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Canada remained unbeaten as they inflicted a 4-0 humbling of TT in their women clash of the Hockey Federation (FIH) World League Round One at the National Hockey Centre, Tacarigua, yesterday.

TT started well, enjoying most of the possession in the first ten minutes and in the process coming close on two occasions. However, Canada started to pick up their tempo and eventually broke the deadlock in the 14th minute as Thea Culley finished a pass from the right side of the circle to make it 1-0.

TT won the first penalty corner of the encounter, but the resulting shot was saved by the Canadian goalkeeper Kaitlyn Williams. They then had another chance a minute later, however, Kristin Thompson could not get the ball past the advancing goalkeeper.

The local hockey women were made to pay at the other end as Poonam Sandhu finished a fine solo run to put the visitors up 2-0 in the 28th minute before Brienne Stairs tapped in a minute before the halftime whistle to give her team a decisive 3-0 advantage.

Canada came out strong in the second period and dominated their hosts easily. It came as no surprise that they extended their lead through Caashia Karringten who made it 4-0 in the 45th minute.

The Canadians could have added a couple more goals had it not been for some good saves from Petal Derry in the TT goal. TT awoke from their sleep in the last five minutes with four good runs but they were not able to muster any goals.

TT will play Barbados on Saturday in their final match needing a win to cement their place in the next round.

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

GEORGE BOVELL III, Trinidad and Tobago’s veteran swimmer, is eyeing gold in the FINA World Championships next month.

Bovell returned home yesterday from capturing 16 medals in the FINA/Arena World Cup — seven gold and nine silver. The 29-year-old admitted that he will have no time for rest, as he will be in the gym at the Hasely Crawford Stadium, Mucurapo, today and, “in the next few weeks, I’ll be looking to return home with a gold medal.”

He admitted, “I felt defeated after I failed to get a medal at the London Olympics” — he placed seventh in the men’s 50-metre freestyle.

“It took a lot for me to recover from that, but I went to Doha (in Qatar), did well and everything fell into place after that.” He pointed out that he had the support, via the Internet, of his coach Anil Roberts (the Sports Minister), “when everyone else had their manager, coaches and technical staff.”

Bovell also highlighted the fact that he had to seek visas, on his own, to enter Russia and China to compete at the respective World Cup meets but felt proud that his efforts did not go to waste. He also made a plea for corporate Trinidad and Tobago to support sport. “I do not have a sponsor from Trinidad and Tobago and it will be nice to have corporate TT supporting the sportsmen, such as Keshorn Walcott, Marc Burns, Njisane Phillip and others,” he said.

By Joel Bailey

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

Its now an established tradition on the local calender that the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC) Annual Awards ceremony is held on the 29th of December.This year  the 18th Annual Awards ceremony will be held on Saturday 29th December at the National Academy For the Performing Arts(Theatre 2) at 6pm. Under the distinguished Patronage of their Excellencies Professor George Maxwell Richards, President of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago and Dr Jean Ramjohn- Richards.

The TTOC will present its Sportsman and Sports woman of the year Awards. Sports Personality of the Year,Junior Sportsman and  Sportswoman of the year and the Alexander B Chapman award .

The TTOC has already sent out invitations and  preparations for the gala event are "well in hand" confirmed Larry Romany, TTOC president.

" The annual awards ceremony in an Olympic year always has an additional sense of occasion and anticipation. This year is no exception. We are well advanced in respect of all the necessary arrangements. I am looking forward to the event . Its always a very  special evening for the local Olympic movement . " said Romany

Qatar Olympic Committee (QOC) general secretary Sheikh Saoud Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani (pictured) has promised that the country will return to bid for the Olympics and Paralympics, most likely in 2024, because their ultimate goal is to host the Games.


Doha were eliminated from the race to host the 2020 Games earlier this year, alongside Baku, as the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Executive Board decided only to shortlist the trio of Istanbul, Madrid and Tokyo.


The decision to remove Doha from the race by the IOC drew criticism after the city had been given the green light to host the Games outside the normal window and in October to avoid the searing summer temperatures in Qatar.

But despite the setback, Sheikh Saoud said they will be back to bid for the greatest sporting event on earth to go along with the FIFA World Cup, which Qatar has been controversially awarded to host in 2022. 

"That question [of whether Qatar will bid for the 2024 Games] was one that was asked straight after we were disqualified from the 2020 race," Sheikh Saoud told insidethegames here at the Aspire4Sport Conference.

"But the Emir [the ruler of Qatar] made it clear that our objective is to stage the Games

"So we will continue on that path and we will continue to bid.

"Every time we bid, we are listening and learning to see how we can make our bid stronger.

"Our 2020 bid was stronger than our 2016 bid because the IOC Executive Board accepted our plan to host the Games in the October window, which didn't happen the first time.

"We think our next bid will be even stronger because of what we have learnt from 2020 and we think that each time we bid, we can get closer.

"If we can keep doing that, one day the dream will happen to host the Olympics in the Middle East."

Sheikh Saoud's comments came as he unveiled the Qatar Sports Venue Master Plan (QSVMP) to stage major events in the country.

Two years in the making, the plan audited 62 existing sports venues for usability and proposed 11 new ones, in addition to eight venues originally planned by the QOC.

The new venues planned are distributed over five zones around Lusail City, Qatar Foundation, Aspire Zone, Old Airport Area and Qatar University and they could directly help with Qatar's next Olympic and Paralympic bid.

"Our focus since the beginning of this project has been legacy and ensuring that we avoid white elephants," said Sheikh Saoud.

"We have watched countries build large venues and struggle later with what to do with them.

"So our team has worked backwards, thinking first about how these venues can be of use in the future before planning their use during major sporting events.

"Our ultimate goal is to host the Olympic Games and we feel this project will help us achieve that goal."

By Tom Degun at the Aspire Dome in Doha

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe told the London Assembly here today of his "frustration" at the lack of cross-party initiative in providing pupils at state schools with better sports provision, and joined his chief executive Paul Deighton in defending the Games organisers of a lack of transparency in its ticketing operation.

Coe (pictured top, right), who now works in a Cabinet Committee dealing with Olympic legacy, which is chaired by Prime Minister David Cameron, was responding to a question from City and East London Assembly member John Biggs, asking what was the one thing he would have done differently in terms of his experience at London 2012.

He said he regretted the approach taken to school sport ahead of the Games, although stopped short of criticising the actions of Education Secretary Michael Gove in controversially cutting £162 million ($257 million/€202 million) in ring-fenced funding to support the national school network that allows PE specialists to work in schools.

These actions, which were partially revoked, caused fierce debate during the Olympics and Paralympics about how best to provide young people with sporting support and facilities.

"It is frustrating still to have this as a key area of discussion when we should be driving this part of the legacy forward," said Coe, who was making his last report to the Assembly in his role as London 2012 chairman.

"I wish we had approached the issue about school sport and sustainable school sport in the state system in a more consensual way.

"I find it frustrating that off the back of the sport we have witnessed, the role models that have emerged, that we are still discussing the future of school sport in the state sector."

Acknowledging that Tessa Jowell, the former Shadow Olympics Minister, has called for a cross-party, 10-year plan for school sport, Coe added: "Figuring out with a grown-up, cross-party consensus how we deliver good quality physical education – and this is not a knock to any particular political party – we need to deal with this in a grown-up way.

"We are going to need to create space outside the school timetable for sport and recognise the worth of physical education teachers in the same way as we did when we needed to improve the quality of maths and science teachers."

Coe and Deighton (pictured top, left) were criticised by the London Assembly for failing to hand over all data relating to the breakdown of tickets by session and price point.

Instead, London 2012 produced a breakdown of the various price points by sport in an attempt to prove that they were roughly equally divided.

However, London Assembly members remained frustrated that they could not tell what the breakdown of tickets was for individual finals.

London 2012 also published details of how many tickets were made available under its "pay your age scheme" on a sport-by-sport basis.

Of the 639,777 tickets sold, more than a third - 255,404 - were for football.

While 50,870 were for athletics in the main stadium, only 839 were for the ceremonies and 1,972 for swimming.

On the subject of the ticketing process, Biggs told Coe and Deighton: "There was a perception that it was less than transparent, and that a lot of ordinary people - not wealthy people - wanted to get lower priced tickets, and that they didn't game the system effectively.

"That they lost out simply because they applied for what they wanted to go to and they didn't get the ticket, whereas someone down the road applied for 27 sessions and got a handful.

"The perception was that it was a sort of scatter-gun that won, or a deep pocket that won, and the promise to make tickets available for people of more modest means didn't really work, and in particular that there was a degree of, if you like, hoarding by people who applied for a lot of tickets which meant that other people did not get them."

Assembly member Stephen Knight pressed Deighton on the issue of providing full ticket data after the chief executive had declared: "Did we deliver all the things we said about tickets?

"The short answer to this is – yes, in every respect and at every level."

Knight said: "Given in your report to the assembly's Economy, Culture and Sports Committee on the 15th of February, when you were asked whether there would be a disproportionate number of higher priced tickets at the most popular events, and the answer was 'No, there would not be.'

"At all sports sessions, and I stress the word 'sessions' because it was your word, would have broadly the same number of tickets in each price band.

"Now in order to test that commitment we really do need to see the proportion of tickets for each session.

"So even if it is only published on your website I think it would answer the question.

"It is important for the public to be able to see the data for each session and each price band in order to see that that commitment has been met.

"What you have published today is the aggregate figures for sport and a few selected figures for a small number of sessions.

"When are you going to publish the full list for every session of the proportion of tickets sold at each price point?

"Because I think that's what the public has been expecting."

Deighton responded: "We have so much data.

"What we tried to do is give you information rather than a data dump.

"We tried to aggregate it so you could see the wood for the trees.

"You can come into our office we will go right through the database and you will see every ticket for every person.

"Believe me I'm not trying to hide it, we are trying to put it in a form which is intelligible."

Knight added: "I appreciate that, but if you don't publish the whole set of data there will be those who will accuse you of publishing selective data – that's the concern."

Coe defended the pricing policy, comparing it favourably to Premier League football and the Rolling Stones playing at the O2 Arena.

Deighton insisted: "Nobody has ever filled up venues like this in the history of sport.

"This was a world-beating success."

Both men insisted that pricing of tickets had not been an issue with the public, with the primary concern having to do with availability.

And they added that the gaps which had been evident at venues in the opening days of the Games were down not to a failure in ticket sales, but to the mechanism upon which the International Olympic Committee (IOC) insisted whereby a proportion of seats had to be reserved for the media, National Olympic Committees, international federations and sponsors.

By Mike Rowbottom at City Hall in London

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Three years after parting ways with the T&T Football Federation (TTFF), Raymond Tim Kee was elected president of the local governing body for the sport unopposed, at the congress, hosted at Cascadia Hotel, St Ann’s, yesterday.
Tim Kee, the only nominated candidate, acquired the position without receiving a vote, following former national cricketer and sports analyst Colin Murray’s decision to step down nine days prior to the election.
Lennox Watson, formerly the federation’s interim president, also opted out of the race. Watson took up the temporary portfolio as president, following the resignation of former long-standing chief Oliver Camps in October, last year, after 19 years at the helm.
Eastern Football Association (EFA) chairman Wayne Cunningham described the congress as the best attended he has witnessed. All member associations were present, with the exception of the National Primary Schools Football League.
Tim Kee subsequently addressed the stakeholders and assured them of his commitment to serve in an “inclusive” capacity.
“Under my stewardship, no voice will be silenced; no idea suppressed and no thought expressed will be left unconsidered,” said the former TTFF first vice-president.
Tim Kee said that he will not pretend to be oblivious of the federation’s reputation, but will instead work toward “mending the breaches”.
“Like the proverbial ostrich, I am not prepared to bury my head in the sand at what has been both the recent and antecedent memory of our federation, but as president, what I am prepared to do is trod the beaten paths that would bring about healing to those who have been wounded, reconciliation for those who have been ostracised and redemption for the many who have been left behind.”
Tim Kee offered a response to Murray who warned him against victimisation of those who were in his support.
“My friend, I have heard your warning and let me allay all fears that nothing that Raymond Tim Kee does is ever marked by vindictiveness.”
He also dismissed the perception of being a minion saying: “Those who know me within football before, know that Raymond Tim Kee is his own man and a fully made one as well. I am not here to be dictated to by anyone. I am here to facilitate open discussion and develop discourse that would assist in ensuring that the TTFF is the most dominant and successful Federation in the Concacaf... That is my raison d’être as president.”
Following his appointment, the new president is expected to face immediate challenges, not limited to an unsettled bonus dispute between the federation and 13 players of the T&T World Cup 2006 squad, and mending of a disjointed relationship between the TTFF and the Ministry of Sport, which has resulted in an inconsistency in funding.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Senior men’s national team and Harvard coach, Larry Mendez, yesterday admitted that the 45–12 result which gave his team victory over Royalians and its first ever T&T Rugby Union title, was much more difficult than many thought it was.
“Royalians came out to play,” said Mendez, who appeared more relieved than elated after the curtain closer on Saturday.
“The score was levelled for 20 minutes and we were on the back foot. I had to make two changes due to injuries and that made it difficult for the team to settle. But, settle we did to register the win.”
The Harvard Club dethroned Caribs as champions of the T&T Rugby Football Union (T&TRFU) Toyota Championship Division, to end its 40-year drought of a major title.
The match was staged at Harvard Pitch, Queen’s Park Savannah, with Harvard taking the bonus point win to finish the league campaign two points ahead of the “Beer Boys”, which completed its schedule six days earlier.
Mendez, who orchestrated a three-year development programme at the beginning of last season, said that his emphasis on strength and conditioning proved to be the difference between the two teams.
“There is no team that trains harder than Harvard in local rugby. I have tried to develop a fitness ethic and culture. It has won us the Marcus Minshall and the Toyota championship.”
Harvard’s Championship triumph came a week after the Tragerete Road-based club defeated Northern 25–11 to seal the Marcus Minshall Knockout Cup for the first time.
With action turning to the 7s format, coach Mendez warned his players not to become too settled as they seek to secure a whitewash of trophies.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

The quality which identifies the greatest of sportsmen, from Ali to Federer, is their ability to seemingly operate in time and space of their own invention. In the modern maelstrom of international rugby, Dan Carter can still float and then still sting, as if in an unhurried world of his own. So it was that Scotland, for all their splendid spirit and commitment, were suspended and speared in Carter time here. It was not just the metronomic accuracy with the boot, nor the exquisite timing of his passing that reminded Murrayfield why he remains the 21st century game’s nigh-perfect 10.

More than that, it was the feeling that Carter was controlling every facet of New Zealand's matchless game behind the scrum like some master puppeteer, just as when Xavi is conducting Barcelona’s orchestra at the Nou Camp.

But even Barcelona can misfire on occasion as the whole of Scotland discovered earlier in the week. The idea that their rugby men, for all their spirit, could follow Celtic’s wholly improbable midweek lead was dead in the water once Carter decided it was time for him to remind everyone that rugby life could be beginning again for him at 30. Perhaps the worst thing that could have happened to Scotland on this hugely enjoyable afternoon was for him to malfunction with the pass that offered the hosts an interception gift for the early lead.

After just missing the last-second dropped goal attempt that caused the All Blacks to lose their chance to keep their 16-game winning streak going against the Australians in Brisbane last month, could he have been mislaying his Midas touch?

The response was one befitting a champion. Within minutes, not in the slightest cowed and still dancing and daring on that high line, he was purring into attack again with devastating effect, a step inside floundering hands enabling him to make 30 yards at a stroke and then, within two phases, making Geoff Cross and Ross Ford look like hippos vainly trying to snag an eel before putting Israel Dagg away.

From there, welcome to the gliding master class. Twenty-one points, nine successful kicks out of 10, 12 carries, 79 metres made, six defenders beaten. Except, like all sport’s great artists, the fun was not in the bare statistics, however impressive; it was all just in seeing a master at work.

A perfectionist, too. Even with the game long wrapped up, you could see him muttering to himself in irritation when his poor pass meant he failed to unleash Julian Savea for his fourth direct try assist of the afternoon.

Andy Robinson, the defeated coach, could only bemoan the fact that if you give a once-in-a-generation playmaker the time and space to work his wiles, especially with the breadth of talent outside him, you are lost. “He’s a fantastic player. It’s the quality of getting to a rhythm; he sucks you in. Pass, pass, pass - and then next time he goes,” sighed Robinson.

Richie McCaw, Carter’s equally splendid partner in New Zealand’s ‘Old Firm’, could only enthuse, “It’s great to see him playing like that”.

Between them, whether through goalkicking or piracy, they extinguished the fires that the Scots, inspired by Richie Gray’s magnificent drive, often promised.

When Carter and McCaw join forces, the win percentage for the All Blacks is even higher than normal, more than 90 per cent. This was the 81st time the pair have played on the same New Zealand side and they have known defeat together only seven times. Having both on board simultaneously, especially with new stars being blooded, represents the ultimate comfort blanket.

McCaw was, as ever, a tireless pirate, confounding the referee and infuriated Scottish pundits alike, but it was noticeable how his best scrambling work was delivered when his men were most in need, under the cosh soon after the break.

To the end, the dynamic duo were still delivering, McCaw first winning the ball on the floor from a line-out to set up a princely dummy and off-load for Ben Smith to dance over for the last try.

The sight reminded you there was perhaps just one thing missing in the All Blacks’ World Cup triumph on home soil last year. Somehow, if Carter, sadly injured throughout, had been there to join McCaw on the victory podium, it would have felt just right.

Yet he still has time. Each time, he and McCaw, now 31, turn up for these November internationals here, you keep wondering if it might be the last time we have the pleasure - and pain - to witness their greatness.

But both are threatening to hang around until 2015 to try to spearhead New Zealand’s attempt to become the first nation ever to successfully defend the Webb Ellis Cup back here in Britain. A talent of Carter’s magnitude, you cannot help thinking, still demands the ultimate reward

The candour and unflinching honesty of former acting president of the Football Federation (TTFF) president Lennox Watson at a press conference last week, was a breath of fresh air.
Regardless of polarised views, Watson, who on Sunday gave way to Raymond Tim Kee, laid out the reality of past and present governance in local football.
The truth offends so it ought not to be any surprise that there will be attempts to discredit or challenge what he said.
Some pundits hold the view that it was too little too late as Watson should have spoken up before, but timing is everything. Watson in his good judgment believed that last week was the right time to say what he had to say. The message is what should resonate.
Football does not stand alone, all national sport organisations (NSOS) simply must get better.
Significant improvement is needed. We are still using old and traditional methods and thinking in the hope of addressing contemporary issues, concerns and challenges.
If we don’t accept that sports leadership, administration and governance is failing our clubs, communities and sportsmen and women, then we are so far away from solving the problems blighting local sport that is not funny.
The down fall of local sport is a sense of triumphalism and self-delusion. When we achieve success, we believe that we have arrived and that we are much better than we really are.
That self-delusion has caused under achievement and the failure to sustain success seems to evade almost every single organisation. The top down method of leadership and sport administration is no longer effective and efficient.
In the modern environment it has failed miserably. One and done. We achieve success once. It is exceedingly difficult for any organisation to perform beyond the vision, imagination, potential or limitations of its leaders. Leaders set the tone, strategic direction, priorities and standards. They provide the inspiration, motivation and impetus. It takes more than strong opinion, feelings, getting carried away or misplaced loyalties.
Sport has its own nuances and subtleties. The right knowledge, commitment, skill and experience ought not to be discounted. Current International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Jacque Rogge once said: “because sport is based on ethics and fair competition, the governance of sport should fulfill standards in terms of transparency, democracy and accountability”.
It is important that those who care deeply about sport in T&T see it as their duty, obligation and responsibility to demand higher standards of sport leadership and governance and a sport governance culture that insists on the highest level of competence, integrity and ethical standards. There must be zero tolerance for unethical and undemocratic sport governance.” In 2008, the IOC defined the universal principles of good governance for the Olympic and sport movement and these were fully endorsed at the 2009 Olympic Congress in Copenhagen.
Principles recommended included: Members of the executive committee should be chosen on the basis of their ability, competence, quality leadership capacity, integrity and experience.
That NSOs develop, adapt and implement ethical principles and rules. The autonomy of sport must be maintained and preserved.
Government ought not to run sport or micro manage its future. The relationship should be facilitative and complementary with government and sport working together towards the same goals.
Issues of conflict of interest cannot be swept under the table. No one with a personal or business interest in any matter should be involved in the decision making and adequate procedures should be established so as to avoid conflict of interests.
Building on the insights offered by the universal principles requires more than reading and comprehension. A culture of zero tolerance for unethical governance and leadership requires a change in thinking if local sport is to become a hotbed of appropriate structures, processes, systems and behaviours that help NSOs and sport run better.
Zero tolerance is the start point, closely followed by the determination to act and live by good governance principles.
Brian Lewis is the Honorary Secretary General of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee http// www.ttoc.org. The views expressed are not necessarily those of the TTOC.
-Brian Lewis
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Flooding today forced the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to temporarily close its headquarters in Lausanne and relocate staff while it is cleaned up.

An old water pipe burst, damaging archives and knocking out communications, IOC director general Christophe De Kepper said. 

The pipe, which had been weakened with age, had burst early yesterday near the IOC headquarters on the banks of Lake Geneva and large amounts of water had gushed into the basement.

In some places, the water stood as high as two metres, claimed De Kepper.
Around 20 to 30 per cent of the IOC's recent paper archives had been damaged, he estimated.

But none of the organisation's historic archives had been destroyed since they are housed separately at the IOC Museum.

The server rooms in the headquarters basement had meanwhile all been flooded, disabiling the building's internet and telephone connections.

Some 150 of the organisation's staff were relocated to another IOC building in the city.

A camping site and several restaurants were also flooded when the pipe burst, and the main highway was closed for several hours yesterday, civil protection services said in a statement.

Around 100 people, drawn from the fire brigade, city water and road services, civil protection units and police, rapidly arrived on site and managed to halt the leak and begin pumping out the flooded buildings.

By Duncan Mackay

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Germany's Thomas Bach has said talk of Jacques Rogge's successor as International Olympic Committee (IOC) President is still premature, despite being widely considered as favourite for the prestigious position when it becomes vacant next year.


Rogge succeeded Juan Antonio Samaranch as IOC President in 2001 and is currently serving his third and final term in the role.


He will officially step down in September 2013 at the 125th IOC Session in Buenos Aires, where a new IOC President will be elected.

Speculation is increasing as to who will replace the Belgian and Bach, a current IOC vice-president, is said to be leading the pack.

But the 68-year-old President of the German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB), who won gold in fencing at the Montreal 1976 Olympics, said the subject should not be discussed publically at this stage.

"It is an honour to think that you could be elected for this important and challenging position and that colleagues would talk about you in this way," Bach told insidethegames.

"But we must remember that our current President still has over 10 months to go in the role and that he still has lots of work to do.

"I have been elected as his vice-president so I will support him fully until the end of his mandate.

"It would not be loyal to start a full public discussion now about his successor.

"Everything in life has its time and we must wait and see but now is not the time for the discussion."

Bach, who has been an IOC member since 1991, added that whoever the next President is will be talking over an organisation in fantastic shape following the huge success of London 2012, which is widely viewed as one of the greatest Games in history.

"London 2012 was great not only for London and for Great Britain but for the Olympic Movement around the world," he said.

"The great success of the Games has put the Movement in a very strong position going forward.

"That will really help future host cities so I think that London has provided a good platform for a successful Sochi Winter Games in 2014 and a great Rio Summer Games in 2016.

"London must be congratulated for their great work."

By Tom Degun

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Sepp Blatter admitted today that he had made mistakes during his 14-year FIFA Presidency but said he would not have got where he is without taking risks.

In a deep-thinking and reflective address here, Blatter (pictured top) revealed nothing new about FIFA policy, instead adopting a philosophical approach as he looked back on his often controversial tenure at the helm of world football – and his life before that.

Revealing that he was born prematurely and that he might even have died, Blatter, who has come under considerable pressure in the past 18 months because of a succession of corruption scandals at the heart of FIFA, said he quickly learned that fighting against adversity and taking controversial decisions were part of life both as a human being and in business.

"Those who never take risks will never have a chance," said Blatter.

"There is a saying that it is better to regret something you have done than something you haven't done.

"I may have made mistakes in both my private and professional life but I have learnt from them.

"The important thing is to make decisions yourself – even if it's the wrong one.

"Winning is easy.

"But not everyone can accept defeat."

Blatter revealed that had he lost out to Lennart Johansson for the FIFA Presidency in 1998, he had no idea what would have happened to him.

"I don't know what I would have done," he said.

"I had no plan B but I believed I would win.

"The next big challenge I had was the [2010] World Cup in South Africa.

"You have seen the result."

Afterwards Blatter insisted to reporters his address was not a veiled attack on Mohamed Bin Hammam, once the most powerful man in Asian football who has been fighting a series of FIFA bans following last year's cash-for-votes scandal when he was accused of bribing Caribbean members.

Bin Hammam has consistently maintained there is a conspiracy against him and has accused the Blatter regime of being behind a move to keep him out of world football for having the audacity to stand against the 76-year-old Swiss for the FIFA Presidency.

But Blatter insisted his comments had nothing to do with the Bin Hammam situation and was more about his own experiences.

Often accused of being too autocratic, Blatter insisted he was anything but.

"My message was simply that you have to take calculated risks," said Blatter.

"I have lost at different times in my life and I wanted to transmit the message that you have to believe in what you are doing.

"I don't want people to speak in 200 years about Blatter the philosopher but I do believe that if you take a risk, you have to be prepared to lose.

"I'm not speaking about any personal thing.

"All I am saying is sometimes you make mistakes and have to suffer the consequences.

"I have always been prepared to lose."

By Andrew Warshaw at the International Football Arena Conference in Zurich

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Neon Trackers “A” captured both male and female club championship titles when the Third Annual Mayaro Secondary School 5K International Relay was run off in bright sunshine through the streets of Mayaro on Sunday.
In the most popular victory of the day, Mayaro Secondary defended their crown as champions of the male division among secondary schools, with Toco Secondary pulling off victory in the female division. St Thomas (Mayaro) RC registered a double in the primary schools category, taking both male and female titles.
The race is organised by Mayaro Secondary School sports committee, headed by teacher Edmund Berazhar. It is fully sponsored by energy company BP Trinidad and Tobago, whose home community is Mayaro. Consisting of five legs of one kilometre each, the road race kicked off at the bpTT Mayaro Resource Centre, with the finishing line at the Mayaro Secondary School.
A record total of 55 teams, representing primary and secondary schools and athletic clubs from across the country, participated in the growing event with hundreds of spectators cheering on their favourite teams.
Minister of Community Development and Mayaro MP, Winston Peters, praised the organisers for making the third annual event “a tremendous success”. He commended bpTT for its beneficial partnership with Mayaro and urged the runners to “take up the athletic mantle and run with it”.
Representing bpTT, Rene-Marie Wilson told the participants that their training, discipline and sportsmanship made them all champions and congratulated the winners on their outstanding achievements. She said bpTT was proud of its partnership with the Mayaro Secondary School in several areas of activity.
The first team to cross the finish line, Neon Trackers “A” male team, comprising Kern Alexis, Jody Smith, Sterling Paul, Kyle Stanley and Sherlon Mason, stopped the clock at 15 minutes, 21.7 seconds. Their female team, of Dominic Williams, Kernisha Spann, Elia Neon, Sparkle McKnight and Claudia Antoine, clinched the double victory with a clocking of 20 minutes, 5.2 seconds.
In the secondary schools male division, Mayaro Secondary defended their crown through Brandon Modeste, Jordan Lares, George Lezama, Jeremiah Lezama and Jameel Joseph. They clocked 16 minutes, 4.1 seconds. In the female category, champions Toco Secondary clocked 20 minutes, 22.3 seconds, paced by Donica Antoine, Mickayla Ottley, Kermisha Serapio, Eliesha Serapio and Daniella Barker.
St Thomas (Mayaro) RC took the primary school male title in 22 minutes, 14.1 seconds, with runners Kareem Dickson, Decklon Marcelle, Brandon Stewart, Quaway Phimp and Vernon Williams. They clocked 28 minutes, 26.6 seconds to capture the female crown through Kayana Lemessy, Kimberly Taylor, Anela Panchoo, Crissy Mitchell and Karlessa Dickson.
RESULTS
Clubs/Teams
Male
1—Neon Trackers A
2—Penal Athletic Club
3— UWI Track & Field A
4—Air Bon Sonics AC.
Female
1—Neon Trackers A
2—Abilene Wildcats
3—Neon Trackers B
4—Toco Titans
Secondary Schools
Male
1—Mayaro Secondary
2—Toco Secondary
3—Hillview College Juniors
4—Sixth Form Government.
Female
1—Toco Secondary
2—Matura Secondary
3—El Dorado East
4—Mayaro Secondary.
Primary Schools
Male
1—St Thomas (Mayaro) RC
2—Mayaro Government
3—Brazil RC
4—St Therese RC
Female
1—St Thomas (Mayaro) RC
2—Ortoire RC
3—St Therese Preparatory.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Domestic sponsorship contracts and record revenues from the sale of almost 11 million tickets for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games helped organisers to reach their target of raising £2.4 billion to help cover the costs of staging the events, it was revealed on Tuesday.

The details were released in a written submission by London 2012 organising committee (LOCOG) chief executive Paul Deighton to the London Assembly, who will today question LOCOG and the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) about the Games and their legacy to the English capital. Deighton’s submission detailed that London 2012’s ‘lifetime’ revenues of £2.4 billion were mainly accounted for by domestic sponsorship of £746 million. This included income from deals with more than 40 companies, including top-tier Olympic partners Adidas, BMW, BP, British Airways, BT, EDF and Lloyds TSB.

Revenue from ticket sales exceeded forecasts at a record £659 million after near sell-outs crowds for both the Olympics and Paralympics. A total of 10.99 million tickets were sold across both events, with Deighton stating that the majority of the 319,000 unsold tickets were for the early stages of the Olympic football competitions. The rest of London 2012’s revenues can be broken down as £609 million from the International Olympic Committee’s contribution; £200 million in other income from sources such as commissions, asset sales and sponsor hospitality; £111 million from the Paralympic grant and £85 million in merchandising and licensing.

“Our core revenues are forecast at £2.4 billion and our core costs are forecast at £2.4 billion,” said Deighton. “Throughout this period we have made clear our aim for LOCOG to break even, and we remain confident that our revenues will meet our costs.” The UK Government’s final quarterly economic report last month stated that London 2012 is set to come in £377 million under the revised budget of £9.298 billion assigned for infrastructure development for the Games. The overall cost of the Games was forecast at £8.921 billion.

In addition, £103 million of contingency is being held to cover the remaining risks in the programme, such as the retrofit of the Olympic Village for legacy use and closing out around 2,000 Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) and LOCOG contracts. In total, the Government stated that £480 million of uncommitted contingency still remained within the budget.

By Matt Cutler

Source: www.sportbusiness.com

 

When Lord Coe was duly anointed as the new chair of the British Olympic Association (BOA) last week, did we hear the trumpeting of a white elephant in the room?

Just a few hours before it had been revealed that the £486 million ($772 million/€608 million) Olympic Stadium will be mothballed at least until 2015 – and possibly later.

So, it will lay dormant for another three or four years while £200 million ($318 million/€250 million) – double the original estimate – is spent on converting it into a multisport venue with retractable seating over the immoveable running track, a feature now recognised as essential for a football tenant – most probably West Ham United.

There is even the possibility that, if the refurbishment is not completed on schedule the Stadium, reduced to 60,000 capacity, would not be ready to host the IAAF World Athletics Championships in 2017, or any other athletics event.

No wonder Coe said tersely: "As a vice-president of the IAAF I will be watching the situation closely."

There is no doubt that this is a serious blow to Coe's promised legacy of 2012, the glorious drama of the iconic Olympics and Paralympics now threatening a farcical postscript.

Moreover, the question of who will pay for the upgrade remains unresolved, with West Ham, some £80 million ($127 million/€100 million) in debt, saying they would contribute only £10 million ($16 million/€13 million) on the premise that the landlord should provide facilities.

The present hiatus underlines the own goal scored seven years ago, when, despite knowing the Stadium's only viable future was with a national sport like football, the successful Games bid team rejected the idea of installing Stade de France-style retractable seating, which in that more clement economic climate could have been included for little more than the cost of West Ham's striker from Mali.

Was this because the bid team did not wish to imitate anything their French rivals had done? If so it was, as they say, l'incroyable faux pas.

The possibility of the taxpayer having to subsidise a Premier League club is causing some angst at Westminster where the Shadow Sports Minister Clive Efford told the insidethegames: "These delays can only mean more public money is spent on maintaining the Stadium. I would rather see this money go to community sport."

If the opposition sports spokesman is a little coy of saying more it is surely understandable. For Labour were in Government when the original decision was made on the shape and size of the stadium.

Those influencing that decision included not only Tory peer Lord Coe but Labour Secretary of State Tessa Jowell and leftie former London Mayor Ken Livingstone.

The Games bid team clearly was anxious not to make the cost of the stadium seem exorbitant knowing that that the then Chancellor, Gordon Brown, was sceptical about the whole project. Indeed, I am reliably informed that when then bid was won he held his head in his hands and groaned:"Oh my God, what have we let ourselves in for?"

Knowing that football and athletics are such uncomfortable bedfellows when a track surrounds the pitch, incorporating a roll-over seating plan from the start would now be seen as sensibly cost-effective in the light of the uncertainties enveloping the Stadium today.

A deal with a London football club would have been a no brainer in that situation.

The fact that the Stadium will be redundant for so long has disquieting echoes of the fate of several at previous Olympics, not least Beijing 2008 where they are building a shopping mall and hotel to attract major events that have been few and far between, with no sign of permanent usage by anyone.

With all this rumbling on London's Olympic Park is already beginning to resemble something of a shell of its former glory, with the spectre of a doubtful future for the Olympic Stadium looming large as the centrepiece.

But in the manner of the late Clive Dunn (Cpl Jones in Dad's Army) Coe assures us: "Don't panic!"

He dismisses the prospect of white elephants and insists this is simply a period of transformation. "It will be a thriving park. It is important to make the right decisions and not force ourselves into time frame where those decisions don't become sustainable."

Coe's lap of honour following the conclusion of the Games is expected to conclude with him being named "Man of the Year". His appointment "by acclamation" to the BOA role surely will cement his ambition to become President of the IAAF in 2015 and ultimately even, the IOC.

The sporting world is his oyster. I have even heard it rumoured that he might succeed Sepp Blatter at FIFA.

But these have been an oddly disconcerting few days for the good lord.

Apart from the Stadium controversy his new book has been strangely, and unfairly, savaged by a prissy Guardian interviewer who declared she found him "a crashing bore".

Now I have known Coe for 40 years. He may be many things but boring?

Never. How could he possibly be with the sort of life he has led?

Perhaps she didn't ask him the right questions.

Actually, his biography "Running My Life" published by Hodder & Stoughton, is a rather good read, if a bit pricey at £25 ($40/€31).

Now he faces a grilling at the London Assembly alongside his trusty right hand man at London 2012, Paul (now Lord) Deighton, Mayor Boris Johnson and Denis Hone, chief executive of the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC).

It seems odd to have a post-mortem on a Games that was far from a fatality but the London Assembly inquisitors will do their utmost to find fault, of that we can be certain. We can we equally sure that Coe will handle them will his usual aplomb.

Much of it will be nit picking over tickets and security but I suspect the nitty-gritty will surround the Stadium and in particular how much it will cost in maintenance while it lays idle.

In a similar situation the taxpayer had to fork out £1 million ($1.6 million/€1.3 million) a month before the Millennium Dome was rescued by AEG, the American entertainment corporation to become the now hugely prospering O2.

Technically, Coe is not responsible now for what happens to the Stadium, it is in the hands of the Mayor and the Legacy bods.

But as the Government's advisor on the L-word, he must have a say in the matter.

The futures of the Aquatics Centre and Velodrome are certainly secure and doubtless a suitable anchor tenant eventually will be found for the stadium.

But one wonders whether a trick is being missed here - just as it was by Coe and co seven years ago.

When the refurbishments to the permanent sports facilities are completed, could there be sufficient room in the rest of the Olympic Park to create a theme park – a London Disneyland maybe?

OK, so there was nothing Mickey Mouse about London 2012 but what an opportunity to demonstrate, as the O2 has done, that sport and the entertainment business can be a winning team.

Better that than an Olympic circus ring, complete with white elephant.

Alan Hubbard is an award-winning sports columnist for The Independent on Sunday, and a former sports editor of The Observer. He has covered a total of 16 Summer and Winter Olympics, 10 Commonwealth Games, several football World Cups and world title fights from Atlanta to Zaire.

By Alan Hubbard

Source: www.insidethegames.biz


Who'd be your footballing Newcomer of the Season? Who has sprung from relative obscurity to outright celebrity?

No doubt the likes of Michu, Santi Cazorla, Kevin Mirallas and Raheem Sterling would all receive plenty of votes.

But surely none has had a greater, more sudden impact on the current footballing landscape, nor inspired as many column inches, than a certain Peter Herbert.

It's hard to believe that just a month ago very few in the sport had even heard of The Society for Black Lawyers. Now the organisation and its chairman are front and centre of the game's discourse.

But in Herbert's case, of course, it would be wrong to mistake prominence with popularity.

In recent days, he's been described as a sensationalist member of the thought-police. Condemned as a politically-correct, naive, agenda-chasing, publicity-seeking, bandwagon-jumping, johnny-come-lately with no knowledge of the sport he criticises.

Herbert caused a stir when, last month, in the wake of John Terry being banned for just four matches after he was found guilty of racially abusing Anton Ferdinand, he revealed his role in talks over a separatist Black Footballers' Association. For many, this marked Herbert out as a divisive figure, encouraging a dangerous 'us and them' mentality.

But it was two subsequent episodes that really ensured Herbert would come under fire.

First, he reported Mark Clattenburg to the police over Chelsea's allegations the referee used a racist term towards Jon Obi Mikel. And then he described Spurs fans as 'casual racists' over their use of the 'Y-word', giving them two weeks to cease the chants before referring the matter, once again, to the police.

It's unlikely that Herbert is too bothered by all the criticism he's received as a result. This is, after all, one of the leading human rights lawyers of his generation, one of a very small number of black judges, a veteran of 30 years' worth of campaigning against institutional racism, and for greater racial equality in the criminal justice system. This is a man who's taken on opponents that make the footballing establishment look positively tame in comparison.

The son of a white mother and African father, Herbert was brought up in the Northumberland mining town of Ashington, home of the Charlton brothers. The only mixed-race child at his school, the teenage Herbert was the victim of merciless verbal and physical racial abuse, an ordeal that helps to explain his subsequent determination to speak out against discrimination at every opportunity.

Described as "exceptionally driven and robust" by one person who has worked with him, Herbert went on to become an internationally-renowned defence barrister, working on some of the most high-profile murder and terrorist cases of recent decades, representing one of the social work managers in the Victoria Climbie Inquiry, and appointed Lead Counsel by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda. Having made submissions to several Judicial Inquiries, namely the Home Affairs Select Committee on Racial Attacks in 1992 and the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry in 1998, Herbert was also a recipient of the American Bar Association's Human Rights Award.

But while Herbert may be exceptionally well qualified to talk about issues of race, many feel he's gone about it in entirely the wrong way.

Herbert's tendency to say what he thinks has got him into trouble before. In 2004 the Bar Council's disciplinary committee found him guilty of breaching its Code of Conduct which bans barristers from voicing personal opinions to the media in cases they're currently acting, a decision he called a "travesty of justice" by a "kangaroo court". Herbert was reprimanded and advised as to future conduct.

But could it be that the outspoken Herbert is in fact exactly what the game needs to shake it out of any complacency it may still have towards discrimination? Some I've spoken to in football's anti-racism movement say they agree with almost all of what Herbert says. The SBL's 10-point plan demanding football's authorities get much tougher on racism certainly strikes a chord with most people after Terry's four-match suspension, and the drawn-out process to get there.

The boycott of Kick It Out's Week of Action recently by senior black players told you all you needed to know about the frustration many feel towards the FA and PFA. While the Terry and Suarez cases provided the spark, much of their resentment lay in the sport's continuing inability to address under-representation of ethnic minorities in dugouts and boardrooms.

Some black players feel that KIO, with its shoestring budget, obvious inability to criticise the very organisations that co-fund it, and without a strong voice since the departure of former director Piara Powar, is failing to engage with them, and to speak out enough on behalf of them or their communities. Black players complain that they rarely see or hear from KIO's staff.

Herbert appeared therefore to have timed his arrival on the scene perfectly. And yet, despite their frustrations, which players have actually come out and publicly backed Herbert and his concept of a Black Players' Association? Not one.

Herbert's problem is that football isn't the Metropolitan Police or the Judiciary. It doesn't respond to his version of shock and awe. It's inherently conservative, fiercely independent, and doesn't take kindly to outsiders telling it what to do.

But while Herbert's efforts to forge an organisation to represent black players may fail, there's little doubt he's made the game stop and ask itself:

  • why there are so many black players, but so few black managers or directors;
  • why the notion of reporting an allegation of racist abuse to the police without witnessing it yourself is, according to some, so outlandish, even when the landmark MacPherson Report enshrines the right of people to do exactly that;
  • why so many think it so wrong for Chelsea to complain to the FA once one of their players has come to them with an allegation of racial abuse (does the fact that it involves a referee mean it should just be swept under the carpet?);
  • why the mere concept of a body that would speak on behalf of a group of players that feel under-represented is regarded with such horror;
  • why asking fans to cease chanting a term that many Jews find highly offensive is seen as unnecessary interference;
  • why those in the grassroots of the game who complain to their County FAs about cases of racist abuse find themselves waiting months before anything happens;
  • why, unlike the rest of society, those accused of racial abuse aren't suspended pending the outcome of their respective investigations.

Tough questions, but ones which deserve answers. Herbert may not be an ex-footballer. He may not have as much credibility or recognition among the fans as Garth Crooks or Paul Elliott. Indeed, he freely admits he's only been to four matches in his entire life. But he speaks at a time when the government wants to see football do a lot more when it comes to the thorny issue of racism.

Think fooball has done enough to combat the problem? Think Herbert's opinions are an irrelevance now the dark days of terrace abuse have thankfully faded? Ask Anton Ferdinand what he thinks. Or Marvin Sordell. Or Danny Rose. Or the youngsters who play for Leicester Nirvana. They claim they were racially abused and subject to monkey noises during a recent under-15 fixture. Herbert and the SBL have taken up their case for free, and the Leicestershire Police are investigating.

Those who run, play and follow football have every right to disagree with the views of Herbert. But they'd be wise not to ignore him. The battle to rid the game of discrimination and racism is far from won.

By Dan Roan BBC sports news correspondent

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

TWO-TIME Pan Am gold medallist, Christopher Sellier, is retiring from professional cycling at the age of just 26. Speaking to Newsday yesterday, Sellier said he has been contemplating putting down his bike and walking away for the past two years due to the lack of financial support he has been receiving.

“For the past couple years, getting funding to travel abroad (to train) has been near impossible. I’ve been performing below my par and getting more and more demotivated,” he said.

The 13-time national champ noted that there are many challenges facing the sport in TT which has further cemented his position to retire.

“It’s really hard training in Trinidad. TT will never produce a world champion who trains in Trinidad. People might think I’m being a hater but it’s true. That’s why our top cyclist Njisane Phillip doesn’t train in Trinidad. Even my best performances came when I was training abroad,” he pointed out.

Sellier also had some harsh words for the Trinidad and Tobago Cycling Federation (TTCF) who he believes has done nothing for the sport locally.

“The Federation is a joke, it’s really a waste of time. If they don’t do anything then cycling is going nowhere.

“Cycling has been one of our most successful sports at the Pan Am level but we don’t even have a proper track and that’s the basics,” he continued.

Sellier revealed that all these combined weighed on his mind and made the difficult choice of leaving the sport he loves one that was necessary.

“Of course walking away from something I’ve been doing for over ten years was hard. My family have been supportive because they know the problems I face,” he declared.

With his career over at the age of 26, Sellier lamented that he was not able to represent his country at the Olympics but didn’t not rule out a possible return if the problems he cited are corrected.

“I have no regrets but I always wanted to go to the Olympics. I still wanted to go to Rio (2016 Olympics) but it’s hard to do that training in Trinidad. You can never say never (about returning to the sport) because I’m 26 and the best cyclists in the world are in the their thirties,” he explained.

Asked what he will do now that cycling is no longer part of his life, Sellier was uncertain of his future but is contemplating going back to school.

He did express gratitude to Beacon Insurance for their aid over the last 5-6 years as well as the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee president Larry Romany for his belief in him.

“I thank all the fans who cheered for me, in my victories, and my defeats,” he concluded.

By Stephon Nicholas

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

History made as first black US president is re-elected, defying jobless rate and assaults of American right

The improbable journey goes on. What Barack Obama always regarded as the unlikeliest of political odysseys will now be allowed to run its full measure. By a clearer margin than many of his supporters had dared hope, the people of the United States voted to let their 44th president finish what he had started.

As election night brought the familiar, intense focus on this or that county in Ohio or Florida, it was easy to lose sight of the scale of Obama's achievement. Of course becoming America's first black president four years ago was an unrepeatable feat, but winning four more years made history, too. Obama is only the fourth Democrat since 1900 to win two full terms in the White House. Only Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt and Bill Clinton have matched his achievement.

And he did it in the hardest of circumstances. The experts long believed that to win re-election with unemployment at or above 8% was to defy political gravity: no one had done it since 1940. Yet that was the jobless number Obama confronted from the day he took office until two months ago. His approval ratings had struggled to break 50%. He had been on the receiving end of a four-year assault from the American right – the alternative universe embodied by Fox News, which tore itself apart on air as pundit Karl Rove refused to accept the cold, hard facts set out by Fox's own number-crunchers – which sought to "other" the US president, to paint him as Barack Hussein Obama, the Kenyan Marxist Muslim bent on destroying America. Despite all that he won and won convincingly, ahead in the popular vote and taking all but one of the nine key battleground states, with as-yet-undeclared Florida likely to be added to his tally – with no need of recounts and not a hanging chad in sight.

It was a monumental achievement, one the renewed president recognised with a magnificent speech. In Chicago before a crowd both relieved and delighted, he spoke with a force, clarity and determination that had scarcely been glimpsed in the 2012 campaign. The rhetoric was soaring – "for the United States of America the best is yet to come" – and moving but it was also rooted in the concrete. He set out the goals of his second term: "Reducing our deficit. Reforming our tax code. Fixing our immigration system. Freeing ourselves from foreign oil."

But he also spoke of a danger that had barely featured on the campaign trail, warning of "the destructive power of a warming planet". For his supporters, including those frustrated by the timidity of much of his first term – and the lethargy of his appearance in the first TV debate – this was the Obama they had been waiting for.

It brought hope flickering back to life inside Democrats who wonder if, having made history, Obama might now defy it, reversing the usual order and achieving more in his second term than in his first. His healthcare reform, which would have been repealed by a President Romney, will now be implemented, which represents a legacy in itself. If he can somehow negotiate the looming fiscal cliff, bringing tax revenues and spending into balance, that too will endear him to posterity.

But the president cannot do that alone. Action on the deficit will require a "grand bargain" with Congress and that means the Republican party, which retained control of the House of Representatives, though Democrats remain in charge in the Senate. The risk for Obama is that, for all his renewed talk of bipartisan co-operation, he might be thwarted by all too familiar gridlock.

Yet the night marked more than just the extension of the Obama presidency: it also confirmed the arrival of the Obama nation. For underpinning the president's success was a shift in the very nature of the US electorate, with white voters accounting for a smaller share than ever before. Now 28% of American voters are non-white, a threefold increase over the past four decades. And these rising groups that make up the new America vote Democrat.

That much was clear in what analyst John Heilemann called Obama's "coalition of the ascendant". The president could trail Romney among white men because, exit polls showed, he could rely on 93% support among black Americans, 71% of Latinos, 60% of the under-30s and 55% of women. The lift in the Latino vote may well account for Obama's wins in Nevada, Colorado and Florida. And this is no one-off: 50,000 Latinos turn 18 and become eligible to vote every month. That translates into 2.4m new Latino voters able to take part in the election of 2016.

The US pundit class is fond of hailing every presidential election as the birth of a new, permanent Democratic or Republican majority. Such verdicts should be handled with care. After all, Romney came within two percentage points of Obama in the popular vote. Nevertheless, the political complexion of the American people is changing. Striking was the passage in three states of measures authorising equal marriage for gay couples. Wisconsin elected the first openly gay senator, Tammy Baldwin. The Obama campaign understood this new electorate and turned out its vote brilliantly.

The Republicans are in the reverse position. They lost because they relied on a white vote that is shrinking. What will surely follow is a battle for the soul of the Republican party, realists pitted against purists. The realists will argue Republicans – who have lost the popular vote in five of the last six presidential elections – must expand their appeal if they are not to be doomed to perennial defeat. Romney won fewer Latino voters than John McCain, who won fewer than George W Bush. That was partly because, in order to survive the Republican primaries, Romney had to adopt a hard line on immigration, calling on migrants to "self-deport". In that move, the Latino commentator Ana Navarro told CNN: "He self-deported from the White House."

Others will add that Republicans have to change the way they speak to women, after two candidates who suggested that women should be forced by law to bear the children of their rapists lost winnable Senate seats.

The purists will brook no such change, insisting Republicans must stay true to their small government, socially conservative message. The people will come around eventually, they believe, especially if the party can find an attractive, ideally non-white messenger – say, senator Marco Rubio of Florida.

The consequence could well be a Republican civil war, or period of "reflection and recalibration" as Texas senator John Cornyn politely called it. But a change is overdue. Without it, Republicans will surely endure more nights like the one they suffered on Tuesday, when they gathered in a Boston ballroom for what was meant to be a victory party – a glum, all-white group staring at a giant screen, watching TV pictures from Chicago of a crowd of beaming Democrats, young and old, black and white, celebrating a victory that tasted even sweeter the second time around.

By Jonathan Freedland

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

• Lord Coe unopposed for election to succeed Lord Moynihan
• 'This organisation will take a zero tolerance approach'

Lord Coe has said that he will continue the British Olympic Association's push for tougher penalties for drug cheats after taking over as chairman of the organisation.

The 43 members of the National Olympic Committee on Wednesday voted by acclamation for Coe to take over from Lord Moynihan, who announced after the London Olympics that he was stepping down as chairman a year early.

Moynihan fought a high-profile and fractious battle with the World Anti-Doping Agency over the BOA's ability to ban athletes for life who had been suspended for doping, but was ultimately forced to drop the bylaw. Coe backed the BOA's fight and, while likely to be more consensual in style than Moynihan, has promised to continue to lobby for a harder line.

"You know where I come from over drugs. I've been battling that for as long as I've effectively been a competitor. My stance is still non-negotiable and this organisation was quite right to believe that it has to be within the interests and power of the organisation to decide what is best for that organisation. Ninety-nine per cent of the athletes supported that bylaw and I am sorry we weren't able to uphold it," Coe said.

"We will need to think about how we adapt to that landscape. I will chair an organisation that will always take a zero-tolerance approach to drug abuse in sport but we have to recognise that we are in a much more complex and complicated legal landscape than we were 30 years ago."

Wada is currently consulting on its new code, with pressure for the two-year ban to be increased to include the Olympic Games that follows. Coe will oversee the development of a new three-year strategy for the BOA and hinted he would refocus the organisation on its traditional remit of preparing British teams for the Games.

Under Moynihan, it had expanded to include a high performance coaching unit under Sir Clive Woodward, who stepped down last month.

"This is not an organisation that delivers elite level sportsmen and women. That is the role of the federations, it is the role of UK Sport through their funded programmes. This organisation has a monumental responsibility to manage those teams and to promote Olympism throughout the country," Coe said.

"Being given the custody of Team GB every two years is a monumental responsibility. This is a service-led organisation and it needs to be a world-class organisation in the delivery of those services at Games time.

"In the landscape of British sport, where we are all concerned about that pathway between playground and podium, the BOA will want to play a role in that. Its particular roles and responsibilities will be something we all want to discuss in the run-up to Rio."

Despite extending its overdraft to £5m for the first quarter of next year and recording a loss of £411,000 in last year's accounts, the BOA expects to break even as a result of the formula under which the London organising committee will return the first $8m of any surplus to the BOA.

There is believed to be confidence within the BOA that Locog will indeed produce a surplus, despite continually saying that it would only break even. Under the formula, the first $8m of any surplus goes to the BOA and the next $4m to the British Paralympic Association.

The BOA chief executive, Andy Hunt, has completed a cost cutting programme to slim down the staff from 87 to 52 and will aim to sign a series of new sponsorship deals once Coe is on board.

Coe will combine his role as chairman of the BOA with his positions as vice-president of the International Association of Athletics Federations, a board member at Nike and a government adviser on the Olympic legacy.

By Owen Gibson

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Lord Coe will be taking the reins of an organisation on the crest of a wave – but with difficult issues to surmount

When he is voted in unopposed as the chairman of the British Olympic Association on Wednesday, Lord Coe will be at once joining an organisation on the crest of a wave and in some difficulty. On the one hand, it has just played a major part in delivering the best British performance at an Olympic Games in over a century, under the unremitting glare of a home Games. On the other, it faces long-running questions over its finances and remit amid a looming debate over the post-Games sporting landscape. But the appointment of Coe, London 2012's figurehead with a large reservoir of political, public and international goodwill to draw on, will give it the best opportunity possible to face those challenges – assuming he can devote enough time to them amid his portfolio existence. Among the challenges in his in-tray are:

Finances

Before taking the job, Coe sought assurances that the BOA's creaky finances would not damage his ability to do it. Dismal sales of BOA scarves and medallions during the Games, not to mention a long-running row with Coe's Locog over the deal that originally licensed the Olympic rings to the 2012 organisers, left the BOA's balance sheet in a parlous state. Its 2011 accounts revealed a £411,000 loss but the more serious impact will be felt this year when the full cost of delivering the 550-strong British team to the Games are taken into account. In its recent accounts, it revealed that it had extended its overdraft to £5m for the first quarter of next year. There is also an ongoing debate about whether it should lobby for a share of public money for some areas of its operation – such as the museum it wants to build on the Olympic Park and the Get Set educational programme it has inherited from Locog – or remain entirely independent of government.

Legacy

Coe was once fond of saying it was for others to deliver on the legacy created by the Games. But his decision to accept an offer from the prime minister David Cameron to be a government adviser and cheerleader for the Olympic legacy and an entreaty from the sports minister, Hugh Robertson, to take on the BOA role have left him among those who will be judged on whether the promises he made to secure the Olympics are being kept. The success of the Games has not only given the BOA a platform to exploit but also left Britain's standing at an all-time high among the global sporting community. A bid for the 2018 Youth Olympic Games has already been submitted on behalf of Glasgow, but it will be for Coe to decide how else best to capitalise.

Role

A long overdue debate on the respective roles and responsibilities of the alphabet soup of British sports administration bodies had been put off until after the Games. A full-blown merger of UK Sport, the Olympic funding agency with which the BOA under outgoing chairman Lord Moynihan regularly clashed, and grassroots body Sport England is likely to be put on ice in favour of streamlining their operations and moving to new offices. Before the Games, Moynihan had spoken ambitiously about the BOA taking a lead role in coaching, school sport and a host of other areas that could lead to clashes and overlap. Coe's task will be to define what sort of organisation he wants the BOA to be and where it should sit in the overall sporting landscape. Given his success at bringing together previously warring factions to deliver the Games, Coe will be expected to build a consensus – nationally and internationally. His task is likely to be helped if long-time friend and ally Sir Keith Mills takes on a role as chairman of both UK Sport and Sport England, as some in government want.

Staff

Ahead of the arrival of the new chairman, the BOA chief executive, Andy Hunt, presented a restructuring plan to the board designed to streamline the number of senior staff and save money – and potentially cement his own position in the process. The departure of Sir Clive Woodward, although by his own volition, will also help save money. Under the plan, the number of divisional directors will be reduced from 11 to seven and the overall headcount from 87 to 52, including an unspecified number of redundancies. Coe will have to pilot the organisation through this morale-sapping period and emerge the other side with a clearer idea of its future role.

Commercial

The rationale behind the investment by Moynihan and Hunt – who expanded the commercial team ahead of the Games – was the lure of the rewards on offer once the rights to the Olympic rings return to the organisation at the beginning of next year. But aside from a new contract with Adidas and a marketing deal with the International Olympic Committee's commercial partners, which will bring in £13m over the next four years, there has been little progress in getting other deals over the line. The hope is that Coe's longstanding links at the highest levels with some of the biggest multinationals, and Locog's success in delivering more than £700m of sponsorship incomedespite the global recession, will help seal more of those deals.

By Owen Gibson

Source: www.guardian.co.uk