• With Peaty tipped to become his country’s first male champion in the Olympic pool since Adrian Moorhouse won the 100m breaststroke in Seoul in 1988, one can imagine the rule has been sorely tested.

    At London 2012, the British men took only one medal — a silver for Michael Jamieson in 200m breaststroke. In 2008 in Beijing, when Rebecca Adlington struck gold twice, the only men’s medal was in the open water.

    Peaty was not even born the last time a British man triumphed in the Olympic pool, although he has seen the 1988 race on video, and does not feel any particular burden of expectation.

    Indeed, as he showed in Kazan where he beat South Africa’s Olympic 100m champion Cameron van der Burgh in both the breaststroke sprints, he thrives on pressure.

    “I’m going in as number one but what’s the worst that can happen? It’s not like someone’s holding a gun at the end of the lane. I’ve got nothing to lose. I’m just going to give it a good go,” he told reporters.

    “I’m going in to my first Olympics whereas people I’m racing are going into their third and fourth and probably last Olympics. So there’s more pressure on them to perform.

    “I’ve still got a whole future ahead of me. I am not even the Olympic champ.”

    Read Reuters

  • Four years ago at the London 2012 Olympic Games, Chad le Clos stunned the world when he beat Michael Phelps to an Olympic gold medal in the 200m butterfly. His father Bert, Chad’s best friend and mentor, captured hearts all over the planet with his emotional response to Chad’s victory on the BBC.

  • That night, and during the 16 days of competition that followed before the Spice Girls closed the show by roaring around the stadium perched on the top of London taxis, it all felt great. A friend of mine was a Games Maker and had one of the best times of his life, but he identified a dissonance buried beneath the euphoria. “In a sense, it was volunteering for an organisation that takes hundreds of millions of pounds from broadcasting organisations,” he said this week. “I mean, would you volunteer for Amazon?”

    Eventually other dissonances emerged, ranging from the relatively trivial – a legal dispute, settled out of court, over the creative inspiration for the cauldron – to the great thundering falsehood employed to persuade a sceptical British public that the whole enterprise was worth the vast expense: the claim, endlessly repeated by Sebastian Coe and others, that hosting the Olympics would ensure a legacy of physical health for future generations.

    So where are we now? With a plague of obesity, diabetes and other symptoms of ill health among young people, exacerbated by Michael Gove’s destruction of the School Sports Partnership. That vile decision deprived children at state schools of probably the most effective scheme devised to guarantee them physical exercise, with only the half-baked Schools Games and an unsatisfactory primary schools scheme offered in compensation. And now this week’s warning from Public Health England that a sharp rise in the level of vitamin D deficiency – the sunlight vitamin – among children has led to a resurgence in infant rickets, a condition associated with Victorian slums.

    To watch the opening ceremony unfold all over again, and to listen to the recollections of the participants, was to be reminded that sport can indeed sometimes provide a good example to wider society. “We all felt so excited to be part of something so much bigger than us,” one volunteer performer said, remembering the secret rehearsals at a disused Ford plant in Dagenham. Another spoke of being tempted to withdraw, but changing her mind because it would mean letting people down. Those are the life lessons sport can offer.

    In terms of real legacy, however, it was all a gigantic waste of time and money. Less than a year ago, the Children’s Society reported on the high levels ofunhappiness shown by English schoolchildren. In a survey of 53,000 children aged 10 to 12 in 15 countries, including Ethiopia, Germany, Israel, Estonia, Turkey, South Africa, Poland, and Algeria, English children came next to bottom in the happiness index, ahead only of South Korea. “We are one of the richest countries in the world and yet the happiness of our children is at rock bottom,” the charity’s chief executive said. “They are unhappy at school and are struggling with issues around their appearance and self-confidence.”

    At around the same time, researchers at Essex University tested 300 children of similar age and discovered plummeting levels of physical fitness. “It has got to the stage now that if we took the least fit child from a class of 30 we tested in 1998, they would be one of the five fittest children in a class of the same age today,” Dr Gavin Sandercock, the lead researcher, said. “These are the children who had free swimming taken away, who lived through the demolition of the Schools Sports Partnerships and lost the five-hour offer of PE.”

    These are issues that regular physical exercise – whether actual competitive sport or the “Indian dancing” derided by David Cameron while defending Gove’s axing of the SSP – could have addressed, had Coe’s pledge actually meant anything.

    Read The Guardian

    Photo by Si B

  • Major issues with the Rio 2016 Olympic Village have been revealed less than a fortnight before the start of the Games – with some athletes facing turning up to find their accommodation not ready.

    Kitty Chiller, the Australian Chef de Mission, said the Village was “neither safe or ready” with the situation bound to cause serious alarm to both Rio organisers and the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

    Among the problems highlighted by Chiller are blocked toilets, leaking pipes, exposed wiring and darkened stairwells, with the Opening Ceremony swiftly approaching on August 5.

    Dirty floors are another problem, Chiller said, while she claimed water has come through the ceiling in some areas leaving large puddles on the floor.

    A number of other countries have also reportedly raised concern about conditions, with the IOC admitting to insidethegames that “extra work” was required with staff working around the clock.
    It will take “another few days” to address this, however, meaning athletes arriving imminently may have to stay elsewhere.

    Chiller said that members of the Australian delegation had been due to move into the Barra da Tijuca facility on July 21, but had instead been staying in local hotels.

    Concerns have been raised on a daily basis with both the Organising Committee and the IOC, she said.
    Extra maintenance staff and more than 1,000 cleaners were supposedly dispatched as part of a bid to resolve concerns but Chiller said the issues, particularly the plumbing problems, have not been resolved.

    The Australian party decided to carry out a “stress test” where taps and toilets were simultaneously turned on in to see if the facility could cope when at full capacity.
    “The system failed,” Chiller said.

    “Water came down walls, there was a strong smell of gas in some apartments and there was shorting in the electrical wiring.

    Read Inside the Games

  • As he swam against the current in Antarctica’s Southern Ocean among leopard seals and icebergs, Ryan Stramrood’s body went numb.

    He looked down, pulling his arms one stroke at a time through the -1 C water, and he thought about how clear the ocean was that day.

    “You don’t want to see very far down. It can be quite eerie,” he said.


    Read Toronto Star

  • The IOC has decided against a complete ban on Russian athletes from the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

    The International Olympic Committee says it is leaving it up to global federations to decide which Russian athletes to accept in their sports.

    The IOC says it will deny entry of Russian athletes who do not meet the requirements set out for the federations.

    The IOC says the federations have the authority, under their own rules, to exclude Russian teams as a whole from their sports.

    Read for instance WTOP

    https://youtu.be/P6RMgpxkPEk

  • Of course, setting a new swimming World Record is something really special. But how does it feel to be the new no.1 of the world? Enjoy some pure emotions by Michael Phelps, Katinka Hosszú, Sarah Sjöström, Florent Manaudou and more.

  • I play my flute for the whales, and they come! I was paddle boarding in Half Moon Bay, CA when all of the sudden a juvenile humpback leaped out of the water and lunge fed RIGHT NEXT TO ME!