XXX Olympic Games 2012

The real XXX Olympic Games – sexy sports women

Olympic Beach Volleyball: Women Can Wear Shorts Instead Of Bikinis At London Games

March 28th, 2012

Olympic Beach Volleyball

Olympic Beach Volleyball

Most female beach volleyball players will wear their usual bikini outfits at the London Olympics. For those who prefer to cover up, that’s OK, too.

Under new rules adopted by the International Volleyball Federation (FIVB), players are free to wear shorts and sleeved tops. The governing body said the move was made out of respect for the cultural beliefs of some of the dozens of countries still in contention to qualify for the games.

Many of these countries have religious and cultural requirements, so the uniform needed to be more flexible,” FIVB spokesman Richard Baker told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The rule, which will apply to the Olympics, has already been in effect at five Continental Cup qualifying competitions involving 142 nations.

Winners of the Continental Cups will qualify for the Olympics, so it has to be applied,” Baker said.

The FIVB has not specified which countries lobbied to be allowed to cover up in London.

An African qualifying event scheduled May 24-26 in Kigali, Rwanda, includes Algeria, Kenya and the Democratic Republic of Congo among the contenders. Photographs on the FIVB’s website of preliminary matches shows female players from those countries covering their midriffs by wearing sleeveless tops, which are the typical attire of indoor volleyball teams.

A Continental Cup qualifier to be played in Asia will include India, Indonesia and Sri Lanka among 12 competing nations.

The modified rule permits “shorts of a maximum length of (1.18 inches) above the knee, and sleeved or sleeveless tops.”

Bikinis have been part of the wardrobe since beach volleyball became an Olympic medal event at the 1996 Atlanta Games. Players have typically opted to wear body suits in cold weather.

Cultural and religious sensitivities have been brought into focus by changes to the Olympic entry format to encourage more nations to compete.

Four years ago, qualification was based almost entirely on world rankings earned by competing in at least eight elite-level events. The Continental Cup competitions, which began in July 2010, now offer direct routes to the Olympics.

The women’s tournament at London will be played from July 28-Aug. 12 and is expected to sell out almost every session.

Beach volleyball will replace indoor volleyball as the FIVB’s nominated sport at the 2014 Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China.

Beach volleyball offers a women’s season-long World Tour involving 13 events in Europe, Asia, Brazil and Canada. Shorts and sleeved tops are also allowed in that event, which is dominated by players from Brazil, the United States and Europe.

“We don’t think we will see much change (in uniforms) on the World Tour,” Baker said.

 

source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com

Kim Yu-na wins gold with record score – Pictures

February 26th, 2010

South Korea’s Kim Yu-na has won the women’s figure skating gold medal at the Vancouver Olympics – and did it by setting a record.
Kim shattered her own world mark by scoring 228.56 points, more than 18 higher than her previous record. She is the winner of South Korea’s first Olympic medal in the sport.
Mao Asada of Japan won the silver, but finished 23 points behind Kim.
Joannie Rochette, whose mother died four days ago, got the bronze, Canada’s first women’s medal in the games since 1988.
American Mirai Nagasu finished fourth.

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Kim Yu-na

Biathlon (Women’s Relay): Russia claim women’s relay gold

February 23rd, 2010

Russia won the women’s relay biathlon gold medal on Tuesday ahead of second-placed France while Germany – minus star performer Magdalena Neuner – finished with bronze.
The Russian team’s winning time was 1hr 9min 36.3sec as France’s Sandrine Bailly produced a brilliant effort on the final leg to beat Germany to the silver as the French finished at one hour 10min 09.1sec.
The Germans were minus starlet Neuner, who leaves Vancouver with two golds and a silver, and finished at 1hr 10min 13.4sec having been in gold-medal contention throughout.
Having won Sunday’s mass start, Neuner announced she would not be bidding for a third gold and fourth Olympic medal in the relay due to mental fatigue and the desire to see one of her team-mates win a medal.
But with the French quartet all skiing well, Germany missed Neuner’s cross-country skills as one of the fastest skiers in biathlon in the eventual battle for silver.
The decisive third leg saw Russia’s Olga Medvedtseva produce a devastating display of cross-country skiing to leave her team with a 44.8sec lead over the Germans.
When team-mate Olga Zaitseva, who won silver in Sunday’s mass start, shot well on the standing section at the shooting range on the final leg, the Russians had the gold in the bag.
Although France’s Marie Dorin missed two shots on the third leg which earned her two penalty laps, her skiing kept France in touch and Bailly powered past Germany’s Andrea Henkel on the final leg to give her country the silver.

source: www.vancouver2010.com

Kim Carries Nation’s Expectations on Her Skates

February 23rd, 2010

Officially, Kim Yu-na of South Korea will be judged only for her jumps and spins when the Olympic women’s figure skating competition begins Tuesday. But there will be important political and cultural elements to her programs as well.
No South Korean figure skater has won an Olympic medal, much less gold, as is expected from the willowy Kim, 19. So not only does she have to shoulder enormous athletic expectations, but also Kim’s main rivals, Mao Asada and Miki Ando, are from Japan, which occupied the Korean peninsula for 35 years through the end of World War II.

More than a half-century later, South Korea’s nationalistic fervor and sense of victimhood still inform sporting rivalries between the two nations. The Olympic buildup has been fueled by great anticipation of Kim’s beautiful, speedy, flowing style, and also by Internet vitriol and fears that she will be unfairly marked down for the quality of her triple lutz-triple toe combination jump.
“Koreans’ blood roils when their country competes with Japan in sports or elsewhere,” said Song Doo-heon, a professor of computer science at Yong-in Songdam University in South Korea, who blogs about figure skating and is a popular commentator on Kim.
Figure skating is as much art as sport. Kim is a cultural icon as well as an athlete. Thus, Song said, the competition between Kim and her Japanese rivals will also be viewed as a referendum “on which country’s culture is better regarded by the rest of the world.”
Given that Kim is a national hero in South Korea, “her loss or her winning will be perceived as a national loss or a national winning,” said Kyung-ae Park, a political scientist who holds the Korea Foundation Chair at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.
“If she wins the gold medal,” Park said, “I think it will be a great boost for national pride for Koreans. In a way, it will work as compensation for past humiliations.”
The first Korean to win an Olympic gold medal, Sohn Kee-chung, took the marathon at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, but he had to compete for colonialist Japan and take a Japanese name. He remained a fierce Korean nationalist, though, and his story is still taught to South Korean schoolchildren.
“I know of him,” Kim said at Skate America in November. “I will try to be like him.”
Some South Korea experts suggest that anti-Japanese sentiment ebbed once Kim became the 2009 world champion, vanquishing Asada and Ando, the previous two champions. Also, when the countries co-hosted the 2002 soccer World Cup, South Korea advanced further than Japan, to the semifinals.
“Anti-Japanese sentiment in sport has decreased a lot,” said Chung He-joon, a professor of sports science at Dong-A University in South Korea. “It’s not what it used to be, partly because South Korea has defeated Japan very often, especially in soccer. Nationalistic fervor has found other vents as well — for example against the United States. There are even many South Korean fans of Mao Asada, because she is pretty.”

Kim is also popular in Japan, said Lee Yun-hyang, an Olympics interpreter who was born in Seoul, South Korea, and now works for the United States State Department. The enmity felt toward Asada and Ando, Lee said, does not match the antagonism directed toward the American short-track skater Apolo Anton Ohno over the disqualification of a South Korean competitor during a race at the 2002 Winter Games.
“We want to see Kim do well, but we don’t want to see Mao Asada fall,” Lee said. Yet, she conceded, “We have to win against Japan in every way.”
Chung, the sports science professor, said that South Korea seemed unique in the sense that “the whole nation laughs or weeps depending on one athlete’s success or failure,” a prospect that he found “a bit absurd,” considering that “these athletes do what they do for personal success and fortune.”
Michelle Kwan, the two-time Olympic medalist from the United States, experienced Kim-mania when she visited Seoul last month as a public diplomacy envoy for the State Department. She saw Kim pictured on numerous billboards and shown on televised replays of her previous competitions.
“She is the nation’s sister,” Kwan said. “That’s a lot of pressure.”
This pressure, of course, would bring huge financial reward if Kim — who already makes $5 million a year in endorsements, according to her agent — transformed expectation into gold.
“If she wins, she’ll be a Godzillionaire,” said Frank Carroll, who coaches the Japanese-American skater Mirai Nagasu, mixing his monster metaphors.
Yet pressure can also be straining. Kim has trained in Toronto, thousands of miles from her yearning fans. At Skate America, held in Lake Placid, N.Y., in November, she won the overall competition but seemed nervous during a faltering long program attended by several busloads of Korean supporters, who came from New York City.
Here, Kim has sometimes seemed tense, struggling to land her triple flip in training, while Asada possesses the more difficult triple axel. In practice Monday, though, Kim smiled and seemed commanding. Afterward, Brian Orser, her coach, said, “I think today was a turning point.”
Four gold medals won by South Korean speedskaters here have relieved some pressure on Kim. But only some. If she is defeated, there will be “some kind of panic” in South Korea, lamented Chung, the sports science professor.
“The society and media have publicized her too much,” he said. “The whole nation hanging on to one athlete — as if some crisis might befall the nation if she didn’t win a gold — this is not good sportsmanship.”

source: www.nytimes.com

Alpine Skiing: Vonn wins women’s downhill gold

February 18th, 2010

American Lindsey Vonn won the women’s downhill gold at the Winter Olympics on Wednesday. Team-mate Julia Mancuso took the silver with Austrian Elisabeth Goergl winning the bronze.
Alpine speed queen Lindsey Vonn lived up to expectations by winning the United States’ first ever Olympic gold in the women’s downhill on Wednesday.
Vonn, the winner of five consecutive downhills in the World Cup this season, produced a flawless performance on the technically challenging Franz’s Run to finish in a winning time of 1min 44.19sec.
Teammate Julia Mancuso finished second at 0.56sec to take a surprise silver with Austrian Elisabeth Goergl winning the bronze.
An ecstatic Vonn said her victory was made even better by Mancuso finishing second.
“It’s one of the most incredible moments of my life,” said the 25-year-old American. “When I crossed the finish line and saw my name in first and Julia’s second, it was just the coollest thing.”
Vonn’s maiden Olympic medal comes four years after her bid was hampered by injuries sustained in training for the downhill during the Turin Games in 2006.
As well as making alpine history for the US, Vonn is also the first American woman to win Olympic gold in an alpine speed event since childhood hero Picabo Street won super-G gold at the Nagano Games of 1998.
Against expectations, Mancuso fired out the start hut to produce an inspired run that was enough to knock Austria’s Elisabeth Goergl of Austria off the top spot of the provisional podium.
Goergl had started with bib number five and went on to scorch the course, however the Austrian just avoided a spectacular crash when she landed after the last big jump with her ski tips pointing dangerously downwards.
Mancuso, the giant slalom champion from Turin, has been searching for good downhill form all season but she was eventually guaranteed a medal after Anja Paerson crashed and then Maria Riesch failed to shine.
Paerson was in silver medal position going into the final jump just before the finish line but the Swedish ace, like many of the field, found big air and landed awkwardly on one ski, eventually crashing out.
The Swede, who won three medals including slalom gold and downhill bronze in Turin, was immediately taken to hospital by a doctor for checks, according to organisers.
The only other racer left to challenge Vonn, German rival and friend Riesch, failed to produce the kind of challenge most were expecting, finishing way off the pace.

source: www.vancouver2010.com

Luge: Huefner wins second luge gold for Germany

February 16th, 2010

Germany’s Tatjana Huefner claimed gold in the women’s singles on Tuesday as the German team threaten to sweep all three luge titles at the 2010 Olympic Winter Games.
Huefner posted the fastest time of 2mins 46.524sec over the four runs while Austria’s Nina Reithmayer claimed second at 0.490sec behind with Germany’s Natalie Geisenberger third, 0.577sec off the pace.
With the body of Nodar Kumaritashvili flown home to Georgia on Monday, the mood was still sombre here for Tuesday’s women’s runs at the Whistler Sliding Centre, where the Georgian died in a training run accident last week.
After 20-year-old Felix Loch dominated the field to claim the men’s singles title on Sunday, Huefner claimed victory in the women’s with a flawless fourth run and only the doubles title remains to be decided.
Having held an overnight lead of 0.05sec over the field, Huefner turned the screw on Tuesday’s third run with an almost perfect slide to open a 0.268sec gap.
The margin between the German and Reithmayer in second looked decisive and so it proved as the German clocked a top speed of 134.1kph on the last run to take gold.
Germany’s women have dominated the luge in recent Winter Games.
Reithmayer has the distinction of being the only non-German to claim an Olympic medal in the women’s singles luge this century after Germans took gold, silver and bronze at both Salt Lake City in 2002 and Turin four years ago.
Since the country reunified in 1990, Germany has won the men’s, women’s and doubles titles at Nagano in 1998 and at Calgary in 1988.
In the doubles, Austria’s Linger brothers, Andreas and Wolfgang, are the defending Olympic champions from Turin and will be challenged by Germany’s Andre Florschuetz and Torsten Wustlich, who won silver in Turin.

source: www.vancouver2010.com

Germany leads medal table in Vancouver after a brace of golds

February 16th, 2010

Gold medals for German women in the 10 kilometer biathlon and the luge have catapulted their country to the top of the medals’ table. Magdalena Neuner won on her skis, while Tatjana Huefner was quickest on her sled.

Germany currently leads the medals table at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, with three golds, four silvers, and two bronzes, after a string of successes in Tuesday’s competition.
First, Magdalena Neuner added a second gold to Germany’s medal count, winning the women’s biathlon 10-kilometer pursuit at Whistler Olympic Park in British Columbia.
The 23-year-old Neuner completed the course in 30 minutes 16 seconds, 12.3 seconds ahead of Slovakia’s Anastazia Kuzmina, to claim her first Olympic gold medal. Marie Laure Brunet of France took the bronze.
Neuner won silver in the women’s 7.5-kilometer sprint on Saturday, then coming in behind Kuzmina. That silver was Germany’s first medal of the Games.
Neuner, a six-time world champion, is a native of Wallgau near Garmisch-Partenkirchen in Bavaria, the site of the 1936 Winter Olympics.

Magdalena Neuner

Magdalena Neuner

More gold, and a silver lining on the ice
In the luge, German favorite Tatjana Huefner claimed gold in the women’s singles. Another German hopeful Natalie Geisenberger grabbed bronze, and Austrian Natalie Reithmayer came in second, almost half a second adrift of Huefner.
Reithmayer becomes the first non-German woman of this century to win an Olympic medal in the luge singles event, after German racers locked out the podiums at both Salt Lake City in 2002 and Turin four years ago.
On Sunday, 20-year-old German Felix Loch won the men’s singles, so Germany – usually dominant in this discipline – will shoot for a luge “grand slam” in the doubles later this week.
But heavily fancied German speedskater Jenny Wolf just missed out on gold in the women’s 500 meter event. South Korea’s Lee Sang-Hwa won the first race starting on the outside lane and managed to maintain her aggregate advantage when the skaters switched sides, despite world record holder Wolf setting the fastest single time of the competition: 37.84 seconds.
Lee’s combined time over the two races was 76.09 seconds, just five hundredths of a second quicker than Jenny Wolf.
The second quickest pair racing head-to-head in the final, China’s Wang Beixing and Margot Boer of the Netherlands, secured third and fourth places, respectively.

source: www.dw-world.de

Vancouver 2010 Olympics: Figure Skating and China’s Gold

February 16th, 2010

China’s new heroes are Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo who have gained the gold medal at the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics in the figure skating. Previous to their victory Russia had held on to the pairs gold title for 46 years.

The Chinese pair had emerged from retirement in one more bid to win the gold Olympic medal and in doing so received a standing ovation from the crowd.

The ecstatic couple celebrated victory by holding the Chinese flag proudly during a lap of honour at the rink which was filled to capacity. At a news conference afterwards Shen expressed that maybe now it was time to stop skating and have a baby.

Zhao, who had won the world title 3 times with Shen said “This is a dream come true”. China had never before won an Olympic figure skating gold and in true Olympic style, another pair from China, Pang Qing and Tong Jian, won the silver medal.

Do you think this story represents genuine Olympic spirit? To come out of retirement and achieve the impossible dream surely gives us all hope?

source: www.onlykent.com

Isinbayeva set to vault in London

June 8th, 2009

Yelena IsinbayevaOlympic pole vault champion Yelena Isinbayeva will compete at the London Grand Prix as a final preparation for the defence of her world title.
Russian Isinbayeva has signed up to compete at Crystal Palace on 24 and 25 July, when sprint star Usain Bolt will also be in action.
“I want to make sure I am in good shape and at my best there,” she said.
“It will be my last proper competition before heading out to Berlin, so I want to know I’m in the best possible form.”
Isinbayeva, who turned 27 on Wednesday, has won the London event in each of the last six years, setting a new world record mark on three occasions.
She won her second Olympic gold medal last year in Beijing with a clearance of 5.05m – her 14th outdoor world record – and she has since raised her best indoor mark.
“I’ve set three world records there already so I know it is a place where I can perform well, and hopefully this year will be no different,” said Isinbayeva.
“I’ve set 26 world records so far, and I still feel I can get even better, so hopefully I will give everyone plenty to cheer.
“My coach and I have selected five events I want to compete at this summer as I prepare to defend my World Championship title in August, so every meet will be really significant.”

source: news.bbc.co.uk

XXX Olympic Games 2012

The real XXX Olympic Games – sexy sports women