Friday, July 13, 2012

London 2012: Team GB Football Team Train Ahead Of Olympics (PICTURES) - Huffington Post UK

Team GB's football team trained for the first time together on Monday, with just 17 days to go until their London 2012 Olympic Games opener against Senegal at Old Trafford.

Daniel Sturridge, who is being treated for meningitis, was the only absentee as coach Stuart Pearce cast his eye over the remaining 17 members.

Captain Ryan Giggs is the oldest member at 38-years-of-age, with Micah Richards and Craig Bellamy the other two over-age players included.

The squad trained at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire and will also face the United Arab Emirates and Uruguay in Group A.

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Great Britain captain Ryan Giggs (centre) with James Tomkins (left), Neil Taylor and Aaron Ramsey (right) during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain football coach Stuart Pearce and captain Ryan Giggs during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain's Micah Richards during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain's Tom Cleverley during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain captain Ryan Giggs during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

The Men's and Women's Great Britain football teams pose for a photo during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain coach Stuart Pearce during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain goalkeeper Jack Butland during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain captain Ryan Giggs listens to coach Stuart Pearce (right) during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain's Welsh contingent of Team GB James Tomkins, Ryan Giggs (centre), Neil Taylor and Aaron Ramsey (right) during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain players including Tom Cleverley (left), Ryan Giggs (centre), Craig Bellamy (right) during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain coach Stuart Pearce (left) during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain captain Ryan Giggs and Craig Bellamy (left) during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

Great Britain's Micah Richard (right) with Danny Rose and Craig Dawson (right) during a training session at Champneys Hotel and Spa, Leicestershire.

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London 2012: The Kotaku Review - Kotaku

London 2012: The Kotaku ReviewThere are few activities in life that feel sillier than playing an Olympics video game. There are fewer activities that better illuminate how ridiculous the act of playing a video game can be.

You're not running a 100-meter dash. You're pretending to run one. You're pretending by waiting for the signal, then—press that A-button!—you're off.... tap-tap-tap-tap that A button to keep running and running. Taptaptaptap faster to speed up! Toofast! Taptap-tap-tap-(wait)-tap-tap....OK. Good rhythm. Almost there. 2nd place? PRESS-A-TO-LUNGE! Finished... Yes. Second place. Silver medal.

You just ran the 100 meters. More specifically, you just tapped a button a lot.

Want to swim the 200-meter breaststroke? Hopefully you're good at pulling two analog sticks in sync.

London 2012, as with so many official and unofficial Olympics video games before it, is a translation of primal sporting activities into a collection of mechanical challenges. In the real world, we would hurl a javelin by running with it, aiming it and throwing it. In London 2012 we would tap the A button to build running speed, pull back a joystick to begin establishing the throwing angle and then we would jolt the joystick forward, as straight ahead as could be, to launch our virtual spear. In real life, we would dive or vault using a series of jumps and twists, folding and unfolding of our body; in the video game version we would press certain buttons at the right time.

The classic Olympic competitions of track and field, of swimming, gymnastics, rowing and shooting, are a contest among the people on this planet who have most successfully mastered simple series of body movements that they have practiced thousands of times.

London 2012: The Kotaku Review WHY: It's not built for fun; it's built to convey the experience of perfecting a routine and then being the best in the world at it. So are Angry Birds and Street Fighter, but this one effectively involves javelin, hurdles and diving boards—and is a waste of time if you're not competing online.

Developer: Sega Studios Australia
Platforms: Xbox 360 (version played), PS3, Windows
Released: June 26

Type of game: Summer Olympics simulator stuffed with 46 mini-games, mostly recreating track-and-field, swimming, shooting and gymnastics events, with random additions such as women's beach volleyball and a cool kayaking challenge tossed in.

What I played: Played through a 10-day Summer Games, taking second in the Medal Count to virtual China; tried most of the game's 46 events; used the Kinect controls; competed online on and off for a week.

Two Things I Loved

The game offers the distinct thrill of out-paddling, out-swimming and out-hurdling players from other nations, as a virtual announcer cheers about how awesome your country is. It's not jingoism if you can't catch me in the 100 meters.No sappy sentimental stories to be found. This game is about the pure body motions of the Olympics.Two Things I Hated

The dim-witted announcers sometimes praised failed Olympic efforts that they thought were successes. Fools.Lots of missing sports. No rings? No uneven bars? Does this game not want to test my proficiency in rhythmic gymnastics? Judo? The marathon?Made-to-Order Back-of-Box Quotes

"Becoming the world's best athlete isn't supposed to be fun." - -Stephen Totilo, Kotaku.com"A thrilling exercise in non-exercise, as long as you're playing it online. " -Stephen Totilo, Kotaku.com

These classic Olympic activities are adorned every four years with the made-for-TV narratives of the young athlete grasping from an impoverished childhood for a gold medal or of the older athlete just proud to be competing after some disaster of a stumble four years ago. The implication of television broadcasts of the Olympics is that the pure competition between people who have mastered such pure actions as running 200 meters in the shortest time possible, jumping as high as possible or throwing a heavy ball down a field is insufficiently interesting without the addition of human narrative.

London 2012 is a repudiation of the broadcast TV theory of the Olympics. It is wonderfully bland. It is devoid of named athletes and freed of any drama in, say, the women's 100m hurdles other than the unfolding story of who among a group of competitors has most successfully mastered a simple series of body movements that can get a person down a track, beyond a series of barriers.

How wonderful that in a video game, that most anti-athletic of pursuits, we find this celebration of pure sporting contest. Learn the actions. Practice the actions. Excel at the actions. Be better than anyone else at the actions.

As a single-player video game, London 2012 is perhaps an all too effective simulation of Olympic athletic purity. It may be true to the spirit of unmedicated, unsentimental sport-for-sport's-sake—however unrealistic that may be—but it also presents a case for how boring being the essential actions of elite athleticism must be. There is, no doubt, a real world thrill to being able to reach to the ground, grab a barbell loaded with heavy plates and hoist it above one's head. There is also no doubt that doing the same thing repeatedly for days and years of training renders that extraordinary series of movements as the routine. The video game version is similarly all routine. None of the 40-some activities in London 2012 is much fun to execute the first time, and all have lost any of their physically interesting qualities by the 10th. They are routines, better practiced with a mind focused on perfection than distracted by fun. The only joy to be found in the tapping of the A button during the 100-meter dash is the joy of tapping it with a good enough rhythm to win. Single-player London 2012 is training. Its 40-something tests of finger discipline, all mechanical metaphors for Olympic feats. It never once suggests that being an Olympic athlete is fun, which feels right.

Multiplayer London 2012 is the game's stadium, its arena where we can test the repetitious actions we've mastered in single-player against the world's best practitioners of the same. A couple of weeks since the release of the game, the problem is that the Xbox 360 version of this stadium is not well-stocked with athletes. There don't seem to be many people competing in these Olympics. Try to randomly join a contest. Don't want to do the discus that the five people you're matched with are doing? Then back out. Try for a new match. Surprise! It's those five people again. Perhaps the activity will pick up closer to the start of the London games later this year, but if not, an opportunity is lost.

It's irresistibly exciting to volunteer to wear the Team USA uniform, hop into a virtual rowing contest against real people wearing the flags of the U.K. and Canada and Kenya and then to hear the in-game announcer shouting about the amazing performance by the surging Americans. It would be even more exciting if the game somehow forced players to only represent the country their Xbox, PlayStation or PC is in. But letting players fudge it works well enough. National pride appears to compel plenty of people to identify with their real home country. The U.K. currently stands atop the game's online national pride leaderboard.

Divorced from the Olympics, London 2012 would seem like a mere mediocrity. It is not very fun and it is not improved on Xbox by its awkward, optional Kinect motion controls. The game's human announcers have no real-life human drama to prattle about, so they're left to spout generic lines of praise or despair. They're cued clumsily. They will enthuse about a male gymnast's superb vault just because he flipped well while ignoring that he landed with the grace of a stumbling toddler.

London 2012: The Kotaku Review The Olympics, of course, are not really just about the purity of physical competition. They are a contest of nations and therefore a competition of societies' techniques for nurturing elite athletes. They are complicated by efforts to illicitly enhance performance and by legitimate improvements in the technology of, among other things, shoes. It is arguably unrealistic for a game like London 2012, which is an official, antiseptic licensed product of the International Olympic Committee, to not include the moral gray of the Olympics amid its brightly colored rings. But where there are games, there will always be competitors who will find shortcuts. When earlier Olympic games such as the old Track & Field required players to rapidly mash two adjacent buttons, players figured out that rubbing a fork or spoon back and forth, tightly across the buttons, rather than tapping each one with a finger, generated the most speed. Surely, the best London 2012 gamers will find some spoon tricks of their own and the game will seem more realistic because of it.

Some people will find London 2012 boring. That assessment will confirm one or two things. They either have no tolerance for the translation of the sports of legs and arms into contests of the fingers or they ultimately prefer an Olympics that is a tale of people rather than a performance of feats.

London 2012, however, looks good enough and runs well enough to effectively simulate the experience of doggedly practicing some basic task to become the world's best at it. That is an Olympic ideal. Tossing a javelin in this game may not be as interesting as scoring a headshot in Halo or slingshotting an Angry Bird, but as a method for conveying what it might feel like to actually be in the Olympics, it seems superior to watching someone toss a javelin in real life. The human drama is stripped away, but in its place is a celebration of practice and perfection and of reaching a pinnacle of achievement.

London 2012: The Kotaku Review


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Thursday, July 12, 2012

Official Olympics London 2012 Results App now available for Android - The Mobile Indian

Olympics 2012 is taking place in London and is scheduled to start on July 25. The several enthusiasts can now get all basic details about the scheduled events, athletes, venue and other media from the official Olympics 2012 app. The official Olympic Games' London 2012 Results App is now available through the Google Play Store for free download.

official Olympics London

The London 2012 Results App is meant to offer all the latest updates, news, schedules and results. These updates will be almost live so that users can be updated with the results. Apart from live updates there will be details about the sports, athlete profiles, schedules and medal tables.

official Olympics London

The app also allows people to follow the Live Schedule that offers details of the sports events in progress and lets users share the results in real-time over social networks. This app will offer loads of multimedia in terms of photos and other information. There is no mention of live videos or videos on demand.

official Olympics London

The London 2012 Olympics app will feature 36 sports of the Olympics and 21 sports of the Paraolympics. This app is meant for sports fans and also for those who wish to know the medal standings of their country or favourite athletes.

Download the official London 2012 Results App from the Google App Store.


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Olympics: London 2012 stadium's future in the balance - Channel News Asia

Olympics London 2012 StadiumLONDON: The Olympic Stadium was designed precisely to avoid becoming a "white elephant" after London 2012, but with three weeks to go to the Games, its future remains uncertain.


London's key pledge when it won the hosting rights in 2005 was that the stadium would provide a lasting athletics legacy for the city, rather than join the embarrassing collection of abandoned Olympic venues in past host cities.


The functional, no-frills stadium is designed to meet that pledge. It is designed as a permanent 25,000-seater sunken athletics stadium, with a temporary 55,000-seater tier on top, the bare concrete exterior of which is covered in a fabric wrap.


The upper tier's temporary design means that catering facilities and toilets are located outside the stadium.


The venue in Stratford, east London, cost ?486 million ($760 million, 600 million euros) and was a statement of intent that this Olympic stadium was not going to be a waste of money.


Its plain design is a marked contrast to Beijing 2008's striking Bird's Nest stadium -- now more of a tourist attraction than a sports venue.


Bids to find a buyer for the stadium were sought and West Ham football club -- who are based in east London -- won the contest, edging out north London Premier League rivals Tottenham.


However, the decision hit a wall of challenges from rival bidders and, facing legal deadlock, the process was abandoned in October 2011.


Seeking a resolution, the stadium was kept in public hands and the process restarted in January, with prospective tenants now vying for a 99-year lease from 2014.


The 2012 Games organisers were "absolutely determined" that the venue should have a long-term future, said Tessa Jowell, Britain's Olympics minister from 2005 to 2010.


"We were all haunted by the possibility of our stadium being a 'white elephant'," she told AFP.


"Central to our bid was a promise that there would be an athletics track in legacy," she explained.


"Therefore we envisaged a multi-use stadium with athletics at its heart... that would maximise its use by including other sports and activities.


An 80,000-seater stadium might only be needed once a year and was thus not deemed sustainable, she said.


"We were determined that the stadium would be reduced to a size after the Games that would be useful and practical in legacy," she said.


But while the future uses of most of the London 2012 venues are secured, the Olympic Stadium's destiny is still far from resolved, with the Games just weeks away.


Three contenders have confirmed their bids, with applications due to close in early July.


They are West Ham, a joint bid by University of East London and Essex cricket club, and a company wanting to stage a Formula One race that would go inside the stadium.


East London football side Leyton Orient also retain an interest.


"It remains our intention to sign construction contracts for converting the stadium at the end of October," Andrew Altman, the outgoing chief executive of the London Legacy Development Corporation, said in May.


Altman is to leave his post after the Games, with The Daily Telegraph saying he had "effectively paid the price for failing to secure the future of the stadium".


Having won the abandoned contest to buy the stadium, West Ham might now consider themselves in a stronger position, having won promotion back to the lucrative Premier League.


The club acknowledges that the bid to move has divided fans who are loyal to its Upton Park home, 2.5 miles (four kilometres) away from the Olympic Stadium.


Football played in athletics stadia is commonplace elsewhere in the world but none of England's 92 league teams do so -- the closeness to the pitch is seen as essential to the atmosphere.


Tottenham's bid involved demolishing the stadium and building a football-specific venue, while paying towards redeveloping the dated Crystal Palace athletics stadium in south London to uphold the athletics legacy pledge.


The club's ground is five miles (eight kilometres) away, triggering claims that they would have been invading West Ham's territory and abandoning their traditional home community.


But third-tier football side Leyton Orient, whose home ground Brisbane Road is the closest at 1.5 miles (2.5 km) away, also complained bitterly about the threat to their "patch" posed by West Ham moving in.


Their challenges helped trigger the collapse of the original West Ham deal.


Orient chairman Barry Hearn has branded the venue "not fit for football" -- the low rake of the seats gives a flat view -- but still wants the tenancy if seats can be put over the track.


The stadium is due to host the 2017 World Athletics Championships, meaning it should remain in its current two-tier format for the short-term.


"I'm absolutely sure that the right long-term use will be found," Jowell said.


"Probably by this time next year there will be a long-term tenant... and this will be a living stadium, probably with football, probably as an entertainment venue with other uses as well."


-AFP/ac


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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Olympics-London 2012 clinic offers athletes top healthcare - Reuters

By Kate Kelland


LONDON, June 18 (Reuters) - Athletes at the London Olympics will be offered free healthcare ranging from state of the art eye care and dentistry to sports physiotherapy, osteopathy and surgery at a 23 million pounds ($36.04 million) "polyclinic".


The 24-hour centre in the Olympic Park, where 200 competitors a day are expected to be treated during the Games, will make athletes the top priorities but will also look after support staff and coaches.


The common complaints are expected to be musculoskeletal injuries such as strains and sprains, minor illness like colds and small wounds and grazes.


"Even the most minor ailment can have serious implications upon an elite athlete's performance," Olympic organising committee LOCOG's director of sport Debbie Jevans told reporters as they were given a preview of the clinic on Monday.


Athlete Olymipcs London Healthcare


She said the centre was equipped to respond quickly and get athletes the treatment they needed as soon as possible.


Organisers stress the medical care offered will be "immediate and necessary" and say athletes and support staff will not be treated for pre-existing or chronic conditions.


Experience from previous Games suggests the dental and eye care clinics are likely to be among the busiest, ranking second only to physiotherapy.


"There will be competitors who haven't had much access to dental care," said Wendy Turner, one of the six dental specialists who will work at the clinic. "This is an opportunity for them to get it sorted out."


The main healthcare services - which will include state of the art magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography(CT) scans, as well as digital X-rays, will be delivered by a team of 10 paid LOCOG staff, 500 volunteer doctors, nurses and other health workers and 80 on-call specialists.


PEAK CONDITION


"We have always put the needs of the athletes at the heart of the Games," said LOCOG chairman Sebastian Coe.


"When they are preparing for the most important moment in their sporting careers, it's vital they are in peak condition with all the support they need."


The Olympic village's doping control station is also to be housed in the polyclinic but will be accessible via a separate entrance, organisers said.


The centre was built with 17 million pounds from Britain's taxpayer-funded National Health Service (NHS) and another six million pounds from the London 2012 organising committee's 9.3 billion pounds budget.


After the Games, the plan is for the clinic to be converted back into an NHS health clinic with primary care doctors, pharmacy services and a dental surgery. ($1 = 0.6382 British pounds) (Editing by Tony Jimenez)


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Photos: Jonathan Horton makes 2nd Olympic gymnastics team - AZFamily


SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- Sam Mikulak heard the names rattled off. Jake Dalton. Jonathan Horton.

Each announcement followed by 10 seconds of clapping and a brief wave from the latest members of the U.S. men's Olympic gymnastics team.


"It seemed like an eternity that's for sure," Mikulak said.

More than enough time for the 19-year-old to wonder if he made the wrong decision on Saturday when he rested his sprained left ankle rather than compete in the final day of Olympic trials.

"The whole time I was in the meeting, it was panic," Mikulak said.

Relax kid, you're good.

Mikulak was the final name called by U.S. men's program director Dennis McIntyre on Sunday, though it took a moment for it so sink through his perfectly spiked hairdo.

"It hilarious because they said Sam and Sam was just like `What? What?'" Horton said. "Sam was just like so pumped, it was awesome."

Reaching a goal more than a decade in the making has a tendency to do that to somebody.

Mikulak, Dalton and Horton will join trials winner Danell Leyva and national champion John Orozco in London on a team expected to challenge longtime powers Japan and China for team gold.

Chris Brooks, Steven Legendre and Alex Naddour are the alternates.

Horton gives a veteran presence to the deepest U.S. Olympic team in recent memory. The 26-year-old helped the U.S. win a team bronze in Beijing four years ago, then added a silver medal on high bar. None of the other four members are over 20.

"It shows that the future, we're going to be tough," Mikulak said with a laugh.

And, the U.S. hopes, in the present too. U.S. men's team coordinator Kevin Mazeika is confident Mikulak will be ready when men's qualifying starts at the O2 Arena on July 28.

Mikulak will undergo intense rehab and likely won't be able to do full routines on floor or vault for two weeks. He will join the rest of the team at training camp in Colorado Springs, Colo., from July 8-11 and coach Kurt Golder believes the first University of Michigan male gymnast to make an Olympic team will be close to 100 percent.

Dalton, the reigning NCAA champion, gives the U.S. someone who can put up eye-popping numbers on floor and vault. The 20-year-old won both events during trials easily, his explosiveness on the floor leaving Brooks to joke he was "disgusted" watching Dalton's powerful tumbling runs.

The junior at Oklahoma called the moment "bittersweet" because it means the tight-knit group of 15 national team members will be split up. The alternates will stay in Birmingham - about two hours northwest - during the games. Brooks will try to stay focused, pointing out the U.S. used two alternates in Beijing four years ago.

"That's something you notice," he said. "At the same time, you know you want the guys in front of you to stay healthy."

Horton makes the team nine months after ripping up his left foot at the world championships in Tokyo last October. The two-time U.S. champion finished third at trials and his steadying presence should help calm any lingering nerves as the U.S. prepares to take on longtime powers Japan and China in London.

Leyva, Orozco, Dalton and Horton were all members of the bronze-medal winning team at worlds last fall, with Leyva taking gold on parallel bars. The dynamic 20-year-old Cuban-born Leyva said a team Olympic gold and an all-around gold are next on his check list, though there's little doubt which one matters most to team organizers.

The U.S. hasn't claimed the top of the podium in the games since Los Angeles in 1984. The Americans head to London with the ability to put up impressive numbers in five of the six rotations. Pommel horse remains an issue, though Orozco and Leyva are much improved, and Mikulak is more than serviceable when completely healthy.

Mazeika insisted he was focused on a team gold and acknowledged the decision to trim Olympic rosters from six to five made the process particularly difficult for a program that's as good as it has been in a generation. The five-person committee met for three hours on Saturday convened briefly again on Sunday before making the team public.

"This is definitely the toughest one because we have so many great athletes," he said. "We're so deep. We knew it was going to be tough coming in and it was."

The goal is to compose a roster designed to excel in the team finals, where three gymnasts compete on each apparatus, with all three scores counting. It leaves little room for error but Orozco and Leyva have been rock steady over the last year.

The narrowing of the rosters likely cost Brooks a spot. The affable 25-year-old struggled during preliminaries Thursday, at one point flying off the parallel bars then taking out his frustrations in a nearby hallway. He roared back into contention Saturday and ended up tying Dalton for fourth. Considered more of an all-around gymnast than a specialist, Brooks is good insurance if Mikulak's ankle doesn't recover in time for London.

"I'm going to prepare like I'm on the team," he said. "But I fully expect the five guys to rock it."

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Security operation for 2012 Olympics in London to be huge team effort between ... - The Star-Ledger - NJ.com

olympic-security-athens-greece-stadium-2004.JPGAristide Economopoulos/The Star-LedgerSecurity at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London is expected to be extremely tight, just as it was during the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece, pictured here.

LONDON — Fighter jets thunder above the English countryside. Missiles stand ready. And Big Brother is watching like never before.

The London Olympics are no ordinary games. Not since World War II have Britain and the United States teamed up for such a massive security operation on British soil.

Hundreds of American intelligence, security and law enforcement officials are flying across the Atlantic for the games that begin July 27. Some will even be embedded with their British counterparts, sharing critical intelligence and troubleshooting potential risks. Dozens of Interpol officers will also be deployed.

The unique collaboration is rooted in common threats the partners have faced since the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the U.S. and Britain's own deadly suicide bombings in 2005.

Britain was America's closest ally in Afghanistan and Iraq, making it a prime target of Islamic terror groups. And dozens of recent terror plots, including the 2006 plot to blow up nearly a dozen trans-Atlantic airliners, have been hatched within Britain's sizeable Muslim population, more than 1 million of whom have ties to Pakistan.

Although other Olympics have taken place since 9/11 — Salt Lake City, Athens, Turin, Beijing and Vancouver — London poses a different breed of security challenge.

"I'm confident that there is more than adequate security here for these games," Louis Susman, the U.S. Ambassador to the U.K., told The Associated Press. "That said, we live in a tumultuous world, whether that be in New York or London."

Intelligence officials say there has been an expected increase in chatter among extremist groups but there are still no specific or credible threats to the London games. The terror level is labeled substantial, a notch below severe and what it has been for much of the past decade. A substantial threat level indicates that an attack is a strong possibility.

olympic-security-athens-greece.JPGThanassis Stavrakis/APA massive security operation is planned to protect athletes and fans at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. Pictured is an air force radar operator inspecting equipment in front of a Patriot missile launcher near Athens, Greece, during the Olympics in July 2004.

"There is a perception in some quarters that the terrorist threat to this country has evaporated," said Jonathan Evans, head of Britain's domestic spy agency of MI5. "Bin Laden is dead, al-Qaida's senior leadership in Pakistan is under serious pressure and there hasn't been a major terror attack here for seven years. (But) in back rooms and in cars and on the streets of this country, there is no shortage of individuals talking about wanting to mount terrorist attacks here."

The potential threats to the London games are broad and diverse — a lone wolf attacker such as Norway's Anders Behring Breivik who confessed to killing 77 people; a possible non-Asian Muslim convert who could slip by security with a European passport; a coordinated strike like the Sept. 11 terror attacks or a debilitating cyber-attack.

Although al-Qaida has been weakened by targeted U.S. strikes, its affiliates in places like Somalia and Yemen have stepped up their activity and increased their capabilities. They've even been working on bombs that can go undetected in airport scans.

British security officials fear that dozens of nationals who went to train in Somalia and elsewhere could eventually return.

"Terrorist problems have a long tail," said Evans. "They very rarely just stop."

Up to 1 million visitors are expected for the games, putting added strain on border security agents at airports like London's Heathrow, which has been criticized for its long lines and lack of staff to screen those arriving from other countries.

On site, some 300,000 people are expected to flow into Olympic Park in east London each day during peak times.

One of the key functions for Interpol, the international police organization, will be to speed intelligence data sharing between countries so threats can be deterred. U.K. officials scan Interpol data 150 million times per year, Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble told the AP during an exclusive interview at the agency's Lyon headquarters.

olympics-london-2012-mayor.JPGOli Scarff/Getty ImagesLondon Mayor Boris Johnson addresses the media as a giant set of Olympic rings are displayed from Tower Bridge on June 27 in London. The rings weigh more than three tons and will be illuminated in a light show every evening during the 2012 Summer Olympic Games.

"The truth is, and we know this from Norway, that you can't identify one ethnic group and say that's the ethnic group that should only concern us," Noble said. "But this Olympics — from all that I know and based on all the information that Interpol has — should be a safe Olympics."

Shared intelligence, better technology and boosted resources have allowed security officials to crack organized plots before they happen but the possibility of a self-starter extremist who operates below the radar remains one of the biggest fears.

In the case of Breivik, there were few warning signals that the self-styled anti-Muslim fanatic was about to kill 77 people last summer. The same essentially was true for Mohamed Merah, a Frenchman of Algerian descent who in March killed three paratroopers, a rabbi and three Jewish school children in southwest France.

Security officials say unless people are already known to authorities, they can go virtually undetected as they plan atrocities.

The overall security numbers are staggering. The games will be protected by some 12,000 police officers during peak times and 23,700 security staff — a number that includes some 13,500 troops on standby, which is more than the 9,500 British troops currently in Afghanistan. A no-fly zone will also be established over Olympic venues from July 14 to August 15.

More than 100,000 people have applied for jobs at Olympics venues, being vetted for employment history and possible criminal backgrounds. The more rigorous checks are done by the government for accreditation to get into the games, according to Ian Horseman Sewell with G4S, a global company providing most of the training and security staff for the Olympics.

Still, Sewell admits London is different than past games.

"London is a proven terrorist target and it is the first time the summer Olympics have been operated in a post 7/7 environment in a place that isn't a totalitarian state," Sewell said, referring to the 2005 suicide bombings in London and the 2008 Beijing games. "From a security perspective, London is breaking new ground."

G4S will also help secure venues outside of the park and protect athletes.

Some specific teams from places like Belarus, Belgium, New Zealand and Vietnam will be training in northern France to keep costs down — a move that prompted a joint Franco-British security exercise earlier this year.

Protecting athletes has been a concern since a terror attack at the 1972 Olympics in Munich killed 11 Israeli athletes and coaches.

"Israeli athletes will be staying away from the others in a more secluded area and with more security," a senior Israeli intelligence official told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of his job. "But a repetition of what happened in Munich is considered unlikely because Israel is ready and also because it isn't the kind of attack Palestinians would want now."

Technology has also advanced from past games.

Special Israeli surveillance technology has been rolled out for the Olympics across Britain, a country already known for its 4 million closed-circuit television cameras. Even more cameras have been installed at the Olympic Park.

olympics-london-2012-mayors.JPGOli Scarff/Getty ImagesLondon Mayor Boris Johnson, left, and Lord Sebastian Coe, chairman of the London Organizing Committee of the 2012 Summer Olympic Games, cheer as a giant set of Olympic rings are displayed from Tower Bridge on June 27 in London. The rings weigh more than three tons and measure over 25 meters wide by 11.5 meters tall; they will be illuminated in a light show every evening during the Games.

Advanced facial and image recognition software will be used to identify suspects and connect multiple crime scenes. Cameras will be used to capture suspicious behavior. And special drones will be used for crowd surveillance, according to a salesman at an Israeli company who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

And remember the movie "Speed" where a bomb would allegedly go off if a bus went slower than 50 mph (80 kph)? Hundreds of public transport vehicles and VIP buses being used in the London games have already been equipped so authorities can tell if a driver is acting erratically — something that might happen in a hijacking.

Authorities will also be able to stop a vehicle remotely or keep it going at a certain speed — technology that could be useful if a terrorist were carrying explosives and threatening to crash a bus full of athletes into a crowded venue.

The British military has already made headlines with the weapons it will have available — surface-to-air missiles, RAF Typhoon combat aircraft and an aircraft carrier docked on the Thames, the river that cuts across London close to several Olympic sites.

Security officials had worried that Irish dissidents could target the games, but those fears have dissipated.

Despite the U.S.-U.K. collaboration, there will still be differences in how the London Olympics is policed. Most of the security personnel will be unarmed — a striking difference to operations in the United States.

Adding to security issues, leaders from around the world will want to visit during the Olympics. The American delegation will be led by first lady Michelle Obama while President Barack Obama focuses on his re-election campaign.

"I've not heard any American who has said they were concerned about security here," said Susman, the ambassador. "London has made an effort to showcase London for the world and I think it's going to be terrific."


More London Olympics coverage:

• D'Alessandro: Olympic spot in trampoline up for grabs as NJ's Gluckstein brothers must battle each other

• Olympics 2012: Plainsboro native Rebecca Soni clinches London berth with second-place finish in 100m breaststroke

• Olympics 2012: Michael Phelps edges Ryan Lochte in 200-meter freestyle


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Tuesday, July 10, 2012

USA Basketball finalizes 2012 London Olympics roster - KTVQ Billings News

LAS VEGAS - Ready for the world.

USA Basketball will announce its final 12-man roster for the 2012 London Olympics at the Wynn Casino on Saturday, setting the team that will travel on an international tour over the next few weeks.


Entering Saturday's announcement, 10 of the 12 roster spots were assumed to be locks, with 2008 Olympics Gold Medalists LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Chris Paul and Deron Williams leading the way, joined by 2010 World Championships Gold Medalists Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, Kevin Love and Tyson Chandler, plus Team USA newcomer Blake Griffin.


After deliberation between USA Basketball Chairman Jerry Colangelo and a coaching staff led by Mike Krzyzewski, the roster's final two spots went to Philadelphia 76ers forward Andre Iguodala and Oklahoma City Thunder guard James Harden, according to the Associated Press. Jeff Goodman of CBSSports.com has confirmed the roster decisions.


That left New Orleans Hornets forward Anthony Davis, Hornets guard Eric Gordon and Memphis Grizzlies forward Rudy Gay left as the team's "cuts" from its group of 15 finalists. All three will remain on stand-by in the event of injury.


Here's how the full 12-man roster -- which will be headlined by the trio of LeBron James, Kevin Durant and Kobe Bryant -- breaks down.


Guards


Kobe Bryant -- age 33 -- Los Angeles Lakers: Back to defend his Gold Medal, Bryant stands as the leading veteran voice of the group. He's joked in recent weeks that he will let the younger guys do the heavy lifting while he focuses on closing games, but deferring has never been in his vocabulary. Krzyzewski said on Friday that Bryant enters Olympics play in excellent health and shape.


James Harden -- age 22 -- Oklahoma City Thunder: The NBA's Sixth Man of the Year is getting his first real look for Team USA and he impressed Krzyzewski with his feel for the game and his basketball intelligence. With players like Dwyane Wade and, eventually, Bryant on their way out, he figures to be a national team mainstay going forward.


Chris Paul -- age 27 -- Los Angeles Clippers: A minor thumb injury forced Paul from practice on Friday, although it's not expected to be anything serious. He was slowed by a naggging groin injury during the playoffs so it's been awhile since we've seen Paul play to the best of his abilities. He'll fill a play-making role for Team USA given the bevy of A-list scoring options that will surround him.


Russell Westbrook -- age 23 -- Oklahoma City Thunder: The explosive, relentless Westbrook will bring his constantly attacking style off of Team USA's bench. Bryant said Friday he envisions Westbrook plugging the reserve scorer's role left by Dwyane Wade's absence due to a knee injury. Despite an often spectacular playoffs stretch and top-shelf play during the 2010 World Championships in Turkey, there's a decent chance the rest of the world isn't ready for him.


Deron Williams -- age 28 -- Brooklyn Nets: Like Paul, Williams will play the facilitator's role. Team USA is emphasizing up-tempo play and pick-and-rolls, two areas where Williams can excel. He's sidelined from live play until his new 5-year, $98 million contract with the Nets goes final on July 11.


Forwards


Carmelo Anthony -- age 28 -- New York Knicks: Of the returning members of the 2008 squad, Anthony's role is the least clear. He's facing a logjam at his position thanks to James and Durant and he is coming off an up-and-down season with the Knicks, in which he drew criticism for his ball-stopping and which saw Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni, a Team USA assistant, resign. Still, Anthony's finishing ability was of paramount importance in Beijing and he should be able to find plenty of minutes when Team USA switches to smaller looks.


Kevin Durant -- age 23 -- Oklahoma City Thunder: Arguably the world's second-best player, Durant comes to Team USA smarting from a loss to James' Heat in the 2012 Finals just weeks ago. Ever the professional, he spent the first day of practice explaining how Team USA functioned so well because egos are tossed aside and he sounded eager to win his first Gold Medal. Expect the NBA's leading scorer to be a focal point of the offense.


Blake Griffin -- age 23 -- Los Angeles Clippers: Griffin missed out on the 2010 World Championships because of a knee injury and is poised to take his high-flying, gravity-defying game to the international stage. Not known as a premier defender and with limited range, he'll likely be used as a deep reserve, although Team USA can use his rebounding ability.


Andre Iguodala -- age 28 -- Philadelphia 76ers: One of the NBA's premier perimeter defenders, Iguodala fills a valuable niche as a lockdown guy who can complement some of the roster's score-first wings.


LeBron James -- age 27 -- Miami Heat: The biggest star in the basketball galxy and the best player on the planet, James heads to London at the peak of his powers and fresh off his first title. He seems at ease with his Team USA teammates and is clearly the central personality off the court. He'll be asked to do it all for Team USA and could potentially play all five positions during the Olympics. He said on Friday that he is ready to embrace the challenge.


Kevin Love -- age 23 -- Minnesota Timberwolves: Love's game has improved and expanded by leaps and bounds in recent years and his outside shooting prowess could be a deadly weapon and match-up nightmare for teams in the Olympics. Expect him to swing up to center at times to make full use of his elite rebounding and outlet-passing. Indeed, there's a 100 percent chance that one of his patented touchdown passes finds itself in a highlight loop nxt month.


Centers


Tyson Chandler -- age 29 -- New York Knicks: This defense and rebounding specialist simply makes every team that he plays for better. He'll be key in matching up with Spain's length and his shot-blocking ability will dissuade opponents from attacking USA's interior. The knock on Chandler has been foul troubles and he'll need to play smart without any real positional depth behind him.


Alternates


Anthony Davis -- age 19 -- New Orleans Hornets: The 2012 NBA Draft's No. 1 pick sprained his ankle just before Team USA minicamp opened, putting his availability into question for the next few weeks. On Friday, Team USA chairman Jerry Colangelo questioned whether he had the "physicality" to compete at the moment. As the most promising young big man since Dwight Howard, Davis figures to be a Team USA regular for the next decade.


Rudy Gay -- age 25 -- Memphis Grizzlies: He would have been a big, long, athletic wing on a team full of them, Gay would mostly be injury insurance. His range and height make him a tough cover for the international competition but he probably would have done most of his work waiving towels.


Eric Gordon -- age 23 -- New Orleans Hornets (restricted free agent): Despite being in the middle of ongoing contract negotiations, Gordon impressed Krzyzewski by showing up on Friday and agreeing to compete in all 5-on-5 drills. A knockdown shooter with the abilty to create his own shot, Gordon hasn't seen much court time recently due to a knee injury that sidelined him for much of last season.


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Basketball Match Olympics London 2012
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