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    Lightning Bolt Strikes Twice With Historic Sprint Double for Jamaica and PUMA(R)

    August 21st, 2008 by OlympicNews

    Sprint Sensation breaks 100m and 200m world records in Beijing

    PUMA’s(R) Usain ‘Lightning’ Bolt of Jamaica made history Wednesday night in Beijing when he became the first man in history to break world records in the 100m and 200m at the same Games. Bolt again demolished the field with a winning time of 19.30 seconds, beating the previous time of 19.32 seconds set by Michael Johnson in Atlanta in 1996.

    Bolt, who won 100m gold in a world record time of 9.69 seconds last Saturday, also became the first athlete since Carl Lewis in 1984 to win Olympic gold in both disciplines. The Jamaican sprinter ran to victory in his now famous personalized PUMA Theseus II golden spikes inscribed with his nickname and the night’s event — ‘UGO 200m Beijing’.

    Inspired by Bolt’s victory, his Jamaican compatriot Melaine Walker also won gold in the women’s 400m hurdles on Wednesday, reinforcing Jamaica and PUMA’s sprint success in Beijing.

    Usain’s Golden Theseus II Spikes

    Bolt worked with PUMA to develop the optimum running shoe. Running both the 100m and 200m, he needed a versatile shoe that provided support for power, as well as firmness to hold his foot in place around the turn.

    Following this collaborative process, the complete Theseus II was born. Made from synthetic leather with an airmesh upper construction for maximum breathability, it enhances sprinting efficiency due to its stiffness of material. Bolt was wearing the Theseus II shoe when he broke both the 100m and 200m world records in Beijing — both inscribed with a personalized message.

    Follow Usain on his Quest for a third gold medal

    Log onto www.chasingbolt.com, Usain’s personal blogumentary that gives fans the opportunity to gain an unprecedented look into the life of the world’s fastest man. Featuring videos, photo galleries and regular blog postings, Chasing Bolt offers an extraordinary insight into the man behind the medals.

    Source: PUMA



  • Cycling at the 2008 Olympic Games

  • Posted in Athletics, Olympic News, Olympic Sports | No Comments »

    U.S. Army Soldier is Golden at Summer Games

    August 19th, 2008 by OlympicNews

    Young Gun Finishes First Olympics With a Bang

    Pvt. 1st Class Vincent Hancock didn’t know what to expect at his first-ever Olympic effort in skeet shooting, but he went on to earn his first gold medal over the weekend.

    “I’ve been shooting ever since I was young and always dreamed of this moment, but for it to come true, it’s just, awesome!” said the 19-year-old from Eatonton, Ga. “And to do it as a Soldier makes it even better because my win represents what you can do when you’re part of something bigger than yourself.”

    Hancock trains at Fort Benning, Ga., as a member of the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit (AMU), which sent six shooters to Beijing. Fellow AMU member and Olympian, Spc. Glenn Eller, set an Olympic record at the Summer Games, securing gold in the double trap competition.

    “By competing and winning on the world stage, AMU Soldiers highlight the strength, discipline and commitment it takes to be successful and help to raise the standards of marksmanship proficiency throughout the Army,” said unit commander Lt. Col. Frank Muggeo.

    Since the AMU was established in 1956, its shooters have won 22 Olympic medals and more than 40 world championships.

    To learn more about the U.S. Army athletes and training, visit http://www.armyathletesolympians.com/ .

    Source: U.S. Army



  • Gold Standard: Army Soldiers Achieve Mission of Earning Olympic Gold Medals in Beijing

  • Posted in Olympic News, Olympic Sports, Shooting | No Comments »

    Larissa Latynina, the 18 Times Record Olympic Medal Athlete, Congratulates Michael Phelps on Becoming the Record Gold Medal Athlete

    August 16th, 2008 by OlympicNews

    Larissa Latynina, one of the noblest Russian athletes in the globe, whose record at 18 Olympic Medals is still unbroken, congratulated the talented American swimmer Michael Phelps, who has been already commemorated in the sports history as record Olympic Gold Medals athlete, as for today having broken 6 global records at the Olympic Games in Beijing. Altogether he presently has 12 Gold Olympic Medals.

    In her official letter to the sportsman Larissa noted:

    “I wanted to add my congratulations to the many you have received in the last few days. I have enjoyed your impressive performance here in Beijing. You have shattered all sorts of records with truly inspiring Olympic character. Many in the world will be stirred to greatness by what you have achieved and this is your true legacy.

    In ceding my record for most Olympic gold medals, I do it with little regret as I am sure that we share the joy of competition and a timeless admiration for excellence.”

    Larissa Semyonovna Latynina (born December 27, 1934 in Kherson, Ukrainian SSR) is a Soviet gymnast who was the first female athlete to win nine Olympic golds. She holds the record for winning the most Olympic medals at 18 (nine gold medals, five silver and four bronze). After the 1966 World Championships she became a coach for the Soviet national gymnastics team, a position she held until 1977. She organized the gymnastics competition at the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow. During her life she was awarded with many noble honors, among them is the Olympic Order (silver) by the International Olympic Committee. In 1998 her name was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame.

    Source: Larissa Latynina



  • Michael Phelps and Kerri Walsh Steal the Hearts, and Votes, of Match.com Members

  • Posted in Aquatics, Olympic News, Olympic Sports | No Comments »

    The Dream: Roy and HG on Eric The Eel Moussambani

    August 11th, 2008 by OlympicNews


  • Gold Standard: Army Soldiers Achieve Mission of Earning Olympic Gold Medals in Beijing

  • Posted in Aquatics, Olympic Sports, Olympic Videos | No Comments »

    Top Secret Technology To Help U.S. Swimmers Trim Times at Beijing Olympics

    August 9th, 2008 by OlympicNews

    Milliseconds can mean the difference between triumph and defeat in the world of Olympic sports, leading more trainers and athletes to look toward technology as a tool to get an edge on the competition.

    A fluids mechanics professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y., is using experimental flow measurement techniques to help American swimmers sharpen their strokes, shave seconds from their lap times, and race toward a gold medal in Beijing.

    Professor Timothy Wei, head of Rensselaer’s Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering and acting dean of the university’s School of Engineering, helped develop top-secret, state-of-the-art equipment and mathematical techniques that USA Swimming coaches have been using to help train Olympians.

    “This is the real thing,” Wei said. “We have the physical system, we’re taking flow measurements of actual swimmers, and we’re getting more information than anyone has ever had before about swimming and how the swimmer interacts with the water. And so far, these techniques have contributed to some very significant improvements in the lap times of Olympic swimmers.”

    In years past, swimming coaches have used computer modeling and simulation to hone the techniques of athletes. But Wei developed state-of-the-art water flow diagnostic technologies, modifying and combining force measurement tools developed for aerospace research with a video-based flow measurement technique known as Digital Particle Image Velocimetry (DPIV), in order to create a robust training tool that reports the performance of a swimmer in real-time.

    “This project moved the swimming world beyond the observational into scientific fact,” said USA Swimming Coach Sean Hutchison. “The knowledge gained gave me the foundation for which every technical stroke change in preparation for the Beijing Olympics was based.”

    You can see one of the videos, of 2008 Olympian Megan Jendrick, here: http://www.rpi.edu/news/video/wei/videos.html

    The secret, Wei said, is in understanding how the water moves. The new system incorporates highly sophisticated mathematics with stop-motion video technology to identify key vortices, pinpoint the movement of the water, and compute how much energy the swimmer exerts.

    “You have to know the flow,” Wei said. “To see how a swimmer’s motion affects the flow, you need to know how much force the swimmer is producing, and how that force impacts the water.”

    “Swimming research has strived to understand water flow around a swimmer for decades because how a swimmer’s body moves the surrounding water is everything,” said USA Swimming’s Biomechanics Manager Russell Mark. “The ability to measure flow and forces in a natural and unimpeded environment hasn’t been available until recently, and Dr. Wei’s technology and methods presented USA Swimming with a unique opportunity that United States swimmers and coaches could learn a lot from.”

    Wei has been working with USA Swimming for several years, but the idea and design of the new flow measurement tool really took shape in 2007. Most of the preliminary tests were conducted in October 2007, and the coaches and swimmers have spent the past several months incorporating what they have learned into their training regimes. For any swimmer, it takes time to make adjustments to their strokes and practice new techniques, Wei said.

    One highlight of working on the project was when Mark arranged for Wei to attend the 2007 and 2008 U.S. Summer Nationals and be on deck with the swimmers. “How often does a researcher get to do something like this?” said Wei, whose young son and daughter also swim competitively. “It’s been a journey into a world that someone like me would have never before gotten the privilege to see first-hand.”

    Wei began his research career as an aeronautical and mechanical engineer, including hydrodynamics research for the U.S. Navy. But lately he has expanded into bio-related research, such as working with a vascular surgeon to study effects of flow over endothelial cells, and partnering with a neurosurgeon to understand the mechanisms behind hydrocephalus, or excess fluid in the brain.

    As a young researcher, Wei dreamed of measuring flow around swimming whales, but the idea never progressed to fruition. Recently, however, in the midst of his work with USA Swimming, Wei worked with marine biologists Frank Fish and Terrie Williams to measure the flow around swimming bottlenose dolphins at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

    Wei said he’s confident that the United States will have a strong showing in swimming at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, and that he’s already thinking of ways to improve his technology to be even more effective when training swimmers to compete in the 2012 London Olympics.

    “It’s been a wonderful, unique experience,” he said. “It’s everyone’s dream to make a difference, and I’m excited to keep helping the team for as long as they need me.”

    Wei is also currently working with the U.S. Olympic skeleton team and looking at new flow measurement techniques to help shave precious milliseconds off downhill times.

    Source: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute



  • Toyota Brings Mobile Hybrid Experience, Aqua Zone and Energy Zone to Olympic Swim Trials

  • Posted in Aquatics, Olympic News, Olympic Sports | No Comments »

    U.S. Women’s Olympic Relay Medalists Appeal IOC Decision

    May 1st, 2008 by OlympicNews

    Seven female United States track and field Olympic medalists who ran relays with Marion Jones at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia, today appealed the April 10, 2008 decision of the International Olympic Committee that demanded the return of their medals. The appeal was filed with the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne, Switzerland, a tribunal that has exclusive jurisdiction to adjudicate disputes relating to the Olympic Games.

    On April 10, the IOC issued a decision disqualifying the seven relay athletes from further competition, as well as stripping them of the results and medals they achieved at the 2000 Sydney Olympics in the 4 x 100 and 4 x 400 relays.

    “The IOC disqualified these athletes and revoked their medals without allowing the athletes to attend the proceeding and without allowing them to review or respond to the evidence or charges against them. Therefore, the proceeding before the Court of Arbitration for Sport is not really an ‘appeal,’ - it is the first chance for the athletes to receive what we hope will be a fair hearing,” said Mark Levinstein of Williams & Connolly LLP, the law firm representing the relay athletes. Levinstein added, “When all of the facts and rules are considered, there is only one reasonable conclusion - these young women athletes have done nothing wrong and any attempt to alter their results or revoke their medals violates the Olympic Charter and all the rules that were in effect in 2000, as well as all internationally-accepted concepts of due process and natural justice.”

    “We are very excited to finally receive an opportunity to give our side of the story and show how unreasonable the International Olympic Committee has been throughout this process,” said Passion Richardson, one of the Olympians whose medals and results are at issue.

    The Court of Arbitration for Sport will select a panel of arbitrators-with each party selecting one and the third selected by CAS-and will set a date for a hearing.

    The United States Olympic Committee has refused to support the women or to join the women in their appeal, except to take the position that the women have a procedural right to an appeal.

    The women continue to seek financial support. Anyone interested in helping the women pursue their appeal in the Court of Arbitration for Sport should contact The Innocent Olympic Athletes’ Legal Defense Fund, c/o Mark Levinstein, Williams & Connolly LLP, 725 Twelfth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005.

    Source: The Innocent Olympic Athletes’ Legal Defense Fund



  • Aquatics at the 2008 Olympic Games

  • Posted in Olympic News, Olympic Sports | No Comments »

    Olympic News 05 April 2008

    April 5th, 2008 by OlympicNews

    KIDK

    Would boycott of Olympics help Tibet?
    Merinews, India
    Tibet needs to understand that boycott of Olympics is no solution. BOYCOTT OF Olympics by the Tibetans is not the right way to solve their problem.


    Canoe.ca

    International Campaign for Tibet calls on Dutch Olympic Committee
    Save Tibet, DC
    In advance of meetings next week between the Executive International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the Association of National Olympic Committees in Beijing,


    CCTV

    Proud to bear Olympic flame
    The Sun, UK
    Here she explains why she feels honoured to bear the Olympic flame. I LOVE the spirit of the Olympics – of bringing all the nations together on one platform


    Radio Australia

    China and the Olympics
    Washington Post, United States
    On July 13th 2001, when Beijing won the right to host the 2008 Olympic Games, the Chinese government promised the world it would improve China’s human


    SLAM! Sports

    Victoria’s Say heads to third Olympics
    Times Colonist, Canada
    Rick Say of Victoria has scored swimming’s version of the career natural hat trick in gaining a berth into his third Summer Olympics, becoming only the


    TopNews

    India: The Olympic Torch and Tibet
    Global Voices Online, MA
    Baichung Bhutia, India’s well-known football player has refused to carry the Olympic torch when it comes to India in mid-April. Bhutia is a Buddhist from


    CBC.ca

    An Olympic Honor
    KCBS, CA
    SAN FRANCISCO (KCBS) — Mayor Gavin Newsom announced the names of the individuals chosen to carry the Olympic Torch through the streets of San Francisco


    CBC News

    Yao Ming confident of Olympic recovery
    CCTV, China
    Injured center Yao Ming said on Friday in Beijing that he is unlikely to miss the Beijing Olympics this August. Yao is now back in China to consult with


    icSeftonandWestLancs

    Alexei Puninski Earns Spot On Croatian Olympic Team
    CSTV.com, NY
    COLUMBUS, Ohio - Auburn senior Alexei Puninski punched his ticket to the Olympics Friday night as the Croatia native finished third in the 100m butterfly


    CBC News

    Bill Asks President Bush to Boycott Beijing Olympics over Human
    Lifesite, PA
    By Michael Baggot WASHINGTON, DC, April 4, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The Communist Chinese Olympic Accountability Act, introduced on Tuesday,



  • U.S. Women’s Olympic Relay Medalists Appeal IOC Decision

  • Posted in Olympic News, Olympic Photos, Olympic Sports | No Comments »

    Eight womens teams out of 12 already qualified

    February 10th, 2008 by OlympicNews

    The Algerian women’s volleyball team will compete for the first time at the Olympic Games. After winning the continental Olympic qualification tournament sustained at home, the Algerian players have obtained their ticket for the 2008 Olympic Games.
    Eight nations out of a total of 12 will be making the Olympic journey. The Algerians will be joining China, Italy, Brazil, the USA, Venezuela, Cuba and the Russian Federation. The four remaining places will be allocated at the Asian continental tournament and the world Olympic qualifying tournament taking place in Tokyo (Japan) from 17 to 25 May. The best three teams and the best Asian team will then go to Beijing.

    2008 Olympic Games



  • Baseball at the 2008 Olympic Games

  • Posted in Olympic News, Olympic Sports, Volleyball | No Comments »

    Hockey at the 2008 Olympic Games

    August 13th, 2007 by OlympicNews

    Hockey at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing will be held over a fourteen day period starting on August 10, and culminating with the medal finals on August 23. All games will be played at the hockey field constructed on the Olympic Green.

    2 sets of medals will be awarded in the following events:

    • Hockey Men
    • Hockey Women


  • BEIJING 2008 Sports

  • Posted in Hockey, Olympic News, Olympic Sports | No Comments »

    Wrestling at the 2008 Olympic Games

    August 13th, 2007 by OlympicNews

    Wrestling competitions at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China, will be held at the China Agricultural University Gymnasium from August 9-19, 2008. It will be split into two disciplines, Freestyle and Greco-Roman which are further divided into different weight categories. Men will compete in both disciplines whereas women will only take part in the freestyle events with 14 gold medals being awarded. This is the second Olympics with women’s wrestling as an event.

    18 sets of medals will be awarded in the following events:

    • Men’s Freestyle 00-55 kg
    • Men’s Freestyle 55-60 kg
    • Men’s Freestyle 60-66 kg
    • Men’s Freestyle 66-74 kg
    • Men’s Freestyle 74-84 kg
    • Men’s Freestyle 84-96 kg
    • Men’s Freestyle 96-120 kg
    • Men’s Greco-Roman 00-55 kg
    • Men’s Greco-Roman 55-60 kg
    • Men’s Greco-Roman 60-66 kg
    • Men’s Greco-Roman 66-74 kg
    • Men’s Greco-Roman 74-84 kg
    • Men’s Greco-Roman 84-96 kg
    • Men’s Greco-Roman 96-120 kg
    • Women’s Freestyle 00-48 kg
    • Women’s Freestyle 48-55 kg
    • Women’s Freestyle 55-63 kg
    • Women’s Freestyle 63-72 kg


  • BEIJING 2008 Sports

  • Posted in Olympic News, Olympic Sports, Wrestling | 1 Comment »

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