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Emirates Airlines, one of FIFA's most important sponsors, want to see some kind of improvement in the organisation's image before putting pen to paper on any further deals.

The Dubai-based carrier's $195 million (£122 million/€150 million), eight-year sponsorship of FIFA expires in 2014 and senior vice-president Boutros Boutros says it is looking forward to the results of the reform drive instigated by FIFA President Sepp Blatter (pictured top, left) after two years of bribery and vote-rigging scandals.

"So far they talk a lot about them, but we are yet to see," said Boutros.

"They look serious about it and we are optimistic.

"We hope they will work on it and do what the public want.

"We are waiting until after 2014 to evaluate.

"Our research is to see how people perceive our brand - how they perceive our relationship with them, how they look at it."

FIFA's reputation has been sullied by bribery and vote-rigging in the last two years but Boutros says Blatter is doing his best to clean up the operation before he almost certainly stands down in 2015.

"Blatter is working on cleaning the image of FIFA – they had unfortunate events and incidents and issues," Boutros said.

"In one way, I am glad they were courageous enough to talk about it and discuss it.

"And they were courageous enough to announce they were taking measures.

"I am yet to see the outcome of these measures and we are waiting and watching."

By Andrew Warshaw

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Top T&T swimmer George Bovell III will have the financial support of the Government via the Ministry of Sport as he looks ahead to the 2016 Rio Olympics in Brazil.
This was confirmed by Ashwin Creed, permanent secretary in the Ministry of Sport, at a welcome reception held in Bovell III’s honour to celebrate his historic FINA World Short Course Swimming Championship bronze medal in the men’s 100m individual medley in Istanbul, Turkey, earlier this month.
Creed was speaking to a small gathering which included Bovell III’s coach, Minister of Sport Anil Roberts; SporTT chairman and former Olympic swimmer Sebastian Paddington; special advisor to the Minister of Sport Caryl Kellar; senior manager/executive manager Corporate Services Adrian Raymond; senior manager Corporate Communications Nyssa Pierre; and the parents of the history-making local swimmer George Bovell II and Barbara Bovell, at the VIP Lounge, Piarco International Airport, on Monday night, following his return home from Europe.
Taking first turn at the podium, Creed first congratulated the 29-year-old Bovell III, who was also fourth in the 50m freestyle final—missing a medal by 0.04 seconds—on what he considered an avalanche of performances over the year which included 16 medals (seven gold, nine silver) over the eight legs of the FINA/ARENA Short Course Swimming World Cup and a seventh-placed finish in the men’s 50m freestyle final at the London Olympics.
He said, “I will like to take it back a bit to Athens 2004 when he (Bovell III) won the bronze medal in the 200m individual medley and subsequent medals at various Pan American Games and other championships.
“This year, coming out of the Olympic Games, he placed seventh and some people may say it was a disappointing performance not having medalled.”
Taking a swipe at the local media for their headlines, Creed added, “Seventh in the world by any standard is a top performance and I want to particularly say that to the media.
“People don’t know when you have to go through rounds of qualification what it takes to get to a final when you come up against 200 countries in the world and coming out of London, yes, it was a disappointment to him that he did not medal.”
Turning to the swimmer, who had spent the last 36 hours travelling to T&T from the Vladimir Salnikov Cup in St Petersburg, Russia, where he won a gold (100m IM) and silver (50m freestyle), Creed reminded the former NCAA champion of their chat after his London swim: “…I told him I believed there was still a lot of him that has not come out as yet.
“So if you look back at the seventh-placed performance and then the results of the World Cup where he was second overall, and now the World Short Course Championships, winning a bronze medal in the 100m IM and fourth in the 50m freestyle and to follow it up with gold and silver in Russia, it tells you a lot about George Bovell.”
“It tells you he is able to recover from disappointment and really perform against the best in the world. This augurs well for George’s future as we move towards Brazil 2016 Olympics. The Minister of Sport (Anil Roberts) has already mentioned Cabinet’s approved a major investment plan for the next Olympics and surely, George, we are going to support you all the way,” said Creed.
By Nigel Simon
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Harvard Sports Club celebrated in style at their recent annual awards ceremony following a good year for the club.

Standing tallest amongst the disciplines in which Harvard competes was rugby, which enjoyed by far its most successful year as the team bagged seven of eight titles in competition this year, with a runners-up finish in their final outing, the Carib Tobago International Sevens tournament being the only blemish.

This success was reflected at the awards ceremony two weekends ago, as the Harvard rugby team was named Most Outstanding (sporting) Discipline, and was presented with another award for its outstanding form by the hockey team, Maritime Harvard Checkers.

It was no surprise then that winger Claudius Butts, a crucial cog in Harvard's successful 2012 T&T Rugby Football Union (TTRFU) League Toyota Championship Division and rugby sevens campaigns, was named Sports Personality of the Year.

Harvard rugby coach Larry Mendez, who also heads the national rugby technical team, rounded out the special awards sweep as Member of the Year.

Butts was also Most Disciplined Player in the Championship Division, but the Most Valuable Player honour went to flanker Wayne Kelly.

The guest list at the function read like a who's who of sports personalities, with Harvard president Brigadier General Carl Alphonso, accompanied by former T&T Football Federation (TTFF) president and Harvard patron Oliver Camps, Memphis Pioneers head coach Dr Ian Hypolite and T&T Cricket Board North Zone Cricket Council president Don Asgarali in attendance.

Also on the list were ex-T&T Olympic Committee president and current T&T Hockey Board (TTHB) president Douglas Camacho and TTRFU president Leslie Figaro.

 

Honour Roll:

 

Cricket

Most Outstanding Batsman – Marc Hospedales

Most Outstanding Bowler – Stephen Kadoo

Cricketer of the Year – Marc Hospedales

Football

Special Award – Wade Charles

Hockey (Junior)

Most Goals – Michaella Jones

Most Improved Player – Charnise Cato

Junior Player of the Year – Brittney Hingh

Hockey (Senior)

Most Goals – Mindy Charles

Most Disciplined Player – Kwylan Jaggassar

Senior Player of the Year – Christabella George-Ford

Rugby (Under 17)

Most Improved Player – Shaquille Lucas

Most Disciplined Player – Brandon Greenidge

Rookie of the Year – Curtley Bateau

Most Valuable Player – Shakeel Dyte

Rugby (Senior)

Most Improved Player – Cloyd London

Most Disciplined Player – Thabiti Benjamin

Rookie of the Year – Corey Phillips

Most Valuable Player – Joseph Quashie

Rugby (Championship)

Most Disciplined Player – Claudius Butts

Rookie of the Year – Corey Phillips

Most Valuable Player – Wayne Kelly

Most Improved Player – Aaron Rocke

Special Awards

Harvard Club Rugby team

Most Outstanding Discipline Trophy – Harvard Club Rugby Team

Sports Personality of the Year – Claudius Butts

Member of the Year – Larry Mendez

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation (TTFF) president, Raymond Tim Kee, believes this country’s football is on the rise again after nearing its depths earlier this year with the Soca Warriors’ early elimination from the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifying phase.

Tim Kee made the statement in his end-of-year address yesterday which was released to the media.

“...our committed Technical Staff and players, the latter of whom the product is all about, have demonstrated their love for country by devoting their energies and life to ensuring that Trinidad and Tobago football has stopped the slide and are once again trending upwards to the extent that, in addition to emerging First Runner-Up in the CFU Championship (Caribbean Cup), we have also qualified for the Concacaf Gold Cup Competition as well as to be among FIFA’s top 70 football nations to close off the 2012 international calendar,” he declared.

The TTFF boss also hailed the national Under-17 men’s team who are still in the hunt for a place in the World Cup for that age group.

“Also we saw our National Under-17 men’s team advance to the final phase of qualification for the 2013 FIFA Under-17 World Cup which will take place next year. This provides us with much promise at the youth level to move forward with,” he continued. Meanwhile, Tim Kee did not shy away from addressing the problems local football has faced and acknowledged that his organisation has its work cutout in 2013.

“Over the last year our nation’s most loved and popular sport, football, was faced with several daunting experiences, some of which were interpreted by many as being at death’s door. However, many of Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation personnel felt that there was an opportunity to introspect, re-tool, rebrand and embrace every possibility to enter a new, sound era for our sport. In the midst of adversity they saw opportunity,” he added. Tim Kee noted that with him replacing Acting president, Lennox Watson, it prove that democracy was alive in the TTFF and the focus now is on transparency, accountability and high ethical standards in all their undertakings as they proceed forward.

“There is much that we at TTFF must thank God for as he assisted us in our pursuit of enhancing our relationship with our stakeholders, particularly the Minister of Sport and his staff who at times, extended themselves to assist us in our time of need. This and more, we at the TTFF in general and our executives and other staff members in particular, are extremely thankful and wish the population’s continued support in our endeavours to take our sport to a higher level and be once again among the leading football nations in Concacaf. I wish on behalf of our executive team, staff and on my own behalf as Chief Servant of TTFF, to wish our blessed nation, season’s greetings and best wishes for a fruitful, healthy, safe and blessed 2013,” he concluded.

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

"PURE vandalism" was how local art historian, Geoffrey Maclean, yesterday described the slashing of artwork in the long-flagging People's Canvas art project on the walls of the Queen's Park Oval.

Monday morning brought to light damage to 19 of the 21 art prints gracing the walls on Tragarete Road and Elizabeth Street by a determined slasher.

The lower halves of the prints were torn, some in more than one place.

After viewing the damage yesterday, Maclean said the act did not appear to be anything more than vandalism.

"It is pure maliciousness," he said in a telephone interview.

"It is unfortunate the way people abuse all aspects of our heritage. People just don't respect anything."

Maclean is a member of the Art Society of Trinidad and Tobago (ASTT), which, along with corporate sponsors, started the People's Canvas project in 2008. The ASTT is no longer involved with the project.

The aim was to give artists a chance to showcase their work.

Ken Crichlow, artist and ASTT member, said the project suffered from a loss of enthusiasm by the business community.

The optimism of the early stages has been lost, he said, and this week's damage may spell the demise of the project altogether.

"When you have this kind of response, you feel dispirited," he said.

He added that public art is yet to manifest in Trinidad and Tobago, with only "transient" pieces being the result of years of talk.

"I suppose that will be the end of that project," he said.

Head of the Artists Coalition of Trinidad and Tobago, Rubadiri Victor, said yesterday it was sad that most locals do not feel a sense of ownership that embodies all aspects of local art and all geographic areas of this country.

While it is also unfortunate that there those who "catch their kicks" carrying out acts of vandalism, Victor said a real effort must be made to nurture art in public spaces.

"We come from a culture where people don't feel a sense of ownership of things that are rightfully theirs, so at times they feel that things that are in the public space or civic space or in seemingly private spaces, are worthy targets of a rebellious act of vandalism, not recognising that the space that they are defacing is really their home."

At the same time, he said, the project itself has raised issues regarding public art in Trinidad and Tobago and what constitutes public art.

"The only forms of public art that we have are coloured, copied prints of original artwork rather than commissioned public art and I wonder, if there were more gestures of real public art in public and private and community spaces, if we may see more of an understanding by the population as to the fact that this is their house and that it is being beautified, be it sculptures, graffiti or whatever form it takes," Victor said.

This country, for its history and culture, still does not have a rich tradition of public art, either in its commissioning or the skill level that is often executed when objects hailed as public art make an appearance.

"A national normally trains people like that," he said.

"Jamaica and Barbados have incredible monuments but they train people for that."

Photographer Chris Anderson, whose work "Maracas Bay", was slashed, said yesterday it was "extremely disappointing".

"It just shows Trinidad to be uncivilized," he said.

"While it may happen anywhere in the world, it just seems to happen more here and far too often."

Anderson said this type of acting out may be the result of a society better known for its partying than for its focus on family life.

That negative aspect of local culture, combined with an education system that fails so many of its subscribers, may be the reason there are so citizens who are down-on-their-luck and very angry, Anderson said.

"It just seems that Trinidad has a whole pile of social problems than can't be solved too easily."

Anderson hoped, however, that the project would not be allowed to die and that corporate sponsors would come through for next year.

The following artists' works, featured on the walls of the Queen's Park Oval at part of the People's Canvas public art project, were vandalised : Shawn Peters "Chasing Horizons" Marsha Bhagwansingh "Seascape" Cliff A. Birjou "Cashew Tree on Monos Island" Robyn Knaggs "Flamboyant" Christopher Anderson "Maracas Bay" Karen Hale Jackson "Peaceful Early Morning Mist" Shalini Seereeram "Earth Mother" Denise Anderson "Caura River" Shalini Singh "Dreaming of Vessels" Gaby Beston Edwards "Ginger Torches and Crotons" Marsha Trepte "Looking for Fish" Anil Bridgelal "Over the Hill" Beverly Fitzwilliam Harris "J'ouvert" Kenderson Noray "Pan Riddim II" Ann Stapleton "Roadside Market" Gregory Scott "Toco Sunrise" Susan Correia "La Foret" Nicole Craig "My Music" (one artist's name was missing from its place)

By Kim Boodram

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

World Outdoor Championships women’s 100m bronze medallist Kelly-Ann Baptiste is aiming at some fast times in 2013.
Since the Lance Brauman-coached sprint lass lowered her national record to 10.94 in 2009, Baptiste has been ten-point range every year since. The next year she lowered her national mark to 10.84 (25th on the all-time list) and came within 0.02 seconds of equaling it when she sped to 10.86 in Jamaica in May, this year.
The former Louisiana State University sprinter has been in the sub-eleven domain on five occasions both in 2011 and 2012 to raise her career total to 14. The London Olympic sixth place finisher believes with the current form of the world’s top female sprinters 10.7/10.8 will be time required to get a medal at major meets.
Baptiste’s expectation is quite reasonable given that ten women ran faster than 11 seconds in 2012 of which six ran under 10.90 seconds. “Everybody is running well now. 10.7(5) won the last Olympics and if you are not running that or faster you can’t stand a chance of winning or getting a medal because 10.81 got the bronze. So you pretty much have to be in the 10.7/10.8 range to try to get a medal,” said Baptiste. The Plymouth speedster did not want to reveal the time she has set for herself, but said that it was faster than 10.8.
Baptiste was speaking on Tobago Channel Five’s Rise and Shine Morning show recently, during a brief trip to Tobago. The Bethesda Government/Signal Hill Secondary graduate said she believed that to achieve such a time requires more that talent.
“You have to have a coach and a team around you that is very specific in managing minor details. Your technique becomes extremely important, and also becoming as strong as you can. It’s not
just running a race; it gets way more technical.”
The 25-year-old also said that though she made it to the finals at the London Olympics becoming the first local woman to do so, she was disappointed at not getting amongst the medals.
“I had lots to goals I wanted to accomplish, but was not able to. It took me a while to get over (not getting a medal). Even now it is hard to be satisfied with what I did but at the same time I have to put things into perspective; it was my first Olympic finals and I can’t look at someone else’s career and try to based mine on it.”
She, however, was grateful for the progress she has made in the sport: “I have to realise that I am an individual and people’s expectations of me based on someone else may not be the same for me.  It may take me another four years, eight years to accomplish what I need to accomplish.
“As I reflect, I am realising that there has been improvement every year. The last Olympics (in Beijing, China in 2008) I did not even make the semi-finals. When I think of that, I realise I have made huge strides in the event; I have to be thankful.”
By Clayton Clarke
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Sport first and foremost is about humans. Humans play sport. We must never forget that sports are games played by humans. As such, when we talk about and plan for sport there must be the intention to create an environment that enables sport to meet the needs of our communities, participants and our high performance athletes.
Too many people seem hell-bent on functionalising and commoditising sport—narrowing sport down to systems, processes, technology, and management, and leadership skill. Sport ought to have skilled administrators and coaches to be effectively and efficiently developed, managed and governed. But it’s important not to put the cart before the horse.
There is this myth about the place, and the first thing that has to happen is that we need to debunk the myth. Yesterday was Christmas day, as gifts were opened and we engaged in the usual Yuletide merriment and celebration. It’s important not to get carried away and miss the whole significance of Christmas. Modern T&T seems inclined to leave Christ out of Christmas. The same can be said for sport here in T&T where we seem inclined to leave sport and the essence of sport out of sport.
If I had to have one Christmas wish for sport, it would be for T&T to look at sport with new eyes of understanding. Though the truth of sport and the values of sport may stand firm as foundation stones, there is counterfeit faith and love as not everyone who claims to understand or love sport remains faithful to the core values of sport, or have an authentic understanding of the true worth and value of sport.
It makes no sense rejecting the truth to chase after myths, the most pronounced of which is that T&T is a sport-loving nation. It’s not. There is a lot of worthless talk—talk that only leads to foolish actions and arguments that only start fights. It makes little sense being boastful, proud and puffed up with pride when the foundations are creaking.
T&T sport has reached the point where people want to follow their own desires and will look for those who will tell them whatever their itching ears want to hear—reject the truth and chase myths.
It’s not that we shouldn’t stop and smell the roses. What I am saying is, don’t let euphoria and competitive and high performance success cover over the foundational cracks and inadequacies.
Remember when you have a victory, attention, comfort and joy follow, but don’t confuse attention comfort and joy with success. It’s not what you get that makes you successful; rather, it’s what you are continuing to do with what you got that measures your success.
Olympic and sporting success doesn’t mean that we are a sport-loving nation or that the sport ecosystem, infrastructure or processes are in order and fit for purpose. We must get serious about sport development and not continue to fool ourselves that we are.
We have to get the sport development foundation right, first of all. The foundation is the grassroots—in our communities where children and adults can simply play and enjoy sport in safe and secure facilities; where our children can simply be children by playing games without instructions from coaches and just learn by experience, the sheer unadulterated joy of playing games. In fact, that’s where the tacit knowledge is gained.
But there is a myriad of issues negatively impacting knowledge creation and management in sport. The problem begins with the foundation. If most of T&T were really exposed to sport via play, there is no doubt they would fall in love with it. If most of T&T recognised sport as being about human development they would fall in love with it. Merry Christmas, be safe
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.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Former England fly-half Danny Cipriani’s future at his club Sale Sharks attracted further speculation amidst his omission from the team in its 25-18 loss to his former club Wasps, yesterday.
The 25-year-old Cipriani, whose father is Trinidadian, has struggled to find form this season, and with rumours of tension between administrators and players at Salford City Stadium, the once bright prospect will need to improve his form drastically in order to help the club escape potential relegation.
Last week, Sale added to its woes of just one victory since the start of the league campaign when it suffered a humiliating record 62-0 loss to French club RC Toulonnais in Pool 6 of the Heineken Cup.
It was then that management opted to leave Cipriani off the squad for its next match, a league fixture against his former club Wasps, which it lost, but with a bonus point in an improved performance.
The loss was Sale’s tenth of the league campaign.
And, while Sale has struggled to reach beyond the try line, its defence has attracted most of the team’s criticism. Cipriani’s leakages have come under the spotlight from the club’s interim director of sport John Mitchell, who chastised the former Under-19 and senior England international.
“If you can’t defend, there’s no place for you in Premiership rugby. Danny had a dreadful game in defence last week (against Toulon),” said Mitchell.
“If you’re not prepared to put your body on the line for this club who pays your wages and give(s) you the chance to play at the highest level each week, then you won’t be in the squad.”
Despite the mouthful directed at Cipriani, Mitchell chose not to rule out a possible return once performances improve. “I don’t care where he played before. All I’ve asked for him to do is defend. Our defence was good last week until he chose to be an individual. You have to serve your team-mates before yourself. If he improves his defence, he’ll be back involved again,” Mitchell said.
Cipriani has made three international appearances for England’s Under-19 team, before being promoted to the senior team, where he featured on seven occasions.
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Games even more popular than at height of summer success, poll reveals, but support for Conservatives continues to wane

Far from suffering from an Olympic hangover, Britons are closing 2012 in a mood of fond nostalgia for the London Games, according to a Guardian/ICM poll. By an emphatic four-to-one margin, the public said the Games were worth the expense – and there are signs that the resulting feelgood factor has rallied spirits more widely in the year of a double-dip slump.

Even after being reminded of the £9bn price tag, 78% of voters said the Olympics "did a valuable job in cheering up a country in hard times", as compared with just 20% who look back on them as "a costly and dangerous distraction".

This new vote of confidence is even more marked than that which ICM found at the height of the Games. In an online survey taken immediately after so-called Super Saturday – on which Mo Farah, Jessica Ennis and Greg Rutherford all took track and field gold for Team GB – ICM asked an identical question, and found support for the games running at 55%, with 35% against. Instead of narrowing as the Games slipped into memory, that 20-point margin has widened to 58 points today. The Paralympics may have helped to cement this majority.

For all the pre-Games controversy about the public money involved, the strong retrospective support is reflected remarkably closely across the range of demographic groups and the political spectrum: 79% of men say the Games were "well worth the cost" as do 77% of women. In every age bracket, more than three-quarters of people take the same view, with the 80% of 65+ voters who gave the thumbs-up being the most emphatic of all.

A similarly crushing margin in favour of London 2012 is found in every social class, and, more strikingly, across every region. Some had feared that the Games would be heavily concentrated in the capital and its hinterland, but in fact 79% support in the south is closely matched by 80%, 74% and 77% respectively in the Midlands, the north and in Wales. Only the Scots are somewhat less enthusiastic, and even among them the overall 69%-31% balance in favour of the Games is striking.

The Olympics themselves took up little more than two weeks in a year which has also witnessed volatile weather, the diamond jubilee and the first double-dip recession since the 1970s. Asked to consider all of these things together, and reflect on 2012 as a whole, 49% of respondents said the year has made Britain a better place to live – against 41% who said the reverse, suggesting a positive public take on the Olympics is colouring wider perceptions of the year. The overall verdict ought to surprise voters themselves, who in last year's Guardian Christmas poll told ICM by a 60%-30% margin that they expected Britain would become a more miserable place in 2012.

But if London 2012 has left a feelgood legacy, it is not one which any politician – and particularly not the coalition – is finding it easy to cash in. David Cameron will be dismayed to learn that his Conservative party remains eight points behind Labour for the third month in a row.

Compared with last month, all the main parties stand still, with Labour on 40%, the Tories on 32% and the Liberal Democrats on 13%. Ukip retains the record 7% it achieved last month, which, taken together with the 9% notched up by other assorted minor parties, means that 16% of respondents are now signalling support for a party other than Westminster's big three. That is a new record in the 28-year history polling for the Guardian.

Disdain for the political mainstream comes into sharper relief when voters are asked to award a school report grade for work taken in the last year alone. No senior politician chalks up a better average grade than C- awarded to both Cameron and Ed Miliband. The one figure to do much better is the Queen, who comes in with a solid B+. And that average grade is brought down by the less loyal of her subjects: 32% of the most enthusiasticaward her an A+, a grade that only the smallest handful of voters award to anyone else.

The warm mood towards the monarch comes in a country that harbours no illusions about the Olympic year having restored its lost imperial role. Only 27% believe that 2012 allowed Britain to increases its power in the world, less than half the 61% who say that British power diminished this year. In a similarly downbeat vein, voters continue to expect the slump to drag on. Asked to look ahead to the end of 2013, 42% expect that Britain will by then have turned the economic corner, as against 51% who believe the country will still be stuck in a downturn.

While the balance of opinion on the economy leans to the negative side, the tilt is far less marked than 12 months ago. In December 2011, 68% expected a continuing downturn through to the end of 2012, as against just 27% who anticipated turning the corner by then. Likewise, expectations for the mood of the country in 2013 are less gloomy than they were for 2012 last year. By 47% to 42% respondents expect Britain to be a more miserable rather a happier place next year, a relatively even split compared with the 60%-30% margin by which voters were predicting a miserable 2012 this time last year.

The feelgood mood of the Olympic year may have smoothed some rough edges off the psychology of the double-dip recession. Despite the most sustained squeeze on pay packets since the 1920s, there is an even split – 45% to 45% – on whether Britain has got better or worse as a place "for you and your family" to live, with supporters of the coalition parties being more positive and Labour voters more negative than the average about their personal experience of the past 12 months.

After a year whose politics were dominated by a controversial budget, which cut top income tax rates for the rich, the one more emphatically pessimistic expectation relates to economic division. By a two-to-one margin of 60% to 30%, voters expect Britain to become more divided rather than less divided during 2013.

ICM Research interviewed a random sample of 1,002 adults aged 18+ by telephone on 19-23 December 2012. Interviews were conducted across the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of all adults. ICM is a member of the British Polling Council and abides by its rules.

By Tom Clark

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Unforgettable. Incomparable. Unbeatable? The year 2012 will forever be remembered as one of the greatest in British sporting history.

During the magical summer of 2012 we witnessed the unique power of sport to unite and inspire our nation. Team GB felt a wave of support from every corner of the United Kingdom. People of all ages, beliefs and backgrounds rallied behind our athletes and lifted them to unprecedented heights of success.

Within each of us, we rediscovered the spirit of camaraderie, friendship and understanding that is at the heart of the Olympic Games. It was a year in which Britain was truly "Great", and London was the centre of attention once again.

On the field of play, Our Greatest Team – Team GB and ParalympicsGB – delivered an incredible 185 medals to light up the London 2012 Games and inspire generations to come.

When it mattered most, on the greatest stage of all, our athletes stepped up and delivered. And they did so in front of the most passionate, knowledgeable and enthusiastic sports fans in the world.

For Team GB and ParalympicsGB to have the honour of receiving the prestigious BBC Sports Personality 'Team of the Year' award last Sunday was a very fitting tribute to everyone involved.

First and foremost to the 541 athletes from 26 diverse sports, who have relentlessly dedicated and sacrificed so much in pursuit of their goal of competing for Team GB at the Olympic Games.

Secondly to the coaches, training partners, medical personnel and other support staff who devote themselves day-in day-out to giving our athletes the very best chance of achieving their personal best.

Finally, to our valued and trusted partners at the National Governing Bodies, UK Sport, Government and our Corporate Sponsors, who all worked together in a spirit of collaboration to reach a shared goal of making certain the athletes of Team GB had the very best opportunity for success at London 2012.

On a personal note, 2012 has certainly been the most exciting, challenging and ultimately fulfilling of my life in leading Team GB at a Home Games. There are simply too many highlights and too many firsts to mention, but this is a year that I know I will look back on with real pride, as I simply don't think we could have done anything more at the British Olympic Association (BOA) to provide a better platform for Team GB athletes at the London 2012 Games.

In keeping with the BOA motto of "Better Never Stops", we are already moving ahead full steam with our planning and preparation for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, and of course the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games, which are now just 14 months away.

And as part of our strategy to support the development of future Olympic stars, we are taking a team of 120 young athletes from 11 sports to compete at the Australian Youth Olympic Festival in January, the first of seven Youth Olympic events at which Team GB will be represented during the next four years.

We are delighted that the overall level of funding for British Olympic sport is increasing. This represents a tremendous vote of confidence in the British sport system, its coaches and high performance personnel and, most importantly, the athletes who continue to deliver on the national and international stage.

Rio 2016 is four years away and the hard work now begins in earnest to maintain the momentum that was established by Team GB at the London 2012 and Beijing 2008 Games.

However, some sports over the last week have received the disappointing news that their UK Sport funding has ceased and no doubt, they recognise this will make the process of qualifying for Rio 2016 all-the-more challenging. We hope these sports recognise that they delivered credible, competitive performances at the London 2012 Games and did so in a manner that made our country proud.

Of course, we all owe a debt of gratitude to The National Lottery and lottery players throughout the United Kingdom – whose support is so critical to the success of British athletes and Team GB.

From the BOA and Team GB, to everyone who made 2012 a year none of us will ever forget, we offer our heartfelt congratulations and thanks. It was a truly remarkable year for British sport.

Andy Hunt is the chief executive of the British Olympic Association (BOA)
Source: www.insidethegames.biz

ROSS RUSSELL, coach of the Digicel Pro League leader Defence Force, is pleased with his team’s position atop the eight-team standings before the Christmas break.

Defence Force rebounded from a 1-0 deficit to thrash reigning champ W Connection on Friday in the second game of a Round One Match Day Seven doubleheader at the Hasely Crawford Stadium, Mucurapo.

Russell, who guided Defence Force to the League crown in the 2010/2011 season, commented, “it always feels good to be back on top. We belong there because we’re playing for the League this year.

“So it’s a great feeling right now, going into the Christmas break,” added Russell, who also serves as the Trinidad and Tobago Under-20 coach.

On Wednesday, Defence Force were beaten 2-1 by National Super League outfit Stokely Vale FC in a Third Round TTFF (Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation) FA Cup meeting, at the Hasely Crawford Stadium.

And, on Friday, they fell behind to a Shahdon Winchester item in the 46th before an own goal by Daneil Cyrus in the 48th, followed by strikes from Aklie Edwards (53rd), Devorn Jorsling (56th and 66th), and Josimar Belgrave (81st), completed the sensational comeback.

“Normally in football, sometimes you have to give up something to get something,” said Russell. “The League is more important than the FA Cup right now for the Defence Force, because we like to play at the higher level, the CFU (Caribbean Club Championships) and CONCACAF (Champions League). We’re really aiming at that. Whatever we pick up other than that, we’ll be thankful really.”

The former national goalkeeper continued, “going down one-nil, it didn’t really bother (us) because we were playing well and had the better of the game.

“In the first 10-15 minutes of any game, it’s always a kind of unusual time. And it was an unusual goal so it didn’t really bother me much to say that they created anything to score the goal. We responded quickly enough.”

Concerning the spate of goals in the second half, Russell mentioned, “we planned to come and hustle them. We realised they were a little jaded from their long season so we (took) full advantage of that.”

Asked about the team’s plans for the next fortnight, Russell replied, “we have to keep training because the League starts back on (January) 4.

I’ll give them a Christmas Day and Boxing Day rest but we’ll be jamming right through, to keep maintaining our form and our position on top of the League.”

By Joel Bailey

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

Blink.

No, I haven't replaced a certain entertainment superstar as brand ambassador for a particular telecommunications network. But assuming you were inclined to follow the instruction of that first word, it is worth appreciating that the very brief instant of time it took for you to open and close your eyes just once is actually longer than the gap between George Bovell and the winner of the men's 50-metre freestyle at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

Florent Manaudou was first to the wall then in 21.34 seconds with Bovell seventh in 21.82, just 48 hundredths of a second adrift.

Okay, so you want me to say he was second-to-last? Yes, he was second-to-last. And while we're at it: yes, the four-time Olympian lost to a relative just-come 21-year-old; yes, the 29-year-old Trinidadian finished two spots behind a competitor (American Anthony Ervin) two years older than him and who had retired from competitive swimming in 2003 only to return to action in 2011; yes, it sounded like he was just making excuses when he talked about holding his breath and the starter's delay; and (this one is for the Balisier Brigade) yes, if he wasn't being coached by big-mouth Anil Roberts who should have been in Port of Spain attending to his responsibilities as Sports Minister, he would have won gold for sure.

Okay, so with all of that out of the way, let's now properly reflect on the sporting contribution made this year by the third in the line of George Bovells. Were it not for the stunning, out-of-the-blue, entirely unexpected triumph of Keshorn Walcott in the men's javelin at the London Games, it would have been the white boy from the posh north-west peninsula and not the black boy from the north-eastern backwater at the head of the class among our outstanding sporting achievers this year.

We are a society so full of ourselves that anything less than the top spot is considered failure, as if we were ever familiar with success at the highest level as we pretend to be. So while there was nothing terribly wrong with TV6 reporter Vinod Narwani's question (except maybe the timing, mere seconds after the event) to the country's top swimmer, asking "What went wrong?" it represented an accurate reflection of the mood of the nation in the aftermath of the event.

Even in this era of instant everything, it still takes time to properly appreciate certain things, like the toll on his mind and body after a vehicular accident on the way to Mayaro in August of last year. Know-nothings like so many of us will say that the Olympics were almost a year away at that time, as if the physical and emotional trauma of such a narrow escape doesn't impact on training and preparation for weeks and months; as if you just turn up on the starting blocks on August 3, 2012 and go for gold.

Hopefully in time to come, a generation will emerge who can truly appreciate what it means to be up there with the very best in the world in a (for us) not-so-popular pastime for more than a decade.

Our footballers scrape through as the 32nd and final team for the 2006 World Cup in Germany and the nation goes wild, even wilder than usual. They don't score a goal in three games when they get there but that doesn't matter. They made it on the big stage, they deserve all that could be given to them, and because of the depths to which our game has plummeted since, we will treasure that experience more and more as the years go by.

Yet Bovell has been on the big stage for more than ten years, was forced to change from his favourite event—the 200-metre individual medley in which he claimed Olympic bronze in Athens in 2004 —because of injury yet remains at the very elite level of world-class competition in the 50-metre freestyle.

Test and first-class batting world record-holder Brian Lara never really took to T20 cricket when it emerged on the international scene six years ago.

He was an abject failure in his only season in the breakaway Indian Cricket League in 2007 and no-one in the officially sanctioned, money-spinning Indian Premier League wanted his services when he went on the auction block last year.

On the other hand, the swimmer has made a successful transition from the supreme test of versatility to the raw, explosive power of the sport's shortest and swiftest test. For that reason alone he is a champion. But we take no notice of these things because swimming is a fringe sport beyond the narrow confines of a mentality that also perceives it as a pastime of the privileged who don't need recognition because they have everything else anyway.

So his bronze medal in the 100-metre IM two weeks ago at the Short-Course World Championships in Istanbul, like his 16 medals (seven gold, nine silver) over the previous two months on the World Cup circuit, like his gold and silver at the season-ending Vladimir Salnikov Cup in St Petersburg over the past two days grab the headlines but don't seep into the national consciousness.

Unlike Salnikov, the long-distance king who led a Russian revolution in the pool in the late 1970's, Bovell has carried our flag with dignity, honour and no little success virtually all on his own in his chosen discipline.

We don't know it yet, but he is a class apart.

By Fazeer Mohammed

Source: www.trinidadexpress.com

The Harvard Club, which underwent one of its most memorable years in 2012, in particular for its reception of the national award—the Humming Bird Silver medal, celebrated its many achievements at the annual Harvard Awards Dinner, recently hosted at the club house on Tragarete Road, Port:of:Spain.
The club had its best season to date in rugby having picked up seven out of eight possible titles, the most notable being the coveted T&T Rugby Football Union (T&TRFU) Championship division league and knockout trophies, taking over for the much more celebrated Caribs.
As a result, a host of players were acknowledged for their efforts including Wayne Kelly of the championship team who was awarded the Most Valuable Player. Kelly, who is also a part of the national rugby team set:up was instrumental in the club’s successes this season. Guyanese national Claudius Butts, a first team winger, was voted the most disciplined player.
He was also recognised as the “Sports Personality of the Year.” Aaron Rocke and Corey Phillips were awarded the “Rookie of the Year” and the “Most Improved Player” awards, respectively.
Four players of the Senior Division team, which also won the league title this season, Cloyd London (most improved player), Thabiti Benjamin (most disciplined player), Corey Phillips (rookie of the year) and Joseph Quashie (most valuable player) all played a major role in the second tier team’s success.
For the hockey section which also enjoyed a fine season, Christabella George:Ford copped the “Senior Player of the Year” title, while Kwylan Jaggassar took the award for the most disciplined player. Mindy Charles was handed the “Most Goals” award.
In the juniors’ division, Brittney Hingh took the “Junior Player of the Year” award.
Honor Roll
Cricket
Most Outstanding Batsman:
Marc Hospedales
Most Outstanding Bowler:
Stephen Kadoo
Cricketer of the Year: Marc Hospedales
Football
Special Award: Wade Charles
Hockey
Junior
Most Goals: Michaella Jones
Most Improved Player: Charnise Cato
Junior Player of the Year: Brittney Hingh
Championship (Senior)
Most Goals: Mindy Charles
Most Disciplined Player:
Kwylan Jaggassar
Senior Player of the Year:
Christabella George-Ford
Rugby
Under-17
Most Improved Player: Shaquille Lucas
Most Disciplined Player:
Crandon Greenidge
Rookie of the Year: Curtley Bateau
Most Valuable Player: Shakeel Dyte
Senior
Most Improved Player: Cloyd London
Most Disciplined Player:
Thabiti Benjamin
Rookie of the Year: Corey Phillips
Most Valuable Player: Joseph Quashie
Championship
Most Disciplined Player: Claudius Butts
Rookie of the Year: Corey Phillips
Most Valuable Player: Wayne Kelly
Most Improved Player: Aaron Rocke
Special Awards
Most Outstanding Discipline Trophy:
The Harvard Club Rugby Team
Sports Personality of the Year:
Claudius Butts
Member of the Year: Larry Mendez
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Many athletes and active people are living with at least one pain in their body that they are ignoring thinking the pain will pass eventually because ‘obviously’ as they continue to train, their bodies will be strengthening and therefore the vulnerability will resolve. So they think! However a year later, the pain has not gone away, possibly worsened, and training has plateaued.
Finally the decision is made to do something about it by seeking the assistance of specialists. They soon realize that what started out as an occassional niggling pain has gone from an acute and isolated discomfort to a chronic condition with secondary issues, a more involved injury, the progression of which will be different to an injury that had been handled sooner rather than later.
So what is the difference? Well, without getting into the nitty gritty, painfully boring scientific explanation of the whole thing, compare the healing that goes on in interstitial tissue to what happens to what most are more familiar with, your skin. Just as the skin bleeds, is tender and requires particular care to allow healing, so too do the layers below the surface.
Everyone is familiar with the age old practice of placing ice on the area when an injury occurs. Anyone who has actually applied this principle could attest to its effectiveness. Based on my experience however, the percentage of people who actually carry through with this simple home remedy is very slim, thus perpetuating the annoyance and inconvenience of the injury. The typical exercise enthusiast maintains their exercise routine and the injury is put into a cycle of inflammation.
To deal with the perpetuating environment of inflammation, the tissues “harden.” They thicken so that they aren’t so vulnerable to the effects of it, like a callous on your foot. This tissue becomes less elastic and particularly in muscle that require that recoil effect, the inelasticity compromises its ability to function and/or be explosive. Any compromise in muscle function causes over-compensations in other related muscles and tissue and next thing you know, the mechanics of the movement is thrown off. What started off as a simple little muscle strain can turn into annoying tissue scaring, limited range of motion, impingement and any number of other secondary effects, simply because the initial problem was allowed to perpetuate.
The value of taking those initial steps to best understand how to deal with an injury is grossly underrated. Not all injury results in long protocols of treatment sessions. Fortunately, there are health insurance policies out here that honor rehabilitation, once it has been prescribed by a doctor. Regardless, while there is the cost attached to therapy, anything that deals with preserving the health and function of your body, be it filling a prescription of antibiotics for a flu, seeing a dietician to manage your weight or buying the right gear/equipment for your sport – whether your insurance covers it or not, such actions should be considered self-preservation and an investment.
Just as an athlete or active person invests in his equipment, it is important that there is always the financial ability to handle the costs in the event of an injury. The chances of getting injured in one way or other is great, however major or minor.
It seems to me that part of the reason why people underestimate their need for therapy is because of the simplicity of some of the movements that are prescribed in therapeutic corrective exercise. Many think that the corrective exercises are exercises that can be done independently and while in some cases this may be true, rehabilitating an injury is not just about strengthening the area but also about knowing what movements you can do without making the injury worse, understanding body positioning, modifying a movement appropriately, breaking down the movement to build it back up so that muscles fire in proper sequence and so on.
While an injury can limit a person’s freedom in the gym or on the field, it does not always mean a complete removal from activity and athletic therapists in particular, challenge themselves to figure out ways to keep an athlete safely in play/active while nursing an injury. Once a therapist or doctor is able to identify specifically the condition and muscles affected, the rehab protocol is indicated with its goals and timelines as well as the parameters within which the individual can still operate/play.
Although the internet can provide you with a lot of information about your injury, seeking direct assistance from someone trained to deal with such conditions makes a big difference in directing the approach efficiently and effectively.
By Asha De Freitas-Moseley
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Larry Probst has been re-elected as the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) chairman for a second four-year term, it was announced tonight.

Probst was re-elected by acclimation at the USOC Board meeting today which took place at the Electronic Arts headquarters in Redwood City, California.

The American, who is also the chairman of gaming company giant Electronic Arts (EA), was first elected to the USOC role in 2008 when he replaced Peter Ueberroth.

"It's an honour to continue serving the US Olympic and Paralympic Movements and I look forward to making continued progress in the years to come," said Probst.

Under Probst, the United States topped the medal table at the London 2012 Olympic Games while they finished third at the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics.

Meanwhile, they finished sixth on the medal table at both the London 2012 Paralympics and Vancouver 2010 Winter Paralympics.

Another of his major achievements also involves helping the USOC settle their long standing revenue sharing dispute with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) which they hope paves the way for a successful American Olympic and Paralympic bid in the near future.

Probst has also helped the USOC maintain a strong financial position and his re-election increases the chances that he will be made an IOC member in the near future.

He is already on the IOC International Relations Commission and is considered one of the most influential figures in the Olympic Movement.

"We're extremely pleased that Larry will continue in his role as chairman of the board," said USOC chief executive Scott Blackmun.

"He's shown remarkable leadership and dedication over the last four years, which has resulted in us becoming a stronger National Olympic Committee.

As well as Probst's re-election, the meeting in California also saw Bill Marolt and Whitney Ping join the USOC Board.

Marolt, who serves as President and chief executive of the US Ski and Snowboard Association, replaces the outgoing Mike Plant as the USOC Board's National Governing Bodies Council director.


Meanwhile Ping, a member of the Athens 2004 US Olympic table tennis team, takes over from the outgoing Jair Lynch as the USOC Board's Athletes' Advisory Council director.

Marolt and Ping were selected following a search by the USOC's Nominating and Governance Committee.

They will each now serve a four-year term, after which a vote of retention would extend the term for an additional four years.

"We owe our gratitude to both Mike and Jair, who have helped shape our organisation during their service to our board over the last eight years," said Blackmun.

"In addition, we're happy to welcome both Bill and Whitney to our distinguished list of directors and are confident that their diverse perspectives and broad connections will effectively enhance our board."

By Tom Degun

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

The British Olympic Association (BOA) have secured their preparation camp for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Minas Tenis Clube (MTC) in the city of Belo Horizonte.

The BOA today signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) agreement with the MTC (pictured top) for Team GB athletes to train there prior to the start of the Olympics to help them adapt to the conditions and climate in Brazil.

Belo Horizonte is located in the state of Minas Gerais in South East Brazil while it is a short 45 minute flight away from Rio.

It is the third largest city in Brazil with a metropolitan population of 5.5million people while it is set to host matches at the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

The MTC in Belo Horizonte was chosen by the leadership of BOA from a shortlist of potential preparation camp locations both in Brazil and among other South American countries following an extensive search process that involved team leaders from the sports of aquatics, basketball, boxing, fencing, gymnastics, hockey and rowing.

"Getting your pre-Games training and preparation environment right is absolutely essential to the success of an Olympic team on foreign soil," said BOA chief executive Andy Hunt.

"We were very impressed with the breadth of world class sporting facilities available at the Minas Tenis Clube and equally pleased with the professionalism, friendship and warm welcome we received.

"We understand that for some sports the priority will be the final stages of training and fine-tuning their performance needs, while for others the focus will be on acclimatisation and gaining sufficient rest and relaxation immediately prior to the Games."

Alongside the pre-Games training elements the MoU also includes a commitment to create exchange programmes and share expertise and knowledge in the areas of sports science and medicine, education and training, marketing, media and commercial fields

The BOA will also work to facilitate the establishment of strategic partnerships between the MTC and Olympic sport national governing bodies and clubs in the UK.

"The Minas Tênis Clube is honored to have been selected by the British Olympic Association to be the basis of the activities of preparing their delegation in Brazil for the Rio Olympics 2016," said MTC President Sergio Bruno Zech Coelho.

"Great Britain and Northern Ireland today stand among the leaders in the international Olympic stage.

"Therefore we see in this relationship a lot of opportunities which will boost the development of sports activities in Minas Tênis Clube."

The facilities at the MTC include numerous indoor sports halls and gymnasiums and the swimming pool used to host the 2008 FINA World Cup.

It also includes the Lagoa dos Ingleses (Englishman's Lake) which has the potential to be utilised for training in sports such as rowing, canoeing and triathlon.

The MTC regularly hosts domestic and international competition in Olympic sports such as judo and volleyball while it was responsible for producing five of Brazil's 17 medals at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

It is still unclear whether the Team GB athletics and cycling squads will train at the MTC or stage separate preparations camps as both sports did in the lead up to London 2012.

UK Athletics and British Cycling have both confirmed to insidethegames that their preparation camp plans are still under consideration while the BOA revealed discussions are on-going.

"We continue to consult with all NGBs (national governing bodies) on each sport's preparation strategy for the Rio 2016 Games," a BOA spokesperson told insidethegames.

"Discussions with athletics and cycling are on-going."

The BOA previously hosted successful summer Games preparation camps in Macau prior to Beijing 2008, in Cyprus ahead of Athens 2004 and on the Gold Coast before Sydney 2000.

By Tom Degun

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

After 13 hectic days of filming and documenting several national athletes, London-based sports programme Trans World Sport’s visiting team, will depart the twin-island republic today, and head back to England to begin working on the documentaries.

Speaking to Trans World Sport assistant producer Simon Welch yesterday, he revealed that the trip to Trinidad and Tobago was indeed a major success. Welch and his cameraman JP Bassin, arrived in TT on December 8 to delve into the backgrounds of some of this country’s young and rising athletic stars.

They were originally scheduled to meet with Olympic javelin gold medallist Keshorn Walcott, Olympic Men’s Sprint fourth-placed cyclist Njisane Phillip, national cricketer Darren Bravo and the rest of the TT cricket team. Even though the duo managed to complete their intended schedule, they attained one extra day of filming and decided to visit the TT Tai Chi Institute in St James yesterday.

“It’s really been a warm and hospitable experience here in Trinidad and Tobago. We achieved what we originally came for and we even had the opportunity to visit the Tai Chi Institute today (yesterday). We received an invitation from Sifu Rahaman Khabir and we couldn’t refuse this offer to educate us a bit more on this country’s hidden talents,” stated Welch.

Over the past two weeks, Welch and his cameraman have been touring the islands and visiting the homes and training sessions of these national athletes. Their goal was to uncover the lifestyles, backgrounds and social lives of the athletes and investigate the challenging journeys each went through toward achieving international stardom.

When they return to England, the duo and the rest of their Trans World Sport team will begin the precise editing of their attained footage. They will be producing four one-hour documentaries on each athlete, that will be aired across 146 countries throughout January and February.

“Half of our work is done. We were able to get a lot of footage (filming) in and now we have to go back (England) to edit our copy for the programme. The Tai Chi Institute was our last stop. We’re going to use our time back home working on producing some great shows on Trinidad and Tobago athletes,” he added.

Welch admitted that he was honoured to have met with Walcott, Phillip and the national cricket team.

“Keshorn and Njisane are quite different,” he said.

“Keshorn is so down-to-earth and humble. We also had the opportunity to visit Toco and meet with his mother (Beverley), so this was very good for us. Njisane on the other hand is a very upbeat and outgoing guy. Both guys are really clever and it wasn’t too hard for us to document them on film. They really are great young athletes,” Welch continued.

On Sunday, the Trans World Sport team attended the national cricket team’s second Twenty20 practice match against the Queen’s Park Cricket Club at the Queen’s Park Oval, Port-of-Spain. Here, they were privileged to meet some of the “Red Force” players and record in-depth interviews. This, according to Welch, was crucial for their documentation since cricket is such an integral part of this country’s sporting history and current sporting accomplishments.

“The cricket match on Sunday was great for us and especially for our programme. As you know, cricket is also a major sport in England and a lot of West Indian star players hail from Trinidad and Tobago. We just had to do a special piece of cricket here,” Welch mentioned.

The Trans World Sport crew leave Piarco International Airport this afternoon and have expressed a strong desire to return to the twin-island republic for further documentation and publicity of our young and upcoming national sportsmen and women.

By Jonathan Ramnanansingh

Source: www.newsday.co.tt

Tennis Australia has moved to address concerns over the distribution of prize funds in the sport’s grand slams by announcing that the 2013 Australian Open will pay more prize money per round than any other event.

The 2013 Australian Open’s men’s and women’s singles champion will each receive A$2.43 million (US$2.54 million), the biggest prize money purse in the history of the sport. However, it is the distribution of the total prize fund of A$30 million that is the main headline. The biggest percentage increases come in the first three rounds. The first round is up 32.7% to A$27,600, second round up 36.6% to $45,500 and the third round up 30% to $71,000. Prize money for the three rounds of qualifying has gone up nearly 15%, while first round doubles prize money has increased more than 30% and the round of 16, quarters and semis have all gone up more than 14%.

Thursday’s announcement came on the back of reports this year that players on the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Tour were considering a boycott of the 2013 tournament in an effort to secure a greater percentage of grand slam event revenues. The 2012 Australian Open commenced in January with players warning of future strikes over the issue of prize money and the revelation that a proposal to boycott the tournament had been strongly endorsed at a players’ meeting. Players have long complained over the structure of prize money, saying the sums put in place for the four grand slams did not equate to the revenue they generate while the distribution is too heavily weighted to those players who regularly advance to the latter stages.

Tennis Australia said it had held “extensive consultation” with the ATP and Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) taking on board recommendations from both tours for the first step in what is a four year plan for prize money increases. “Our motivation is to make a major contribution toward helping ensure professional tennis players can make a decent living,” said Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley. “As we have said in the past, it is a real issue and needs to be urgently addressed throughout the sport.”

He continued: “That is why the biggest increases are in the earlier rounds, qualifying and doubles which in effect rewards a lot of the lower ranked players for their achievements which, by the way, should not be undersold. To just reach the main draw of a Slam, a professional tennis player has to be among the top 100 in what is one of, if not the most, competitive professional sport in the world.”

The Australian Open’s move comes after the ATP gave a lukewarm response to the US Open’s decision last week to increase prize money for the 2013 edition by US$4 million to a record US$29.5 million. Tiley added: “At the same time we also still want to continue to recognise the incredible drawing power and contribution of the top players. It is always a balance which is why we undertook unprecedented consultation on this subject with the tours and players who have been extremely supportive. We will not be stopping here. There will be more talks and more increases during the next four years. This is just a very positive first step.”

Source: www.sportbusiness.com

UK Sport announces record investment, up 11% on 2012 figure
Basketball 'devastated' by total cut to funding

Some of the sports held up as the biggest crowd-pleasers and legacy drivers during the London Olympics have had their funding cut altogether ahead of the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games. Table tennis, wrestling, handball, basketball and indoor volleyball have had their financial support withdrawn by UK Sport, while beach volleyball will receive just £400,000 over four years to fund the women's team.

The elite-sport funding agency was forced to defend the tough decisions on minority sports, made under its "no-compromise formula" that targets public money only at genuine medal hopes, at a time when the Olympic legacy is under scrutiny.

"I think people understand that when you host a home Olympics you have to put teams out in every single sport. Bizarre though it sounds to say it now, the rationale is to drive ticket sales," said the sports minister Hugh Robertson. "When people look at it, they know that is done on a performance basis. There is not a lot of point at this level, funding teams that are not going to qualify for the Olympics."

Those sports that have fuelled the rise in Britain's medal-table positions over the past eight years were rewarded with increased investment.

UK Sport vowed that funding, increased from £312m to £347m and guaranteed by the government for the next four years, would be invested in making sure Great Britain becomes the first host nation to deliver more medals at the following Games. It has already targeted at least 66 Olympic medals, one more than this time round, and 121 Paralympic medals, for Rio 2016.

Swimming, which underperformed in London and is in a state of flux, was effectively placed on 12 months' probation along with boxing, fencing and judo. Over four years it is due to receive £21.4m, down from £25.1m, but will have to prove its effectiveness after 12 months.

On Tuesday, British Swimming was told by Sport England that its grassroots funding would also be limited to one year until it could prove its worth. "We were disappointed and they were disappointed with the performance in London," said the UK Sport chief executive, Liz Nicholl. She said that a new structure, including a new performance director and head coach, would have to prove its worth in a year's time in order to release the rest of the funding.

Boxing, which did well in London and saw investment over four years rise by 40% to £13.8m, will also be given 12 months to sort out internal governance issues.

Overall, the amount of funding going into elite Olympic and Paralympic sport is going up by 11% over the next four years, with £347m due to be invested with the aim of winning more medals in Rio than Team GB achieved in London.

Thirty-five sports across the Olympic and Paralympic programmes received increased funding, with just seven suffering a decline. Sports such as cycling (£30.6m), rowing (£32.6m), sailing (£24.5m) and equestrianism (£17.9m), all of which excelled in London, are rewarded with budget increases under UK Sport's "no-compromise formula".

Funding for athletics has increased slightly to £26.8m over four years, despite missing the target set by its then head coach, Charles van Commenee. A total of 42 sports will receive funding and Nicholl added: "We're very confident we're supporting every creditable medal shot for 2016."

The Guardian revealed in June that sports such as handball and volleyball that were reliant on home-nation places to make the Games were likely to see their funding cut altogether unless they could prove they might win medals by 2020. Nicholl pointed to sports such as gymnastics and hockey that had previously lost all their elite-level funding but had come back to prove that they were capable of winning medals. "It has not been easy making the decisions or sharing them with sports today. I think some of these sports have got to concentrate on increasing participation base, improving their talent in the UK, improving their competition structure before they can compete with confidence for medals at a world level," she said.

Sport England's chief executive Jennie Price pointed out that those sports that lost funding would still receive support from its grassroots programme, designed to help build the talent base. But athletes took to Twitter to describe their response to losing funding. "I'm devastated, absolutely gutted. I gave my all for seven years, now we've been chopped," said the handball player Christopher McDermott.

British Basketball said the decision was a "waste" of previous funding in the run-up to the London Games. "We knew the criteria that UK Sport were applying for Rio, but having been funded to the tune of £8.5m in the lead-up to the London Olympics because of the sport's medal potential for the future, this is a devastating decision and is a waste of that investment," said its chairman, Roger Moreland.

"Over the last five years, the GB teams have done the equivalent of going from League Two in football to the Premier League. They have been competing with the very best countries in the world. It doesn't seem much of a legacy from 2012 to dash the hopes and aspirations of a sport whose heartland is founded in Britain's inner-cities."

But UK Sport, which will invest a total of £500m across the four years to Rio including money put towards research, medicine and major events, said that in many ways the London Games were an anomaly because it was forced to fund sports that would normally get nothing under its criteria.

OLYMPIC SPORTS FUNDING 2013-2017

Winners:

Athletics �£26.8m (from £25.1m) - 6 medals in London (hit target 5-8 medals)

Boxing* �£13.8m (£9.6m) - 5 medals (hit target 3-5 medals)

Canoeing �£19.1 (£16.2m) - 4 medals (hit target 3-4 medals)

Cycling �£30.6m (£26.0m) - 12 medals (surpassed target 6-10 medals)

Diving �£7.5m (£6.5m) - 1 medal (hit target 1-3 medals)

Equestrian �£17.9m (£13.4m) - 5 medals (surpassed target 3-4 medals)

Fencing* �£3.1m (£2.5m) - 0 medals (hit target 0-1 medals)

Gymnastics �£14.5 (£10.7m) - 4 medals (surpassed taregt 1-2 medals)

Hockey �£15.5m (£15.1m) - 1 medal (hit target 1-2 medals)

Modern Pentathlon �£6.9m (£6.3m) - 1 medal (hit target 1-2 medals)

Rowing �£32.6m (£27.3m) - 9 medals (surpassed target 6 medals)

Sailing �£24.5m (£22.9m) - 5 medals (hit target 3-5 medals)

Shooting �£3.0m (£2.5m) - 1 medal (hit target 0-1 medals)

Synchronised Swimming �£4.3m (£3.4m) - 0 medals (hit target 0 medals)

Taekwondo �£6.9m (£4.8m) - 2 medals (hit target 1-3 medals)

Triathlon �£5.5m (£5.3m) - 2 medals (hit target 1-2 medals)

Water Polo*** �£4.5m (£2.9m) - 0 medals (hit target 0 medals)

Weightlifting �£1.8m (£1.3m) - 0 medals (hit target 0 medals)

Losers

Archery �£3.1m (£4.4m) - 0 medals (missed performance target)

Badminton �£5.9m (£7.4m) - 0 medals (missed performance target)

Basketball zero funding (£8.6m) - 0 medals (missed performance target)

Handball zero funding (£2.9m) - missed performance target

Judo* �£6.8m (£7.5m) - 2 medals (surpassed target 0-1 medals)

Swimming* �£21.4m (£25.1m) - 3 medals (missed target 5-7 medals)

Table tennis zero funding (£1.2m) - missed performance target

Volleyball** �£400,00 (£3.5m) - missed performance target

Wrestling zero funding (£1.4m) - missed performance

* first year only guaranteed, remainder pending approval

** funding only for women's beach volleyball

*** funding only for women's water polo.

By Owen Gibson

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Cycling continues to accumulate medals, fans and funding, leaving other sports to work out its recipe for success

They used to dig for coal on the site of the National Cycling Centre in Manchester. Now they pan for precious metal and the bigger prize of maintaining the momentum of the sport's golden summer.

After another valedictory night at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year awards, where Bradley Wiggins strutted to the main prize and the performance director Dave Brailsford was named coach of the year, back at HQ eyes are firmly on the next four years.

The sprawling site, encompassing the velodrome where Sir Chris Hoy, Laura Trott and the rest put in endless hours of training as well as the national governing body's HQ and a new indoor BMX track, was built on the site of a former mine.

Now British Cycling executives are hopeful that unparalleled success in winning medals can be translated into further grassroots growth for the sport, that will allow them to continue riding a wave of success fuelled by public money.

On Monday Sport England confirmed that success in increasing the number of people cycling once a week by 200,000 over the past year had been rewarded with a grassroots funding boost from £24.7m to £32m over a four-year period. On Tuesday, UK Sport will confirm that cycling remains among the top tier of funded sports and is expected to reward continued success in London with a modest increase on the £26m it provided between 2009 and 2013.

It is easy to forget that for the first three years of its life the Manchester Velodrome was seen as something of a white elephant, marooned on the edge of the city. Dave Cockram, British Cycling's national facilities manager and father-in-law to one Bradley Wiggins, recalls that taxis wouldn't drop you there in its early days.

But with the advent of lottery funding, then the Commonwealth Games of 2002 and the subsequent arrival of Manchester City a few hundred yards away, it became an engine of the success of the elite Olympic team that excelled in Beijing and London and the catalyst for the creation of Team Sky, the wild scenes on the Champs-Elysées last summer and an attendant growth in the grassroots popularity of the sport.

The governing body is rare in marrying elite success with participation growth. It is helped by the fact cycling is as much a recreational activity or commuting practicality as a sport, but has seized the opportunity through enlightened governance and a dash of good fortune.

Since the lottery funding tap was turned on in 1997, Great Britain has come to dominate elite cycling. A decision by the Labour government in 2008 to funnel £120m of Sport England lottery and exchequer funding a year into the grassroots through governing bodies has attempted to repeat the trick in the more multilayered world of community sport.

As such cycling has become something of a talisman for the government as it searches for evidence that London 2012 can do something no previous Olympics has achieved and inspire more people to take up sport.

The picture remains mixed but recent Sport England figures show the number of people playing sport at least once a week grew by 750,000 in the past year. Cycling has powered that growth.

Ian Drake, British Cycling chief executive since 2009, has spent the four months since Great Britain ruled the velodrome in London not basking in glory but in finalising bids for more than £60m of public money, at a time when the prevailing economic climate is less than healthy.

You do not have to travel very far to see where the cuts that Manchester City Council, which perhaps more than any other has tried to use sport as a lever for redevelopment, is having to make are likely to bite.

Against that backdrop, Drake says that making the case for the money from UK Sport, to fund its elite athletes, and from Sport England, to invest in driving participation figures, has been the hardest job of his time in charge.

"I've got quite a simple view of sport," he says. "Cycling was here for a long time before me and its going to be for hundreds of years after me. So the simplest way of looking at a sport is to say you're only looking after it for a short period. You're just a custodian for a very limited period of time and you've got to leave it in a better state than you found it."

Drake was involved in 1998 in putting together the first "playground to podium" talent pathway that identified the best riders but also catalysed interest in the sport.

"In 2004, we knew that pathway was going to work," he says. "We had Ed Clancey and Lizzie Armitstead in the system but we knew we were doing it in isolation from the rest of the sport. I was increasingly uncomfortable with the fact that membership was static, we had declining events and yet we were on this trajectory to smash the world. I was worried that we'd sit there in 2008 and 2012 with boxfuls of medals but the sport stuck where it was 10 years ago."

That has changed since Beijing, in particular. Membership of British Cycling stands at more than 62,000 – it has trebled in eight years - and it has used the increased profile of Wiggins, Hoy and Victoria Pendelton to drive the growth of the sport. This has been pulled off partly thanks to a partnership with Sky and techniques honed to target specific parts of the population – be they women turned off by the idea of riding with men, schoolchildren without a bike at home, or commuters who want to take the first step into riding competitively.

The Breeze network, for example, has targeted women with intially easy recreational rides in a social atmosphere that are organised online.

"When Sky got involved, we knew it wasn't the cash that made the difference but the reach," says Stewart Kellett, British Cycling's director of recreation and partnerships. "The way we spoke to cyclists in 2006 was that you had to be a bloke, you had to be in lycra, you had to be fit and and you had to win races. That was relevant to 0.1% of the population. We had to change the image and the way we talked about cycling."

It has also meant taking a wider lobbying role on cycling safety issues. "Every time we have a death or accident on the roads it sets us back 20,000 people," he estimates. As cycling becomes "normalised" and more popular with a broader cross section of the population, the hope is that it will foster a greater level of understanding between riders and motorists.

The sport has benefited from engaging with recreational cyclists, in a way that athletics has historically failed to do – leaving an alternative industry to grow up around fun running and marathon running rather than embracing it.

"Just like you need a talent pathway, you need a participation pathway that can hold somebody's hand until the point where they can either ride socially on their own or have found a group or found a club," says Drake.

For all the talk of systems, talent pathways and aggregation of marginal gains Drake, a former PE teacher, acknowledges that it is those on the front line who make the difference. "It's that magic moment, the first 10 minutes," he says. "It's the people who make or break sporting habits for life.

"At the end of the day, we're trying to do two things – win medals and get more people playing the sport. As long as you do those two things, you get momentum and growth. That's been the journey for the last 14 years. Can we crack that international success but also make sure those medals deliver more than the sum of their parts?"

Far from basking in glory, Drake is determined to recalibrate the parameters of success. There is an unspoken acknowledgement that the high water mark of winning the Tour and huge Olympic success in the same year is unlikely to be repeated. "You can't justify this level of funding just on medal success alone," he says. "There's got to be more to it."

Kellett says that British Cycling has "sweated the medals more than any other sport". Overlooking the £23m indoor BMX track that opened in August of last year brings to mind the experience of BMX since the 1980s. In the grip of a fad for the sport in the mid-1980s, local authorities up and down the country built BMX tracks that fell into disrepair because they were not maintained properly and had no resident clubs or enthusiastic volunteers. Cockram says it is determined not to repeat those mistakes. In the bowels of the velodrome, which is shared roughly 60/40 between the public and training for the elite squads and which since the Olympics has seen waiting lists for "try out" sessions lengthen to weeks then months, lies the equivalent of the Quartermaster's Stores.

There, in a cramped space once inhabited by Brailsford and Shane Sutton as they plotted the route to Olympic success, is a reminder of the attention to detail that lies behind the glory. Row upon row of nutritional supplements, kit and – in a locked room at the back – the frames of the bikes that powered their riders to those medals in London. Charging endlessly around the track, the GB academy squad are following a derny ridden by a coach, Jon Norfolk. There are 10 riders in the sprint programme, all hoping to become the next Hoy or Jason Kenny, move to Manchester at 18 to British Cycling-owned apartments in the city and train full-time.

"The aim of the programme is the Olympic podium," Norfolk says. "These guys benefit from those who ploughed the furrow and created the pathway. Athletes like Chris Hoy, Jason Queally, Chris Boardman, they had to create this.

"They have done all the experiments and the making it up as you go along. Although the expectation is a lot higher on these athletes than an 18-year-old Chris Hoy, they get a lot more support."

A 20-minute drive from the National Centre, in the suburb of Tameside, Cockram shows off a mile-long off-road track that he proclaims as the future of cycling in Great Britain. It is not much to look at – a loop of tarmac that winds its way past an athletics track and a Football Foundation-funded project.

But he says investing in similar secure, floodlit closed-road circuits around the country, where local schools and clubs can train in a safe environment, is the key to the future development of the sport. Drake agrees: "Wherever we're building those, they're packed. What we're trying to build in every town and every city is a place to go where there's a secure environment."

There are around 20 such road racing circuits around the country and Cockram estimates that total will double in the next four years. "They are in the areas of big population and whole swathes of the country with no coverage at all. The trick is to make road racing circuits open to a wider percentage of the membership." In an attempt to attract youngsters, British Cycling's 11 regional managers and 30 Go Ride coaches will pitch up at schools with a van full of bikes and evangelise about cycling, with the aim of getting the children involved with a local club.

A British Cycling board member in the early 1990s, Cockram says he has seen the culture of the sport change to become more welcoming and outward facing. There have been growing pains along the way but the relentless self-analysis that has served Hoy et al so well has also sparked a culture change within the sport.

To illustrate the virtuous circle that they are aiming for, Drake reaches for Trott, the irrepressible double London gold medallist – one of the first riders to come all the way through the system since public money for participation matched that for the elite end.

"The point at which somebody sees Laura Trott and says 'I want to do that', you want to know the first time they go down to that club on a Tuesday night that their first 10 minutes is going to be fantastic; that they're going to go home and tell their Dad it's something they want to carry on doing. That's why we spend a lot of time on coach education, a lot of time on volunteers. At the end of the day, they will make or break whether that inspiration turns into participation and turns into future Olympic success."

Unlike other governing bodies at which the elite side of the sport remains disconnected from the grassroots, which are rarely discussed around the boardroom table unless there is a funding round coming up, at British Cycling the two sides appear genuinely integrated.

There is an irony in the fact that at the Football Association and the Rugby Football Union, for example, their councils are made up of venerable figures from the grassroots of the game. And yet the endless concern of them and their board tends to be the upper echelons and the England team. That is partly, of course, because they don't have to rely so heavily on public money. Football, tennis and rugby have their own cash cows in Wembley, Wimbledon and Twickenham to help drive their sport whereas 86% of British Cycling's revenue come from the public purse. Drake says he wants to alter that balance but believes it also makes them work harder to grow the sport as a whole.

Drake says other sports have been beating a path to his door to hear how cycling squared elite success with boosting participation. He says there is no silver bullet but that obsessive attention to detail, combined with hard work and restless curiosity, brings its own reward.

"There's no point one or two sports succeeding and everyone else failing. It's in our interest to make sure the system is delivering. At the end of the day, it's just people riding bikes."In an ante room at the ExCel Centre following a SPOTY show that has all but confirmed cycling as a new national sport Brailsford acclaims the shift in its profile, paying tribute to Wiggins, Hoy, Mark Cavendish and Pendleton for blazing the trail.

"My own personal experience growing up in north Wales was falling into a sport which just seemed like a very odd thing to be doing," he said. "All my friends thought it was an odd thing to be doing. When it came to the point where I wanted to try to do it seriously, the only way you could do it was to go and live abroad.

"To go from that, from what really was a minority sport with 10-mile time trials on a Tuesday night, to where the sport currently stands in British culture now is remarkable."

By Owen Gibson

Source: www.guardian.co.uk