Michael Phelps won the right to call himself the greatest Olympian of all time when the US team destroyed the field in the 4x200 metres freestyle relay yesterday to hand him his 19th medal.

Chinese prodigy Ye Shiwen won her second gold of the Games, setting an Olympic record in the 200m individual medley, after stunning swimming pundits with her victory and world record in the 400 medley on Saturday.

But the night belonged to Phelps, who swam the anchor leg of a relay that the Americans dominated from start to finish after Ryan Lochte handed them a commanding lead.

It was a historic moment in the 116-year annals of the modern Olympic Games, and an emotional one for Phelps, still a powerful force but no longer the commanding figure who won an unprecedented eight golds at the Beijing Games in 2008.

His teammates flung their arms around him. "I thank those guys for helping me get to this moment," said the 27-year-old from Baltimore, who had 16 medals before the start of the Games.

Having picked up a silver in Sunday's 4x100 freestyle relay, he drew level with Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina's tally of 18 when he won silver in his first outing yesterday in the 200 metres butterfly.

The American led going into the last few metres of his favourite race, but was tiring rapidly and had to settle for second when South Africa's Chad Le Clos ploughed through to snatch it on the final touch.

Watching at poolside was Latynina, 77, who has held the record for decades with her haul from the Games at Melbourne (1956), Rome (1960) and Tokyo (1964).

Latynina told Reuters earlier this month she had no doubt Phelps would overtake her in London, adding: "I can only wish him well".

The entire audience in the 17,500-capacity Aquatics Centre stood to applaud Phelps' cumulative achievement in winning 15 gold medals, two silvers and two bronze. Latynina won nine, five and four respectively.

In other action on Day Four, Germany won its first two golds, in equestrian eventing, and France its fourth, in canoe slalom, but host nation Britain was still seeking its first.

China tops the overall medals table with 13 golds, followed by the United States with nine. Each has 23 medals in all.

The U.S. women's team stormed to the gymnastics gold - the country's first since 1996 - with dazzling performances from Jordyn Wieber and Gabby Douglas.

It was compensation for Wieber's disappointment at missing out on a spot in the all-around individual final, and for the U.S. men's slump to fifth place in their team event on Monday.

In the pool, 16-year-old Ye completed a medley double when she held off a late challenge from Alicia Coutts of Australia.

The teenager, who swam her last length on Saturday faster than Lochte did in winning the corresponding men's event, has been forced to fend off insinuations of cheating.

American John Leonard, executive director of the World Swimming Coaches Association but not on the U.S. coaching staff in London, told Britain's Guardian newspaper: "Every time we see something ... 'unbelievable', history shows us that it turns out later on there was doping involved."

The US Olympic Committee distanced itself from his comments, saying he was not associated in any way with the country's swimming or Olympic team.

Chinese officials hit back. "Ye Shiwen has been seen as a genius since she was young, and her performance vindicates that," Xu Qi, head of the Chinese swimming team, told the news agency Xinhua.

"Don't use your own suspicions to knock down others. This shows lack of respect for athletes and for Chinese swimming."

Source: www.guardian.co.tt

Switzerland footballer Michel Morganella has been stripped of his Olympic accreditation after posting a racist message on social networking site Twitter.

Morganella (pictured top, in white) posted the message, which insulted South Koreans and has since been deleted, after Switzerland were beaten 2-1 by the Asian country on Sunday (July 29).

"I made a huge mistake after a disappointing result," said Morganella.

"I wish to apologise to the people in South Korea and their team, but also to the Swiss delegation and Swiss football in general."

The 23-year-old claimed that he felt provoked after receiving a torrent of abuse throughout the match against the Koreans.

Morganella was booed throughout the match after he picked up an "injury" in a phantom challenge with Arsenal forward Park Chu Young.

After the match he made his feelings clear on Twitter writing: "I want to beat up all South Koreans! Bunch of mentally handicapped retards!" ("Je les tous Defonce Coréens, allez vous tous Bruler, bande de trisos!")

Switzerland's Chef de Mission Gian Gilli said that the player "discriminated against, insulted and violated the dignity of the South Korean football team and people."

According to a spokesman for the Swiss Olympic team, Morganella has accepted the decision to strip him of his accreditation and has apologised to South Korea.

Morganella, who has played one senior fixture for Switzerland, will miss the final Olympic clash with Mexico.

The Palermo defender's account on Twitter has also been deleted.

Although London 2012 is meant to be the first "social networking Games", the use of the media platform has already landed a Greek athlete in trouble.

Triple jumper Voula Papachristou was not even allowed to travel to the Olympics for posting a racist message on Twitter, which mocked African immigrants.

Although the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has tried to encourage Olympians to communicate with fans via social networking, it has urged them to follow guidelines to avoid such pitfalls.

By David Gold

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

London 2012 has started to put thousands of tickets back on sale for the Olympics in an emergency bid to fill the empty seats at venues across the Games.

In the lead-up to the Olympics, London 2012 claimed there would be no empty seats at the venues as they were overwhelmed with ticket requests but the sight of whole sections of gaps in the stands has angered the thousands of fans who missed out on tickets.

The non-attendance of accredited "Games Family" – including sports officials and media – has largely been blamed for the empty seats but London 2012 have said that international federations  have started giving tickets back to sell to the public.

"We talked to the international federations yesterday," said the London 2012 director of communications and public affairs Jackie Brock-Doyle at a press conference here.

"We were able to put back into the pot for sale around 3,000 tickets last night; they have all been sold.

"That includes about 600 for the gymnastics event today and we are going to do that on a day to day basis.

"The other side of it is obviously in basketball, when the Dream Team [the USA basketball team] played yesterday, there wasn't a spare seat in the house.

"So we are doing this session by session, talking to the accredited groups including broadcast media, and asking whether we can release for the different sessions tickets back into the public pot.

"Where we can, we are going to release those the night before and put them up for sale.

"The accredited seating for these Games is down 15 per cent on previous Games, so there already has been a reduction in accredited seating for London 2012."


Brock-Doyle also defended criticism that London 2012 should have addressed the issue at an earlier stage.

"I think we are trying everything we can to make sure those accredited seats are filled where we can," she said.

"There are operational issues that make it difficult to fill some of those seats which is why we are putting and making them available to the troops and to the teachers and children.

"We had a plan in place for the teachers and the children over a year ago that we have been deploying.

"There are 150 children and teachers who are on the Park today.

"That is only for the Park.

"We will increase that to about 300 or 400 tomorrow and we will keep going on that.

"We really are doing the best we can but it is not an exact science, as we saw with swimming last night and with basketball and the American match yesterday.

"We are working within the numbers that each of the accredited areas look at.

"We have done a lot already.

"At a lot of venues, we have taken, for preliminary rounds, away all of the non-tabled seats and sold those out.

"So we have done an awful lot already in the lead up."

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) director of communications Mark Adams said the organisation is looking to help.

"From the IOC's point of view we are doing a number of things," he said.

"From that you will understand that clearly we are giving up those seats in those accredited areas on a case-by-case basis.

"At the USA basketball game there were 200 or 300 people who could not get into the accredited area because it was completely packed.

"So it is horses for courses."

By Tom Degun at the Main Press Centre on the Olympic Park in London

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Lithuanian teenager Ruta Meilutyte has caused one of the biggest shocks of London 2012 so far after the unheralded athlete stunned a world-class field in the women's 100 metres breaststroke final to claim her country's first ever Olympic swimming medal.

The victory makes Meilutyte (pictured top, in green cap) the youngest ever winner of the discipline at 15 years 133 days old as well as the youngest Olympic champion in any swimming event since American Beth Botsford triumphed in the 100m backstroke at Atlanta 1996 aged 15 years 62 days.

Meilutyte, originally from Kaunas but who now lives in England and attends the same Plymouth school as British diver Tom Daley, led from the start and miraculously held on to claim gold ahead of American superstar and reigning world champion Rebecca Soni by the narrowest of margins.

The teenager finished in a national record of 1min 05.47sec while Soni, the overwhelming favourite going into the race, finished just 0:08sec behind in 1:05.55 to claim silver, the same colour medal she won in the event in Beijing four years ago.

Japan's Satomi Suzuki earned bronze in 1:06.46 while Australia's defending Olympic champion, Leisel Jones, finished fifth.

But the race undoubtedly belonged to Meilutyte, who was completely overcome with emotion following the unlikely win on the biggest stage in sport.

"I can't believe it," she said through tears.

"It's too much for me.

"I really can't say anything.

"It was hard and difficult.

"At the moment I can't speak too much but it means a lot to me and I'm so proud."

Meilutyte's tears of joy continued on the podium in what marks a remarkable journey for the teenager, who only turned 15 in March.

She moved to Britain three years ago with her father and is trained by English coach Jon Rudd.

Rudd knew he had a major talent on his hands when he first saw Meilutyte but admitted the result was a major shock.

"We didn't realistically know what she would do but the Olympics are a funny place," he said.

"She is a talented and vigilant worker but this is obviously unexpected."

Meilutyte proved she was not at the Games just to make up the numbers by setting a European record in the heats which proved two seconds faster than her personal best.

She swam even quicker in the semi-finals yesterday to qualify fastest for the final and managed to hold her nerve even through a bizarre fault at the start when the bleep went off before the swimmers were told to take their marks.

The long delay should perhaps have favoured more experienced competitors but Meilutyte kept her composure to astonish both herself and the crowd to win.

Soni sportingly led the tributes to the Lithuanian.

"You have to give her credit because what she has done is phenomenal," said the American.

"I'm a little disappointed not to win gold but to do what she did at her age is pretty special."

Meilutyte could actually add to her medal tally at the Olympics as she is also competing in the women's 50m and 100m freestyle events and will now be taken seriously by her competitors following the shock gold.

It marked Lithuania's first gold medal of London 2012 and only its fifth ever.

The first was won in the men's discus by Romas Ubartas, who claimed victory at Barcelona 1992, four years after winning a silver medal for the Soviet Union at Seoul in 1988.

The second also came in the men's discus, at Sydney 2000 courtesy of Virgilijus Alekna, while at the same Games, Daina Gudzinevičiūtė took victory in the women's trap shooting.

Alekna again won the men's discus at Athens 2004 while Meilutyte becomes Lithuania's first swimming gold medallist.

By Tom Degun at the Aquatics Centre on the Olympic Park in London

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Forty-fifth (45th) spot was not the position T&T’s Andrew Lewis was hoping to be at the end of day one of his sailing event, yesterday at the London Olympic Games in England. It was a frustrating start for the local sailor, who is making his debut at the prolific sporting event. The blue skies, bright sunshine and the cold, crisp wind made it a perfect day for sailing at Weymouth and Portland in Dorset, a cool three-hour trip from London. Competing in the laser category—a men’s one-person dinghy event—Lewis finished race one in 46th place, improving somewhat in the race two, placing 43rd, giving him a total of 89 points at the beautiful secenic, Weymouth Bay South course. “I think it is best to say that I did not expect to do how I did today (yesterday). Yesterday (Sunday), I sailed the practice race and had a really good feeling for the boat. “I sailed really well and I thought I was going to sail like that today (yesterday) but I went out there and did not have two very good races,” said Lewis, who was visibly bothered by the outcome of the both races.
“The second race was better than the first race which shows I am improving. I had two good starts though, which indicates that I am starting better and I expect things to improve from here on.” Australian Tom Slingsby with a total of three points emerged the top performer for the day. Second was Guatemalan Juan Ignacio Maegli Aguero with 11 and third was Croatia’s Tonci Stipanovic (11). Cy Thompson, the only other sailor from the Caribbean competing in the men’s event, ended in 24th spot with a total of 46. Other sailors from the region who were on show were St Lucia’s Beth Lygoe and US Virgin Islands’ Mayumi Roller, who placed 37th and 41st, respectively in the women’s laser radial. Lewis will look to step up in races three and four of the 10-race series today.
The races will be on an entirely new course which Lewis feels more confident in his approach as he looks to finish among the top 10 in the coming races, to get a chance to compete in the medal round on Sunday. “It is going to be a little bit different conditions. I know this race course a little better and it will benefit me. “Basically, I have to not let those technical mistakes happen and not make those mistakes that I shouldn’t be making anyway after all these years competing,” shared Lewis. T&T ace swimmer George Bovell dives back into the pool today at the Aquatic Centre in Olympic Park, when he competes in the men’s 100 metres freestyle event. In the Olympic bronze medallist first outing at the Games, he set a new national mark in the men’s 100m backstroke, swimming a personal best 55.22 seconds to place 29th overall.
He merely used the event as a warm-up for his pet event, the 50m freestyle which is scheduled for Thursday. Bovell will swim in lane two of heat four. There will be eight heats in all which starts at 10 am (5 am T&T time). While Bovell will be aiming to add to his collection, T&T boxer 19-year-old Carlos Suarez will make his debut at the Olympic Games in boxing at Excel South Arena2. Suarez will fight out of the blue corner against Ferhat Pehlivan (23) of Turkey at 8.45 pm (3.45pm T&T time) in the light flyweight class round of 32.
By Rachael Thompson-King
Source: www.guardian.co.tt

By Jacquelin Magnay, Olympics Editor

Source: www.dailytelegraph.co.uk

A fresh ticketing row has enveloped London 2012 Olympic organisers as angry parents of athletes are turned away at Games venues.

Parents and friends of Swedish and Singaporean swimmers as well as a host of other countries have been refused access into the aquatics centre over the past two nights, missing seeing their loved ones compete, while other parents have had hours of angst trying to sort tickets at the last minute.

Adding to their woes were the pictures of empty seats in prime positions.

The issue hasn't been confined to the aquatics centre. Parents have missed tennis matches at Wimbledon and only been able to get into Eton Dorney for the rowing and Excel for the boxing after fraught negotiations.

Gunilla Lindberg, a senior International Olympic Committee member intimately familiar with the London preparations as she was also on the London Coordination Commission, said the issue was chaotic and distracting for many athletes.

''It is so confusing for everyone. Parents keep calling the athletes, no one knows where the tickets are and it is not very good preparation for the athletes to be so stressed about it,'' she said.

The parents and friends ticket programme entitles every athlete to buy two tickets for each session in which they compete. But the Ticketmaster ticketing system used by Locog to administer the programme has not been able to update in time for each final - detaling which athletes are eligible to puchase the tickets.

Then the distribution of the tickets has, in the words of one team chef de mission become '' a complete nightmare''.

Locog has changed the system, telling the foreign teams that tickets for the programme could be picked up at venues, but the officials at the venue have not been informed and have refused the parents admission.

''This is chaos, no one knows about the system,'' said Lindberg. ''But I don't know how it is going to be sorted as it is so complex and this is the first games this programme has been used.''

The International Olympic Committee has been so concerned about the issue it has been repeatedly raised at the early morning joint briefing with Locog and government.

This morning at the chefs de mission meeting at the Olympic Village it was a major topic of debate.

The IOC told the Telegraph: ''This is the first time that this particular service has been offered to athletes and it comes on top of all the other ways that athletes can see the Games. It has been working for a number of months for those that pre-qualified and clearly, with such a new system, especially during the Games, when the turnaround time may only be a matter of hours, there may be challenges but LOCOG is working to fine tune the services with the NOCs and ATRs.''

Earlier Tessa Jowell called on Lord Coe to use his "muscle" to resolve the empty seat issue at the Olympics today.

Tessa Jowell, the shadow Olympics minister, has called on Games organiser Lord Coe to ensure sports fans are given tickets for empty venue seats 'today'.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today Programme, Mrs Jowell said: “The IOC have got to be part of the solution to this particular problem, these accredited seats remaining empty.

"However, we can’t wait for that medium-term resolution. We’ve got to get people into those seats today tomorrow and the next day and I think the measures Seb Coe announced yesterday go quite a long way in relation to that, together with the recycling of tickets for people who are already in the park.

"This is very important for the confidence of the British public and what I’m struck by is that the sponsors certainly don’t seem to be the bad guys in this at.

"They have really responded to public expectation that these are not fat cat games but two of our major companies – the majority of tickets have gone to staff or who are active in their local community, or they’ve gone to people beyond the board level of the sponsors and I’m sure that is a more general theme.

"We need the federations to be as responsive as many of the sponsors.”

She added that Lord Coe could exercise “muscle” in facing up to the federations not using their tickets.

“He’s done a fabulous job in leading these Olympic Games, being the face of the Olympic Games. He’s highly respected in every part and now is the time when he can exercise maximum muscle in saying to these federations: ‘Look your reputation is on the line here and it’s not fair to the British many of whom have not been able to get to the Games.”

Mrs Jowell said that the London 2012 Games would be among the most "democratic" ever to take place, with the public truly taking part in events such as the mass bell ring which was held on the morning of the Opening Ceremony.