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.





Farewell, Winter Olympics

27 02 2014

It’s not quite the same hollow feeling I had at the end of the London 2012 Olympics, but, four days on, I still miss the Sochi winter games.

Winter Olympics 2014 closing ceremony

A self-deprecating moment in Sochi 2014’s closing ceremony

 

The youth of the world have been exhorted to assemble four years from now in PyeongChang, British medal winners have received the customary Downing Street reception and a weird Eggheads spin-off is on BBC Two after work.

Generally I prefer summer sports to winter ones, and even in the final days before the opening ceremony I was finding it hard to get hugely excited about Sochi 2014. The parallel attraction of the Six Nations probably had something to do with that, as well.

But, cheesily, the whole Olympic ethos, of down-to-earth athletes coping admirably with both the pressure and the media which had ignored them for the previous 47 months, quickly won me over.

There are some sports I like – bobsleigh, curling and ice hockey – but I temporarily put aside my old-fashioned instincts to embrace even the snowboard halfpipe (rule of thumb: lots of big spinning are good).

Team GB also did plenty to keep interest high. They exceeded their pre-Games target of three medals and ended up with their best medal count since the very first Winter Olympics in 1924, but, even so, a British public spoiled by the third-placed Summer Olympic finish in 2012 was almost disappointed with that. Particularly so considering, as Great Britain’s chef de mission Mike Hay pointed out, more medals were almost within grasp before slipping, agonisingly, away:

“Some of us are disappointed that we may have left a couple of medals out there in Sochi. Our short-track speedskaters did fantastically well and were extremely unlucky not to come back with a medal.

“I’m very proud of the team. I’m not sure about the relevance of comparing with 1924, but we are delighted to have exceeded our target and come back a successful delegation.

“In performance sport you are measured by the medal table and how well you did, and I’m delighted to say our athletes did Great Britain proud.”

I don’t want to delve into the politics of Russia, but it’s worth noting that the nation seems to be establishing itself as a popular destination for sporting events: just witness the 2008 Champions League final, the Москва 2013 World Athletics Championships, Сочи 2014, the football World Cup in 2018…

Anyway, there’s no point in being all gloomy about the end of the Games for the next two and a half years, until the Olympic circus rolls into Rio: roll on the Sochi 2014 Winter Paralympic Games!





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





London 2012 Olympics: one year on

25 07 2013

This time last year, during the glorious display of Great Britain that was the 2012 Olympics, I was privileged enough to be living in London and working for the Telegraph during their coverage of the Games.

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It’s hard to believe it was 12 months ago, and we’re already a quarter of the way through the wait until athletes reconvene in Rio de Janeiro.

With the anniversary approaching, arguments and counter-arguments about whether there is enough of an Olympic legacy are surfacing, but I don’t want to go into that now.

The Olympic Park has fallen quiet - at least until the Paralympics

It’s difficult to believe this was a year ago

Last summer, you wondered whether anything could top those two and a half weeks. The Games showed off Britain at its finest, whether in competition – an historically brilliant third place finish in the Olympic and Paralympic medals tables, and a whole host of new national heroes – or not: the Games Makers have virtually entered sainthood, the capital was friendly to visitors, and it was even sunny (mostly).

Of course, 2013 has already seen a first Lions series victory for 16 years, a second consecutive Brit winning the Tour de France and Andy Murray going one better than last year to triumph at Wimbledon. Then there’s the almost inevitability of England retaining the Ashes against a desperately weak Australia. Over the last 12 months my appetite for football dropped significantly – it looks like that will be the case during the coming season as well. The Prima Donna-ing, the lack of respect for officials, the yobbishness of fans – it all seemed to be a world away from London 2012.

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This weekend sees three days of competition at the Olympic Stadium, inside what has been rebranded the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. To prove the British fans’ passion for the Olympics and Paralympics was no flash in the pan, tickets for the first two days of competition sold out within 75 minutes. I’m off there on Sunday to see the day of Paralympic competition. (As an aside, it was great to see the IPC World Championships in Lyon leading the sports bulletins on the BBC News this week.)

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I can’t wait to go back to the Olympic Stadium for the last time before it is downsized, which will apparently include the removal of the superb triangular floodlights. It might almost be emotional, bringing back a whole lot of memories which are too numerous even to make a start at listing.

But it will also remind me just how wrong the various nay-sayers, who doubted whether London’s creaking infrastructure would cope, who feared the Games would be a washout, who were sceptical as to whether the British public would embrace the Olympics and Paralympics, were.

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London gets one more dose of Games fever this weekend, which will prove once more the truth expressed by Lord Coe in his speech at the Olympic closing ceremony: “When our time came, Britain, we did it right.” Our time has gone, but the memories it provided will never leave.

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IPC athletics coming to Wales

23 03 2013

As if Welsh sport needed more good news after this, this, this and this, the International Paralympic Committee this week announced the 2014 Athletics European Championships would be coming to Wales.

The Olympic Park has fallen quiet - at least until the Paralympics

From the Olympic Stadium to Swansea University…

The championships will be held at Swansea University, which is quite a coup for them – especially if the national media embraces the six-day event with a London 2012-inspired zeal.

Among those who could be competing in Wales will be ParalympicsGB stars David Weir, Richard Whitehead and Welshman Aled Davies as well as the world’s fastest Paralympian, Jason Smyth from Ireland.

And because I’ll use any excuse to put a video of it here, let’s have another look at Richard Whitehead’s outrageous gold medal at London 2012:





Becky James makes her SPOTY bid

25 02 2013

It would be nice to think this weekend has ensured a Welsh sports star will be on the BBC’s Sports Personality of the Year shortlist in 10 months’ time.

Not anyone to do with Swansea City, who won their first major (English) trophy yesterday, nor a rugby player (though with a Lions tour coming up that’s not totally out of the question).

Becky James, from Abergavenny, picked up four medals – two gold and two bronze, exactly the same record as France – in last week’s 2013 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Belarus as Great Britain continued their dominance on two wheels (if not quite as comprehensively as during the Olympics).

James won two individual rainbow jerseys, in the sprint and keirin, an individual bronze in the 500m time trial and a further bronze alongside Victoria Williamson in the team sprint. GB finished with five golds, two silvers and two bronzes.

It’s great to see a young Welsh star (she is only 21) emerge as such a force on the world stage – and if you had any doubts as to the magnitude of her achievement, you only need to see the reaction of her track rivals, including Anna Meares, Victoria Pendleton’s long-time adversary (ignore the fact she’s forgotten some past champions):