Tuesday, November 15, 2011
London 2012: Football tickets and fixture confirmed
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Football at London 2012: Egypt withdraw as tournament hosts
Egypt have cancelled plans to host the inaugural African Under-23 Championship due to security concerns, just six weeks before the tournament is due to begin.
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
NBA pre-season cancelled
London 2012 athletics track inaugurated
Friday, August 5, 2011
Wang Meng expelled from team for drunken brawl
Wang Meng went out drinking and failed to return to the team hotel before a curfew, China’s sports governing body said in a statement released late Thursday. When she was confronted by the team manager, she assaulted her, it said.
The 26-year-old Wang was expelled from the national team and banned from international competitions because her conduct “has violated the team’s disciplines and jeopardized the sport’s image,” China’s General Administration of Sport said in the statement.
Wang, who won three golds at the Vancouver Games last year, and one gold, a silver and a bronze at Turin, Italy, in 2006, had been suspended since the incident during a summer training camp in the eastern Chinese city of Qingdao on July 24.
State-run Xinhua News Agency said Wang punched team manager Wang Chunlu after being criticized for failing to meet a curfew after a night out with five other teammates.
China’s General Administration of Sport said Wang and male speed skater Liu Xianwei assaulted the team manager and damaged hotel property. Liu was also expelled for his role in the incident.
The other four squad members—Zhou Yang, Liu Qiuhong, Han Jialiang and Liang Wenhao—were allowed to keep training with the national team.
At the time, Xinhua reported that Wang accidentally cut her hands on glass and needed dozens of stitches after the incident.
In a video posted on the website of China News Service, an angry Wang, her arms in bandages, was shown amid a throng of reporters at the Winter Sports Management Center on Thursday night.
It was unclear what she had been asked, but Wang was shown insisting that she be quoted verbatim on TV and threatening to hold a news conference if she wasn’t quoted in full.
“Can you not report the voice from the heart of an ordinary person? … To report the voice from the heart of an ordinary person,” she said. “I am no longer an athlete. I have been expelled.”
Xinhua said Wang is famous for her fiery temper and it is not the first time she has landed herself in trouble.
She was expelled from the national team for six months in 2007 after criticizing her coach’s tactics at the Asian Winter Games, Xinhua said.
In June, Wang and her teammates reportedly clashed with security guards who accused them of making too much noise during a night out in the southwestern Chinese city of Lijiang. That incident led to the 10 p.m. curfew being imposed during last month’s summer training camp.
Source: AP
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Oscar Pistorius = Daegu 2011 + London 2012 : experts say South Africa's 'blade runner' gains advantage from his technology
A double below-knee amputee almost from birth, Pistorius, 24, ran a personal best of 45.07sec to win in Lignano, Italy. His time betters the stiff IAAF entry mark of 45.25sec, which no Australian has clocked this year.
Pistorius' time would have won the Australian title in April by about 3m. So now, with intersex Caster Semenya to defend the women's 800m title captured two years ago in Berlin, and Pistorius to race in the men's 400m, the world championships are set to be overwhelmed by South Africa's controversial causes celebre.
It is not that Pistorius should not be cheered for his courage and persistence, but the scientists whose work convinced CAS judges to support him because he has "no significant advantage" through the technology of his carbon fibre limbs have changed their minds.
Exercise physiology professors Peter Weyand and Matthew Bundle provided the scientific proof which persuaded CAS to clear the Cheetah blades worn by Pistorius.
But they claim to have made their conclusions based on incomplete evidence at the time. They have since concluded - and published their findings in the Journal of Applied Physiology - that Pistoriusw' prosthetics provide a significant advantage. They calculate the artificial limbs take as much as 10 seconds off the 400m time he could have run had he been born with lower legs.
"We are pleased to be able to finally go public with conclusions that the publishing process has required us to keep confidential," Bundle and Weyand stated. "We recognised that the blades provide a major advantage as soon as we analysed the critical data."
The scientists have found Pistorius' blades enable him to reach speed while applying 20 per cent less ground force than an able-bodied sprinter.
He also has a stride rate advantage, turning his levers over "15.7 per cent more rapidly than five of the most recent former world record-holders in the 100m dash".
They further found that his blades "reduce the muscle forces Pistorius requires for sprinting to less than half of intact-limb levels".
With the command of his blades he now has, and the speed he can generate with the superb economy of energy, Pistorius could win a 400m medal in Daegu. Trinidad's Renny Quow won bronze in Berlin in 45.02sec. Pistorius' 45.07sec ranks him 15th fastest man in the world this year.
NBA: Yao Ming retires from basketball
"I will formally end my career," said Yao, the 7-fooot-6 center who became a household name in China before starting his NBA career with the Houston Rockets as the top draft pick in 2002.
Yao played eight seasons in the NBA, but missed 250 regular-season games over the past six years.
"Today is an important day for me and holds a special meaning for both my basketball career and my future," Yao said in comments translated into English. "I had to leave the court since I suffered a stress fracture in my left foot for the third time at the end of last year. My past six months were an agonizing wait. I had been thinking (about my future) over and over. Today I am announcing a personal decision, ending my career as a basketball player and officially retire. But one door is closing and another one is opening."
Houston general manager Daryl Morey attended Yao's farewell conference Wednesday, and NBA Commissioner David Stern sent a message via video link. Morey had to get permission from the NBA to be attend because the lockout prohibits contact with players.
"Yao Ming has been a transformational player and a testament to the globalization of our game," Stern said in a statement. "His dominant play and endearing demeanor along with his extensive humanitarian efforts have made him an international fan favorite and provided an extraordinary bridge between basketball fans in the United States and China."
Yao said he will return to work with his former Chinese team, the Shanghai Sharks, with the possibility of becoming general manager. He plans to continue his philanthropic work with his Yao Foundation.
Yao entered the conference room at a five-star hotel dressed in a dark suit, after the master of ceremonies led a count down to his arrival.
Yao's wife, Ye Li, and their young daughter, Yao Qinlei, and Yao's parents were in the room. Qinlei was dressed in a red qipao, a traditional Chinese dress. He later appeared with his family on the stage to the applause and cheers of the room.
He thanked his family, friends, coaches in China and in Houston and fellow competitors such as Shaquille O'Neal "for making me a better player".
"I will be always with you," Yao said. "Thank you."
Despite news of Yao's pending retirement being out for several weeks, the actual announcement was treated with the pomp that Yao's appearances in China bring. Media were asked to sign up weeks in advance for the conference and show up two hours early to pass through airport-style security checks.
The Grand Shanghai Ballroom was crammed at the back with dozens of television cameras and black-suited security men outnumbered the hundreds of media. China Central Television planned to carry five continuous hours of Yao coverage beginning at 1 p.m. local time, including 90 minutes live from the media conference.
Yao's contract expired after last season, and the Rockets said they were interested in re-signing him if he came back healthy. Yao said in April in China that his professional future depended on his recovery from a stress fracture in his left ankle.
Selected to the NBA All-Star team eight times, Yao averaged 19 points and 9.2 rebounds. More importantly, his impact expanded the NBA's influence in Asia into lucrative merchandise sales and TV ratings.
After his rookie season, Yao helped the Rockets reach the playoffs in the next two seasons.
Yao played in 77 games in the 2008-09 season, when Houston reach the second round of the playoffs for the first time since 1997.
But Yao broke his left foot in a playoff game against the Los Angeles Lakers, and underwent complex surgery that sidelined him for the entire 2009-10 season. He lasted only five games at the start of the 2010-11 season, before breaking his left ankle. He had surgery in January, and was lost again for the season.
Yao had played six years with the Chinese national team before joining the Rockets, and was already a star in his home country. He carried the Olympic torch through Tiananmen Square and his country's flag during the opening ceremonies at the Beijing Olympics in 2008. He also donated $2 million and set up a foundation to rebuild schools in the wake of the 2008 earthquake in Sichuan.
Friday, January 7, 2011
Solar storm may disrupt 2012 London Olympics
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghW4bhtddfzvbV2Qilbqha0L2oVjT0naQ3A214-ziEAGYShdENnF1WtRS2CoRyE-t4_tJ3Y5oOei6V7tFQaY529r0Ym4JqIT2zcDzzJvC_IbmoE7WsLhJ19HyeMF7isKPShl6fe6V_fxw/s400/polar+licht.jpg)
Despite all preparations almost complete for the 2012 London Olympics, the organisers of the £9.3 billion mega event are now faced with some genuine problem as London could suffer a solar storm during the Games. The solar flare may cause power cuts, damage communication satellites and force planes to divert, the Daily Mail reported today.
The organisers of the 2012 Olympics told the newspaper that they had been 'monitoring the situation carefully' after the Met Office warned the next solar storm may occur during the games next year.
"Extreme space weather events typically occur at the solar maximum, which itself follows a roughly 11-year cycle. The next solar maximum is expected around 2012-13 --potentially coinciding with the London Olympic Games," said a weather expert.
And even as Olympic organisers hope that the storm would not be of an extreme nature and there may not be any 'significant risk' of a major disruption but they are certainly gearing up for all kinds of eventualities.
"We are working with our partners and stakeholders to ensure that contingency plans are in place for all eventualities," a London 2012 spokeswoman said. The Met Office, meanwhile, warned that if the earth is stuck with one of the most powerful solar storms then it could cause national grid failure leading to power loss across significant areas for up to 12 hours, and up to several weeks.
It might also cause the permanent loss of 30 per cent of satellites, leading to the disruption of communications, earth observation facilities and position navigation and timing services including GPS. The most powerful solar storm to have hit the earth was in 1859 Carrington event which caused the failure of telegraph systems in North America and Europe.