Sunday 26 August 2012

Andre Brasil

26/08/2012

Biography
Andre Brasil will be the one to beat in the men’s S10 class at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.
The 28-year-old made a first international appearance at the 2006 IPC Swimming World Championships in Durban, South Africa, where he finished on top of the podium in four races: 50m, 100m and 400m Freestyle and the 100m Butterfly.
In addition to that, Brasil won two bronze medals, one in the 200m Individual Medley, the other one in the 4x100m Freestyle Relay (34 points).
Two years later, at the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games, Brasil became a four-time Paralympic Champion, taking the gold in the 50m, 100m and 400m Freestyle and in the 100m Butterfly.
Brasil finished second in the 200m Individual Medley. He was able to top this performance another two years later at the 2010 IPC Swimming World Championships in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, when he added one more gold medal in the 100m Backstroke in addition to the titles in the 50m, 100m, 400m Freestyle races and the 100m Butterfly.
As in Beijing, Brasil finished second in the 200m Individual Medley and one another silver medal with the 4x100m Freestyle relay (34 points).
Holding a total of eight world records, Brasil will be coming to London as the top favourite in his class and will surely try to further improve his results from Beijing.
SWIMMING

Andre Brasil

24th May 1984São Paulo, Brazil
LATEST TRIUMPHS:
2010 IPC Swimming World Championships - Gold: 50m, 100m & 400m Freestyle; 100m Backstroke & 100m Butterfly; Silver: 200m Individual Medley & 4x100m Freestyle Relay
Beijing 2008 Paralympics - Gold: 50m, 100m & 400m Freestyle, 100m Butterfly; Silver: 200m Individual Medley
2006 IPC Swimming World Championships - Gold: 50m, 100m & 400m Freestyle, 100m Butterfly; Bronze: 200m Individual Medley and 4x100m Freestyle Relay
World record holder in 50m, 100m, 200m & 800m Freestyle; 50m & 100m Backstroke, 100m Butterfly S10



































London 2012 Events

200m Individual Medley SM10 (30 August)
50m Freestlye S10 (31 August)
100m Butterfly S10 (1 September)
4x100m Freestyle Relay 34 points (2 September)
100m Backstroke S10 (4 September)
400m Freestyle S10 (5 September)
100m Freestyle S10 (6 September)
4x100m Medley Relay 34 points (8 September)

Australian champion Kelly Cartwright

26/08/2012

The Australian will go into London 2012 as a double world champion after a sensational performance at the 2011 IPC Athletics World Championships where she claimed gold in the Long Jump and 100m T42 events.
Cartwright only took up Athletics in 2006 after losing her right leg to cancer at 15, and her progress since then has been nothing short of meteoric.
Her first major international event was the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games. She finished sixth (18.92) in the 100m but describes the experience of pulling on the Australian vest and competing in front of 90,000 people in the Birds Nest stadium as her most memorable yet.
Since Beijing, Cartwright has rapidly improved and matured as an athlete.
At the 2011 IPC Athletics World Championships, she won a thrilling Long Jump competition by setting a new world record of 4.19m, an improvement of 7cm on the previous best.
She followed this up with victory in the 100m. Her winning time of 16.46 seconds, knocked half a second off the Championship record, but was still 0.08 seconds off her personal best set in 2009.
What her performance did highlight though is that if she goes into London in good form then fellow Australian Michelle Errichiello’s 100m world record of 16.31 seconds, set in April 2010 could be in serious jeopardy.
It is not just her performances on the track though that have been getting Cartwright noticed.
She is an ambassadors for the Make-A-Wish foundation, a charity set up to enrich the lives of seriously ill children, and in 2009 she climbed Mount Kilimanjaro, the tallest mountain in Africa and fourth tallest in the world, for the Humpty Dumpty Foundation, a charity that supports children's hospitals in Australia and East Timor.
In August 2011 to mark one year to go until London 2012, British tabloid newspaper the Daily Mirror featured Cartwright in its Top 10 Paralympic Pin-ups.
By the time of London 2012, Cartwright will be 23 years old and certainly one to watch both on and off the track.

Canada announces London 2012 media coverage

25/08/2012

The Canadian Paralympic Committee has announced both the television and online streaming coverage for this year’s Paralympic Games.
Coverage of the Opening and Closing ceremonies, and daily highlight shows will be available on CTV, TSN2, Sportsnet ONE, RDS, RDS2, and AMI.The Opening Ceremony will take place on 29 August and will be broadcast live on RDS2 from 3:30 p.m. local time.
Félix Séguin and Canada's Chef de Mission Dr. Gaétan Tardif will present the Opening Ceremony on RDS2, while Paul Roman UK and Canada's Assistant Chef de Mission Elisabeth Walker-Young will provide English language commentary. The Ceremony will also be repeated on TSN2 and AMI from 9 p.m.
Once the Games commence, daily highlights of the day’s best performances, medal winners, athlete interviews, and features will be hosted by Roman UK and broadcast from 10 p.m. to 11 p.m. every day until 8 September on TSN2 and Sports net ONE.
Félix Séguin will also host RDS2’s French language coverage of the games from 11 p.m. most days throughout the games, with coverage repeated the following morning.
Complete coverage of the Closing Ceremony on 9 September will be available on Sports net ONE and AMI at 9 p.m with Romanuk and Walker-Young commentating. French language commentary will come again from Séguin and Tardif which will be broadcast the following day on 10 September from 2 p.m.
For the first time online streaming will provide multiple streams of the Paralympic Games across all 11 days of competition. Five streams will offer a total of 780 hours of live coverage, including uninterrupted feeds of swimming, wheelchair basketball, and athletics, while two channels will showcase a range of sports and will show a “best of” compilation from each day.
All digital channels can be accessed from CTVParalympics.ca and RDSparalympiques.ca. A comprehensive video on demand and Paralympic news library will be available online and on mobile devices.
Not only will the Paralympic Games be a great spectacle, the Canadian Paralympic Team has some fantastic medal hopefuls. Michelle Stilwell has dominated the recent history of the T52 sprint events – winning gold in the 100m, 200m, and 400m at last year’s IPC Athletics World Championships and taking gold in Beijing in both the 100m and 200m.
The Canadian men also have a fantastic medal chance in the wheelchair basketball, despite finishing in seventh place at the last World Championships. Canada won a medal at every other Paralympics and World Championships of the last 10 years.

Wednesday 15 August 2012

London Olympics:QUEEN, SPICE GIRLS, JESSIE J, MUSE PERFORM AT OLYMPIC CLOSING CEREMONY


Queen, The Who and Jessie J were amongst the performers at last night's Olympic Games closing ceremony (Aug 12).
Taking place in the Olympic Stadium, the Symphony of British Music saw the past sixty years of music in the UK played out with some of the key figures from each decade performing live.
The Spice Girls staged  their latest comeback with all five members of the group arriving in the stadium via personalised cars, singing 'Spice Up Your Life' as they went.
Elsewhere, there were performances from The Who, Ed Sheeran, Pink Floyd, Pet Shop Boys, The Kinks' Ray Davies, Kaiser Chiefs, Annie Lennox, One Direction and Monty Python's Eric Idle. In a bizarre segment of the show, comedian Russell Brand performed a version of The Beatles 'I Am The Walrus'.
As expected, Take That appeared with Gary Barlow - just days after he lost his newborn daughter Poppy. The group performed their hit 'Rule The World' as celebratory fireworks exploded around them.
Elsewhere, Liam Gallagher performed the Oasis classic 'Wonderwall' with his Beady Eye bandmates and Muse performed their Olympic single 'Survival'. George Michael also made an appearance, performing his hit single 'Freedom' as well as new track 'White Light'.
However, it was Jessie J who made perhaps the most contributions to the closing ceremony, performing by herself, with Tinie Tempah, Taio Cruz and again with Queen. Dressed in a nude catsuit, Jessie sang 'Price Tag', 'Written In The Stars' and then joined Taio Cruz on a version of the Bee Gees' 'You Should Be Dancing' before singing 'We Will Rock You' alongside Brian May and Roger Taylor.
The closing ceremony bowed out in style, however, with The Who playing 'My Generation' to all 80,000 fans inside the stadium.

London Olympics:OLYMPIC CLOSING CEREMONY TO BE 'THE BEST PARTY THERE HAS EVER BEEN


Rehearsals continue today for the end of London 2012, with organisers behind the closing ceremony promising that the close of the Olympics will be the 'best party ever'.
Finishing touches are being put on the show, which will feature performances from Take That, The Spice Girls, Annie Lennox and many more huge names from British music. The event closes two weeks of sport after a hugely successful Olympic Games.
"We want it to be the best after-show party there has ever been," says Artistic Director Kim Gavin, who refused to give further details of the event. "Any more than that and we would spoil the surprise," he added, before saying: "We are still rehearsing and waiting for the final line-up.""It is about British creativity in the arts. There is a hell of a lot of talent and music and a hell of a lot of show in the show."
Photos from rehearsals for the show emerged yesterday (10 August, 2012) which showed The Spice Girls performing on top of black taxis in the stadium. Earlier this week it was rumoured that Kate Bush would make an appearance at the show, but her performance has yet to be confirmed.
Take That are on the line up for Sunday night's show, and Gary Barlow is said to be determined to perform,despite the loss this week of fourth daughter Poppy, who was stillborn.

London Olympics:Marcel Nguyen of Germany competes on the Parallel Bars

Marcel Nguyen of Germany competes on the Parallel Bars during the Artistic Gymnastics men's Parallel Bars final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at North Greenwich Arena

London Olympics:Lu Sui of China competes in the Beam final

Lu Sui of China competes on the Beam during the Artistic Gymnastics women's Beam final on Day 11 at North Greenwich Arena.

London Olympics:Gold medallist Alexandra Raisman of the USA celebrates victory

(R-L) Silver medalist Catalina Ponor of Romania, gold medalist Alexandra Raisman of the United States of America and bronze medalist Aliya Mustafina of Russia pose on the podium during the Victory Ceremony for the women's Floor Exercise final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at North Greenwich Arena

Alexandra Raisman of the United States hugs coach Mihai Brestyan

Alexandra Raisman of the United States hugs coach Mihai Brestyan during the Artistic Gymnastics women's Beam final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games

London Olympics:Kiprotich claims Marathon gold

12/08/2012
London:Uganda's Stephen Kiprotich stunned the Kenyan challenge to clinch Olympic Games gold in the men's Marathon on The Mall today.The 23-year-old burst past Abel Kirui and Wilson Kipsang around the 38km mark to leave his two rivals trailing and claim only Uganda's second-ever Olympic gold in Athletics.
Kiprotich followed in the footsteps of his compatriot John Akii-Bua, who was 400m Hurdles champion 40 years ago, and crossed the line in 2:08.01.
Kirui took the silver, 26 seconds adrift, and long-time leader Kipsang finished with the bronze.
Kipsang, the London Marathon winner, made an early move to try to break up the lead group, building a 21-second lead at one point.
It was a high-risk strategy in such warm conditions, though, and he paid for it as the race went on as he started to look less and less comfortable.
He missed a drinks stop and by the 25km mark his advantage was down to seven seconds.
Kenyan world champion Kirui and Kiprotich soon joined the leader to make it a three-way battle for the gold medal.
Kiprotich looked to be starting to struggle, holding the back of his leg, but he suddenly produced a big surge, leapt to the front and pulled away.
And in front of packed crowds rows deep all along the looped central London course, the Ugandan, who moved to Kenya as a teenager to train, started smiling and pointing his finger into the air as he closed in on victory before draping himself in the Ugandan flag as he crossed the line.

London 2012 organisers awarded Olympic Orders

14/08/2012
London: Key people involved in the organisation of the London 2012 Olympic Games have been awarded Olympic Orders in recognition of their hard work and achievements over the last seven years.Jacques Rogge, President of the International Olympic Committee, presented gold Olympic Orders – the highest award of the Olympic Movement – to Seb Coe, Chair of the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG), and to Paul Deighton, LOCOG CEO.
Sir Keith Mills, LOCOG Deputy Chair, and Colin Moynihan, Chairman of the British Olympic Association, received the silver Olympic Order, as did a number of other senior LOCOG staff who played a crucial role in delivering the London 2012 Games.
IOC President Rogge also presented Mayor of London Boris Johnson with the Olympic Cup as thank you to the people of London for hosting and supporting the Games.

Paralympic Flame to go to new heights

15/08/2012
As the countdown begins to the London 2012 Paralympic Games, the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) has revealed details of how the Paralympic Flame will be created and the route it will take during the 24-hour Torch Relay.On Wednesday 22 August, with just one week to go to the Games, four Flames will be lit at the summit of the highest peaks of the four UK nations on Wednesday 22 August. 
Groups of disabled and non-disabled Scouts will ascend Scafell Pike (England), Snowdon/Yr Wyddfa (Wales), Ben Nevis (Scotland) and Slieve Donard (Northern Ireland) where they will use the traditional technique of rubbing flint to create sparks and kindle a flame.
Sebastian Coe, Chair of LOCOG, said: ‘By creating the four Flames through human endeavour at the four highest peaks in the UK we will ensure that the spirit of each home nation is represented in the Paralympic Flame.’
The Flames will then be transferred to each nation’s capital city where they will each become the focus for a day of Paralympic celebrations. On Tuesday 28 August the Flames will be united in Stoke Mandeville – the spiritual home of the Paralympic Movement – to create the London 2012 Paralympic Flame.
At 8pm that evening, the Paralympic Flame will embark on its 24-hour Relay, with 116 teams of five Torchbearers set to carry the Flame on its journey to the Olympic Stadium in Stratford.
The teams of Torchbearers have been selected through public nomination campaigns run by BT, Lloyds TSB and Sainsbury as well as the British Paralympic Association, and have been chosen for the way they represent the Paralympic Values.
They include five members of the UK’s first blind cricket team, five PE teachers from Davenant Foundation School nominated for their dedication to teaching Paralympic sports, and Argyle Bird, a 13-year-old from Hull who has not let his disability get in the way of him taking part in sport. Find out more about the Torchbearers
The Paralympic Torch Relay will travel through some of the communities of Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire, before visiting all six host boroughs and a number of London landmarks. View the route map

Saturday 11 August 2012

London Olympics:Russia's Aliya Mustafina earns gold


August 6, 2012
LONDON : Aliya Mustafina stood atop the podium, proudly cradling her medal and watching the Russian flag rise.
She dared not even imagine such a scene six months ago, her left knee aching and the ruthless brilliance that had made her the world's best gymnast no longer within her command. Yet she refused to give in, to the pain in her body or the doubts in her mind, and the reward now lay heavy upon her chest.
"I am very, very happy I've won gold," Mustafina said after winning the Olympic title on uneven bars Monday. "Every medal represents its own thing."No one could appreciate that better than Beth Tweddle.
Tweddle has been at the forefront of the transformation in British gymnastics, winning every prize there is -- except an Olympic medal. She'd come oh, so close four years ago, missing the bronze by a mere 25-hundredths points, and the devastation almost drove her into retirement.
To finally win a bronze Monday in what is surely the 27-year-old's last Olympics, in front of an adoring British crowd, was all that mattered and not the color.
"I tried to say it didn't matter if I didn't medal, but I've got every other title to my name," Tweddle said. "I can now say I would have been devastated walking away with no medal. I am going to sleep easy tonight."
U.S. star Gabby Douglas, meantime, left the floor without a medal for the first time during these games, finishing last in the event.
Though it is her aerodynamic uneven bars routines that earned Douglas her "Flying Squirrel" nickname, a medal was always a longshot. Mustafina, Tweddle and silver medalist He Kexin have far more difficult routines. To have a shot, Douglas would have needed to be perfect while the others made a slew of mistakes.
Her routine lacked its usual electricity, and she stalled as she pirouetted on the high bar. It was the briefest of hesitations, and she quickly recovered. But she needed every last decimal point she could get, and that cost her a bunch. A step on her dismount didn't help and, after politely smiling at the judges, she quickly walked off the podium and headed straight for the sidelines and her gym bag. Her score of 14.900 was the lowest in the eight-woman field.
"I made a little mistake and I paid for it," Douglas said. "You get toward the end of the Olympics and you get kind of drained. ... I've got two gold medals. Overall that's very good."
Mustafina was so dominant at the 2010 world championships it seemed impossible she wouldn't overwhelm the field again in London. She left those worlds with a medal in all but one event, including the all-around gold, and her haughty attitude was as entertaining as her gymnastics skills.
Six months later, however, she blew out her left ACL at the European championships, putting her chances of simply competing in London in doubt.
"Sometimes I did," Mustafina said when someone asked if she ever considered quitting. "But these urges left me quickly."
She threw herself into her rehab, coming back so quickly she actually tried to convince her coach she could compete at the world championships last fall.
But there were only glimpses of her old self, and she was downright dismal at this year's Europeans.
"I did not believe I could do it," she acknowledged. "I was nowhere near in the shape I am now."
On this night, however, she was as brilliant as she's ever been.
Mustafina's uneven bars routine is packed with so many difficult skills it leaves her gasping for air by the time she's finished. But she makes them look easy, flipping and floating from one bar to another. Her execution is exquisite, her toes perfectly pointed, her legs razor straight.
When she landed, she threw up her hands in triumph and turned on a megawatt smile. When her score of 16.133 flashed, coach Evgeny Grebenkin picked her up in a bear hug, and chants of "ROSS-EE-YAH!" (Russia) rang out.
She now has a complete set of medals, following her silver from the team competition and bronze from the all-around.
"I was hoping very much I'd done everything I could to win it," Mustafina said. "It's the worth of all the hard work I've put in."
Tweddle might have given Mustafina a real run for the gold had she not landed low on her dismount, needing to take two steps back to steady herself. But after her disappointment four years ago, any medal was as good as gold for Tweddle.
"I saw myself in third and I thought: 'Please don't be fourth again,'" she said. "I just can't put into words what it means to me."
The British have become a surprise force in gymnastics -- they won four medals at these games -- and it was Tweddle who led the way. Her bronze at the 2003 world championships was the first world medal for a British woman, and she won Britain's first world title, on uneven bars, three years later. She has since added two more world titles, one on floor exercise in 2009 and another on bars in 2010.
"It's the best feeling in the world," Tweddle said after securing her bronze. "It's the one medal that was missing from my collection and I've always said I don't care what color it is."

Cycling: Dominant Britain floor opposition on the track


LONDON (Reuters) - Records tumbled again as Britain humbled their rivals with poster girl Victoria Pendleton capping another remarkable track cycling day for the hosts at the London Olympics in a simmering velodrome on Friday.
Britain won the two gold medals on offer as the men retained their team pursuit title in world record time before Pendleton gave her rivals no chance in the adrenaline-filled keirin.
Earlier, Britain's women laid down a marker in the team pursuit qualifying session by beating their own world record.
Four years ago, Britain had claimed seven out of the 10 possible titles. Now backed by an ecstatic capacity crowd, they look to be in a position to repeat the feat with three titles already in the bag.
"Vicky deserves a special mention because what she's done is nothing short of sensational really, she's worked extremely hard," Britain's director of performance David Brailsford told Reuters.
"She's been willing to lose to get better so she's gone to World Cups, she's gone to world championships in heavy phases of training with a long term plan of how to put all this conditioning together.
"It comes all together right at the last minute and it's when you see the full benefits of all the years of work."
Pendleton, who came to cycling under pressure from her father, waved at the crowd draped in a Union flag barely holding back the tears.
"It's the best moment of my career so far. I had a bad year in 2011 and a lot of people wrote me off and I wanted to prove them wrong," she said.
She was not the first to be greeted by the crowd, however, as Tour de France champion and Britain's most decorated OlympianBradley Wiggins, sporting a burgundy Fred Perry jacket over a white polo shirt, paid the velodrome a visit to support his former pursuit team mates.
WIGGO VISIT
The jacket was off quickly as the temperature soared in "the pringle" when Ed Clancy, Geraint ThomasSteven Burke and Peter Kennaugh lined up for their final against Australia after New Zealand had beaten Russia for bronze.
They took an early lead but Australia seemed back in the contest after 1500 meters, only for the Britons to hammer their rivals in the last two kilometers to slash almost one second from the world record they had set the previous day.
"Seeing your fellow Brits do so well inspires you and you want a piece of that," said Thomas, who won the title in Beijing with Wiggins, his Sky team mate.
"Seeing Bradley win the Tour and then the time trial inspired us and we wanted a part of that and it shows how good the squad is.
"There were a lot of people doubting us after Beijing and that has spurred us on even more."
While the team pursuit's victory was on the cards long before the Games, Pendleton's keirin success was not so predictable as Australian arch rival Anna Meares came into the event having dominated at the world championships.
Pendleton, who with Jessica Varnish was disqualified from the team sprint on Thursday for an illegal changeover, won her qualifying races in impressive fashion.
In the final, she produced an incredible amount of power again to leapfrog her opponents from the outside, resisting the late challenge of China's Guo Shuang as the crowd went into a delirious state.
Hong Kong's Lee Wai Sze took the bronze.
"The crowd have been fantastic, they really helped me today," said Pendleton.
"I was expecting the best Vicky and I knew she'd bounce back from the team sprint," Meares told reporters.
"I could tell Vicky was making her move because the pitch of the crowd noise changed.
"I'm surprised there were so many Brits, I thought the ticket distribution would be more even," she added sardonically.
Russian medal contender Victoria Baranova did not take part in the keirin after she was sent home by her national federation because she had failed a pre-Olympics test for testosterone.

London Olympics: New Zealand's Lisa give her country its first women's Olympic gold medal in sprint canoeing

11/08/2012


DORNEY, England, Aug 11 (Reuters) - Blessed by her Maori
family, New Zealand's Lisa Carrington stormed to victory in the
inaugural K1 200 on Dorney Lake on Saturday to give her country
its first women's Olympic gold medal in sprint canoeing.
The smiling 23-year-old from Ohope Beach, New Zealand, wore
a green stone necklace in the shape of a whale's tail tucked
under her racing outfit that had been blessed by her Maori
family for strength and protection.
"My dad's Maori. It's blessed by people from home and that
means a lot," Carrington told reporters after winning her firstOlympic medal and adding a fifth gold to the New Zealand haul at the London 2012.The bubbly, 1.68-metre Carrington was one of the smallestcompetitors in the event but was confident ahead of the racethat she could give Hungarian great Natasa Douchev-Janics and
2008 500-metre K1 Olympic champion Inna Osypenko-Radomska from Ukraine a run for their money.
"I've got good power-to-weight ratio. I'm small but I'm strong," she said.Osypenko-Radomska won silver and Douchev-Janics bronze.
Carrington started surf lifesaving at a club near her home when she was 10 and by 2007 she was competing in the junior Olympics.
"One of the guys who was coaching us at the time said, 'We could go to the Olympics'. I didn't even know, I was 17 and from there I just went to junior world champs."The explosive sprint over 200 metres is new to the Olympic
programme and designed to increase interest in the sport, with the canoeists taking three strokes per second in a fight for the line, which suits Carrington racing style."You can never predict how fast everyone else is going,"
Carrington said. "You've got to keep your feet in your lane and you know I just wanted to go as fast as I could."
Carrington, who is distantly related to former All Black rugby player Ken Carrington. said her parents, Pat and Glynis,her older brothers Shaun and Brett as well as boyfriend Bucky
were in London and she was looking forward to celebrating her win with them at a dinner later on Saturday.
"I was probably the annoying little sister...but yeah they
support me," Carrington said. Back in Ohope Beach near the motel owned by her parents, who
are also both teachers, grandmother Doreen Carrington and some
200 family and friends watched the race and celebrated at the
Ohope Surf club."We actually went wild," Doreen told Reuters by telephone from the Ocean View Motel, praising her granddaughter's determination and level-headedness."We're quite proud of her, she's put in the hard yards and she never, ever boasts about her achievements."Carrington, who came seventh in the K2 500 metre event
earlier this week, said when she got home there would be celebrations, maybe a traditional Haka.
"It is nice to be an icon of the Maori community and New Zealand itself, but you know we have got lots of other gold
medallists as well," she said.

London Olympics: Neda Shahsavari maintaining her Islamic hijab

Iranian woman ping pong player, Neda Shahsavari maintaining her Islamic hijab, competed her first race in London Olympic games 2012. 

Kinesio tape: The latest Olympic accessory

10/08/2012
(CNN) :Beach volleyball players, particularly Olympians, are known all around the world for their incredible skill with the ball. They've also been known for wearing those skimpy uniforms.
Now, something that's covering their skin is getting a lot of attention.
It's called kinesio tape. The tape has been around for decades, but during the London 2012 Olympics, it has been spotted stretching and spiraling in interesting patterns on some athletes.
U.S. silver medalist Trey Hardee had big black pieces snaking up his legs in the decathlon. German beach volleyball star Katrin Holtwick wore bright blue bits of it running up and down her six-pack abs. Even ping-pong players were reportedly wearing it.
With its Olympic popularity, athletic trainers say you can bet you will see a lot more of the tape at your local gym or on the playing field this year.
Paul Ullucci Jr., a Rhode Island athletic trainer who is on the board of the National Athletic Trainers Association, says he received a call Friday from a patient about the tape.
"She said she had been watching the Olympics, saw the tape on sale, and wondered if she should buy it," he says. "I definitely think I'll be getting a lot more of these calls for the next month or two."
Ullucci says he keeps the tape as a tool to help improve balance in athletes, and says it helps prevent excessive protraction injuries -- in layman's terms, shoulder problems from activities including playing tennis.
If you put the soft and stretchy cotton tape in the right area, Ullucci says, it will pull at your skin when you start to overextend your arm, reminding you not to.
Because the tape is thin and pliable, it's different from athletic tape used on ankles or wrists, he says. That kind of tape keeps the injured joint from bending to prevent further injury.
Japanese chiropractor and acupuncturist Kenzo Kase designed the taping method in 1979, according to his company, Kinesio. He thought the standard taping methods of the time were too restrictive and may even extend injuries, because they inhibited the flow of inflammatory fluids beneath the skin.
A flexible tape that could be applied to injured muscles, he believed, would stimulate circulation through its tug on skin and start clearing out the damage.
According to Adam Halpern, education director for Kinesio, Kase's patients kept telling him they felt great in his office, but the impact of his healing hands would diminish after a while. The tape he developed stretched the good feeling.
"I was just at the Olympic beach volleyball game between Russia and China with him, and both of the teams were covered in it," Halpern said.
"You should have seen the doctor's smile. To think he just had an idea and created a product that serves practitioners and is used at the highest level of athletic competition in the world, well, you know why he was smiling."
The company has trained more than 100,000 practitioners around the world on how to use the tape, Halpern says. It has been used by 80 countries at the London Games, he says.
It also has been spotted at the usually staid Wimbledon and on athletes including soccer's David Beckham and cycling's Lance Armstrong.
"A lot of athletes like it because there are no chemicals and it is a natural healing mechanism that tells different receptors to deactivate a little bit if the muscle gets too tight," Halpern says.
Some, however, are skeptical about the tape's effects. There aren't many large scientific studies regarding its effectiveness, says Dr. Nicholas Fletcher, an assistant professor of orthopedic surgery at Emory University.
"I think, if anything, there is a placebo effect involved, and there probably is a little bit of a peer pressure effect. When people see athletes who are doing so well, they think, 'Maybe this could work for me,'" he says.
He compared the tape to knee braces for athletes. "There is little data to support knee braces' effectiveness in a lot of situations, but when I talk to my patients, they say they don't want to run without it," he says.
Robin Rogers, an Atlanta runner who is also a massage therapist for athletes, says he's a fan of the tape.
"It definitely feels like it is doing something, and helped me feel better in training," Rogers says.
He has used it for his own plantar fasciitis. With his clients, he uses it for shin splints and he has taped up some hamstrings.
Rogers says he hasn't used the tape in any races yet. "But hey, I'm a runner -- we'll try anything that will give us that edge."
Running coach and marathoner Tina Klein says she tried the tape, but it didn't work for her.
"I have hamstring issues and I kept trying it, but the stuff just wouldn't stick to me," she says. "Ultimately, I decided to go the regular therapy route instead, but I know some people swear by the stuff."
Still, says Fletcher, "If it gives you a sense of stability and support, or gives you that psychological edge, why not? It's not going to harm them. It's pretty-colored cotton tape."

Thursday 9 August 2012

London Olympics:Welsh teenage taekwondo star Jade Jones won Olympic gold medal

09/08/2012
London:Welsh teenage taekwondo star Jade Jones has won an Olympic gold medal after beating world champion Hou Yuzhou, of China 6-2 in the final.
The 19-year-old from Rhyl, North Wales, ran around the ExCel arena with a red dragon flag in one hand and a union flag in the other after beating the odds to claim the crown she craved.
Earlier today she pulled off a shock victory over the world number one Tseng Li-Cheng of Chinese Taipei to earn a place in the final, leading to a whirlwind of excitement across Wales.
In her hometown, fans and well wishers packed out the social club to celebrate as she held off the talented Asian to end round one level at 0-0 and then as she racked up the points in the second round, they could hear the roar in London.
Then in the final round, leading 2-0, a head shot quickly saw Wales' youngest ever gold medalist in an unassailable 6-2 lead. She then easily closed the contest out to win 6-4 before the celebrations began.

The crowd chanted “GB” and waved a sea of Union Flags at the jubilant teenager.
After the bout, on being told she was Great Britain's first ever taekwondo Olympic champion, the excited youngster joked: "I could get used to hearing that.
"To be the first British athlete to win a gold is amazing but to win it in the UK is something else. Also having my family here with me has made it extra special and I know all my friends back home have been cheering me on and putting posters in their windows. I want to thank them all."
After claiming her medal, Jade said: "It was amazing to win and it still feels crazy holding my gold medals. I had watched other athletes winning them for most of the last two weeks and I wanted one for myself. Now to have one around my neck is the best feeling in the world.
"All the people who have supported me here and at home have been amazing and winning the gold for them is the cherry on the cake.
"At the moment taekwondo is a low profile sport in Britain and hopefully I have done something to change that.
"Now I am looking forward to a bit of time off and then I will be ready to bring on Rio in 2016.
"I want to say a big thank you to my coach Paul Green. He is a legend. He has pushed me so hard. Even when I have been tired or crying, he has still supported me."
After his protege's amazing win, Mr Green said: "Jade has all the attributes of the best male taekwondo stars and she has been amazing today. But she is still really young and there are plenty of things we can work on in the next cycle, which should make the next Olympcis in Rio really exciting.