This can be big, very big. Can see a gold medal coming to Mullingar. With due respect to Katie Taylor, this is a much, much bigger prize to win - the barstoolers would never know it though.
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This can be big, very big. Can see a gold medal coming to Mullingar. With due respect to Katie Taylor, this is a much, much bigger prize to win - the barstoolers would never know it though.
Not happy with that decision, even with the knockdown still thought he just snipped it. Oh well, Gold, Silver and 3 Bronzes, not bad.
Unlucky for Nevin, I thought he might have levelled it but had a bit of a slip in the last round, was always going to
be difficult scoring fighting a boxer from the host nation.
If is is any consolation Cambell is of Irish descent on his fathers side. he would be eligible to represent
both the Republic and N.I at football thorough his grandparents.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/boxing...ot-out-1247401
I thought Campbell deserved the gold, it would have been a shock had the judges had scored the last round to JJ. He just didn't have the fluency of his earlier bouts, maybe part of that was down to the opponent, as Mick Dowling said. Tough on John Joe but he'll always have that magnificent semi final win.
Paddy Barnes thinks this bronze shines brighter than the Bejing bronze. He seems keen to give it a go for another Olympics.
It was a close fight, good fight, JJ didn't push as much as he should have. To beat the home fighter he had to go all out, but after losing the 1st so badly (I thought there was 3-4 points in it then) he just had to be perfect. Still, he should have a good pro career.
Old git, in terms of level of competition, difficulty and prestige, it's above Katie's, for now. It's like (to use a crude comparison) Beach Volleyball and proper Volleyball. Both have merits, both are competitive, but the strength, quality and history (as well as quality) will be on the indoor code.
To put it very simply, it's a gold, but like those won at the very early Olympics when there wasn't the depth of opposition.
After Mo Farah won the last leg of the 'double double', Gerry Kiernan said it should rank a higher achievement than Lasse Viren's because the level of competition is greater now.
I don't know about that, maybe like Lasse if Mo wakes up tomorrow to run the marathon at top speed - maybe if Mo had fallen down half way through, picked himself up and clawed his way back to clinch the race. I suppose one could say the same about Jesse Owens not having to face the same level of competition as exists now, but what's the point? The gold medal victory is timeless.
http://www.highlandradio.com/2012/08...-sunday-sport/
Usain Bolt on Highland Radio today. Random as hell.
My Laughing Billophobia: O'Helihy on Katie Taylor's award ceremony: "I found the national anthem strangely moving". FFS. I suppose he has never stood on a foreign field and sung the anthem. I always find the anthem moving let alone at an Olympic gold medal ceremony!
The UK closing ceremony was entertaining but only to the those from these islands and a few other places. I hear NBC hadn't got a clue what the batman and Robin thing was with the Only Fools and Horses car. How many of the billions of Chinese and Russians would have ever have heard of most of the artists? What was with the second George Michael song? Didn't know that one.
From an Irish perspective, delight with Katie but disappointed for John Joe after the hype the RTE Panel had given him before the fight for the gold. It looked as if it would be a gold but from an untrained eye it appeared that he had left his best in the fight with the Cuban. FOr those who blame home juries, don't forget that it what the Russian is claiming in her fight with Katie. Sickener for Paddy Barnes to lose on the count back. An "amazing" (word most use on the BBC for the games) performance. Still hurting for him. Men's walking, women's penthalon and the sailing were our only other decent performances as far as I can see. The show jumping didn't do it for me.
Very enjoyable games to watch but I did miss the medal ceremonies on tv not featuring Irish or UK athletes so I watched Eurosport for those. I will always remember the Belarus woman 18 stone shot putter in floods of tears during her anthem.
p.s. I liked the RTE boxing panelists (despite their wild optimism on occasions), particularly Mick Dowling who never missed a chance to promote the sport. Fair dues to him. Jimmy Magee's commentaries drove me mad particularly his bias. He had one Irish boxer winning a round 5-3 when he in fact lost it 3-5.
I shall miss the Olympics and congratulations to London for the games. If I was a Nordie I'd be really pi**ed that they didn't even get a mention in the name Team GB or in the closing ceremony. Bagpipes, welsh choirs but nothing for the "wee country" or did I miss something?
She has lost her medal according to twitter:
From BBC Journo James Pearce: https://twitter.com/PearcesportQuote:
Olympic gold medallist loses medal after failing drugs test. Belarus' Nadzeya Ostapchuk tested positive for metenolone after women's shot
Jessie J did something the IRA never could last night, she murdered Queen:mad:
That's a good analysis Owlsfans:)
I saw the first week and a bit in London and the last bit at home in Mullingar. BBC had 25 channels showing all the sports which was great. Archery, weightlifting and some of the swimming were great at the start. The French and Chinese swimmers impressed. Bolt was magnificent and our Katie the main highlight for me. was hard to watch the boxing commentary with Jimmy Magee but the boys in the studio were brilliant. Reading that the media have said that over 6000 were out to see Nevin - that's rubbish, no where near that - think we might need a GUST fan to decide that attendance.
Overall a good Olympics, well done to the Brits - but Im already looking forward to Rio
The women's pentathlon on the last day was interesting, there was nothing else on the tv, maybe it was the last competition. It's a strange sport, shooting and running. It was won by a Lithuanian with ease, the rest of the field were struggling hard over the last run, but she finished fresh as a daisy. No doubt the long run up (a roped off run-in meandering like an airport check-in area) to the tape was all the more enhanced by the huge roar which greeted her very stride. But most of the roar was for the Brit who had just entered the arena, way back in silver position. Didn't matter a bean to the winner who took it as if all the acclaim for her.
I couldn't be bothered with the closing ceremony but somehow I suspect the Rio ceremonies will have me drooling.
At the risk of going off topic but would Team UK have covered everyone? calling us "Team GB + NI + Crown Dependencies" probably wouldn't fit on the jerseys!
I suppose they could have rolled in a lambeg drum or two.
level of comparison katie fought and defeated top ranked oponents in her weight division and also she won with the weight of the whole nation expecting her to bring home the gold & also if womans boxing had been in olympics before now it is quite possible she could have been looking at a 3rd gold medal. i would not tarnish anybody who won any medal of any kind at this olympics or at earlier olympics the all deserve or respect.
old git, I certainly didn't tarnish her, however it is unfair and incorrect to compare her achievements to other more settled sports, or to other competitors. There was so much hype spoken about her before and during the Olympics, much of it by talking heads with zero knowledge of boxing (or indeed reality, ie sports) that her achievements hae somehow propelled her onto the pantheon of greats. She did well, she qualified easily, is the best in her division and won what amounts to a trial run sport. It cannot be taken away from her or any other female fighter who took part that they don't have ability, however since the depth of talent is very, very shallow (when was Katie's last Irish title fight?) it has to be viewed objectively.
Amazing (GB Olympics catch word) that I should pick her out as one of my highlights on the podium and then she is stripped of her medal. She certainly has something to cry about now.
A lot of insinuations from the Beeb and RTE about the Algerian runner who won the 1500 meters at a canter. Could drugs really make such a difference in an event like that? If so I'll have some of that. If he can do with without being detected, how do we know that they're not all at it, even those who haven't made the big improvement he did? I thought it was unfair of both stations. Innocent until proven otherwise surely?
Slow day in work and came across this article. Raises some intereseting points and the idea of performance profiling seems a solid enough one. Probably worth a read if you have a few minutes to kill.
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/2012...mpian-doubts/1
Can we not just let everyone take everything and leave it at that.
Best doctor wins.
Team GB also covers the Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia and the following British Overseas territories: Anguilla; the British Antarctic Territory; the British Indian Ocean Territory; the Falkland Islands; Gibraltar; Montserrat; the Pitcairn Islands; Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha; South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands; and the Turks and Caicos Islands.
First of all, congratulations to all our Olympic athletes for their fantastic and of course in particular to those who brought home more medals than we have won since 1956 - you were awesome to watch, even on the online world feeds here in Canada. We came in 41st out of 204 on the medal table and can be more then happy to be in the company of countries like Mexico and Argentina. But I want to look forward four (or even eight years) and try to figure out just what Ireland is capable of achieving at future Olympics. And with five medals at this Olympics and another nine top-ten finishes (including three top-five performances) I don't think it's pie-in-the-sky thinking to aim for double figures. So where could we achieve this?
1. Boxing - It seems that the IABA took the disappointment of the Athens Olympics particularly hard and has really focused on improvement and determining what it takes to become an Olympic Medalist and to great success. Right now it appears that boxing is the one sport capable of churning out multiple medal contenders in the near future - they have the drive and the belief to take on all-comers (having a sports psychologist has been crucial to this, I feel). And with Katie Taylor's spellbinding performance, more young women can be expected to take up the sport and if the women's side is expanded in future Olympics, it could provide a fertile ground for even more (BTW 19-year-old Ceire Smith was only one fight away from joining Katie Taylor in London) - I think the IABA should aim to increase the number of Irish boxers qualifying for the next two Olympics from six to eight or nine with an aim of bringing home five medals per Games.
2. Equestrian events - finally, after so much controversy and under-performing over the years, our riders delivered this time around with Cian O'Connor's bronze and also with excellent performances from the eventing team and, in particular Aoife Clark. For the future, the aim should be to qualify a full team for showjumping with a couple of medal contenders (and also practice jumping against the clock in a less hell-for-leather manner - while the bronze was great, O'Connor could easily have taken a couple of extra strides before the last, cleared it and claimed silver). The eventing team needs to improve on dressage and they will become serious medal contenders.
3. Sailing - Firstly, Annalise Murphy needs to be financially backed so that sailing becomes her job for the next eight years. And she needs to believe fully that she is the best sailor in the world in her class because for two days at the end of July she was. So she would do well to do some training with the boxers and Katie Taylor in particular and maybe have a few sessions with their psychologist. Her inspirational performance along with couple of other creditable efforts should be built on to provide multiple medal contenders in future years.
4. Athletics - Next time you see someone walking frantically down the road frantically, wiggling their bum, don't snigger - rather applaud and shout words of encouragement because, since I left, apparently Ireland has become a serious competitor in racewalking, with Robert Heffernan's two top-ten finishes and Aoife Loughnane's world championship silver medal. While both these stars may be nearing the end of their careers, they will hopefully inspire a new generation to take our new-found love of the event to new heights. And with the development of sprinting in Ireland (through the likes of Derval O'Rourke, David Gillick, Paul Hession, Jason Smyth and latterly Steven Colvert) we should have the infrastructure in place to produce a world-beating sprinter or two over the next decade and, without wishing to spark a controversial race debate, it is possible that Ireland's new community from West Africa may produce someone capable of sprint medals, given appropriate levels of support.
5. Swimming - Unfortunately Grainne Murphy was unable to show just what she is capable of but as she is only 19, she may again be a medal contender for the next two Olympics. And with Ireland now having three Olympic standard pools, she may be the first of a batch of potential medal-winners to emerge over the next few years.
6. Cycling - After Britain's poor performance in Atlanta it was their track cycling team who were at the forefront of their revival as a major sporting power, culminating in them winning sixteen gold medals. Undoubtedly, the building of the National Cycling Centre for the Manchester Commonwealth Games (for a modest 10 million pounds) was a major catalyst for this turnaround. So with a velodrome planned for Tallaght, Ireland could combine its great tradition in cycling with this brand new facility to develop a number of track cyclists into serious medal contenders. Martyn Irvine should also be supported through the next Olympic Games because, while he may have slightly underperformed in London, on his day he may be capable of challenging for a medal.
7. Canoeing - Give Andrzej Jezierski the support he didn't receive from Poland so that he can challenge again in Rio. Give him and Eoin Rheinisch coaching jobs to develop multiple medal contenders in canoeing. Support Hannah Craig so she can focus full-time on canoeing and give it one more shot in Rio to build on her creditable ninth at London - but get her to see a sports psychologist as she looked a little tentative in the final run.
8. Minor Sports
- Natalya Coyle should be helped to build on her top-ten finish in modern pentathlon so that she can contend for a medal in Rio and beyond
- Fencing, Judo, Shooting, Taekwondo and weightlifting offer 186 medals - why not develop these sports in Ireland and try to contend for a few?
Can't comment on the others, but judo isn't really a minor sport anymore. The near-total domination by the Japanese historically has ended as more countries take it seriously as an Olympic sport, with Japan getting only 1 gold medal this time round.
I'd guess that a problem with your idea in general is that lots of other countries will have already had the idea of finding sports that aren't taken seriously and investing in those hoping for Olympic medals.
Aw come on now, it's not like I'm saying that we can suddenly pick up 20 of these medals - it was, after all, Part 8(b) of my Grand Plan to double our medal tally (which I might add, took me an hour to put together and was intended to inspire people to think big for the future) and was just added because I thought if such countries as Afghanistan and Gabon can pick up Taekwondo medals, there may be a possibility that, with a bit of support, our competitors could go further - we had at least one competitor who came close to qualification.
Good post Sam, but surprised you didn't mention rowing- Ireland as a whole's second most successful sport at the 2012 Games. There must be a chance that three guys from the same small town school and club will inspire others across the island. Even if potential stars have to train in England or Germany.
West Africa got one medal in the whole games.Quote:
without wishing to spark a controversial race debate, it is possible that Ireland's new community from West Africa may produce someone capable of sprint medals, given appropriate levels of support
Even if you only count those representing Britain, two medals is reasonable. Four (ie those for all the competitors from NI) is quite good, don't ye think?
Of the six NI competitors in the GB team, all bar table tennis's Na Liu were expected to win medals or get close. Cyclist Houvenaghel was reserve on the gold winning team and for all her flounces was probably a bit unlucky. Hockey defender Lewers came fourth.
Did you miss the bit where I made clear I was happy to be in the minority? I'd just call the team Britain, but GB is better than UK or any other clunking alternative.Quote:
And thought a majority of a transplanted populace, as you are so quick to remind us, are in favour of 'team Ugly K.'...:rolleyes:
A Van Morrison song perhaps instead of George Michael's new release?
Nice to see that Katie T was one of the 10 competitors picked to make presentations to the volunteer helpers.
You're absolutely right - I had thought about including rowing based on historical performances (Niall O'Toole, men's fours in '96) but chose to focus mainly on sports where there are current performances that give hope for the future. I was not aware of the medals picked up by rowers from the North for Team GB. So let's remedy that:
9. Rowing - if rowers from Northern Ireland can pick up two medals for Team GB, then there's no reason why rowing in The Republic can't work to produce competitive rowers (as it has in the recent past) - or perhaps we can poach the best from the Six Counties!
True, but there were some very respectable track sprint performances with Cote d'Ivoire's Murielle Ahoure qualifying for the women's 100m and 200m finals and Nigeria's women qualifying for four sprint finals, including a fourth place finish in the 4x100m relay (and historically, Nigeria has picked up a fair smattering of sprint medals). And of course, sprinting nowadays is dominated by athletes from the Caribbean and US (and to a lesser extent Britain and Canada) who are of West African heritage (I know, I'm doing a Nik Wallenda here but I think I'm OK) and have the coaching and technological infrastructure to capitalise fully on their genetic predisposition for sprinting (Oh, oh no, waaahhhh!!!!!:eek::eek::eek:)