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Sunday, August 5, 2012

End of Day 8: Au Revoir Swimming

google says it's time to swim in sync

Finished typing everything slowly and it's only 4am. It could only be *sighs* the last day of the swim events. I admit I lost a little bit of interest by sleeping yesterday and attempting to give the meet a miss the day before. But the usual melancholy of the finale still struck me. With my end of day posts getting shorter and shorter, I'm sure you can tell how I'm doing. :((

I'm more composed now. Hopefully during the next olympics I can really be a real neutral spectator and not have any more biases. I don't really want that to happen though, where's the fun in that? Having someone to root for, something to look forward to, really gives you that adrenaline and emotional roller coaster that could be so awesome and satisfying. I can get on to reality now. Everything that was paused can now be resumed now that swimming is over. I can sleep now. :)))

I had fun throughout, and I concluded there's only 3 types of medalists. The young guns announcing their arrival to the world, the bridesmaid who was forever waiting and waiting for their turn to shine, and then there's the ex-champions looking to defend their titles. I've witnessed so many heartwarming moments, bridesmaid who finally got a taste of gold, young swimmers who never swam as fast in their lives and are shocked to tears at their own capabilities, these are swimmers who gave up so much in their life, just for that 15-25 years old time of glory. It's a short career, but it's the price to pay for being the best in the world in swimming. Many swimmers who have yet to reached their peak managed to produce such stellar results. I look forward to seeing them in 2016. :))

And to the real olympic fish Michael Phelps. You are truly the greatest olympian alive. Your story will live for generations to come and I am glad I have stood by to witness it all happen. I'm glad to be in this generation that is basking in your hype. Have a good rest and continue to spread your love to the rest of the world, truly living up to the London 2012 motto - inspiring a generation.

xoxo

Men's 4x100m Medley Relay

Gold: USA
Silver: Japan
Bronze: Australia

Yeah, the results was expected. Like the Women's medley before, the big 3 dominated the race. The only difference being the Aussie men's team is a tat bit weaker than the Aussie women's team in this games and Japan, with all fresh medalists (with the exception of Kitajima, but he's already a legend) is a stronger team. I actually thought Japan might win this, because they were tied from Brandan Hansen to Phelps. But Nathan Adrian really helped widen the gap to bring them the gold. :)))

Phelp's last race.
Last swimming event.
It's been a good ride.
:)))


Women's 4x100m Medley Relay

Gold: USA world record
Silver: Australia
Bronze: Japan

What could go wrong with a line up of already gold medalists? The 3 powerhouses of swimming took up the top three spots like expected. Kudos to the ladies for pushing under world record time. What a major medal haul it is for them! :)))

Men's 1500m Freestyle Finals

Gold: Sun Yang (CHN) Olympic Record, World Record 14:31.02
Silver: Ryan Cochrane (CAN) 14:39.63
Bronze: Oussama Mellouli (TUN) 14:40.31

Sun Yang is insane! I was just introducing to my sister who has make it awake to her first ever live swimming events at this olympics, about what happened the last weeks and who the swimmers are. Sun Yang got off to a false start, second so far in this games. Also in this race is Park Taehwan, nice to see him interacting with Sun in the waiting room. The both had definitely grown closer - I'm not sure if they're friends yet, but hope they are - over the past week due to all their events clashing. Sun led from start to finish, Park was second in the first third of the race but fell behind afterwards. Sun didn't kick as much, he was using mainly his hands, cruising along. And he was consistent throughout the race and was ahead of his own world record which he set last year by a stunning 3s (his old record was 14:34.14). A well deserved race! And I wondered what secrets goes behind his training...he is coached by another legend, Grant Hackett's coach.

Mellouli, 27, was the gold medalist for this event at Beijing 2008, and had been the world champion for several years till 2009, till this young boy showed up. This is very well his last olympics, but he looks genuinely contented at his win, as he congratulated Sun happily in the pool and tried to comfort him as Sun did his 'roar' thing. Cochrane, 23, was silver at the last games.

Women's 50m Freestyle Finals

Gold: Kromowidjojo (NED) olympic record
Silver: Herasimenia (BLR)
Bronze: Marleen Veldhuis (NED)

I always like to say 50m were the hardest to win, because it's too short, too fast and the win is always by hundredths of a second - unsatisfying for audience. But Kromowidjojo proved that wrong today as she wins by about 0.2 second, a hand's length. An event later, she went onto the podium, and then immediately after parading with her medals for the press, she walked out again for the women's 4x100 medley relay. :))

Royalties and celebrities at the Games

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Track cycling excitement taking hold of England

[source: miami herald]

Victoria Pendleton of Great Britain celebrates after winning gold in the Women's Keirin Track Cycling final on Day 7 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at Velodrome on August 3, 2012 in London, England. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) JAMIE SQUIRE / GETTY IMAGES)

LONDON -- It’s been nicknamed The Pringle for its sloped roof. It’s known as the Pleasuredome because of Great Britain’s success. Or you could call it the Thunderdome for the crowd noise that makes the walls shudder.

The most captivating building in Olympic Park also looks like a spaceship and the athletes zipping round and round inside look like aliens, clad in their aerodynamic skinsuits and teardrop helmets and perched on their gearless, brakeless, practically weightless machines.

Everything about the Olympic velodrome is designed to achieve maximum speed, and that’s just what track cyclists are feeling. They are riding at speeds up to 46 mph on the banked oval built to be the fastest on the planet.

The velodrome proved magical again Friday for a nation gone mad for cycling. The men’s team won team pursuit in world-record time. Victoria Pendleton, known everywhere as Vicky just as David Beckham is known as Becks, won the Keirin race.

The striking blue-eyed, black-haired Pendleton, given to emotional outbursts, swore she wouldn’t cry, but shed tears as she sang along to “God Save the Queen” on the medal podium.

“I hadn’t allowed myself to think about standing on the podium and if I started to, I shot the idea out of my mind,” Pendleton said. “I told myself, ‘Focus, Vic, focus.’ I just cannot believe this is true.”

The night before, Sir Chris Hoy won his fifth Olympic gold medal — as many as rower Sir Steve Redgrave, revered as the country’s greatest Olympian.

Princess Anne and Seb Coe were in the stands Friday, following the appearances of Prime Minister David Cameron, Prince Harry, Prince Wills and Kate on Thursday.

And of course, Wiggo was there — that is, Bradley Wiggins, Britain’s first Tour de France winner who came off the three-week race through the Alps and Pyrenees to win the individual time trial on London’s outskirts and his seventh Olympic medal. The medal podium was set up as three thrones near Hampton Court Palace, and Wiggins sat on his and flashed the V sign to his loyal subjects.

British fans have taken to plastering fake red sideburns on their faces in tribute to Wiggo, who lost his father to alcoholism and has talked about his own, past drinking problems.

Hoy, a Scotsman, is also beloved, as is Mark Cavendish, the Isle of Man sprinter who has won two dozen Tour stages.

“Em, they cont get eny beddah than ‘is,” Cav said of his teammates.

Spectators in the 6,000 seats agreed — although they weren’t actually in their seats for much of the evening. Many waved Union Jack flags and their screams reverberated from ceiling to floor.

Pendleton has been embraced by fans and tabloid reporters since she revealed she was romantically involved with team sports scientist Scott Gardner, who was one of her coaches.

“We fell in love and at first everyone was so angry, we were a disgrace,” she said in a BBC interview.

Said Gardner, who had to leave the team: “I knew there were consequences.”

But they were eventually forgiven and admired for their loyalty to each other.

Pendleton won one of track cycling’s strangest, most challenging events. The eight-lap Keirin is a race of speed and tactics and used to be one of pushing and shoving. The racers follow a derney — a motorized bike driven by bloke in black who looks like he could be delivering a pizza. He paces the riders until he peels off into the infield and they are fight it out to the finish line, where places are determined by inches.

Pendleton’s arch rival, Anna Meares of Australia, roared to the front but she went too early. The canny Pendleton, whose petite size belies her strength, passed Meares with two laps to go, pushing her pedals with a burst of power and withstanding the pain in her quadriceps to hold off two other charging cyclists for first place.

Pendleton’s nervous mum, Pauline, took up her usual place in the loo during her daughter’s race, where she said she’s often met up with Hoy’s mother.

Pendleton has the sprint to come, but plans to retire after the Olympics.

“I didn’t sleep last night and I asked, ‘Why do I put myself through this?’ ” she said. “I’m going to be riding my bike to keep fit and that’s it. I won’t ever do a Steve Redgrave where he jumped back in the boat.”

Pendleton, 31, said she’ll be glad to stop agonizing.

“I’m going to give up crying after the Olympics,” she said. “I’ve decided I’m going to give it up forever.”

But first she will have her “amazing exit” in the breathtaking venue. The external sides are covered in western red cedar to coincide with the Siberian pine track. The double-curving roof features 10 miles of steel cable. It was designed to be the world’s fastest track and one of the Games’ most sustainable venues — lightweight and energy-efficient like a bicycle.

The last time the Olympic Games were held in London, in 1948, cycling was contested at Herne Hill, an outdoor track that survives as the only intact venue from the “Austerity Olympics.” It was used by Wiggins when he was a youngster, but has fallen into disrepair. He’s leading a fundraising drive to refurbish it.

Great Britain will soon have six velodromes in which to groom its promising cyclists. The country is undergoing a cycling boom — competitive, recreational and commuting. Sky TV hosts a series of Sky Rides which bar traffic from city centers and open them to cyclists. A Go Ride program in the schools encourages talent.

The likes of Sir Chris, Brilliant Brad and Queen Victoria should keep the wheels turning.


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Never really watched track cycling before, none that left a lasting impression at least. Watched my first match last night, it was this that Pendleton won. My first impression is that what a cute sport. Their coach held their bikes like fathers watching over their precious daughters, and then when they returned, they helped them off their bikes. So all they really had to do on their own, is to paddle, paddle and paddle. Find the part about the mums 'taking their usual place in the loo' extremely cute. :)))