Moynihan said that filling the seats with home support would deliver a boost to the British team, and said the 25,000-capcacity at the Eton Dorney rowing venue on the opening day had helped the rowing team deliver encouraging performances.
“It worked very well at Eton Dorney, there has never been a sell out at rowing before in the Olympics and certainly not on the first day of heats. Speaking to one of our competitors afterwards he said that the noise takes the pain away.
“There is nothing more inspiring to an athlete than to go into competition with a wall of sound driving them on, and we want that for all our teams.”
Moynihan said that he would urge the BOA’s sponsors, all of whom are shared with Locog, took up their full allocation of seats. He said the BOA’s own ticket allocation for friends and family of athletes would be used.
With Great Britain yet to win a medal, chef de mission Andy Hunt said that despite the disappointment of the road race, in which favourite Mark Cavendish was defeated, morale remained high. It had been boosted he said by a visit from the Queen to the village on Saturday.
Pointing to encouraging performances from the rowers, mens’s gymnasts and the women’s football team he said: “We are certainly not in pieces in the team, we are very calm and confident that together we know what we need to do to ensure our athletes give it their all in the coming days.”
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
London 2012: how the Olympics suckered the Left - Daily Telegraph Blogs
The London Olympics are the most Right-wing major event in Britain’s modern history. Billions of pounds are taken from poor and middle-income taxpayers and service users to build temples to a corporate and sporting elite. Democratic, grassroots sport is stripped of money to fund the most rarefied sport imaginable. The police and the state are turned into the enforcement arm of Coca-Cola. How did this event suddenly become the toast of the Left?
Corporations who make people fat and sick – or, in one case, actually maimed and killed them – are allowed to launder their images; the London Paralympics, in a detail you simply could not make up, are sponsored by Atos, the firm repeatedly accused of bullying disabled people off benefits. Meanwhile, the main sponsors – the people of Britain – are largely excluded from the event they paid for.
Not just the Games itself, but many other parts of their own city, are sealed off from them. Some of them are evicted and their houses destroyed; others find overnight and without warning that their homes are to be converted into military missile sites, so terrorist planes can be made to kill ordinary Londoners instead of Olympic luminaries. Protestors against any of this are arrested and detained on the flimsiest of pretexts. Almost every promise ever made by the organisers – from the budget to the ‘greenest games ever,’ from the number of jobs that will be created to the number of new houses that will be built – turns out to be false.
The Left should be up in arms about the Olympics, as should any democrat. But as it turns out, all it takes is a few nurses dancing round beds, some coloured lights spelling out the words NHS and we all go weak at the knees and collapse into the IOC’s embrace. Worse, actually: any criticism of the opening ceremony was described by one left-wing newspaper today as “extremist!”
My favourite line was from the Guardian columnist Richard Williams who wrote: “Cameron and his gang will surely not dare to continue the dismemberment of the NHS after this.” Hmm. If dismemberment is indeed their intention, are they really going to be stopped by a sound and light show? This isn’t a new dawn for Britain. It’s a night’s entertainment.
I can’t quite decide whether this is a genuine Diana moment – when the public hysteria is real – or whether it is confined largely to the media. I’ve been there myself – I covered the Beijing Olympics and I know how contagious and seductive the cossetted, enclosed media atmosphere can be. That's how you get reality drifts like Williams'. I’ve been out and about today outside the Olympic bubble and most people I’ve been talking to seem to be taking it a lot more calmly than the papers.
I’ve also had disappointingly few hate emails and tweets after my mixed review yesterday of the great event. One person objected to my gentle mockery of Shami Chakrabarti’s participation. I like Shami a lot, but someone who campaigns for human rights should never have allowed herself to be used to polish the image of an event with such a long record of trampling on human rights. The abuses in London, of course, are comparatively small – but only four years ago in Beijing, thousands of people were made homeless and entire areas starved of water for the duration of the Games so that the Olympic areas could look fresh and green.
Whatever the truth about the mood is, it will pass. I attended the Beijing opening ceremony, as it happens. I wrote some of the same sort of faintly overawed copy that we're seeing in this weekend's newspapers. I can’t remember very much about that night now.
Source: blogs.telegraph.co.uk
Swimmer airlifted to hospital and three rescuers treated for injuries after she was pulled unconscious from sea - Daily Mail
|
A woman was airlifted to hospital and three others were also injured in a desperate struggle to save her.
The woman was pulled unconscious from the water after getting into difficulties at Camber Sands, near Rye, East Sussex, just before 5pm yesterday.
It appears that during the struggle to help the woman, the three people who were with her waded in but swallowed seawater themselves.
Sea rescue: The woman was pulled unconscious from the sea after getting into difficulties at Camber Sands, East Sussex, just before 5pm yesterday. File picture
The woman was treated on the beach and then airlifted by air ambulance to hospital in Brighton, the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said.
The three other people, whose ages and sex have not been disclosed, were rushed by road ambulance to hospital but their conditions were not thought to be serious.
An MCA spokesman said: 'At 4.41pm, Dover Coastguard was called by a member of the public to say that a lady appeared to be in difficulty.
'She had been pulled unconscious from the water which was thigh-deep at Camber Sands. There was a doctor on the beach.
Dramatic: The Kent Air Ambulance rushed the victim to hospital, while the three who pulled her from the water were taken by road for treatment. File picture
'She was treated on the beach and taken by Kent Air Ambulance at 5.37pm to hospital in Brighton.
'Three other people who were with her were taken to hospital by road ambulance.'
The sea state was described as good and there were no warning flags in place at the time of incident, the spokesman added.
Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
Since when have the words "illness", "injury" and "condition" all become interchangable? Near drowning is a condition that can lead to an illness, but is definetely not an injury. A broken arm is an injury.
- Patrick, Belfast, 29/7/2012 10:04
Report abuse