Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Press conference on Beijing Olympics and Beijing Economy to be held on Aug. 21

On Thursday, August 21 from 10:00 a.m. – 10:45 a. m. there will be a news conference highlighting Beijing Olympic and Beijing Economy. This press conference will be held in Conference Room 1. Experts from Beijing Olympic Economy Research Association will brief you at this press conference and take your questions.

Bolt toys with 200m heat

Jamaican Usain Bolt ran the fastest time of the Men's 200m semifinals at the National Stadium tonight, August 19, pushing him into the final as the man to beat.

His relaxed stride carried him across the line in 20.09 seconds as he watched himself on the giant TV screen in the National Stadium. His dash and pose puts him just ahead of the 100m fourth place getter Churandy Martina of Netherlands Antilles who won the first semifinal heat in 20.11s. The United States' Shawn Crawford ran just behind Bolt in the second heat in 20.12s.

Jamaican giant Bolt goes into the final of the Men's 200m as favorite after leaving the world in awe after his phenomenal 9.69s world record triumph in the Men's 100m on Saturday,.

Predominantly renowned for his 200m talent, Bolt made headlines earlier this year when he stormed into the 100m scene, clocking 9.72s to break the world record in New York in May. Initially, Bolt was using the 100m for "speed work" to improve on his more favored 200m.

Bolt has run the three fastest 200m times in the world this year - 19.67s (Athens), 19.76s (London) and 19.83s (Ostrava). His winning 19.67s at the Athens Grand Prix in July was the fifth-fastest ever.

The US trio of Walter Dix, Shawn Crawford and Wallace Spearmon will all be breathing down Bolt's neck. The three sprinters proved at the 2008 USA Olympic Trials that they are capable of producing a sub-20 second time in the 200m. Both registering 19.86s, Dix just pipped Crawford, the finish line camera separating the two on the line by 0.005s. Spearmon was not far behind in 19.90s.

Crawford is the reigning Olympic champion, and despite a couple of quiet years, remerged in 2008 as a contender for a medal. The 2001 World Championships bronze medalist has a personal best of 19.79s.

At the 2008 USA Olympic Trials, reigning 200m world champion Tyson Gay of the United States broke down mid-race with a hamstring strain, and was not selected to compete in the Men's 200m in Beijing.

Carl Lewis was the last man to complete the 100m-200m sprint double at the Olympic Games, in Los Angeles in 1984. Usain Bolt will have something to say about that.

Kanter lands Men's Discus gold

Gerd Kanter of Estonia threw 68.82 to claim Olympic gold in the Men's Discus Throw Tuesday, August 19. Taking the silver medal was Piotr Malachowski of Poland with a throw of 67.82. Virgilijus Alekna of Lithuania took bronze at 67.79.

Ohuruogu wins Women's 400m title

Christine Ohuruogu of Great Britain won the gold medal in the Women's 400m on August 19, at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.

Ohuruogu recorded a season's best of 49.62 seconds to add the Olympic gold medal to the World Championships title she won in Osaka in 2007.

"I am just so proud of myself," Ohuruogu said.

"You always have all these dreams about winning, but you never think your dreams will be reality. I just ran across the line, thinking, 'I won!'," she added.

Silver medalist Shericka Williams of Jamaica ran 49.69s for a personal best, ahead of Sanya Richards of the United States who settled for bronze with a time of 49.93s.

China has new Diving He-man

China's dominance in Diving continued at the Water Cube on Tuesday, August 19, with He Chong winning the Men's 3m Springboard with 572.90 points. The host nation has won all six Diving competitions contested in Beijing thus far and has won the Men's Springboard in three consecutive Olympic Games.

Alexandre Despatie of Canada continued a streak of his own, winning silver in the event for the second straight Olympic Games. He Chong's compatriot, Qin Kai, won bronze.

He Chong finished on top of the field in the preliminary round and semifinal, showing from start to finish why he is ranked No. 1 in the world. He punctuated his performances with a final dive -- a 5156B -- that earned him a 100.70, the highest individual score of the final.

Three-time Olympian Alexandre Despatie won his second Olympic silver with a consistent performance in the final, following closely behind He Chong from the second dive to the end.

Qin Kai, who, like He, was also making his Olympic debut, won his second medal of the Games. He won gold with partner Wang Feng in the Synchronized Springboard event.

Legendary diver Dmitry Sautin of Russia, an eight time Olympic medalist, finished in fourth -- falling short of the podium despite a spectacular 99.75-point final dive. Sautin won silver in the Synchronized Springboard last week.

Men's 3m Springboard, final standings:

1. China -- He Chong, 572.90 points

2. Canada -- Alexandre Despatie, 536.65

3. China – Qin Kai, 530.10

4. Russia -- Dmitry Sautin, 512.65

5. Germany -- Pavlo Rozenberg, 485.60

6. United States -- Troy Dumais, 472.50

7. Mexico – Yahel Castillo, 462.10

8. Germany -- Patrick Hausding, 462.05

9. Australia – Robert Newberry , 461.05

10. Columbia -- Juan Guillermo Uran, 454.50

11. Japan -- Ken Terauchi, 442.50

12. US -– Chris Colwill, 425.90

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Vijender warms up for Thai revenge

The Worker’s Stadium is an imposing arena. It’s just the perfect stage for a brutal contact sport like boxing, an open house where spectators give vent to their emotions and bare their passion in an uninhibited manner. If you want to hold back, walk away. This is not the place for you.
Vijender Kumar, the tall, goodlooking middleweight (75kg) boxer from Bhiwani walked into this
set-up at 8.30 pm to the soothing voice of Harry Belafonte. Strange music for a sport like boxing; you would rather expect Survivor’s ‘Eye of Tiger’ to be blaring from the speakers. The music stopped and then came the dramatic introduction, almost in WWF style.
Vijender got down to business after and walked away from the ring after 10 minutes, raising his right arm in salute and tapping his chest twice __ the magical right that pulverized his first round opponent from Gambia, Jack Badou.Vijender flowed in the fight, dancing, ducking and punching with ferocity.
He took time to warm up, which made the Gambian look good for a while. After that the 23-year-old Indian took control. He raced to a 6-1 lead in the second round, went ahead 9-2 in the third and wrapped it up at 13-2.
‘‘Mazaa aaya (I enjoyed the fight),’’ he said later. ‘‘It’s always good to get going in the first round. I had never played him before. It felt good out there. Yes, the right worked well. I’m ready for a tougher bout,’’ he added.
Well, that’s just coming up. Vijender now runs into Thai boxer Chompuphuang Angkha, an outright showman who outclassed his Korean opponent. ‘‘Yes, I know him. I have boxed with him earlier in the President’s Cup. He beat me by four points then. Abhi badle ka time hai (it’s time for revenge now),’’ Vijender said, clenching his fist.
The other bout featuring an Indian was an anti-climax. Light heavyweight (81kg) boxer Dinesh Kumar was put through the wringer by Algerian boxer Benchabla Abdulhafid.
After the first 30 seconds, with Dinesh keeping it level at 2-2, the Algerian southpaw opened up. Dinesh, an aggressive boxer who plays with an open style, soon walked into trouble and took a severe beating before referee stopped contest in the third round with the score at 23-3. Three other boxers are yet to feature here at the Games Akhil Kumar, Jitender and AL Lakra.

beijing 2008 opening ceremony

China Beijing Olympic National Stadium - Bird's Nest

Guo claims Olympic record and gold in Women's 10m Air Pistol

China's Guo Wenjun won the gold medal in the Women's 10m Air Pistol in Beijing on August 10. Guo, 24, was outstanding in the final, shooting a score of 102.3 which took her total score to 492.3 -- an Olympic record for the final score.

The silver medal was won by Natalia Paderina of Russia (489.1 points) and the bronze medal was won by Nino Salukvadze of Georgia (487.4 points).

To win the gold medal, World No. 1 Guo needed to beat Paderina, who shot an Olympic record 391 in the qualification round. The previous qualification Olympic record was 390, set by Russian Marina Logvinenko at Atlanta 1996.

However, Guo, who equaled the previous Olympic record with 390 in the qualification round, shot incredibly well in the final. Paderina gave her Chinese opponent a helping hand by shooting poorly on her second shot, scoring 8.5.

Eight of Guo's ten shots were above 10 points, with the highest score, 10.8, coming on her ninth shot. Paderina's performance flailed and she shot below 10 points on her last three shots.

Salukvadze comfortably won the bronze over Belarusian Viktoria Chaika, who shot a total of 482.0 points.

With 387 in the qualification round, Mongolia's Munkzul Tsogbadrah had a great opportunity to win the bronze medal. However, the 27-year-old Mongolian's game fell apart in the final with a series of poor shots.

Republic of Korea wins Archery Women's Team gold medal match

The Republic of Korea women's team of Park Sung-Hyun, Yun Ok-Hee and Joo Hyun-Jung out shot China for the gold in the Archery Women's Team gold medal match Sunday.

The ROK team scored 224 out of a possible 240 points. The Chinese team of Zhang Juanjuan, Chen Ling and Guo Dan took the silver medal with 215 points.

The French team of Virginie Arnold, Sophie Dodemont and Berengere Schuh took third place after a close 202-201 victory over Britain in the bronze medal match.

Earlier in the quarterfinal round, the ROK women's team set a 24-arrow world record with a combined score of 231 out of a possible 240 points.

The team's score of 231 also establishes the Olympic record as the 24-arrow format is being featured for the first time in the Beijing Olympic Games.

Flash: Xian Dongmei thrills crowd with second Judo gold

Chinese judoka Xian Dongmei defended her Athen's gold medal by defeating An Kum-ae of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea with a yuko in the final of Judo Women's -52kg. Soraya Haddad of Algeria and Nakamura Misato of Japan won bronze.

Overall Medal Standings

Rank NOC Name Men Women Open/Mixed Total Rank by Total
G S B T G S B T G S B T G S B T
1 ChinaCHN - China 1 1
2 4 1
5



5 2
7 2
2 KoreaKOR - Korea 2 1
3 1 1
2



3 2
5 3
3 United StatesUSA - United States 1
2 3 1 2 2 5



2 2 4 8 1
4 Czech RepublicCZE - Czech Republic 1

1 1

1



2

2 =8
5 JapanJPN - Japan 1

1

2 2



1
2 3 =5
6 AustraliaAUS - Australia



1
1 2



1
1 2 =8
6 NetherlandsNED - Netherlands

1 1 1

1



1
1 2 =8
8 SpainESP - Spain 1

1







1

1 =13
8 Great BritainGBR - Great Britain



1

1



1

1 =13
8 RomaniaROU - Romania



1

1



1

1 =13
8 ThailandTHA - Thailand



1

1



1

1 =13
12 Russian Fed.RUS - Russian Fed.

1 1
3
3




3 1 4 4
13 ItalyITA - Italy
2
2

1 1




2 1 3 =5
14 DPR KoreaPRK - DPR Korea

2 2
1
1




1 2 3 =5
15 CubaCUB - Cuba

1 1
1
1




1 1 2 =8
15 FranceFRA - France
1
1

1 1




1 1 2 =8
17 AustriaAUT - Austria
1
1








1
1 =13
17 HungaryHUN - Hungary
1
1








1
1 =13
17 SwedenSWE - Sweden




1
1




1
1 =13
17 TurkeyTUR - Turkey




1
1




1
1 =13
17 ZimbabweZIM - Zimbabwe




1
1




1
1 =13
22 AlgeriaALG - Algeria





1 1





1 1 =13
22 ArgentinaARG - Argentina





1 1





1 1 =13
22 BelarusBLR - Belarus





1 1





1 1 =13
22 CroatiaCRO - Croatia





1 1





1 1 =13
22 GeorgiaGEO - Georgia





1 1





1 1 =13
22 GermanyGER - Germany





1 1





1 1 =13
22 SwitzerlandSUI - Switzerland

1 1









1 1 =13
22 Chinese TaipeiTPE - Chinese Taipei





1 1





1 1 =13
22 UzbekistanUZB - Uzbekistan

1 1









1 1 =13
Total: 7 7 9 23 12 12 14 38



19 19 23 61

Friday, August 8, 2008

Beijing Olympics tickets almost 'sold out'

A man shows his Olympic tickets just bought at the main box office on Beitucheng Road near the National Stadium in Beijing, capital of China, early July 26, 2008. The Olympic tickets at the main box office were sold out by 3:00 A.M. on Saturday. The fourth and final phase of Olympic ticket sales to the domestic public began at 9:00 A.M. on Friday with 820,000 tickets on offer. Beijing citizens could only buy 250,000 tickets for competitions in the capital area. More than 30,000 people queued for their final chance to buy Olympic tickets near the National Stadium.


Beijing Olympics tickets almost ‘sold out’
A foreign lady shows her Olympic ticket just bought at the main box office on Beitucheng Road near the National Stadium in Beijing, capital of China, July 25, 2008.

Olympic Medal Count





Gold Silver Bronze Total
1. Czech Republic
1 0 0 1
2. Russian Fed
0 1 0 1
3. Croatia
0 0 1 1

Emmons wins first gold medal of the Games

Katerina Emmons of the Czech Republic won the first gold of the Beijing Olympic Games today when she won the Women's 10m Air Rifle.

Emmons, 24, was in scintillating form, breaking Olympic records in both the qualification and final rounds.

In the qualification round, Emmons shot a perfect 400, which equaled the World Record and set a new Olympic Record. The previous Olympic Record was 399.

In the final round, Emmons shot 103.5, giving her a final score of 503.5, which eclipsed the previous record of 502.0 set by China's Du Li at Athens 2004.

Emmons wins first gold medal of the Games
Katerina Emmons wins the first gold of the Beijing Olympics .

The gold medal is Emmons' second Olympic medal, following her bronze at Athens 2004 in the same event.

Emmons never looked threatened throughout the event, despite solid shooting performances by silver medalist Lioubov Galkina of Russia and bronze medalist Snjezana Pejcic of Croatia, who shot final scores of 502.1 and 500.9 respectively.

The day was full of disappointment for Athens 2004 gold medalist Du Li of China and World No. 1 Sonja Pfeilschifter of Germany. Du finished fifth after shooting poorly in the final, finishing with a total score of 499.6. Pfeilschifter just missed out on making the final round.

The United States' Jamie Beyerle finished fourth after performing well in the final, shooting a total score of 499.8.

National Stadium

Newly completed National Stadium welcomes guests
Bird's Nest


  • Newly completed National Stadium welcomes guests

National Stadium welcomes guests
On the morning of June 28, China's National Stadium resonated with cheers. After years of hard work, the "Bird's Nest" is now completed.


BEIJING 2008: BUSH OPENS U. S. EMBASSY, SPEAKS FRANKLY

Arrived yesterday in Beijing, after irritating the Chinese by his statements on the human right situation in China, a few hours before the opening ceremony of the Olympics George W. Bush has defended freedom of expression and individual rights regarding religion. The American president spoke during the opening of the new U.S. embassy in China, a majestic construction in glass and cement. Bush said: "We continue to be convinced that all people should have the freedom to say what they think, and to practice a religion of their choice. I strongly believe that societies in which ideas are allowed to be expressed freely are the most prosperous and peaceful. I will continue to be frank regarding our mutual responsibilities" Bush stressed to the present press and VIPs, among whom his father George H. W. Bush Senior and Henry Kissinger, former Secretary of State of the USA who 30 years ago, under Richard Nixon, started the normalisation of relations with Maoist China. Bush added that he can be so "frank" thanks to his contribution to a solid relation with the regime of Beijing, based on "respect and trust". However his words were welcomed with an icy silence from the side of the Chinese officials present at the opening of the embassy.

2008 Beijing Olympics: Let the Games begin

On Wednesday night, in Shenyang, an hour's flight north of Beijing, the women's football competition kicked off. An undistinguished goalless draw between Brazil and Germany was watched by a crowd of 20,000. Meanwhile more than 23,000 people turned out to watch Argentina lose to Canada in Tianjin. These, remember, were women's football matches, events that normally stir the public interest about as much as pro-celebrity paint drying. Yet they drew crowds unprecedented in Olympic history.

We should not be surprised. In 112 years no Games have been so eagerly anticipated by the hosts, no tickets so voraciously snapped up. For the past seven years, ever since it was revealed that Beijing were to take charge of 2008, the Chinese have been told that this would be the most important moment in their history – far more significant to a modern, commercial country than revolutions both proletarian and cultural.

Through tableaux, firecrackers and human pyramids of spangly clad acrobats, tonight's opening ceremony will make enormous play of the nation's past. But there will be no mention of anything from the last 100 years; no hint of a five-year plan or little red book. The name Mao will be conspicuous by its absence, a haunting gap at the heart of the proceedings. It is as if none of that ever happened. For the consumption of a global television audience of billions, the Games are to be presented as the apex of 4,000 years of civilisation. Nothing else now matters.

Whipped up for nearly a decade by such insistence, the locals here are, in the words of Liam Gallagher, mad for it. A nation that less than 20 years ago was gripped by post-Tiananmen paranoia, treating foreigners with suspicion and scowls, has been sent to collective charm school. Smiles swathe the place. No one can do enough for the visiting thousands.

I have been asked about 40 times by volunteers working at the Olympic Park if I have a ticket for the opening ceremony, an event generally regarded in the west as a comical, yawn-inducing adjunct to the real thing. When I say that I have, I am treated as if I am in possession of tablets of stone.

All this week, at every press conference involving athletes and coaches, amid the usual queries about hamstrings and training preparation, a local journalist is guaranteed to pipe up: "What do you think of our Beijing Olympics?" So far, the answer has been the one they want to hear.

"You go to most venues and you usually find something wrong," said Dave Brailsford, the performance director for British cycling. "But there is nothing wrong here. It makes you want to race. It is very, very exciting."

Michael Phelps, the swimmer who will probably be the star of the Games, was equally effusive. "These are the best facilities I've competed in and the nicest dorms, definitely," he said. "The [athletes] village is cool. There's grass and sculptures everywhere. It's a really nice environment."

The veteran American swimmer Dara Torres made the local smile stretch so far it was in danger of requiring surgery. "I've been going to the Olympics for 24 years," she said, "and I think China's done an awesome job – the best. I brought my own sheets and towels and stuff because I've been in villages before. But they went straight in the closet. It's like you're in a Marriott. The facilities are fantastic. I'm really excited to be part of it."

Not even the most determined professional grouch (and there are plenty of them in the press corps) can find cause for complaint. Everything from the condition of the velodrome floor to the landscaping beside the white-water canoeing course has been designed to thrill. And there is a purpose behind this perfection. This is sport as a commercial statement. The message is, 'If you want the best place to do business, come to China, after all, look at how we staged our Games.'

For those watching on television around the globe, the happy consequence will be that, over the next 16 days, in wonderful venues, before huge crowds, relaxed and content athletes will perform as never before. From first gun to last ring of the bell we are in for a treat. That, at least, is the plan. Nothing can go wrong now. Can it?

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Beijing Olympic Venue Distributioni

New Venues in Beijing

* 1National Stadium
* 2National Aquatics Center
* 3National Indoor Stadium
* 4Beijing Shooting Range Hall
* 5Beijing Olympic Basketball Gymnasium
* 6Laoshan Velodrome
* 7Shunyi Olympic Rowing-Canoeing Park
* 8China Agricultural University Gymnasium
* 9Peking University Gymnasium
* 10Beijing Science and Technology University Gymnasium
* 11Beijing University of Technology Gymnasium
* 26Beijing Olympic Green Tennis Court

Existing Venues in Beijing

* 12Olympic Sports Center Stadium
* 13Olympic Sports Center Gymnasium
* 14Beijing Workers' Stadium
* 15Beijing Workers' Gymnasium
* 16Capital Indoor Stadium
* 17Fengtai Sports Center Softball Field
* 18Yingdong Natatorium of National Olympic Sports Center
* 19Laoshan Mountain Bike Course
* 20Beijing Shooting Range CTF
* 21Beijing Institute of Technology Gymnasium
* 22Beijing University of Aeronautics & Astronautics Gymnasium

Temporary Venues in Beijing

* 23Fencing Hall of National Convention Center
* 24Beijing Olympic Green Hockey Stadium
* 25Beijing Olympic Green Archery Field
* 27Beijing Wukesong Sports Center Baseball Field
* 28Chaoyang Park Beach Volleyball Ground
* 29Laoshan Bicycle Moto Cross (BMX) Venue
* 30Triathlon Venue
* 31Road Cycling Course