Page 46«..1020..45464748..60..»

Category Archives: Olympics

This weekend on the Road to the Olympics: U.S. halfpipe skiers look to secure Olympic spots – KSBY San Luis Obispo News

Posted: December 31, 2021 at 1:12 pm

The U.S. Olympic team for freeski halfpipe could come into focus after two more selection events, the top slopestyle snowboarders gather in Calgary for a World Cup contest, and Jessie Diggins attempts to defend her Tour de Ski title. Here's what's happening over New Year's Weekend on the road to the 2022 Winter Olympics

A pair of mens and womens podiums in freeski halfpipe will be awarded this week in Calgary, Canada, the second of three stops on the disciplines 2021-22 World Cup circuit. Weather conditions are forecast to be frigid, perhaps dipping below zero. Canada Olympic Park, home venue for several events during the 1988 Winter Games, will host.

Both nighttime competitions will simultaneously serve as U.S. Olympic qualification events the fourth and fifth of six total in freeski halfpipe, ending with the U.S. Grand Prix at Mammoth Mountain. Up to four U.S. athletes per gender can make the team, with nomination hierarchy as follows: the top two Americans in the world rankings, provided they are within the top six overall on January 6; athletes with a top-three finish at one of the selection events; and discretionary selections based on past results or future potential.

The womens field is headlined by U.S.-born Eileen Gu of China, who won recently U.S. Grand Prix and Dew Tour contests at Copper Mountain. However, the absence of Estonian Kelly Sildaru, who finished on the podium at both events, leaves room to thrive on home slopes for Canadas Rachael Karker, runner-up to Gu at this years world championships, and reigning Olympic gold medalist Cassie Sharpe.

Red-hot Alex Ferriera of the U.S., like Gu, also took home titles from both the Grand Prix and Dew Tour competitions at Copper, and the 2018 Olympic silver medalist and two-time X Games winner plans to compete in Calgary. Notably absent from the mens field are reigning world champion Nico Porteous of New Zealand and Ferrieras compatriot Aaron Blunck. Canadian Brendan Mackay, third at both Copper events, could add to the potential host party.

A new year ushers in fresh snowboard slopestyle action as the disciplines World Cup season gets underway this week in Calgary, Canada. It's the first of six stops through late March, only three of which are scheduled to take place prior to the 2022 Olympics. Canada Olympic Park, the home venue for several events during the 1988 Winter Games, will host the opener. Mens and womens finals are Saturday, preceded by two days of qualifying Thursday and Friday.

Last seasons slopestyle crystal ball winners were Austrias Anna Gasser, the 2018 Olympic gold medalist in big air, and reigning world champion Marcus Kleveland of Norway. American Jamie Anderson has won each of the last two Olympic and X Games titles and she wouldve added a first world title earlier this year had it not been denied by New Zealand's Zoi Sadowski-Synnott, who poses a real threat to Andersons bid to three-peat at the Games. Kleveland will contend with an extremely talented U.S. mens contingent led by reigning Olympic gold medalist Red Gerard. Earlier this month, Sadowski-Synnott and Gerard won the 2021 Dew Tour contests at Copper.

The Tour de Ski, an annual multi-stage competition comprising six events over eight days la cyclings Tour de France, kicked off Tuesday at Lenzerheide in Switzerland, and after a stop this weekend in Oberstdorf, Germany, concludes early next week at Italys Val di Fiemme.

Defending champion Jessie Diggins, the first American to claim the title, picked back up where she left off Tuesday at Lenzerheide by capturing the contests yellow bib with an opening-stage victory in the individual sprint freestyle; she then followed up with a 16th-place finish Wednesday in the 10km classical. Wednesday's stage was won by Finland's Kerttu Niskanen, who earned her first World Cup win in seven years.

On the mens side, entering as the overall World Cup leader, reigning Olympic and two-time world sprint champion Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo of Norway took the sprint-free opener. Kerttu Niskanens brother Iivo Niskanen also claimed a Stage 2 victory by winning the 15km classic, while Russian Alexander Bolshunov, last seasons Tour de Ski winner, finished runner-up.

Stages 3 and 4 in Oberstdorf feature mass-start 15km/10km freestyle races Friday and individual sprints in classical technique Saturday. Wrapping things up next week, Stages 5 and 6 at Val di Fiemme begin Monday with mass-start 15km/10km classics and culminate Tuesday with "final climb" variations of Stage 3s events, mass-start 15km/10km races in freestyle.

The 2021-2022 Bobsled World Cup races through the New Year as competition continues in Sigulda, Latvia after a weekend off. Its the sixth event of the season.

Sigulda wont host a four-man race this weekend, but will see double the action in the two-man category. Germanys Francesco Friedrich, the reigning Olympic gold medalist in both the two- and four-man events, continues to dominate: He has won each World Cup race this season (thrice alongside Alexander Schuller, most recently teaming with Thorsten Margis). Meanwhile, rival countryman Johannes Lochner has earned silver at three out of four competitions.

The womens competitions are less clear-cut, with Canadian Cynthia Appiah topping the Womens Monobob World Series rankings. Team USAs Elena Meyers Taylor, who owns three Olympic medals in the two-woman event, and newly minted citizen Kaillie Humphries, who previously won two Olympic golds and a bronze for Canada, currently place third and fourth, respectively. As for the two-woman race, Germans occupy the top three slots with Laura Nolte (who's second in the monobob standings) in the lead. Humphries and Meyers Taylor currently rank fourth and fifth in the two-woman standings.

Meyers Taylor is only 18 points from the top spot in monobob, and could easily move up the rankings. Unfortunately, Humphries who's just four points out of third place for the two-woman event has withdrawn from this weekend's competitions to nurse a hamstring injury.

Sigulda will also host World Cup events for skeleton. Germanys reigning world championChristopher Grotheer leads the mens standings, while the Netherlands Kimberley Bos a former bobsledder tops the womens rankings. No American man or woman has reached the podium at any World Cup event so far this season.

*Delayed broadcast

The 2021-22 Luge World Cup hits Winterberg, Germany for mens singles, mens doubles, womens singles, and team relay races this weekend. The location is appropriate, considering Germany leads in three of the four disciplines.

Germanys Johannes Ludwig, who won gold in team relay and bronze in mens singles at the 2018 Olympics, now heads the World Cup singles leaderboard. Hes topped three competitions this season most recently at Innsbruck, Austria, where he scored a personal best time of 1:39.605. Ludwigs compatriot Julia Taubitz, the 2021 world champion in womens singles, also leads the rankings for her division. Headed into Winterberg, both athletes enjoy fairly comfortable margins over Austrian runners up Wolfgang Kindl and Madeleine Egle.

After three of six events, Germany is also in the No. 1 position for team relay. Italy edges out Austria here for the second spot by just five points. But team relay provides the best opportunity for the United States at a luge medal the U.S. currently ranks fourth, with speedsters like Summer Britcher,Tucker West,Jayson Terdiman and Chris Mazdzer (the 2018 Olympic singles silver medalist whos now competing in singles and doubles, even as he recovers from a broken foot) potentially racing for a spot on the podium.

Atop mens doubles are Latvian brothers Adris and Juris Sics, who are looking to complete their Olympic medal set after 2010 silver and 2014 bronze in the division. If their World Cup results are any indication, the Sics may be golden at the 2022 Winter Games.

In the world of ski jumping, New Years is synonymous with one thing: the Four Hills Tournament. For the last 70 years, the sports elite male competitors have congregated in Germany and Austria for a quartet of World Cup events spanning the New Year.

Saturday marks the second quarter of the competition, taking place in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. Japans Ryoyu Kobayashi, who in 2018-19 became just the third man to sweep all four events in the same season, will attempt to repeat the feat after winning the first event in Oberstdorf, Germany, on Wednesday.

In the latest encouraging sign of growth in womens ski jumping, this weekend marks the first edition of the Silvester Tour, a New Years World Cup series taking inspiration from the Four Hills Tournament. Back-to-back days of jumping competition from Ljubno, Slovenia will ring in the new year as Austrias Marita Kramer will attempt to continue her dominant World Cup season. The 20-year-old has won five of seven competitions to start the season.

Both mens and womens events can be streamed LIVE on Peacock.

Here is the original post:

This weekend on the Road to the Olympics: U.S. halfpipe skiers look to secure Olympic spots - KSBY San Luis Obispo News

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on This weekend on the Road to the Olympics: U.S. halfpipe skiers look to secure Olympic spots – KSBY San Luis Obispo News

Why Brad Marchand is right about the NHL’s Olympics decision – ESPN

Posted: at 1:12 pm

7:40 AM ET

Greg WyshynskiESPN

The concept of "can't" hasn't really applied to the NHL during the COVID-19 pandemic. When faced with adversity, it has shown undeniable and admirable ingenuity.

This is a league that halted its 2019-20 season, restarted it in two Canadian "bubble" cities and rewrote its postseason rules to allow 24 teams to participate while temporarily adding an entirely new round to the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

This is a league that, as an encore, realigned its 31 teams into four new divisions while scrapping conference play in 2020-21. It reduced its regular season to 56 games, changed its schedule to intradivisional play and once again rewrote the rules for its postseason format on a temporary basis.

The NHL doesn't hesitate to shatter traditions to get things done.

Unless that thing is allowing its players to participate in the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing while also finding a way to make up postponed games in the 2021-22 regular-season.

I agree with Brad Marchand: It's beyond frustrating to watch a league that just made stuff up on the fly for two seasons refuse to find solutions in order keep a (CBA-negotiated) Olympic promise to its players.

"The NHL and NHLPA can change the rules of the CBA to add a taxi squad so that they don't miss any games and don't lose any money -- which has already been agreed upon that the players will pay back in escrow until the owners are made whole from what they have lost during this pandemic, regardless of how many games are missed," Marchand, Boston Bruins star and expected Canadian Olympian, wrote on Twitter this week.

"Yet they can't do a taxi squad during the Olympics so they can honor the agreement they made so the NHL players can go [to Beijing]," wrote Marchand. "Please tell me that's not bulls---."

The focus here has been on "taxi squad," but I think that misses his larger point: That the NHL and NHLPA have made several in-season changes to the CBA in a time of pandemic crisis to allow teams to ice competitive teams this season. That includes emergency goalie recalls and emergency player recalls, as long as that player makes under $1 million. That includes the return of taxi squads of reserve players, through at least the NHL All-Star break. Not to mention changes to testing protocols announced this week.

Marchand's "yet they can't do a taxi squads during the Olympics" is shorthand for "yet they couldn't bend the supplemental roster rules so players could go to Beijing while their teams make up postponed games while they're gone?"

Of course they couldn't. Because they didn't have to. Because they wouldn't want to.

But I agree with Marchand: They should have.

Read more:

Why Brad Marchand is right about the NHL's Olympics decision - ESPN

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on Why Brad Marchand is right about the NHL’s Olympics decision – ESPN

No Democracy Should Participate in the 2022 Beijing Olympics – The Wall Street Journal

Posted: at 1:12 pm

In advance of the 2022 Olympics this February, the Chinese Communist Party is on a campaign to whitewash its image. Plastering over the ever-growing list of human-rights abusesincluding the takeover of Hong Kong, the internment of Muslims in Xinjiang, the disappearance of tennis star Peng Shuai, the Covid coverup and threats to democratic Taiwanthe party wields denial, obfuscation and cash. The latest campaign pushes the absurd claim that China enjoys democratic government at home while deriding as undemocratic the worlds real democracies.

The Communist Party shows no inhibition about spreading falsehoods in this new misinformation effort. Published last September, a government white paper broadly publicized in China claimed that the Chinese people experience a broad, thorough and true democracy. In October, Xi Jinping said Chinas National Peoples Congress guarantees that the people are masters. In other instances, Mr. Xi has claimed, that when the people call out, I listen, and dismissed American democracy, saying people go into hibernation after elections and otherwise have no way to exercise their rights to speak.

Read the original here:

No Democracy Should Participate in the 2022 Beijing Olympics - The Wall Street Journal

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on No Democracy Should Participate in the 2022 Beijing Olympics – The Wall Street Journal

China Will Attempt First Carbon-Neutral Winter Olympics – IEEE Spectrum

Posted: at 1:12 pm

The Motorola Envoy was a paragon of skeuomorphic design

Open up the Envoy, and the home screen features a tableau of a typical office circa 1994. On your grayscale desk sits a telephone (a landline, of course), a Rolodex, a notepad, and a calendar. Behind the desk are a wall clock, in- and out-boxes, and a filing cabinet. Its a masterstroke in skeuomorphic design.

Skeuomorphism is a term used by graphical user interface designers to describe GUI objects that mimic their real-world counterparts; click on the telephone to make a call, click on the calendar to make an appointment. In 1994, when the Envoy debuted, the design was so intuitive that many users did not need to consult the user manual to start using their new device.

About the size of a paperback and weighing in at 0.77 kilograms (1.7 pounds), the Envoy was a little too big to fit in your pocket. It had a 7.6-by-11.4-centimeter LCD screen, which reviewers at the time noted was not backlit. The device came with 1 megabyte of RAM, 4 MB of ROM, a built-in 4,800-bit-per-second radio modem, a fax and data modem, and an infrared transceiver.

The Envoy was one of the first handheld computers designed to run the Magic Cap (short for Communicating Applications Platform) operating system. It used the metaphor of a room to organize applications and help users navigate through the various options. For most business users, the Office with its default desk was the main interface. The user could also navigate to the virtual Hallwaycomplete with wall art and furnitureand then enter other rooms, including the Game Room, Living Room, Storeroom, and Control Room. Each room featured its own applications.

The Motorola Envoys graphical user interface was based on skeuomorphic design, in which virtual objects resemble their real-world counterparts and suggest their uses.Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

A control bar across the bottom of the screen aided in navigation. The desk button, the equivalent of a home link, returned the user to the Office. The rubber stamp offered decorative elements, including emoticons, which were then a new concept. The magic lamp gave access to search, print, fax, and mail commands. An icon that looks like a purse, but was described as a tote bag, served as a holding place for copied text that could then be carried to other applications, similar to your computers clipboard. The tool caddy invoked drawing and editing options. The keyboard button brought up an onscreen keyboard, an innovation widely copied by later PDAs and smartphones.

Skeuomorphic design began to wane in the mid-2000s, as Microsoft, Google, and Apple embraced flat design. A minimalist response to skeuomorphism, flat design prioritized two-dimensional elements and bright colors. Gone were needless animation and 3D effects. Apples trash can and Windows recycling bin are two skeuomorphic icons that survived. (Envoy had a garbage truck on its toolbar for that purpose.)

Part of the shift away from skeuomorphism was purely functional; as devices added more applications and features, designers needed a cleaner display to organize information. And the fast-paced evolution of both physical and digital technologies quickly led to outdated icons. Does anyone still use a Rolodex to store contact information or a floppy disc to save data? As their real-world counterparts became obsolete, the skeuomorphic equivalents looked old-fashioned.

The Envoys user interface is one of the reasons why the object pictured at top found its way to the collections of the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, in New York City. Preserving and displaying the Envoys functionality a quarter century after its heyday presented a special challenge. Ben Fino-Radin, founder and lead conservator at Small Data Industries, worked on the digital conservation of the Envoy and wrote an instructive blog post about it. Museums have centuries worth of experience preserving physical objects, but capturing the unique 1994 feel of a software design required new technical expertise. Small Data Industries ended up purchasing a second Envoy on eBay in order to deconstruct it, inspect the internal components, and reverse engineer how it worked.

Although the Envoys interface is what captured my interest and made me select it for this months column, that is not why the Envoy is beloved of computer historians and retro-tech enthusiasts. Rather, it is the company behind the Envoy, General Magic, that continues to fascinate.

General Magic is considered a classic example of a Silicon Valley heroic failure. That is, if you define the precursor to the smartphone and a design team whose members later brought us the iPod, iPhone, Android, eBay, Dreamweaver, Apple Watch, and Nest as failures.

The story of General Magic begins at Apple in 1989, when Bill Atkinson, Andy Hertzfeld, and Marc Porat, all veterans of the Macintosh development team, started working on the Paradigm project. They tried to convince Apple CEO John Sculley that the next big thing was a marriage of communications and consumer electronics embodied in a handheld device. After about nine months, the team was not finding the support it wanted within Apple, and Porat convinced Sculley to spin it off as an independent company, with Apple maintaining a 10 percent stake.

In 1990, General Magic kicked off its operations with an ambitious mission statement:

Pretty heady stuff.

General Magic quickly became the hottest secret in Silicon Valley. The company prized confidentiality and nondisclosure agreements to keep its talent from leaking, but as well-known developers joined the team, anticipation of greatness kept building. General Magic inked partnerships with Sony, Motorola, AT&T, Matsushita, and Philips, each bringing a specific expertise to the table.

At its heart, General Magic was attempting to transform personal communications. A competitor to the Motorola Envoy that also used Magic Cap, Sonys Magic Link, had a phone jack and could connect to the AT&T PersonaLink Service network via a dial-up modem; it also had built-in access to the America Online network. The Envoy, on the other hand, had an antenna to connect to the ARDIS (Advanced Radio Data Information Service) network, the first wireless data network in the United States. Formed in 1983 by Motorola and IBM, ARDIS had sketchy data coverage, its speeds were slow (no more than 19.2 kilobits per second), and costs were high. The Envoy initially sold for US $1,500, but monthly data fees could run $400 or more. Neither the Magic Link nor the Envoy were commercial successes.

Rabbits roam free to help spur creativity, personal hygiene seems optional, and pulling all-nighters is the norm.

Perhaps it was the hubris before the fall, or maybe the General Magic team truly believed that they were undertaking something historic, but the company allowed documentary filmmaker David Hoffman to record meetings and interview its employees. Filmmakers Sarah Kerruish, Matt Maude, and Michael Stern took this archival treasure trove and turned it into the award-winning 2018 documentary General Magic.

The original footage perfectly captures the energy and drive of a 1990s startup. Rabbits roam the office to help spur creativity, personal hygiene seems optional, and pulling all-nighters is the norm. Young engineers invent their own versions of the USB and touch screens in order to realize their dreams.

The film also shows a company so caught up in a vision of the future that it fails to see the world changing around itspecifically the emergence of the World Wide Web. As General Magic begins to miss deadlines and its products dont live up to their hype, the company falters and goes into bankruptcy.

But the story doesnt end there. The cast of characters moves on to other projects that prove far more remarkable than Magic Cap and the Envoy. Tony Fadell, who had joined General Magic right after college, goes on to invent the iPod, coinvent the iPhone, and found Nest (now Google Nest). Kevin Lynch, a star Mac software developer when he joined General Magic, leads the team that develops Dreamweaver (now an Adobe product) and serves as lead engineer on the Apple Watch. Megan Smith, a product design lead at General Magic, later becomes chief technology officer in the Obama administration.

Marc Porat had challenged his team to create a product that once you use it, you wont be able to live without it. General Magic fell short of that mark, but it groomed a cadre of engineers and designers who went on to deliver those cant-live-without-it devices.

Part of a continuing series looking at photographs of historical artifacts that embrace the boundless potential of technology.

An abridged version of this article appears in the January 2022 print issue as Ode to the Envoy.

From Your Site Articles

Related Articles Around the Web

Read this article:

China Will Attempt First Carbon-Neutral Winter Olympics - IEEE Spectrum

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on China Will Attempt First Carbon-Neutral Winter Olympics – IEEE Spectrum

Realizing Dreams: Brinegar’s Olympics appearance heads Top 10 sports stories of 2021 – The Republic

Posted: at 1:12 pm

Michael Brinegar competes in the Tokyo Olympics.

Submitted and file photos

COVID cancellations were the big sports story of 2020. Those cancellations and fan limitations severely decreased in 2021, paving the way for some other big stories to land toward the top of The Republics Top 10 Sports Stories of 2021.

1. Michael Brinegar competes in Tokyo Olympics.

Brinegar had a summer to remember. The Columbus native and Indiana University redshirt junior qualified for the Tokyo Olympics in two swimming events in June, becoming only the second athlete from Columbus to make an Olympic team. In late July, he finished 17th in the Olympics in both the 800-meter freestyle and 1,500 freestyle. In October, he and other Olympic athletes from Indiana, were honored with the Sagamore of the Wabash award by Gov. Eric Holcomb.

2. Columbus North girls team, boys individual Reese Kilbarger-Stumpff win cross-country state titles.

Although the North boys did not repeat as team champions, Kilbarger-Stumpff, a senior, was a surprise individual winner at the state finals, leading the Bull Dogs to a third-place team finish in late October. A couple hours later, the North girls captured their second state team title in school history and their first since 2009.

3. Norths Tucker Smith sets state shot put records, wins Gatorade Indiana Track and Field Player of the Year and All-American honors.

Despite being only a junior at Columbus North in the spring, Smith rewrote the record books in the shot put. He broke the all-time state record twice with a best of 69 feet, 7 inches in late May and broke the state meet record with a 67-11 1/4 toss in early June. In July, Smith was named Indianas Gatorade Track and Field Player of the Year, and in December, he was named an All-American by Track and Field News.

4. Josh Holley qualifies for Boston Marathon.

Holley has been trying for several years to qualify for the Boston Marathon. In early November, he became one of only a handful of Special Olympics athletes ever to qualify for the iconic race when he broke the three-hour barrier, which was the standard for his age group with a 2:53:55 clocking in the Indianapolis Monumental Marathon. The Columbus North and Purdue graduate plans to run the Boston Marathon in April.

5. Ali Patberg helps lead IU womens basketball to Elite Eight.

Patberg was a driving force behind the Hoosiers best season in school history. The Columbus North graduate was the third-leading scorer on an IU team that made the Elite Eight for the first time. A couple days after the season, Patberg announced that she would take advantage of the extra year granted to athletes by the NCAA because of COVID, and once again has the Hoosiers in the top 10 in the nation.

6. Tony Stewart wins TQ Midget race on night track is renamed Tony Stewart Speedway.

Last fall, local racing officials started talking about renaming the track at the Bartholomew County 4-H Fairgrounds after Tony Stewart, and in late June, it came to fruition. A few hours after a dedication ceremony and a rain and lightning delay, Stewart won the three-quarter midget feature race at the fair.

7. Norths Emily Moore wins state title on balance beam, finishes second in all-around competition in gymnastics.

Moore had come close to winning a state title her first two years, but as a junior, she captured the elusive crown with a victory on the balance beam. Moore also finished second in the all-around competition and third on the bars and floor to lead the Bull Dogs to a sixth-place team finish at the state finals in March.

8. Tough Mudder, Mill Race Half Marathon events return after one-year hiatus.

The Mill Race half marathon returned in September after being held only virtually in 2020, but the full marathon was canceled because of concerns of COVID and finding enough volunteers to staff the entire race course. The Tough Mudder race also was back in July at Ceraland after being away for a year following its 2019 debut.

9. Alan and Chris Walshs horse California Angel competes in Breeders Cup.

Four months after their trainer bought a filly for $5,500 at an auction in Florida, Columbus couple Alan and Chris Walsh watched California Angel earn $120,000 for winning the JPMorgan Chase Jessamine Grade Two event in Lexington, Kentucky. That qualified California Angel to compete in the prestigious Breeders Cup Nov. 5 in California.

10. School records fall.

Several longstanding school records were broken by local athletes and teams in 2021. Among the more notable ones, Columbus North softball won 25 games en route to winning a regional title, and pitcher-shortstop Maddi Rutan hit a school-record 15 home runs as a sophomore. In the fall, Columbus East senior Chris Quisenberry broke school records for career goals scored and single-season goals scored, and North senior Jenna Lang broke the school record for career goals scored before she sustained a season-ending MCL and PCL injury.

Go here to read the rest:

Realizing Dreams: Brinegar's Olympics appearance heads Top 10 sports stories of 2021 - The Republic

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on Realizing Dreams: Brinegar’s Olympics appearance heads Top 10 sports stories of 2021 – The Republic

Ron Jones, sprinter and British captain at Mexico Olympics, dies aged 87 – The Guardian

Posted: at 1:12 pm

The legendary British sprinter Ron Jones, who captained Team GB at the Mexico Olympics in 1968 and was part of the 4x110yd team that equalled the world record in 1963, has died at the age of 87.

After his illustrious track and field career, Jones moved into football, first as the chief executive of QPR in 1976 before becoming managing director at Cardiff and then Portsmouth.

But he will be best remembered for being part of the British team alongside Peter Radford, David Jones and Berwyn Jones who stunned a strong US contingent to equal the world 4x110yd record in 40.0 secs.

Writing in the Observer, Norris McWhirter said the performance was so good it made the White City crowd explode with joy just like in the old days. The feat was even more impressive given the US team that day included Bob The Bullet Hayes, the worlds fastest man who would later win gold at the 1964 Olympics. It was a measure of Joness quality that when he faced Hayes in the individual 100yd dash earlier that afternoon he pushed him to the line.

The mighty Hayes, who breaks all the rules of fast movement by rocking and rolling as he fights his pigeon-toed way down the track, was expected to pull away, wrote McWhirter. But nothing of the sort happened. In fact Jones fractionally closed on him and was only beaten by two foot on the tape.

Hayess time was 9.5s, with Joness 9.6s. Such was Joness form that year he also set a Welsh 100m record of 10.30s which stood for 27 years until it was beaten by Colin Jackson in 1990.

His great friend Lynn Davies, who won long jump gold in Tokyo 1964 and ran in the GB relay team with Jones in those Olympics, told the Guardian that Jones was an inspirational character on and off the track.

Ron will be remembered for being one of Waless greatest ever athletes, he said. He was one of my heroes growing up and when we raced I could never beat him. He had such a smooth stride. And, remarkably, he did it all while working full-time as an accountant.

Davies said that, when Jones was managing director at Cardiff City, he would even take fitness training with the players. And he also did a great deal for young people in sport in Wales as chairman of Sports Aid Cymru Wales.

He was a very proud Welshman with a very warm and outgoing personality, he added. He loved company, and a glass of red wine. I have many happy memories of sitting with him and reminiscing about the good old days.

Original post:

Ron Jones, sprinter and British captain at Mexico Olympics, dies aged 87 - The Guardian

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on Ron Jones, sprinter and British captain at Mexico Olympics, dies aged 87 – The Guardian

Meet the Athletes: Breezy Johnson – NBC Olympics

Posted: at 1:12 pm

What is your hometown and how has it shaped you?Well of course growing up skiing in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, deeply influenced me a racer. We used to take the bus from school to the town hill to ski three days of the week. Then we skied at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort on the weekends, ripping around like Tasmanian devils. The support of the mountain resort to not limit our ability to ski crazy things and not to police our speed more than was necessary was deeply influential in my skiing. I still attribute many of my skills as a speed skier to the many facets of Jackson Resort and being free to ski them with my friends on Saturdays.

Jackson is also an incredible outdoor place. We have two major National Parks and tons of National Forest and Wilderness. I grew up hiking and exploring this outdoor space and that has carried into my love for adventure and the outdoors as an adult. Exploring new places is something I deeply love about my job. And I think my sense of adventure was created by this amazing place.

Whats your favorite workout?I always love a fun cardio workout where I adventure to a fun place. Like a run last summer where we jogged 20 miles to a hot spring. But we also do really hard strength endurance workouts in the fall. They aren't fun but they do make you feel very accomplished afterwards.

What is your earliest memory of the Olympics?I remember watching the Olympics in Salt Lake City on TV and wanting to go and watch it. I remember working out in my brain that I should work on making the Vancouver Games (somehow the math worked better in my brain back then). I also remember watching Lindsey [Vonn] and Julia [Mancuso] go 1-2 in Vancouver and thinking how amazing that would be to represent your team and to be able to do that with your friends.

Who do you socialize most with in your sport?My best friend is Avital (Shimko) Carroll. She is on the U.S. moguls team and is trying to make the Olympic team in moguls. We met while we were rehabbing and finally both made it back to competition.

I am also good friends with Mikaela Shiffrin. She and I get along well both because we have similar outlooks and work ethic. We also have known each other since we were 12 and the Shiffrin family played a major role in developing me athletically and helping me hone in on how to go forwarding the sport.

Originally posted here:

Meet the Athletes: Breezy Johnson - NBC Olympics

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on Meet the Athletes: Breezy Johnson – NBC Olympics

Park City readies bash to celebrate 20th anniversary of 2002 Winter Olympics – The Park Record

Posted: at 1:12 pm

Park City in February plans to celebrate a past Winter Olympics.

And then in April the community wants to mark the Games of 2022.

There is work underway to hold two events in Park City in coming months related to the Olympics. February will be the 20th anniversary of the 2002 Winter Olympics, and Park City is expected to be one of the places to commemorate the Games of that year. In April, weeks after the Winter Olympics are scheduled to close in Beijing, an Olympic parade is slated in the city.

Only limited details have been publicized about the two events. The Historic Park City Alliance, a group that represents the interests of businesses in the Main Street core, provided information in materials that were distributed in anticipation of a meeting of the organizations board of directors.

According to the Historic Park City Alliance materials, the event honoring the 20th anniversary of the Games of 2002 is scheduled on Feb. 12 from 2-6 p.m. The materials indicate the gathering will include a livestream of the Olympic competitions in China.

Athletes who competed in the Games in 2002 will greet the crowd. There will also be sports demonstrations and the popular Olympic activity of pin trading. Details about the athletes who plan to attend were not included in the materials, but there are a number of them with ties to the Park City area.

The materials did not outline the scale of the event or an expected crowd size. They indicated, though, that one day Feb. 10 is for the loading and the setting up of the necessary infrastructure while the next day is set aside for permitting. The day after the event is designated for removing the setup. The multi-day schedule points to the likelihood the event will be of a sizable scale.

It seems almost certain the event will be the largest in Park City marking the Games of 2002 since the 10th anniversary was celebrated in 2012. The event that year resembled much of what is described in the Historic Park City Alliance materials although there was not an Olympics occurring at the time of that gathering like there is scheduled to be in February.

The Park City area hosted approximately half of the competitions during the Olympics in 2002. Park City Mountain Resort, Deer Valley Resort and the Utah Olympic Park were major competition venues. Main Street was turned into a pedestrian-only zone that drew large crowds and became one of the top places to celebrate the Games. The communitys Olympic legacy remains a point of pride for many Parkites, and there are a variety of physical reminders of the Games, such as the Olympic Welcome Plaza at the intersection of Park Avenue and Kearns Boulevard.

More details about the event are expected to be released during the City Hall permitting process for the event.

The materials from the Historic Park City Alliance also highlight a planned event on April 1, which is designed to highlight Utah-linked athletes who will have competed in the Winter Olympics in Beijing as well as athletes from earlier Games. A Main Street parade is expected to anchor the event.

The anniversary event and the one celebrating the athletes of the Games of 2022 will occur at around the time there is expected to be increased activity in the efforts to hold a second Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City and the wider Olympic region. The International Olympic Committee after the close of the Games in Beijing will likely turn its attention to selecting a host for the Winter Olympics of 2030. Salt Lake City sees there being a possibility of being selected for those Games. The Park City area has a significant role in the Salt Lake City bid for another Games.

Go here to see the original:

Park City readies bash to celebrate 20th anniversary of 2002 Winter Olympics - The Park Record

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on Park City readies bash to celebrate 20th anniversary of 2002 Winter Olympics – The Park Record

For mens college hockey players, the appeal of the Olympics may not be there this time – The Boston Globe

Posted: at 1:12 pm

On Monday, USA Hockey named John Vanbiesbrouck general manager and former Boston University coach David Quinn head coach of the mens Olympic team as it looks to regroup after last weeks announcement that NHL players would not participate in the Winter Games.

The topic of putting together a roster to travel to Beijing was front and center during the press conference.

I think were going to have a good balance of players that are playing overseas right now, and maybe a couple from AHL and the NCAA as well, said Vanbiesbrouck, who acknowledged there might be some reluctance from players, but that the opportunity to represent their country would sway them.

Its the same approach USA Hockey took in 2018 in PyeongChang, when four NCAA players were on the roster: Will Borgen (St. Cloud State), Ryan Donato (Harvard), Jordan Greenway (BU), and Troy Terry (Denver). Donato led the squad with five goals no other player scored more than once while Terry led with five assists, leading some to believe that a greater number of college players would be sought this time around.

Id be shocked if any kid on my team wanted to leave and not defend the Hockey East title, and not play for a national championship, so they can go play in China and get stuck in quarantine over there. . . . I know its the Olympics, but is it really the Olympics this year?

Greg Carvel, UMass men's hockey coach

But coaches might not be clamoring for their players to be selected.

I talked to a couple of guys in our league about it, said New Hampshire coach Mike Souza. Its an incredible honor for any young man or woman to go over and represent the country on that stage, and you certainly wouldnt stand in the way of anyone having that opportunity, but you lose that player for the rest of the year.

Souza has been advocating for his brother-in-law, Chris Bourque, who was on the squad in PyeongChang and is currently playing in Germany.

Its certainly a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for most people, said Souza. Me personally, I would never stand in the way of a young man if they had the opportunity to do it.

Four years ago, Donato and Greenway were able to return to their teams to finish out the regular season and play in the postseason. The 2022 Beijing Olympics run Feb. 4-20. USA Hockey hopes to set a roster by mid-January.

A lengthy quarantine is expected at the conclusion of the Games, meaning college players would miss the regular season, and best-case scenario would be available only if their team made a deep run into the postseason.

If Im a kid playing college hockey, its the last thing on my mind, that Im going to leave this team that Ive invested all of my time and energy in, to go play in this random tournament against random players, thats patched together, said UMass coach Greg Carvel.

On Tuesday, Team USA was forced to forfeit its preliminary-round game of the World Juniors when it had a pair of players test positive for COVID-19. On Wednesday, the tournament was scrapped altogether after two more teams were forced to forfeit games, perhaps increasing concerns players may have about heading to Beijing.

Id be shocked if any kid on my team wanted to leave and not defend the Hockey East title, and not play for a national championship, so they can go play in China and get stuck in quarantine over there, said Carvel. To me, thats a pretty sketchy situation.

Ive not had that conversation with anyone. I know its the Olympics, but is it really the Olympics this year?

All of this serves as a backdrop as the surge of the Omicron variant continues to wreak havoc across the sports landscape, with professional leagues as well as college conferences adjusting their COVID-19 protocols.

The NBA, NFL, and NHL are reducing isolation time for players who test positive and are asymptomatic, including unvaccinated players, to five days from 10. The leagues are doing so after the CDC changed its guidelines for those who are asymptomatic, recommending a five-day isolation period and masking over the second five days.

Hockey East could follow suit, depending on the state-level data and guidance that the leagues state schools follow. As it did last year, the league could revise its policy for requiring teams to complete conference games, with 15 skaters, two goaltenders, and one coach needed to compete.

But thus far, the league has not had to institute those protocols. Nor is it changing its forfeiture policy as some conferences have done for their basketball teams, with Hockey East instead relying on the procedures already on the books that allow schools to reschedule if a team is affected by an outbreak of a health-related situation like MRSA or other contagious infections/viruses.

For now, schools are just focusing on returning to play. Last year, many teams were isolated on campus and did not go home for the holidays. This season, the rest of the student population has returned to campus, and some players may have returned home briefly over the the break. While the league reports a vaccination rate of 99 percent, players and coaches will be tested on reentry.

So far, so good. It was all systems go for Providence, which competed in the Holiday Face-Off in Milwaukee, coming away with a 6-2 win over Bowling Green Tuesday, followed by a 2-2 tie against Wisconsin. UMass Lowell was also in action Wednesday, winning, 3-2, at St. Lawrence. Boston College and UNH are hoping to get in a pair of games at the Ledyard Bank Classic at Dartmouth, while other teams are scheduled to return to action later in the weekend.

Follow Andrew Mahoney on Twitter @GlobeMahoney.

More:

For mens college hockey players, the appeal of the Olympics may not be there this time - The Boston Globe

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on For mens college hockey players, the appeal of the Olympics may not be there this time – The Boston Globe

How Singapore Airlines Is Taking Advantage Of The Winter Olympics – Simple Flying

Posted: at 1:12 pm

The 2022 Winter Olympic Games are right around the corner. This major international sporting event will be held in Beijing and will welcome athletes from all over the world. In support of athletes and officials from across the region traveling to the Chinese capital, Singapore Airlines is set to operate daily chartered flights from January 21st to March 16th.

Supporting both Singaporean Olympic officials and athletes, as well as their foreign counterparts, Singapore Airlines will be operating daily flights between Singapore and Beijing. According to the South China Morning Post, the daily servicebetween Singapore and Beijing will run from January 21st to March 16th, 2022.

The news was confirmed in a post from Singapores Transport Minister, S. Iswaran, who issued a statement following bilateral meetings between Beijing and Singapore:

While air connectivity between our countries remains below 3% of pre-COVID levels, the Beijing Winter Olympics in Feb 2022 will be a good opportunity for us to enhance people-to-people exchanges as Singapore Airlines will be operating chartered flights through Changi Airport as a connecting hub for the region. -S. Iswaran,Transport minister of Singapore

Iswaran also notes that bilateral discussions will continue regarding the mutual recognition of COVID-19 health certificates, which he calls a key enabler for safe travel.

Stay informed:Sign upfor ourdailyandweeklyaviation news digests.

Offering a statement to Channel News Asia on December 30th, the airline said:The flights are for both Singapore and foreign Olympic officials and athletes.

Indeed, at the time of this articles publication, it appears that there are no Singapore Airlines flights to Beijing bookable to the general public- at least according to the airlines website.

Interestingly, data from RadarBox.com indicates that the carrier has been operating daily flights since the beginning of December- sometimes even operating flights twice daily. Flights take the form of services SQ801/802 and SQ806/807. However, these flights also dont appear to be available to the public.

Singapore Airlines has been operating either a Boeing 787-10 or an Airbus A350-900 to connect the two cities. The duration of the flight is just under five and a half hours heading north, and closer to six hours heading south. Its unknown whether the A380 will make an appearance on this route.

Channel News Asia also notes that games spokesperson Zhang Liang has confirmed that the games will be reliant on chartered and temporary flights to fly athletes and other participants to the games. Commercial flights will also supplement capacity. During the peak periods of arrivals and departures to Beijing, an average of at least 15 inbound flights and 13 outbound flights can be provided every day,Zhang added.

Beijing Capital International Airport will be the main hub for receiving and processing arrivals. With the global health crisis still having an impact worldwide, strict limits and restrictions are in place for travel into China.

Will you be attending or watching the 2022 games? Let us know by leaving a comment.

See original here:

How Singapore Airlines Is Taking Advantage Of The Winter Olympics - Simple Flying

Posted in Olympics | Comments Off on How Singapore Airlines Is Taking Advantage Of The Winter Olympics – Simple Flying

Page 46«..1020..45464748..60..»