Rain fails to dampen Glasgow’s Commonwealth Games party

10 08 2014

It’s only a week since the curtain fell on Glasgow 2014, although it feels like longer, with the sporting media having mercilessly moved on to the test match and the start of the new football season (groan!).

And although the Commonwealth Games was never going to compete with the London 2012 Olympics, for obvious reasons, the event surprised most people with how much it captured the imagination.

Hampden Park

Hampden Park set up for the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games 400m hurdles

Of course, it helps that all four UK teams did so well – Wales, Scotland and England all secured record medal hauls, Northern Ireland got their second best total, and England triumphed over Australia to top the medals table for the first time since 1986.

It was a games which lacked quite a few top names – Mo Farah, Jess Ennis-Hill, Usain Bolt from the individual competition – but, thanks to a crop of Home Nations stars, did not miss them. Whether it was gymnasts Dan Keatings and Frankie Jones, swimmers Fran Halsall and Ross Murdoch or track and field’s Jodie Williams and Eilidh Child, fears the global stars’ absence would hamper the games proved unfounded.

Like in London two years ago, Glasgow also got fully behind the games, even if it wasn’t always blessed with the same glorious weather as the Olympics. Being in Scotland for a week was a brilliant experience – it’s such a great place anyway – but it was only enhanced by seeing Lesotho and Mozambique squad members mingling with the crowds in Buchanan Street or Aussies chucking around an inflatable kangaroo on the way to Ibrox. Usain Bolt’s reported comments that Glasgow was s**t were wide of the mark, although he did backtrack later.

Ibrox

Ibrox, which hosted the rugby sevens

I was fortunate to get tickets to swimming, the rugby sevens finals and the (very wet) David Rudisha v Nijel Amos evening of the athletics. In those three sessions there wasn’t a whole lot to cheer as a Welshman. A silver and a bronze were a decent return for my night at Tollcross watching the swimming (though I wasn’t there for Georgia Davies or Jazz Carlin’s golds), but I watched Wales lose in the final play of the sevens bowl final to England and there was only one Welsh representative at the athletics (Brett Morse, fifth in the discus).

But in that sense I was unlucky, because Wales had a brilliant 11 days. Rhythmic gymnast Frankie Jones (born in Kettering, incidentally) kicked it all off and crowned her personal success by winning the David Dixon Award for the outstanding competitor and for a sense of fair play winning a gold and five silvers. Geraint Thomas’ triumph in almost the last event of the games, the men’s road race, capped it all off nicely. It meant the absences of some of our world-class athletes – Becky James, Helen Jenkins, Non Stanford, Fred Evans – were not as keenly felt as I had feared. A return of five golds, 11 silvers and 20 bronzes put Wales in 13th in the medals table, the same as in Delhi – but on that occasion we got only 19 podium finishes (three, six and 10 of the respective medal colours).

Commonwealth Games 2014: Tollcross, swimming: the Welsh flag for Georgia Davies' silver medal

A swimming medal ceremony at Tollcross, with the Welsh flag raised for Georgia Davies’ silver

What about the bigger picture? Some commentators have said Glasgow 2014 saved the concept of the Commonwealth Games following an underwhelming version in Delhi in 2010. I’m not sure I’m qualified to comment on that particular issue, but it certainly quelled any doubts I has about it.

I think Rick Broadbent in the Times at the start of the week had it just about right:

The athletes had little but praise for Glasgow. There was a buzz. And as for Usain Bolt, he came, he saw and, ultimately, he concurred.





My highlights of 2013

30 12 2013

Judging by my 2013 ticket collection (below), I possibly wasted a bit too much time watching sport this year. Anyway, I thought I might as well pick out a couple of highlights and try to relive the glory… In chronological order:

January 20: Leicester 9-5 Toulouse, Heineken Cup

Because who doesn’t love watching sport in the snow?

Tigers officials clear snow from the Welford Road pitch before Leicester's 9-5 Heineken Cup win over Toulouse

Tigers officials clear snow from the Welford Road pitch

February 9: France 6-16 Wales, Six Nations

A terrible game, but it got Wales’s victorious Six Nations campaign off and running.

france v wales, paris, 2013 six nations championship

France 6-16 Wales, Stade de France

March 16: Wales 30-3 England, Six Nations

Goes without saying. What a performance!

wales 30-3 england, millennium stadium, 16 march 2013, six nations

Wales lift the Six Nations trophy after successfully defending their title

June 22: Royal Ascot

My first time at the races, and all three of us who went finished up. Nice.

royal ascot 2013

Royal Ascot 2013

August 16: Mo Farah wins the 5,000m, World Athletics Championships, Moscow

A stunning “double double” for Mo. Made all the sweeter by the disappointment of a Frenchman sitting behind us who had spent the whole race telling us how badly Farah had misjudged the race.

Mo farah moscow 2013 5000m

Mo Farah wins his second gold of the 2013 World Athletics Championships in Moscow

September 29: Pittsburgh Steelers 27-34 Minnesota Vikings, NFL, Wembley

One of the best NFL International Series matches there’s been.

Wembley NFL Steelers at Vikings

Wembley for Steelers @ Vikings

October 5: Cardiff City 1-2 Newcastle United, Premier League

Exciting game – my first football match for ages – and great seats. Thanks Chris!

cardiff city stadium

Newcastle win at Cardiff City Stadium

December 28: Ebbw Vale 45-0 RGC 1404, Championship

Sport-wise, where it all started for me. Good to finish the year watching the Steelmen dominate yet again.

eugene cross park ebbw vale

Ebbw Vale v RGC 1404

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Some others:

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London Welsh v Sale

The Stoop before kick off

Harlequins v Munster

o2 basketball

Euroleague basketball, O2 Arena

Leicester Tigers defeated Harlequins 33-16 at Welford Road in the Premiership semi-final

Leicester Tigers v Harlequins

twickenham tigers 37-17 saints

Northampton v Leicester

cardiff arms park

Cardiff Blues v Edinburgh

Franklin's Gardens

Northampton v Ospreys

 

…and here are those tickets. I love sport.

2013 sports tickets

My collection of tickets from 2013 sports events





The ideal sporting weekend

8 10 2013

I thought it would be a shame if the weekend went unrecorded here.

First, it was to Cardiff City Stadium to watch Newcastle’s 2-1 win over the Bluebirds:

cardiff city stadium

Before kick off of Newcastle United’s 2-1 win over Cardiff City

 

Then, the Cardiff Half Marathon:

me and colin jackson

Colin Jackson and me

 

Followed by cut-price entry to the Blues’ 29-12 Pro 12 win over Edinburgh:

cardiff arms park

Cardiff Blues 29-12 Edinburgh

 

Wrapped up by watching a thrilling, epic win for my Denver Broncos in the NFL:

 





World Athletics Championships: Moscow 2013

29 08 2013

Two weeks ago today I was in the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow, for the first of four days at the World Athletics Championships.

The championships were criticised for poor attendances, and on the Thursday and the Friday (for Mo Farah’s second glorious gold) the home of the 1980 Olympics was a bit empty.

Mo farah moscow 2013

Mo Farah wins gold in the 5,000m

 

mo farah medal ceremony moscow 2013

Mo Farah hears the national anthem from the top of the podium for the second time in the week

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But Saturday and Sunday saw good turn-outs, with the atmosphere for Russia’s gold in the women’s 4x400m relay absolutely electric. Other highlights were Usain Bolt, of course, and French triple jumper Teddy Tamgho, who became only the third person to jump further than 18 metres.

IMG_0974

The only downer? We weren’t there for Christine Ohuruogu’s incredible win in the 400m…

ukraine fans at luzhniki stadium spasiba rossiya

An annoying section of Ukraine fans say thanks to their Russian hosts on the final day

 





World Athletics Championships: Moscow 2013

8 08 2013

This time next week I’ll be in Moscow to catch the last four days of the World Athletics Championships, which start on Saturday.

the Luzhniki stadium

The Luzhniki Stadium, home to the 2013 World Athletics Championships. Picture: Ekaterina Lokteva, Flickr

It’s the most important athletics event this year, and second only to the Olympics in terms of prestige. Britain only had five athletics medallists at London 2012 – Mo Farah, the injured Jess Ennis, Greg Rutherford, Christine Ohuruogu and Robbie Grabarz – so I’m not necessarily expecting a huge amount in terms of God Save the Queen singing.

I’ll also be missing some of my favourite international athletes, with David Rudisha, Kirani James and Valerie Adams all either absent or competing before I arrive, but I can hardly complain.

What will be interesting will be to see how unenthused the Moscow public is by the championships. Ticket sales have been poor, even after officials at the stadium which hosted the 1980 Olympics decided to cover more than half of them with giant banners.

Camera

The Olympiastadion, Berlin, during the 2009 World Athletics Championships – on the night Usain Bolt got the 100m world record which still stands

It will be a huge contrast with London 2012, and even with the three days of Anniversary Games last month, when Britain again got very much behind athletes of all nations.

Daegu in 2011 was also relatively poorly attended, and the Olympiastadion in Berlin two years prior to that was marginally fuller – although I still managed to get a ticket to one evening session the same day.

The World Championships in 2015 will be held in Beijing’s Birds’ Nest Olympic Stadium, but perhaps it won’t be until 2017, and their return to London, that the Championships are a sell-out.





London Anniversary Games: a fitting tribute

30 07 2013

I was lucky enough to get my hands on tickets for the third day of the London Anniversary Games on Sunday (the International Para Challenge).

The Anniversary Games

The Anniversary Games

It was brilliant to be back inside the Olympic Stadium for the first time in nearly 10 months, and to see some great performances – particularly the legendary Richard Whitehead (with his trademark late surge – see below), the dominant Hannah Cockroft and the sprint king Alan Oliveira.

The fact the British public have again embraced the athletics, with about 60,000 (the capacity for the weekend) there on each of the three days speaks volumes about how much London 2012 – both the Olympics and Paralympics – did to inspire people. The weekend was a fitting tribute to what last summer meant.

In some ways it was sad to see the park as it is today: the Aquatics Centre clipped of its wings, the Water Polo Arena and Basketball Arena now just mud.

But even so, it gave you a thrill just to be back at the scene of the greatest instalment of the greatest sporting show.

And, after all, the 2017 World Athletics Championships are not too far away (providing West Ham haven’t ruined the stadium too much by then).


My view of David Weir’s win in the T54 1500m at London 2012