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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.


---


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. :)))

Table tennis standout Natalia Partyka excels despite disability

[source: miami herald]

Poland’s Natalia Partyka, who was born without a right hand or forearm, refuses to use her disability as an excuse. ‘My coaches expect the same from me as from everyone else.’

LONDON -- The Olympic track and field competition got underway Friday, and one of the most talked-about stories will be the tale of Oscar “The Blade Runner” Pistorius, the South African double amputee who is racing at 400 meters with the aid of prosthetic legs. What most people don’t realize is that Pistorius is not the only disabled Olympian at these Games.

There is another.

Far away from the glare of TV cameras, at the ExCel table tennis hall Friday morning, was the equally compelling but lesser-known Natalia Partyka, a one-armed table tennis player from Poland. She was born without a right hand or forearm and is competing in her second Olympics after winning gold medals in the 2004 and 2008 Paralympics. She will also compete in the London Paralympics.

With four matches going on simultaneously, and the dizzying speed of the game at the world-class level, it would have been easy upon first glance to overlook the fact that Partyka is missing half her arm. It is most noticeable when she serves. She cannot toss the ball with her off hand, so she cradles it in the crook of her right elbow and drops it onto the swinging paddle. Once the ball is in play, Partyka, 23, is as quick and graceful as anyone out there.

She reached the third round of the singles competition last week before losing to a Dutch player. On Friday, she played in the team competition against Singapore. Poland lost the match 3-1 (2-3, 3-0, 3-0, 3-0), but Partyka won a lot of hearts in the audience. The Polish fans in the building already knew Partyka, as she is very well-known back home. She received the Order of Polonia Restituta, one of the nation’s highest honors. Those who didn’t know her now do.

She shrugs off the disability, calling it “nothing’’ when reporters ask. “I am playing the same lines as the others. And I have the same dreams and goals. It is not an issue. My coaches expect the same from me as from everyone else.’’

She admits it can get tiresome being asked about her missing hand, but she smiles and politely answers every time the topic comes up. She hopes the publicity can serve as an inspiration to others. After her opening-round singles matches here, she received fan letters from India, the United States and all over Europe. Many were from disabled kids and parents of disabled children, thanking her for being a good role model.

“I can show people that nothing is impossible,’’ Partyka said. “Maybe being disabled makes things more difficult than for able-bodied people, and maybe we have to work a little harder. But we can do anything we want to do if we just try. Maybe someone will see me and realize their own disability is not the end of the world, that they can achieve bigger dreams than they imagined.’’

Partyka began playing table tennis at age 7 out of a burning desire to beat her older sister, Sandra. She followed Sandra to the neighborhood table tennis hall in their seaside hometown of Gdansk and began taking lessons. Four years later, she beat Sandra for the first time.

“One of the most beautiful days of my life, the first time I beat my sister,’’ she said Friday.

At 11 years old, she qualified for the 2000 Paralympics in Sydney and was the youngest athlete to compete in any sport. She didn’t win, but was inspired to keep training for the 2004 Games in Athens, where she won a gold medal at age 15. Four years ago, in Beijing, she competed in the Olympics and won a gold medal in the Paralympics.

Partyka is widely admired among her competitors worldwide.

“I remember the first time I saw Natalia was four years ago, at the Junior World Championships in Stanford [Calif.], and I was amazed at how good she was,’’ said U.S. player Lily Zhang after the Americans lost 3-0 to Japan on Friday. “She is such an inspiration to all of us. She doesn’t let her disability slow her down.’’

Ariel Hsing, also of the U.S. team, added: “Natalia is absolutely amazing. I really admire her and respect her. She is so brave for putting herself out there and playing with the best in the world. I don’t think she knows me, but I definitely know her.’’

Her Polish teammates said Partyka has made the sport more popular in their country.

“Because of Natalia’s story, the television and media are paying attention to table tennis now,’’ Katarzyna Grzybowska said. “They take notice in our big tournaments and our results and we get a lot of fans at our competitions. Everybody supports her and wants to see her play. But she personally never makes a big deal of it. She hasn’t had a hand her whole life, so she’s used to it. And we’re all used to it, too. When I play against her in practice, I don’t even notice.’’

Partyka has been particularly interested in the Pistorius story because she can relate on some level.

“It’s different because he has no legs, but he is a Paralympian competing in the able-bodied Olympics like me, so that we have in common,’’ she said. “I think both of us can make a difference, especially with disabled people, to prove we can be top-level athletes and compete against the best. There is no need to feel inferior.’’

----

I saw her during the match between Poland and Singapore in the Women's Team Table Tennis. 3 para-lympics and her fourth, a able-bodied olympics. Truly admire her courage. :))

End of Day 7: Goodnight!

swim events coming to an end - athletics starting :D

Hello Day 7. It's been a week. And like I've said earlier, I have been lazy. And distracted. And maybe just impatient. Watched a very satisfying Tennis Men's Singles Semifinals; and I really feel like learning the sport. What's cute about it are the audience and ball girls. They run almost in cubified anime version to the fallen tennis ball only to crouch down by the sides, or stand as still as a stone behind. And the 4:30hr match, claimed to be Federer's longest ever match, attracted Kobe Bryant as well. The NBA legend signs a couple of autographs while chatting with fans, shot being cut to during small intervals. Also happening during those intervals, are every other spectator that shot up. Some stretched, others just stand and stone. I'm guessing their butt hurts from all that sitting down. As soon as the game begin, the cooperative bunch sat back down. 
The fish legend is swimming in a while but I really feel like hitting the sacks. For the first time ever, the yoggroupie has lost a little bit of steam and is going to retreat for the night. Is it that the swim event s had grew...uninteresting? Its as if I'm treating it as world-class entertainment and when that is over - really less people will be interested. Ok I don't really know what I'm yapping about. Oh man I am ashamed. It's 2am. Goodnight everyone. We'll see each other tomorrow.

x0x0

Friday, August 3, 2012

End of Day 6: Revitalized

google icon. you're forever in the wrong sports aren't you! all i want to see is swimming! *biased much*


I'm typing this as the 100m semifinals is going on; not sure whether to stay on for Lochte's birthday song or not. :p  2 hours ago, I actually got ready for my goodnight post:


Hello. It's Day 6 and its not 4.30am or 5am. It's just 2, I'm not that tired, the coffee in the afternoon work wonders. The yoggroupie/olympic fish has decided to hit the sacks early for a change. Here's her big face and there's Gabrielle Douglas beating Viktoria Komova to win gold in Women's All-Round Artistic Gymnastics. :)))


 [insert picture here ]


[which i will not do because it doesn't make sense anymore]


So! Today is another historical day. I thought I would be less excited about swimming, but still hoping for that Phelps miracle, I stayed up for a bit. Here's what happened:


1. Rebecca Soni is the first person to successfully defend a title. Took her breaking 2 world records to do so. But at the next match, another American did so too...
2. Phelps won his gold. First man to ever successfully defend an olympic title 3 times in a row. Phelps is back and I'm glad. And then a few minutes later...
3. He finished first in the 100m semifinals. Looks like he performs best when he's tired/stressed.
4. First silver for a Japanese swimmer in this games! Satomi Suzuki got a little cheer when she received her medal today. :)
5. First Belarus swimmer to ever win a medal.


That's really all. I need to go to bed now. :) 


xoxo



Women's 100m Freestyle Finals

Gold: Kromowidjojo (Ned) olympic record
Silver: Herasimenia (Blr)
Bronze: Tang Yi (Chn)

Remember Tang Yi from Yog? She picked up her third bronze medal at this games today. Herasimenia is the first person from Belarus to ever win a medal in the swimming events! :))

Women's 100m Freestyle Finals

Gold: Kromowidjojo (Ned) olympic record
Silver: Herasimenia (Blr)
Bronze: Tang Yi (Chn)

Remember Tang Yi from Yog? She picked up her third bronze medal at this games today. Herasimenia is the first person from Belarus to ever win a medal in the swimming events! :))

Men's 200m Individual Medley Finals

Gold: Clary (Usa) olympic record
Silver: Lochte (Usa)
Bronze: Ryosuke Irie (Jpn)

Just after Lochte's Bronze medal race, you can see him practicing in the training pool. Peireira, Cseh are all in this as well. Lochte led from start to finish. Well-deserved win.

Women's 200m Backstroke Semifinals

Beisel (Usa)
Nay (Aus)
Zueva (Rus)
Franklin (Usa)
Conventry (Zbw)
Russell (Can)
Castel (Fra)
Simmonds (Gbr)

(not in any order)

Zevina from Ukraine, yog champion is also here. :) Missy Franklin, already with 2 gold medals is here too! I really want her to win, she's too fast. Conventry looks like she's going to swim with her life for a medal. I'm guessing this would be her last games, and she would really want a nice swansong. :))

Men's 200m Backstroke Finals




Gold: Tyler Clary (Usa) olympic record
Silver: Ryan Lochte (Usa)
Bronze: Ryosuke Irie (Jpn)

Only the second Israeli swimmer to be in the finals, my yog bias Toumarkin! See you in Rio 2016. :)) Another underdog story today with Tyler Clary. Love them underdog stories. 

Women's 100m Breaststroke Finals



Rebecca Soni is the only swimmer to ever successfully defend a title at these games! And for the first time Japan is getting a silver instead of bonze! First women to ever swim under 2:20s, she's the only person who can do this. Congrats!

Gold: Rebecca Soni (Usa) world record
Silver: Satomi Suzuki (Jpn)
Bronze: Efimova (Rus)

Men's 50m Freestyle Semifinals



Cesar Ceilo (Bra)
Cullen Jones (Usa)
Anthony Ervin
Eamon Sullivan (Aus)
Fratus (Bra)
Schoeman (Rsa)
Bovell (Tri)
Manadou (Fra)

(not in any order)


2 times world champion, Ceilo won in the first round. Another Brazillian Also in the race is YOG star Andrei Goborov is here as well. He almost broke WR last time at Singapore Sports School here. James Magnussen failed to make it into the finals. Still affected from that lost? :( Finals is happening 2 games later.

Sculls!



Sculls! Sculls! Sculls!
What can I say about this one? 
I have never seen these things before. I have never seen such narrow....boats. The water is so calm, the river so narrow, the grass so flowy and green. The spectators so cute, some of them running. And the press (I suppose) on their bikes, keeping up with the rowers. I want to row a scull too!

Women's All-Round Artistic Gymnastics Finals



I thought that USA coach looked familiar. He's Liang Chow, the coach that was made famous by coaching world champion Shawn Johnson. Received another education from my younger self here. I actually look forward to seeing Shawn get that gold back then. I didn't realize how short-lived their careers are and could only make it to at most (normally), 2 olympics. One before their peaks and one during their peak. And the turn over rate for women is quicker. 
Gabrielle Johnson is just one precarious child. From the start, she never rests. She kept on stretching, jumping around, her head in the game. She didn't even look at the cameras, didn't glance at the leader boards too much. My mum decided after seeing her at her first apparatus that she would win gold, and went to sleep. How spot on! 
Also in the competition is Viktoria Komova, who shined in Youth Olympic Games and is hot favourite to become champion. An article I scanned 2 years ago (I was so much more crazier then) predicted that she will be the future olympic star. Both of them are 17 years old this year. She led from the qualifiers but lost to Douglas in the end...I think both of them are maybe, equally great. But Douglas won that mental bit. She was more composed, more calm. 
I had goosebumps after seeing Komova mouthing 'oh my god', with tears glistening in her eyes. She's still as calm as always. She's such a fighter, she lives with a host family in another state just so she could train with Liang Chow. Komova broke down upon receiving the results. :(( Aww.

Men's All-Round Artistic Gymnastics Finals



My family and I don't understand the sport at all, no matter how the commentator helped. We just watched. We praise good steady landings, because that's the only thing we laymen can see. Kohei Uchimura finally won gold. I thought his name sounded familiar. Received an education from my 17 year old self here ; he made his name known in 2008, became the first man to ever win 3 consecutive world championships in 2009, 2010 and 2011. This fighter kept up, become better, maintained...all the hard work paid off when he finally got a taste of sweet victory. Now he can step down in style or continue to shake the world. I''m so happy for you!

Thursday, August 2, 2012

End of Day 5: Fish finishes last...

le - you know what it is

Hello Day 5. I actually felt quite refreshed today and didn't feel sleepy at all...until now that is. I haven't covered any events due to a project that's due tomorrow. But for the first time I sat on the couch and really did nothing but enjoy the ride. I couldn't let go of not rushing back and typing the details down but I guess I was too tired to move. Oh well. The story will go like this:
on day 5, the Olympic fish finally call it quits! For the first time ever I have decided to go to bed instead of battling it out filling up the games coverage. 

-fast forward 5 hours -

This is by far the day with the lowest efficiency. It's Thursday and I have never been this late to go to work. What's this? Without coverage and being late for work? I am a double loser! Oh my...delirious text alert. So far, no one had successfully defended their title, Rebecca Soni looks set to be the first one to do so after breaking the world record with the semifinals. Feng Tian Wei, representing Singapore in the Table Tennis events won our first individual medal after 52 years. During the Bronze medal match, it's Singapore versus Japan right, and beside a couple Singaporean supporters, there's a chinese waving a china flag. :/

I feel quite sad for the Japanese because halfway through maybe the second round, she's already defeated. She and her coach had tears in their eyes, I know at any other occasion this young Japanese would have cried out loud. But she's so strong to keep going, her heart already elsewhere. :( But she's really young, and she's already the world no. 4. There's at least 2 more olympics for her to get that gold and I'm sure she'll get it. Go girl!

xoxo

fish is very late

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Women's 4x200m Freestyle Relay Heats

I'm guessing US, France and China will take home the medals. :)


1.          GBR
2.         France
3.         Canada
4.       Australia
5.         United States
6.        Italy
7.         China
8.        Japan

Men's 200m Individual Medley Heats



Total of 5 heats. What names can be more familiar than the following. Fresh from yesterday’s historical records (more cameras/eyes will be on him now), let’s hope he could maintain his speed and keep calm.

1.           Vytautas Janusaitis (Ltu)
2.         Henrique Rodrigues (Bra)
3.         James Goddard (Gbr)
4.       Ryan Lochte (Usa)
5.         Michael Phelps (Usa)
6.        Markus Rogan (Aut)
7.         Gal Nevo (Isr)
8.        Andrew Ford (Can)

1.           Daniel Tranter (Aus)
2.         Kan Takakuwa (Jpn)
3.         Thiago Pereira (Bra)
4.       Laszlo Cseh (Hun)
5.         Kosuke Hagino (Jpn)
6.        Markus Deibler (Ger)
7.         Chad le Clos (Rsa)
8.        Joe Roebuck (Gbr)

Women's 200m Breaststroke Heats



A total of 5 heats. Nice to see the Koreans making it to the semifinals!

1.           Martha Mccabe (Can)
2.         Suzaan van Biljon (Rsa)
3.         Anastasia Chaun (Rus)
4.       Rebecca Soni (Usa)
5.         Satomi Suzuki (Jpn)
6.        Liping Ji (Chn)
7.         Sara El Bekri (Mar)
8.        Dare Jeong (Kor)

1.           Iillia Efimova (Rus)
2.         Sally Foster (Aus)
3.         Joline Hoshman (Swe)
4.       Rikke Pedersen (Den)
5.         Micah Lawrence (Usa)
6.        Sueyon Back (Kor)
7.         Kanako Wantanabe (Jpn)
8.        Tessa Wallace (Aus)

Men's 200m Backstroke Heats


A total of 5 heats. The usual names for the backstroke, the yoggie Toumarkin and Ryan Lochte.

Semifinals:
1.           Radoslaw Kawecki (Pol)
2.         Mitch Larkin (Aus)
3.         Jan-Phillip Glania (Ger)
4.       Ryan Lochte (Usa)
5.         Ryosuke Irie (Jpn)
6.        Yakov Toumarkin (Isr)
7.         yannick Lebherz (Gbr)
8.        Leonardo Deus (Bra)
1.           Kazuki Wantanabe (Jpn)
2.         Peter Bernek (Hun)
3.         Gabor Balog (Hun)
4.       Tyler Clary (Usa)
5.         Fenglin Zhang (Chn)
6.        Nick Driebergen (Ned)
7.         Tobias Oriwol (Can)
8.        Omar Pinzon Garcia (Col)

Women's 100m Freestyle Heats


A total of 7 heats. I have a feeling Tang Yi is going to get gold. After her seeing her comrades done it, she must be even more inspired and more firm that she could win it.  Wonder kid Ruta Meilutyte failed to make it into the semis this round. Going into the semifinals:

1.         Britta Steffen (Ger)
2.        Sarah Sjostrom (Swe)
3.        Arianna Vanderpool-Wallace (Bah)
4.       Melanie Schlanger (Aus)
5.        Aliaksandra Herasimenia (Blr)
6.        Jessica Hardy (Usa)
7.        Haruka Ueda (Jpn)
8.        Daniela Schreiber (Ger)

1.        Amy Smith (Gbr)
2.       Julia Wilkinson (Can)
3.       Ranomi Kromowidjojo (Ned)
4.      Tang Yi (Chn)
5.       Jeanette Ottesen Gray (Den)
6.      Ran Halsall (Gbr)
7.      Missy Franklin (Usa)
8.      Femke Heemskerk (Ned)

End of Day 4: Most Emotional by Far

I really need to do this fast because I really want to hit the sacks before 4.30am. Dozed off on the bus rides, dozed off during work. That's epic unprofessional. But Olympics - it's truly larger than life. Anywho -
icon of le day 4

The focus today is definitely on Michael Phelps. His most earth-shattering defeat, and him being the greatest olympian of all time with 19 olympic medals. And within that, so many world records and other glorious statistics in whichever ways you want to group it. Remember how I was so in love with the real olympic fish back in 2008? He will forever be a hero in my, and alot of many people's heart. I had the below typed out, because deep inside me, I was really anticipating a miracle:


At 15 years of age back in 2001, Phelps broke the world record for the 200m Butterfly which put him on the map. Ever since then, the 200m Butterfly is like a battle between he himself because only he can beat his own timing. He is still the current world record holder since 2009. It is undoubtedly the event that matters to him the most.

No man has ever successfully defended a swimming title 3 times in a row.
That's 12 years of being the fastest in the world.

I thought I had missed the shot at at least inspiring just one soul out there. But there's still the 100m butterfly in which he could still be the only man to defend a title 3 times. This will be Phelp's last olympics, for sure. In his last events, you can expect the whole stadium to give a standing ovation for the greatest olympian of all time. He is definitely the hero of alot of young swimmers, including Chad le Clos, who beat him in his favourite event. He definitely inspired me, made me discover the beauty of swimming and fall so crazily in love with it. That I'm here doing this now. Not anything huge, but I have a huge fire in me that's burning wildly!

What impressed me the most is how gracious Phelps is. Even though le Clos beat him to a beautiful swansong, he took the results with a big heart, and congratulated le Clos genuinely. You can tell by the way they're interacting, Phelps is kind of like a mentor looking out for him. Imagine 5 year old le Clos watching 15 year old Phelps breaking the world record, helping him to believe that he could do it too. Imagine the 10 year old le Clos watching the 20 year old Phelps at Athens, sweeping the golds, least to say at Beijing when le Clos is slowly breaking into the scene. Phelps is his hero. Take a look a le Clos's facebook and there's only one picture, and it's of him and Phelps. I really love what Phelps said to le Clos. It's so epicly gracious. "I really enjoyed swimming with you these few years ... " Unless I remember it wrongly... you really got to start having the best heart to become one of the best person. :)))

And now to le Clos, the boy whom I have been rooting for since seeing him shine ever so brightly at the YOG. He was leading at first, and the local commentator said something about how youngsters would always start fast. Phelps led after the first 100m and le Clos chased fiercely behind. It looks like Phelps is going to make history even sweeter, but in the last 5m, le Clos and Phelps is head to head and le Clos took the extra stroke to finish first. How he roared in the pool. That's some pure, innocent, uncensored joy that I've yet to seen for sometime. Shortly after his out burst, he realized what he had achieved and broke down. Lips shaking, tears streaming, trying his best to keep the tears to himself but he can't. The only person to ever beat Phelps in the 200m Butterfly since 2000.

What a night.

xoxo