Olympic swimmer dies: Norwegian hopeful Alexander Dale Oen suffers cardiac arrest

Twenty-six-year-old world champion tragically passes away at training camp

Norway's Alexander Dale Oen reacts after he competed in the final of the men's 100-metre breaststroke swimming event
Champion: Oen was tipped to shine at London 2012
Getty

The world of swimming is mourning the sudden death of Norway’s world champion Alexander Dale Oen, who passed away aged 26.

The 26-year-old, who won the gold medal in the 100m breaststroke event at last year’s World Championships, suffered a cardiac arrest and passed away following a training session in Flagstaff, Arizona.

Dale Oen’s death comes little more than a week after the death of Italian footballer Piermario Morosini following a heart attack during a game.

That in turn followed Fabrice Muamba’s cardiac arrest while playing for Bolton at White Hart Lane although he survived and has now left hospital.

In a statement, the Norwegian Swimming Federation said that on Monday evening a teammate, who noticed that Oen had spent a long time in the shower, entered the bathroom and found the 26-year-old lying on the floor.

After immediate attempts to resuscitate him failed, Oen was swiftly rushed to hospital, but he was pronounced dead less than 90 minutes after he was first found.

 

Gold medalist Alexander Dale Oen of Norway celebrates on the podium during the medal ceremony for the Men's 100m Breaststroke final
Gold medal: Oen celebrates becoming world champion in Shanghai, 2011

The Norwegian Swimming Federation statement said: “We are all in shock and this is an out-of-body experience for the whole team over here.

“Our thoughts now go primarily to families who have lost Alexander too early.

“This is the toughest day the sport of swimming in Norway has ever had.”

The Federation said that Oen had undertaken a light day of training that day, including a round of golf, and that he had seemed healthy.

Oen, who won a silver medal during the 2008 Beijing Games, was tipped to be one of Norway’s star performers at the upcoming Olympics.

 

World governing body FINA released a statement which read: “FINA was shocked to learn about the sudden death of prestigious swimmer Alexander Dale Oen at the age of 26 in a training camp in Flagstaff (Arizona, USA), on April 30, 2012.

“Dale Oen has been one of the most promising revelations at the 2008 Olympic Games, winning a silver medal in the 100m breaststroke, an event in which he obtained the victory (the first ever for his country) at the 2011 FINA World Championships in Shanghai (CHN).

“He was therefore one of the most talented swimmers in this stroke and was certainly preparing a brilliant participation at the upcoming Olympic Games in London.

“In everyone’s memory is also present his courage in Shanghai when shining in the pool immediately after the sad events that had taken place in Norway.

“He had given to media and fans an image of a brave and sincere athlete, paying a heartfelt tribute to his compatriots from the pool deck in China. His example had been one of the most vivid moments of those Championships.

“FINA shares the mourning of the entire Norwegian swimming community and addresses its most sincere condolences to his family and friends.”

Quadruple Olympic breaststroke champion Kosuke Kitajima, who is looking to become the first man to twice successfully defend a swimming title in London, Tweeted: “In shock over the passing of a dear friend and great rival. RIP Alex.”

 

2008 Olympic Games Men's 100m Breaststroke Final - (L-R) France's Hugues Dubosq, Japan's Kosuke Kitajima and Norway's Dale Alexander Oen
‘A great rival’: Kitajima, middle, is shocked by death of his friend

South African Cameron van der Burgh, double bronze medallist in Shanghai, added: “To my greatest rival. My greatest friend. My brother in breaststroke. May you rest in peace. One love.”

European governing body LEN bureau member and British Swimming chief executive David Sparkes said: “I think he was an outstanding athlete and a great inspiration – not only to everyone in swimming but in particular to swimmers in Norway.

“He was just outstanding and he very much did it his way.

“He clearly had a great future potential as being Olympic champion in London – he was a class of his own.

“It is a great loss, it is hard to believe he is no longer with us.

“He was a charming young man and so gracious in victory.

“It was so nice to see someone from a country not famed for its swimmers but more for its skiers doing so well.”

Sparkes added: “Swimming is one of those strange sports where they are rivals but also great friends. Often they train together and compete together. It will have affected a lot of people in the sport.”

Dennis Pursley, British Swimming head coach said: “The international swimming family is small and tightly bonded, so it is always difficult when we lose one of our own.

From Mirror

Hoy: After every session I’m helped off the bike … the pain is unimaginable

Here is an interview of Britain’s Olympic Champion Chris Hoy, given at Mail Online describing some of his sessions on the bike and what it takes to become Olympic Champion. I have found it very inspiring. Good luck Chris! Here is the article and the interview:

Sir Chris Hoy does not mince his words.

‘It’s the worst pain imaginable,’ he says. ‘You feel as if you are dying. You’re physically sick and you writhe around on a mat in a world of pain until you can form a foetal position, which you stay in for 15 minutes thinking you can’t go on.’

But, of course, Hoy will go on. And before the Olympic Games begin in London this summer, he will endure the pain on a weekly basis, pushing himself to the limit – and beyond – as he trains at the English Institute of Sport just across the road from the Manchester velodrome that has become his second home.

EXCLUSIVE: After every session I'm helped off the bike ... the pain is unimaginable

 

Still got it: Chris Hoy (centre) with his World Championship gold medalStill got it: Chris Hoy (centre) with his World Championship gold medal

Hoy may have four Olympic gold medals, including an incredible hat-trick four years ago in Beijing, but at 36 the body and the demands of his sport care nothing for reputations and past achievements.

So as he prepares for his bid to add yet more medals to his collection, he must face eight more sessions of interval training, all undertaken on a stationary bike and all expected to cause him the discomfort that any athlete who wishes to become an Olympic champion must confront.’

The lactic acid builds up in your legs until, in the final minute or so, your muscles begin to shut down,’ says Hoy. ‘When the session is over, people have to unclip me from the bike, ease me out of the saddle and lay me down on a padded mat.

 

Good Hoy: Sir Chirs celebrates his victory in the World Championship KeirinGood Hoy: Sir Chirs celebrates his victory in the World Championship Keirin

‘If it is painful during the interval session, it is nothing compared with the pain that immediately follows when you end the training.

‘Every time, you think it’s worse than ever. Every time, you convince yourself that something’s wrong, you must have a virus, or you’re ill, or something. You have pretty much decided you’re not going to do it again – ever. Then after 15 minutes, almost to the second, the pain subsides, you sit up, start talking and get on with it.’

This is how it will be until just a few weeks before the Games begin. This is how it has always been.

At 32, Hoy defied the traditions of sport by winning golds in the men’s sprint, team sprint and keirin inside the Laoshan Velodrome in Beijing in 2008, picked up the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award that December, and followed that by being knighted.

Already considered old for his sport, and with four golds and a silver medal as well as 11 world titles, it seemed the ideal time to retire.

Maybe he would have done if the Olympics were being staged anywhere else, but London had been in his sights even before his triumph in Beijing.

‘I was on the stage in Trafalgar Square in 2005 when the IOC announced that London had got the 2012 Games,’ says Hoy. ‘Now that was seven years ago, when I was 29 and already veering towards middle age in track cycling terms. Anything could have happened since then. But on that day, on that stage, there was no doubt in my mind I’d be in London.

Outrageous manouvre: Sir Chris Hoy beats Maximilian Levy in the Keirin finalOutrageous manouvre: Sir Chris Hoy beats Maximilian Levy in the Keirin final

‘What then clinched it after Beijing was my reaction. Don’t get me wrong, all the awards and the plaudits, the knighthood, it was all incredible and hugely exciting, but it was also a fantasy land, one far removed from my real life.

‘I was commentating on TV at a World Cup event in 2009 and realised how much I hated watching my team-mates and rivals competing while I was on the outside. I realised that all I really wanted to do was get back on my bike.’

Hoy then provides a third reason for putting himself through the pain again, three times a day, six days a week.

‘I’ve never said this before, but I see it as a matter of honour that I defend my titles and give people the chance to beat me,’ he says. ‘The alternative is to win and then simply run for the hills. I don’t like to do things that way.’

And so Hoy climbed back on to his bike, and promptly fell off it again in a crash in Copenhagen that put paid to the rest of 2009, before picking up an assortment of medals at the 2010, 2011 and 2012 World Championships, the most recent in Melbourne two weeks ago when he and his team-mates were disqualified in the team sprint, and he took bronze in the individual sprint and gold in the keirin.

Crashing out: Chris Hoy's accident in 2009 put him out for the seasonCrashing out: Chris Hoy’s accident in 2009 put him out for the season

Throughout this time, Hoy’s ‘failure’ to emulate his Beijing feats has prompted comments concerning his waning powers connected, naturally, to his advancing years.

‘To the outsider, what we achieved in Beijing probably looked easy,’ he says. ‘We turned up and won. It was simple as that. Seven golds in 10 track events. Of course, it wasn’t easy. It was the culmination of an incredible amount of work. I aim to win every race I compete in, but it’s impossible to do so. You just can’t keep up the level of performance witnessed in Beijing for four years.

‘I also noticed a change in my opponents’ approach to me in races post-Beijing. Suddenly, they were trying new tactics that veered away from tradition. They knew they didn’t have the horsepower to beat me in normal racing circumstances, so they tried different strategies.

‘Of course, I didn’t want to be beaten at all over the past few years, although I have consistently been picking up global medals. In track cycling, though, you’re ultimately judged on your Olympic performances. That’s all that matters.’

Still, it was good to finish the recent World Championships on a high with a keirin gold achieved with an outrageous, last-gasp manoeuvre after the disappointment of losing out to team-mate Jason Kenny in the individual sprint semi-finals, a defeat that has presented British cycling with a nasty selection dilemma concerning the one spot available for the event at the Olympics.

On a high: Chris Hoy celebrates with his family after his World Championship winOn a high: Chris Hoy celebrates with his family after his World Championship win

‘With 50 metres to go, you wouldn’t have put a penny on me winning that keirin,’ says Hoy. ‘I went for a gap that wasn’t there but I hoped would open up for me. It did. It doesn’t have too much relevance concerning what happens in London. It’s another race. But at least it reminded people that when I’m in a corner I come out fighting.’

Will it be enough to be selected in all three events again? His places in the team sprint and the keirin are all but assured, but in the individual sprint, Kenny, the man Hoy beat in the 2008 Olympic final, has a big claim, too.

‘I don’t know for a fact that I’ve been selected for anything yet,’ says Hoy. ‘I’d be a little surprised if I didn’t make the team sprint and the keirin, though. As for the individual sprint, it’s a tough one. My hunch is they’ll leave the decision until much closer to the Games.

Golden Hoy: Sir Chris with his Beijing Olympic medalsGolden Hoy: Sir Chris with his Beijing Olympic medals

‘After all, on the form of Jason in the 2008 worlds he may not have been picked for Beijing in the team sprint, but by the time the Games came round he was in good enough form to help us win team sprint gold and lose in the individual sprint final to me.

‘It might make sense to see how we’re performing in a few weeks’ time. But whoever they pick, don’t be surprised to see him standing at the top of the medals podium.’

Whether he competes in two or three events, Hoy has the chance to overhaul Sir Steve Redgrave’s medal tally of five golds and a bronze, a collection that makes the rower Britain’s most successful Olympian.

Hoy, who rowed for Scotland as a junior, admits that Redgrave was one of his heroes.

‘For a time I took my rowing as seriously as my cycling and that meant Steve was the man,’ he says. ‘Even if I won three golds in London, to take my tally up to seven, would that really diminish what he achieved? No, it would not. Steve still is a total hero of mine.’

Good memories: And Chris Hoy will be hoping history repeats itself in LondonGood memories: And Chris Hoy will be hoping history repeats itself in London

Like Redgrave, Hoy remains ultra-confident, despite recent results suggesting he is far from unbeatable. His reasons are threefold, beginning with his stunning performance inside the new London Velodrome at the World Cup event staged there in February.

‘I was back to my old self,’ he says. ‘The crowd was the nosiest I’d ever heard inside a velodrome, and it wasn’t even the Olympics. In the sprints and keirin you hear the volume of support go up whenever you make a move. It definitely helps.

‘I know if I’m in good shape and in the right frame of mind I’ll still beat anybody. Does this mean I believe I can win three gold medals again?

‘Yes, it does. I achieved my lifetime ambition of becoming an Olympic champion in 2004. My next dream was to become a triple Olympic champion and I achieved that in 2008. Now I have another dream – to become a champion in front of a home crowd.’

And what happens then?

‘Well, I won’t do a Redgrave,’ he says. ‘I won’t ask to be shot if I get back on a bike. I’ll see how I feel after a few weeks away.’

Astonishingly, Hoy may be prepared to put himself through further pain to compete in Glasgow’s Commonwealth Games in 2014, when the cycling will be staged at the velodrome which bears his name.

‘I’ll be 38 and it will mean two years more of training,’ he admits. ‘But then I’ve never competed in an international event in Scotland.’

The rationale says everything about Hoy’s obsession with his sport – and his willingness to punish himself in the pursuit of glory.

Triathlon program 16.4.2012 – 22.4.2012

Monday:

A) 50 minutes run, Zone2,3  B)45 minute swim, Zone 2,3

Tuesday:

6:30 English school 20 min. run warm up, 10 x 100, 3 x 1000 3:40 (Zone 4)

Wednesday: A) 6:30 Agrotis parking, 15 easy cycling to Logos radio station, 3 x 2 laps(2 km each)  Time trial, Zone 4

B) 40 min. Swim Zone 2,3

Thursday:

50 min easy run, Zone 2,3

Friday:

A)40 min run with 5X200 race pace

B) 30 min swim continues zone 3

Saturday:

Off

Sunday:

Sprint Triathlon Race. Good luck to all of us.

 

Brownlee on comeback trail after stepping up recovery from achilles injury

From Daily Mail

Triathlete Alistair Brownlee has stepped up his recovery from an achilles injury sustained last month, with his coach revealing on Monday that the Olympic gold medal contender has stopped using a protective boot.

The 23-year-old reigning triathlon world champion, and potential star of this summer’s Games in London, had his preparations disrupted when he tore the tendon in his left ankle at the end of February.

But Brownlee’s training is now getting closer to normality, with running sessions not far off. The former Leeds University student had only previously removed the boot twice a day to go swimming.

Put it there! Brownlee's recovery is moving forwardPut it there! Brownlee’s recovery is moving forward

‘Alistair has been wearing an air cast as a precaution following the diagnosis of a slight tear to his left achilles, but he is now no longer using this,’ Malcolm Brown, British Triathlon’s Olympic Programme Manager, told Sportsmail.

‘During the last few weeks he’s been in the water more frequently and he is swimming well. He’s on the bike, and he will be running shortly.

‘We’re getting good advice from specialists and not rushing things. We’re going through a process to put the strength and mobility back and get him out running again as soon as possible.’

Together with his 21-year-old brother Jonathan, who finished runner up in the world last year, the Brownlees could provide the story of 2012. They are currently training in Yorkshire.

Hard yards: Alistair (left) with brother Jonathan before his injuryHard yards: Alistair (left) with brother Jonathan before his injury

Speaking after sustaining the tear, the senior sibling explained: ‘I felt pain in my calf and ankle. Alarm bells sounded.

‘It’s hard to put into words just how frustrating it is not being able to train. For me it is the loss, for a month at the very least, of the thing I love.

‘Triathlon drives me and I don’t do it for the money, I do it for the love of the sport. This is not just a job for me, it’s my passion, so the setback has hit me hard.

‘People want to know how it affects my Olympic preparations. It’s hard to tell at the moment but if I can get this boot off quite quickly and get training, I have plenty of time to get myself fit.

‘I’ve shown before that I can return from injury to championship-standard competition in the space of a month.

‘However, I won’t be overdoing it in training to make up for lost time as that can be very dangerous – I’ll just return at my own pace.’

Brownlee’s first major race of the year is the ITU World Triathlon San Diego on May 12. His team had never intended that he would race the World Triathlon Series event in Sydney in April.

 

The Ethiopian town that’s home to the world’s greatest runners

ethiopian runners
Runners at the stadium in Bekoji, starting their daily training session with Sentayehu Eshetu, known simply as Coach. Photograph: Ben Quinton for the Guardian
I have recently read this article which i really like it and repost it on my blog. It’s from The Guardian

Outside the blue hut is a plaque with a beautifully calligraphed set of rules and regulations – athletes must train hard, respect each other, work as a team and honour their homeland. At the top of the plaque three flags have pride of place: Ethiopia, the local region of Oromia and the Olympics. This is the office of Sentayehu Eshetu, known to everybody as Coach. To be honest, it’s more run-down garden shed than office. Inside, it is dark and dusty, but the late afternoon sun lights up a series of photographs of athletes on the wall. All have won at least one gold medal at middle- or long-distance running. Amazingly, six of the champions originate from this tiny town of Bekoji, and have been coached by Coach.

If Sentayehu Eshetu is not the world’s greatest coach, he is surely the greatest discoverer of running talent. In London this summer, two of the 54-year-old’s most successful former prodigies, Kenenisa Bekele and Tirunesh Dibaba, will defend Olympic golds at 5,000m and 10,000m. Then there’s his first champion, Derartu Tulu, who won the Olympic 10,000m in Barcelona in 1992 and eight years later in Sydney, and Fatuma Roba, who won the Olympic marathon in 1996 in Atlanta; and the latest generation of champions – Tirunesh’s sister Genzebe, only 21 and already world indoor champion at 1500m, and Kenenisa’s younger brother Tariku who won the 3000m gold at the World Indoor Championships.

Coach is a small man with a big smile. He talks quietly and is not one for hyperbole. When I suggest he has a magical touch, he looks alarmed. “No! No magic,” he says intensely. “I don’t do any magic. It’s the weather and the fact that everything is helping them.” He must have something special? “They listen well and work hard. And eat well. You know barley? They eat barley.” He grins and says I should eat more barley.

Bekoji is 170 miles south of the capital, Addis Ababa. There are plenty of donkeys and horses and goats and cows on the road, but few cars. Coach says around 17,000 people live in the town of Bekoji; there are 25 car owners and he knows all of them. The landscape looks arid but is incredibly fertile. Everything grows here – oil seeds, coffee, tea, spices, sugar cane, cotton, cereals. The centre of Bekoji sits 10,500 feet above sea level and has an average temperature of 66 degrees. Its inhabitants are proud of its climate and special air. On arriving, I find it hard to breathe, but when I do manage to gulp some in, I quickly realise how crisp and pure it is. If you can run here, they say, you can run anywhere.

We head off across the red ochre soil, which blows up yet another mini dust storm, past the corrugated shacks and rubble and randomly parked lorries, and head for Bekoji stadium. It’s not as grand as it sounds. There is one primitive stand, a grassy bank for people to sit on and a straggly football pitch in the middle. This is where Coach takes his youngsters, between the ages of 12 and 20, through their paces five times a week.

There must be more to your success than feeding the runners barley, I say to Coach. “I give full attention to my team and I’m always on time, and I will do anything it takes to make them a champion. I tell them what they should do, and if they follow that, they run very well.” Coach never ran himself. His sport was football. He taught PE and played in central defence. These days he hobbles more than runs. He shows me the knackered knee that did for his football ambitions.

Until now, the rest of the world has remained oblivious to Coach’s achievements, but for the past four years a documentary film crew has recorded in Bekoji and has produced a lovely film called Town Of Runners. It’s no exaggeration – any day at sunrise you will see groups of teenagers or adults running up the hill. Most will be on their way to the two-hour daily training session with Coach. Within an hour the sky goes from red to white to perfect blue. By 8am, the sun is burning through in the 80s.

Coach is thinking about why so many great runners come from here – determination, physical strength from working the land, huge lungs, role models, perfect body shape. (Many of the most successful distance runners have been small, light and immensely strong, with a superhuman capacity to endure – the biopic of Ethiopia‘s most famous runner, Haile Gebrselassie, who comes from down the road in Asella, is called Endurance.) Running is a means of escape and transcendence in Ethiopia – Coach’s best runners will go to “finishing school” in Addis Ababa and that is just the start of their journey. Every day, Coach says, parents will ask him to train their children. “Kids want to run to make their parents happy, and the parents want them to run so they don’t have to work the land. They say, come and take my son or daughter.”

It must be heartbreaking telling them that they are not going to make it, I say. He shakes his head. If they have any natural ability, he insists, you can never write them off. Athletes come through unexpectedly – and fail unexpectedly. He tells me about Zegeue Shifarawu Abebe, the young man who takes training with him. “He used to train with Kenenisa, and we thought he was the better runner; that he was the one who was going to win Olympic medals.” For whatever reason, Zegeue never made it, and now he’s out every morning coaching tomorrow’s champions.

At the Bekoji stadium, the kids are gathering on the grass banks. It’s 7am, but no one’s yawning – perhaps its something in the air. Alemi Tsegaye is one of the girls featured in Town Of Runners. She and her friend Hawii Megersa were two of the most promising local athletes when the film-makers started shooting. But they may not be quite good enough. In the early days, Hawii tended to win the races and Alemi would finish runner-up. She said it made her just as happy to finish second to Hawii as if she had won. In the film, we see both girls graduate to “running camp” – they leave home for a promised land of concentrated training, healthy food, a small wage and school. But it didn’t work out that way. The camps, or clubs, were well intentioned but badly run by regional government, and the girls felt neglected; Alemi returned home disappointed and Hawii returned distraught, suffering what appeared to be a breakdown.

Since then, Hawii has gone off to another camp where she is said to be happier, and Alemi is between camps. Today, back at training and now 18, she is glad to be with her friends.

Like many Ethiopians, Alemi is reserved. I ask questions through a translator and she stares straight ahead when answering, nodding her head from side to side, avoiding eye contact. “I wanted to go to school, but it is very far from the camp. They keep promising we can go to school, but there’s not enough money and it never happens.”

There was another problem at camp – the food. All they were fed was injera, the Ethiopian yeast-risen bread that is rich in iron but tends to bloat the stomach. “Injera, injera, injera,” she says. “Not enough milk and honey.”

We talk about the freakishly high number of great runners from Bekoji. She mentions the special air, of course, and points to the landscape. “We can run on the flat and in the hills. So we can train for all conditions.” Then she points to Coach, looks at me for the first time and smiles. “Good coach.” What makes him so special? “He’s like a parent. You can ask him anything.”

Why does she want to become a champion? “For my country and for my family.” It’s the answer they all give. “If I can’t make a living as a runner, I want to be doctor.” Is that realistic? Well, she says, her family farm wheat and maize, and are relatively wealthy for this area, so yes. “It was possible, but I’ve fallen behind in my learning. Most of the children who go to the running camps fall behind.”

Later that day I meet Frehiwot Sisay, a friend of Alemi’s who was at camp with her. She tells me how awful it was there. “Out of 55 of us, 53 left.” Runners leave for a variety of reasons – they are not good enough to make the required times, they are unhappy or homesick. “They fed us for only three days. The other four days we had to provide for ourselves. We had to sleep on the floor. The two girls who were left weren’t even good runners. They were in their late 20s, too old to go home.”

Coach blows his whistle to start training. All 200 run round the 400m track. It’s easy – barely a trot. Then Coach whistles and they speed up. Within seconds they are half a track away from me – their strides massive, elegant, easy. One time round the track and my chest tightens, my lungs burn, my head hurts and I feel sick. The special air, no doubt.

Coach takes us through our paces for the next two hours. The emphasis is on stretching and loosening, and he refers to the routines as gymnastics. There are so many different exercises – running on the front of your toes, on the back of your heels, bending low and scattering imaginary crops, skipping with an invisible rope, duck-walking, goose-stepping, horse-cantering. “Up, up, up,” Coach says, as the athletes lift their legs ever higher. In the distance cocks crow and dogs howl, but otherwise the silence in the Great Rift Valley is overwhelming. Occasionally it’s broken by “Up, up, up up” and the drum of feet beating the soil in perfect time.

It’s beautiful here – red soil, blue sky, green savannah, mountains in the distance and the smell of eucalyptus everywhere. “It’s the best,” Biruk Fikadu says. Both his parents died in their 30s and he has lived with his grandmother ever since. “It is very beautiful here, but it is also boring. It is a happy place, but there is no money. You have to go to Addis to make money.”

Before long the going gets too tough for me and I drop out. I’m not the only one who’s exhausted. Coach tells me that after training most of the children fall asleep in the afternoon and miss school. Few runners manage to combine training and education. As a former teacher, Coach has mixed feelings about this – yes, of course, he’d rather they studied, especially now that all children can go to government-funded local schools, but if running is their passion, it’s pointless trying to deny them.

Ephren Dejenne, 17, has been training with Coach for three years. He is running 400m and 800m, and hopes to work his way up to 1500m. He’s not yet graduated to club level, but Coach says Ephren is one of his most promising runners. He has a tattoo on his upper arm, drawn in pen. “It says ‘I am’ – it is a statement about me, about believing in myself.”

His trainers are falling apart, but he says there is plenty of life left in them. He will sew and resew them, and when the sole goes, he will buy a newer sole and glue it on. Like most of the youngsters here, he will have saved up for between six months and a year for his pair of secondhand trainers. But these are far from the poorest people in Bekoji. To own any kind of trainers, you are likely to belong to the middle class – owning a few dozen cows or goats. Ephren’s father is a chauffeur and his mother has a butter business. Like everybody here today, he says he will succeed and go on to run in the Olympics. “If I win, I will buy a house for my mum.”

Some of the locals live in very nice houses – three or four rooms, made of bricks, lots of land – but many still live in one-room shacks made from mud. Next door to the newish Hotel Wabe where I am staying for £7 a night is a row of run-down shacks. In one, three children live in one dark room with a sleepy cow and a goat. The shacks are government-owned and cost around 12 birr a week to rent – just under 50p. Farther along the road, a woman is cooking injera on a fire. The only possession the family seems to have is a TV and a huge satellite dish that dominates the backyard.

Back at the hotel, an official from the regional tourist board stops to chat. Sinkeneh Tilahun says he can’t stand the way Ethiopia is perceived by the rest of the world. “What is Ethiopia labelled?” he demands. “We’re labelled famine country. Greece is a country dependent on aid, but would you call it a dependent country? Yes, we still have drought sometimes, but this is a land of plenty. Now the area is completely developed, and lots of it’s been done without aid – like the massive dam on the Nile.” He has a point. Over the past three years a road linking Bekoji to Addis has been built by the Chinese. But the fact remains that, for all Ethiopia’s wealth, 39% of the population lives below the international poverty line of $1.25 a day, and in 2011 the country ranked 174 of 187 countries in the Human Development Index.

Sinkeneh thinks Ethiopia has produced such great distance runners because kids here always had to run to get to school. “I was lucky I only had to run half an hour a day. Gebrselassie had to run six miles to school. Maybe our runners won’t be so good now they don’t have to run great distances to school.”

After training the next day, we head off in a Land Rover to see Derartu Tulu’s house, at the end of a long mud track. Derartu now owns a hotel in Asella and lives in Addis, but she often returns to Bekoji and has provided well for her family. Her mother, an orthodox Christian (the second religion in Bekoji is Islam), has gone to church to fast for three days. A woman stands outside the gates and says we cannot enter. She has a severe, handsome face and holds herself with immense dignity. It turns out she is Tejetu, Derartu’s aunt. She soon relents and lets us in. “Derartu used to practise on the field here every day. She used to help her mum and do training every day. She cooked and cleaned. When she was five or six we knew she was unusual.” In what way? “She was a very strong, powerful girl.”

Tejetu is joined by an older woman who balances herself on a stick and has an expressive singsong voice. Habersha is Derartu’s stepmother (her father’s first wife) and helped bring her up. “Her mother was not happy she was running, but she helped her all the same,” Habersha says. “She was afraid she might go away and she’d lose her. She didn’t want her to leave home.”

Did they have any idea she’d become an Olympic champion? “No, we never knew,” Habersha says. “The first time she ran a race, she was given a dress for winning and she hid it so her mum wouldn’t know. She showed it to me. The second time she ran, she brought home a glass trophy. She showed that to her mum, and her parents allowed her to run after that.”

Did they watch her winning her first Olympic gold? “No, we listened on the radio. About 60-70 people came round. We were dancing. Her father was alive at the time. We were all so happy.”

After the Olympics, Derartu went on to win a great deal of prize money (in 2009, aged 37, she won the New York marathon in her comeback race – a prize of $130,000) and was given land by the Ethiopian government for which she bought more cattle. Tejetu says with 50 cows they were never a poor family, but Derartu’s success has made a big difference to their life. “She came back and built this house here. We got a television, and she bought more animals. She supported everyone, giving clothes and money to family and neighbours. Everyone.”

Did people treat them differently after Derartu won? “If the neighbours have problems, they ask, and Derartu will help. Even if they don’t ask, she can see and will help. That’s how she is.”

On the way back, Coach tells me Derartu has always been his favourite champion. “Everybody loves her. She is sociable.” Do the successful runners keep in touch with him when they leave for Addis? “Some do. Some come back and say thank you after they have won the Olympics, some don’t. Derartu and Kenenisa and Tirunesh all said thank you, the others didn’t.” Does it bother him? “No. The reward is seeing them win.”

We’re on the road to Addis to see Haile Gebrselassie’s empire. He’s considered by many the greatest ever distance runner, and he’s already on the way to becoming Ethiopia’s greatest tycoon. He’s 38 and it’s only four years since he won the Berlin marathon in a world record time of two hours three minutes and 59 seconds. At the time he could command $250,000 appearance money just to run in a city marathon. He runs a number of successful businesses, including, in the centre of Addis, a complex dedicated to his wife, Alem: here is the Alem gym, car salesroom, cinema complex. In a multistorey, glass-fronted building, he and Alem also run a holiday resort business.

A lift takes us to the top floor, which looks out over all of Addis. Haile is out working, but Alem welcomes me. She tells me how they got together. She had a shop in Addis, on Haile’s running route. She didn’t know who he was – just another man who ran past quickly every day. After a year he walked in and asked for her phone number. It took her a while to realise he was asking her out: “He was shy.” He thought she was above his station.

Alem is dressed in an elegant trouser suit. She stands on the balcony as we talk, queen of all she surveys. Is Haile one of the wealthiest men in Ethiopia now? “Yes, he is one of them.” She giggles, embarrassed. Does he still run? Try stopping him, she says. “He runs everywhere. There is construction work we are doing, and he runs there. Then he runs in the mountains.”

They have four children, the oldest 13, the youngest six. Are they runners? She looks shocked. “No! They are students.” Would she prefer it if they won Olympic gold or went into business? “For me, I prefer first learning. The same for Haile.”

Back in Bekoji, Coach welcomes me to his home. He has saved all his life for this four-room house. It cost the equivalent of £3,000. How could he afford it? He says he can’t really, and expects to be paying it off for the rest of his life. He is paid £70 a month before tax by the local government, and struggles to make ends meet. “I have three children, two adopted children and a wife. It is not easy.” But he’s not complaining. He was born in Harar and grew up in a mud shack – that was real poverty, he says. He talks about all the changes he’s seen in his life: he lived for many years under Mengistu Haile Mariam‘s communist military dictatorship. Although the current government has been condemned for silencing dissenters (in January, Amnesty revealed that at least 107 opposition party members and journalists have been charged under terrorist offences since March 2011), Coach says life today is incomparable.

“Now there are more factories, more schools, more people working. You just had to do what the military told you in the dictatorship.” He introduces me to his son, Beck, who wants to be a doctor. Does he run? “No.” What went wrong? Coach smiles. “Nothing. He’s just concentrating on his studies.”

Coach talks about his own plans for the future. In five years he hopes to retire. Maybe then he will train a small group of runners privately. He is looking forward to taking it easy, but he worries that he won’t know what to do with his time. I ask if he has received official recognition from the government for his work. “No.” He stops, and says that’s not quite right. “The local government gave me a gold chain a few years ago.”

Has he ever wished he was on a percentage of all the money his champions have earned? “No.” He laughs. “What would I do with it?” Surely there’s something he’s desperate to buy? Actually, there is. “When my marathon runners train, I have no way of seeing how they are doing. What I’d love is a motorbike so I can follow them, but there is no way I could afford one.”

Austerity measures leaves Greek Olympic buildup in a shambles

What a shame for Greece.

from The Guardian

Dimitris Chondrokoukis

Greece’s Dimitris Chondrokoukis has criticised the Greek government for cutting funding for its Olympic squad. Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images

The Greek Athletics Federation has been forced to indefinitely suspend all domestic competitions because severe funding cuts have made life impossible for athletes, coaches and support staff. In just over a month’s time Greece will host the Olympic flame lighting ceremony ahead of London 2012 but, as the suspension highlights, the country’s own Olympic preparations are a shambles.

Tradition dictates that the Greek team always lead the procession of athletes during the Olympic opening ceremony, but the government’s cuts mean that this summer the country will be sending its smallest squad since the 1992 Games in Barcelona. Only 75 athletes will travel to London, less than half the number who attended the Games in Beijing and only a sixth of the number who competed at the Athens Olympics in 2004.

The head of the athletics federation, Vassilis Sevastis, said: “The cuts in funding for the federation, last year and this year, are so extensive that they do not allow us to cover our basic needs. We can’t do our job properly. We’re at a dead-end financially.” The federation’s budget was cut by a third in 2011 and by a third again in 2012. It has €6.5m (£5.4m) to spend this year. It is not enough to cover basic operating costs and leaves coaches and other support staff unpaid for their previous year’s work.

Greek athletes, including the world indoor high jump champion Dimitris Chondrokoukis, have criticised the government for cutting funding. “The conditions are unacceptable and facilities are a big problem,” Chondrokoukis said. “There is lack of heat in the winter and air conditioning in the summer. Nevertheless, we all keep trying. I do it purely for personal reasons.”

Chondrokoukis’s father forbade all politicians from attending his son’s welcome-home celebrations after his recent success at the world indoor championships, saying: “Politicians are closing athletic facilities; it is unbelievable what is happening. No politician has the right to congratulate or partake in an athlete’s triumph.”

The long-jumper Louis Tsatoumas, who holds the European record with 8.66m, added: “We face so many difficulties in our preparations. The tracks we are using often have no lighting and the indoor gyms this winter have had no heating. It is sometimes below 10 degrees Celsius. It’s a worry because many athletes can get injured during training.” The indoor training centre at the 2004 Olympic stadium is said to have a leaking roof, so when it rains athletes have to work around buckets put out to collect the drips of water.

Other Olympic sports have also been affected by the austerity measures. Greece’s government invested around €30m in the run-up to the Beijing Games. The same amount had been pledged for this Olympic cycle but in the event the national Olympic committee did not receive a single euro in 2010 or 2011. As a result the gymnastics, weightlifting, sailing and water polo teams – Greece’s women are the current world champions – were unable to travel to their Olympic qualifying events. The International Olympic Committee had to step in to provide emergency funding.

Athens hosted the Olympics only eight years ago but the legacy of those Games has been disastrous. “Heaven and hell,” is how Spyros Kapralos, president of the Hellenic Olympic Committee, describes the contrast between Greek sport then and now. “The success of the 2004 Olympics was lost when the lights went out at the end of the closing ceremony as our country had no plan to capitalise on their success,” Kapralos says. Now the venues for the Games sit unused, unwanted, and crumbling.

Olympic Games won’t be the same anymore.

China vs. Austria in Olympic Beach Volleyball....

China vs. Austria in Olympic Beach Volleyball. The Austrian team are sisters. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This morning has been a sad morning for me. Even though it started so well, with our successful  training session, the news i read later at Yahoo sports  have ruined my day.  I saw an article called :

Women beach volleyball players don’t have to wear bikinis at Olympics

Why are you doing this to us? Women beach volley is a highlighted event, especially for men fans. Sitting at my couch, drinking a beer and watching beautiful girls with perfect bodies wearing bikinis and rolling in the sand was something i was waiting for during every Olympic Games. Hopefully the players won’t follow this instruction, otherwise will be the end of an era. Here is the article:

Women beach volleyball players won’t have to wear bikinis at the 2012 London Olympics. A new rule announced Tuesday says that participants in this summer’s beach volleyball competition can wear shorts and sleeved tops.

Athletes in the event have exclusively worn bikinis since the sport was introduced at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. Competitors could also wear bodysuits in cold-weather events.

The change was made to reflect cultural conventions of various participating countries.

“Shorts of a maximum length of [1.18 inches] above the knee, and sleeved or sleeveless tops,” will now be allowed, according to the new IOC ruling.

Since the Beijing Olympics, most beach volleyball competitions have changed rules to allow for more modest uniforms. It’s an attempt to broaden the diversity in the sport, which tends to be dominated by athletes from Europe, Brazil and the United States. Allowing shorts and shirts can encourage participation from countries with more modest cultural beliefs.

As the AP reports, the field at London’s beach volleyball competition won’t be dictated by world rankings, as in Olympics past. Qualifying tournaments on various continents will fill the 24-team draw.

London Olympics Dream Is Over For Ian Thorpe

Ian Thorpe

Image via Wikipedia

IAN Thorpe was beaten like never before in his failed Olympic comeback bid, but said it was the most fun he has had in the sport in years.

Article by HERALD SUN

“It’s crazy, I do (enjoy it more now),” Thorpe said at the post-mortem to his failed swimming comeback.

“You can have tremendous success and not be enjoying something and I have had bitter disappointment here and I still am enjoying what I’m doing again.

“I guess the light at the end of the tunnel for this week is realising that even though those results weren’t what I wanted, I am enjoying this and it’s why I will continue to push through.”

After so much fanfare, Thorpe’s Olympic comeback was sunk in 50.35sec as he placed 21st in the heats of the 100m freestyle yesterday, unable to even reach the top 16 semi-finals.

For a champion who accumulated five Olympic gold medals, 11 world titles and 13 world records, it was a deflating defeat.

Thorpe, 29, knows his legend may have been diminished, but he doesn’t care.

“When I started this, I realised that was a risk, that I would damage what people’s memories were of what I did,” he said. “And it’s something that I didn’t care that much about.

“I was happy to put it at risk because I saw more value in doing this and trying it out than whatever I would do to those accomplishments.

“I don’t regret giving this a go. Compared to how I have raced before and how I have competed, the success that I have had, this does look like doom compared to it.

“But I’m glad that I was willing to put myself out there to give this a shot and I’m pleased with that part, and disappointed that it hasn’t been the result that I wanted.”

Thorpe has yet to decide his next move. He wouldn’t rule out the 2016 Games in Rio, but it is highly unlikely.

His only aim is to return to the selection trials for the 2013 world titles in Barcelona and be fast enough to make the team.

“Failing something is a great motivator,” he said.

“It’s pretty obvious, it’s just not a pleasant thing to go through.

“I think I’m pretty close to where I need to be. Hopefully it’s less than 12 months.

Ian Thorpe crashes out in 200m freestyle semi-final of Australia’s National Swimming Championships

Reposted by Daily Telegraph

Five-time Olympic champion Ian Thorpe’s bid to compete at the London Games suffered a major blow on Friday when he failed to make the final of the 200 metres freestyle at Australia’s national swimming trials in Adelaide.

Thorpe, who will also compete in the 100 freestyle at the weekend, finished 12th fastest of the semi-finalists in one minute 49.91 seconds, outside the top eight that will contest Saturday’s final at the South Australia Aquatic and Leisure Centre.

The 29-year-old, who came out of retirement last year in a bid to qualify for London 2012, said he was “terribly disappointed with that … I thought I could and thought I would swim a lot quicker – much quicker”.

He added: “The fairytale has turned into a nightmare.”

Thorpe who won a total of five golds at the Sydney and Athens Olympics, has struggled to reproduce anywhere near the times he swam in his prime with a string of disappointing results since his comeback in Singapore in November.

He formerly held the world record in the 200m freestyle at 1:44.06, which remains the Australian record.

 

Brothers in arms! British Triatletes Jonathan and Alistair Brownlee in bid for Olympic glory

The scene was a Yorkshire park. Two young brothers were cornered by a group of older boys and ordered to hand over their pennies. ‘Get lost,’ responded the older brother and promptly ran off. His younger brother attempted to follow, only to be tripped by one of the gang and kicked as he lay on the floor.

The older brother may have been smaller than the gang and he may have been outnumbered, but he was not going to leave his brother at the mercy of some yobs. He ran back, helped his brother to his feet and together they made it to safety.

Family matters: Alistair (left) and Jonathan BrownleeFamily matters: Alistair (left) and Jonathan Brownlee

Twelve years on, the bond between Alistair and Jonathan Brownlee is just as strong. The men who are, respectively, the world triathlon champion and runner-up may laugh about the park story now but have they really changed that much when it comes to competing in sport’s most gruelling event, a 1.5km swim, 40km cycle ride and 10km run, completed back to back?

Take the example of the 2010 European Championships in Pontevedra, Spain.

‘We were in the leading cycling pack when Al got a puncture in his tyre,’ Jonny, 21, explained. ‘It was my job to slow the pack down to make sure Al could recover the gap. Nobody else wanted to put in the work so it was easy to do. It wasn’t long before Al rejoined us.’

Surely the better tactic would have been to have pounced while the race favourite, 23-year-old Alistair, was indisposed, creating an unassailable lead? Jonny shakes his head at the unthinkable.

‘I wouldn’t do that to anyone because it wouldn’t feel like a pure win. And I certainly wouldn’t do it to my brother,’ he insisted. Alistair chips in. ‘No, neither would I. It shows that we do work as a team in races, but there’s nothing stopping two Germans or two Aussies doing the same. There is one big difference, though. Only one of the Germans can win, which leaves the other wondering what he’s getting out of it. With us, whoever loses is still happy because his brother has won.’

Race to the finish: Alistair beat Jonny to claim the European goldRace to the finish: Alistair beat Jonny to claim the European gold

The twist to the Pontevedra story is that Alistair, despite his brother’s charity, went on to beat Jonny to claim the European gold. ‘We were level with 1500 metres to go,’ he recalled.

‘Then Jonny tried to make a break and that’s when I passed him. It was great. There were tiny, narrow streets, the crowd were pouring out all over the place and we were bumping off walls.’

How much did he beat his younger brother by in the end? ‘It didn’t matter. All that mattered was that we were both a minute-and-a-half ahead of everyone else.’

 

Alistair has been one pace ahead of his younger brother ever since Jonny came into the world. ‘He’d push me in my toy car into walls and beat me up a bit,’ said Jonny, prompting chuckles from both men. ‘Then I’d go running to our Mum. It made me stronger.

‘Then, when I was older, I’d see Al come home with a GB international vest, and then medals. It made the chances of me following suit realistic because it was so close to home.’

Now the students – former Cambridge and Leeds University graduate Alistair is studying finance at Leeds Metropolitan while Jonny is in his third year reading history at Leeds – are inseparable as they prepare for the London Games and the chance to claim an historic onetwo for Britain in Hyde Park this summer.

Jonathan Brownlee of Great BritainJonathan Brownlee of Great Britain

‘There can’t be two brothers in the history of time who spend more time together,’ said Alistair. ‘We live together and we train together, for hours and hours upon end every day in what could be, if we allowed it, very intense circumstances with the Olympics looming. Of course, we don’t allow this, and it’s amazing how well we get on.’

The training has been interrupted by a tear in Alistair’s left achilles tendon which means a four-week lay-off in a protective boot. With two weeks already gone, Alistair hopes to start rehabilitation in a fortnight’s time, and what he terms ‘proper running’ a week after that. He is not happy. ‘It’s not a catastrophe,’ he conceded. ‘It would be if we were now in May but there’s time still to be as fit as I want to be for the Olympics. The key is to be disciplined when the boot comes off and not rush it. I’ll be fine for London but not if I have any more setbacks.’

Jonny is taking it all in his stride. ‘He’s injured at this time of the year every year, normally worse than this, and he always ends up winning in the summer so it’s just business as usual,’ he argued. ‘Although we train with a group of good triathletes at the Leeds Unis I still train a lot alone with Al so it’s been a bit strange without him but he’ll be back soon and that’s when we function best.

‘We both know we’re training with the best or second best triathlete in the world, and we push each other, either out on the road or in the pool, or even just to get out of bed when it’s dark, cold and freezing.’

It should not be any of those come August when the Olympic triathlon takes place in and around the Serpentine in London’s Hyde Park. The Brownlees have already had a taste of what to expect when they competed in the Olympic test event last summer in front of huge crowds.

‘When they announced our names on the podium we got the biggest cheer of our lives,’ recalled a smiling Alistair. ‘It’s going to be a lot louder this summer. They reckon a million people will be out in the park. That’s not going to do us any harm, is it?’ Indeed not. The race plan will be as always.

‘Finish the swim with both of us around third or fourth,’ Alistair says. ‘Then be part of a small group of cyclists who break away. Then, almost from the start of the running, Jonny and I leave the others behind. We’re particularly good at the start of the run when others suffer initially in their legs from the change from cycling to running.’

‘It’s because of all the fell running we’ve done from an early age,’ added Jonny.

If the dream scenario comes to fruition, and the pair of them are running down the finishing straight together, what then? If Alistair had his way they would hold hands and cross the line together.

‘It’s what the Olympian message is all about, isn’t it?’ he said. ‘In reality it won’t happen. You’d look stupid if you tried it and then one of us won by a vest in a photo finish. Besides, let’s get there first. I’m happy if people see us as favourites, but anything can happen in a triathlon, and I’ve still got to get fit, remember.’

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