman, B Lucas, S Townsend (Reading Univ, Leander).
Pair: P Reed & A Triggs Hodge (Leander, Molesey, crew order tbc).
Four: A Partridge, R Egington, A Gregory, M Langridge (Leander, Reading Univ).
Eight from: T Broadway, T Burton, J Clarke, P Marsland, J Orme, T Ransley, N Reilly-O'Donnell, D Ritchie, T Solesbury, T Wilkinson, cox P Hill (Leander, London, Cambridge Univ, Univ of London, Reading Univ, Oxford Univ).
Lightweight single: A Freeman-Pask (Imperial Coll).
Lightweight double: R Williams & P Mattick (London, Leander).
Lightweight four: C Bartley, S Feeney, C Boddy, B Hewitt (Leander, London, Tees).
Lightweight pair may be selected later.
Women
Single: K Grainger (St Andrew).
Double: A Vernon & A Bebington (Marlow, Leander).
Quad: R Bradbury, B Rodford, S Cowburn, K Greves (Westminster Sch, Gloucester, Durham Univ, Leander).
Pair: O Whitlam & L Reeve (Agecroft, Leander).
Eight from: J Cook, J Eddie, A Freeman, A Knowles, L Maguire, N Page, T Stiller, M Wilson, two U-23 reserves tbc, cox C O'Connor (Leander, Univ of London, Wallingford, Thames, Reading Univ, Nottingham, Molesey, Oxford Brookes).
Lightweight double: H Goodsell & S Hosking (Reading Univ, London).
Lightweight quad: S Cullen, J Hall, L Greenhalgh, A Dennis (London, Leander).
Adaptive
Arms-only men's single: T Aggar (Royal Docks).
Trunk & arms mixed double: J Roberts & S Scowen (City of Swansea, Dorney).
Leg-trunk-arms mixed coxed four: V Hansford, J Roe, D Smith, N Riches, cox R Jones (Univ of Surrey, Stratford-upon-Avon, Reading Univ, Marlow).

Cultural Programming Overhauled for 2012 London Olympics

LONDON—The 2012 Olympic Games here will be accompanied by an ambitious program of arts events known as the Cultural Olympiad, which is getting new leadership, a new focus, and a welcome infusion of almost £16 million ($26 million) in lottery money.
Tony Hall, chief executive of the Royal Opera House, will chair the new Cultural Olympiad board convened by the government and the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games in an attempt to revitalize the project, which has been criticized by some senior figures in the arts world for lacking focus and wasting money. Hall has recruited a series of major names in the arts for the Cultural Olympiad’s board, allowing it to, in effect, become a coalition of the biggest arts institutions in the U.K. Projects include an international Shakespeare festival, a film project for young people, and World River, a music festival to take place in London.