Tag: ek Holiday

XXX Olympiad- Day 12

I saw these while looking for some offbeat coverage-

Competitive Armchair Olympics

Produced by CHRISTOPH NIEMANN and JON HUANG, The New York Times

Today is looking like a rather light day in terms of variety.  Lots of medals being handed out, which means lots of sports we will no longer see, Swimming and Rowing for instance.  No more Tennis or Greco-Roman Wrestling or Badminton after today either

We have Women’s Boxing for the first time.  USA is expected to dominate, but that did the men no good.  I’ll probably watch some of the Water Polo and Handball while it’s still around.  The Equestrian feature is Team Jumping.  Rafalca won’t finish competing until Thursday (people ask).

My schedules are carefully transcribed but often do not match the broadcast.  I blame NBC.

Broadcast Schedule

Time Network Sport Competitors
6 am NBC Women’s Marathon (Medal) all
6:30 am Vs. Badminton (Men’s Doubles Bronze) (Medal) MLY v KOR
7 am Vs. Tennis (Mixed Doubles Final) (Medal) all
7 am MS Tennis (Men’s Singles Bronze) (Medal) all
8:30 am Vs. Women’s Volleyball CHN v KOR
8:30 am CNBC Women’s Boxing (Fly, Light, and Middleweight) elimination
9 am NBC Tennis (Men’s Singles Final) Federer v Murray
9 am MS Table Tennis (Men’s Team Quarterfinals) all
9:30 am MS Women’s Water Polo (Quarterfinals) all
10 am Vs. Synchronized Swimming (Duet) all
11:30 am NBC Women’s Basketball USA v CHN
11:30 am Vs. Shooting (Men’s Pistol Final) (Medal) all
noon Vs. Tennis (Mixed Doubles Final) (Medal) all
noon MS Wrestling (Greco-Roman) all
1 pm MS Women’s Beach Volleyball (Quarterfinal)
1:30 pm NBC Equestrian (Team Jumping Final Round 1) all
2 pm NBC Women’s Water Polo USA v ITA
2 pm Vs. Women’s Water Polo MNE v RUS
2 pm MS Men’s Field Hockey GBR v AUS
3 pm NBC Women’s Volleyball USA v TUR
3:30 pm Vs. Women’s Weightlifting (Medal) all
3:30 pm MS Women’s water Polo (Quarterfinals)
3:30 pm CNBC Boxing (Bantam and Heavyweight Quarterfinals)
4 pm MS Wrestling (Greco-Roman Finals) (Medal) all
4:30 pm NBC Cycling (Women’s Track Finals) (Medal) all
4:30 pm Vs. Women’s Volleyball ITA v RUS
5 pm NBC Women’s Beach Volleyball (Quarterfinal) USA v CZE
5 pm MS Women’s Handball DEN v FRA
6 pm Vs. Women’s Beach Volleyball (Quarterfinal) BRA v GER
7 pm NBC Prime Time (Track & Field (Men’s 100m), Gymnastics (Individual Apparatus Finals), Diving (Women’s Springboard Final), Women’s Beach Volleyball) (Medal) all
12:30 am NBC Late Night (Badminton Men’s Singles Final, Track & Field (Men’s High Jump Qualifying, Hammer Throw and Steeplechase Finals) (Medals) all
1:30 am NBC Prime Time repeat
3 am CNBC Boxing repeat
4 am Vs. Men’s Basketball AUS v RUS
5:30 am Vs. Women’s Field Hockey USA v RSA

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

Williams Coasts to Gold, and a Career Golden Slam

By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY, The New York Times

Published: August 4, 2012

She became only the second woman to complete a career Golden Slam – a gold medal, plus wins in all four Grand Slam tournaments. The feat was first achieved by Steffi Graf in 1988 after she swept all four major titles that year. Williams can add the gold medal to her 14 Grand Slam singles championships, the most of any active woman.



She and Venus Williams won their doubles semifinal later in the day over Maria Kirilenko and Nadia Petrova of Russia and will face Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka of the Czech Republic in Sunday’s doubles final.

‘Blade Runner’ Oscar Pistorius has an edge, all right – his spirit

By Bill Plaschke, Los Angeles Times

August 4, 2012, 4:30 p.m.

Of course, it will continue to spark the most amazing of debates, springing from the power he seems to derive from his prosthetics. Does a runner with no legs actually have an advantage over a runner with two legs? Pistorius is no threat for a medal here, but some worry these legs are walking the sport into a tricky tug of science over skill.

Five years ago, studies conducted by track’s international governing body showed Pistorius expended less energy than an able-bodied runner and banned him from official competitions. He responded by remaining in the Paralympics, where he won titles and still competes today. However, a year later, that decision was overruled by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, and Pistorius was given another chance. When he met the Olympic standard qualifying time this year, South Africa added him to the team, much to the dismay of some.

New Zealand Field Hockey Eliminates U.S.

By LAWRIE MIFFLIN, The New York Times

August 4, 2012, 1:30 pm

The Americans had had high hopes of at least contending for a medal here, based on an improving offense, a notably rugged defense and one of the world’s best goalkeepers in Amy Tran-Swensen.

Oddly for this squad, it was defense that let it down, as New Zealand scored all of its goals from penalty corners. Of course, credit where credit’s due: the New Zealanders created all those corners in the first place, with skillful attack play that too often left American defenders kicking or stumbling on the ball.

Signs of encouragement for the Americans came in the way they improved their own attack, scoring two goals, and the way they kept up with the fleet New Zealanders, especially Anita Punt, and kept them from breaking away too often. Katie O’Donnell scored from open play for the United States, and the defender Claire Laubach scored on a penalty corner.

London Olympics: Changes coming as boxing endures another scandal

By Kevin Baxter, Los Angeles Times

August 5, 2012

Go down five times in one round in professional boxing and your fight will be stopped. Go down five times in one round in the Olympics, and you go on to the quarterfinals.



(B)oxing, once among the most popular and exciting of Olympic sports, has once again become mired in a controversy over scoring. The Shimizu decision was eventually overturned, with the Japanese fighter being reinstated and Ishanguly Meretnyyazov of Turkmenistan, who refereed the bout, being sent home.

A similar fate could await Denmark’s Lars Brovil, who refereed the bout U.S. welterweight Errol Spence was ruled to have lost Friday. After reviewing tape of the fight, officials with the AIBA, amateur boxing’s international governing body, overturned that decision too, ruling that Brovil failed to acknowledge eight holding fouls by Spence’s opponent, India’s Krishan Vikas, in the final round alone.

Koreans declare ping pong cordiale in London 2012 round of wiff-waff war

Marina Hyde, The Guardian

Saturday 4 August 2012

Of course, like every parlour game from tiddlywinks to consequences, table tennis always feels marginally more aggressive than bare-knuckle fighting, particularly if played with friends or relatives at Christmas. Banned substances include human growth hormone and Irish cream liqueur.

But when North Korea and South Korea are thrashing it out between the unforgiving lights of the ExCel, even a home counties family row can look amicable. I didn’t fork out a tenner for the headset providing expert commentary for any bemused spectators. But I’d like to think the ping-pong equivalent of Mark Lawrenson was glossing it with observations like: “Yeah, there’s a little bit of niggle here …”



Still, for all the ping pong cordiale, it wouldn’t do to totally downplay the Olympics’ association with overt and covert international strife. Do recall that the North Korean military rocket launched back in April to commemorate the birth of Kim Il-sung was blown up mid-air, with suggestions being that the humiliation was the work of a virus spawned by the United States cyberwarfare programme. The codename of that programme? Why, “Olympic Games”, of course.

London 2012: Kim Collins axed from 100m by St Kitts for meeting wife

Owen Gibson, The Guardian

Saturday 4 August 2012

Lane four stood empty during the final heat of the men’s 100m in the Olympic Stadium on Saturday after the former world champion Kim Collins was dropped by St Kitts and Nevis for spending the night in a hotel with his wife.



Earlier Collins had posted a message on Twitter, reading: “My fans. I won’t lie. Won’t be running later tonight.” Another message read: “Even men in prison get their wives to visit.”

The 2003 100m world champion, who is 36, carried his country’s flag at the Olympic opening ceremony just over a week ago. In detailing his punishment the team statement described him as “a national hero”.

And they say romance is dead.

A Valued Adjunct to the U.S. Sailing Team

By BARRY BEARAK, The New York Times

Published: August 4, 2012

Doug Charko is the meteorologist for the United States sailing team, which is no easy job here on the rainy and sunny, cloudy and clear, windy and still southwest coast of England.



In one of his forecasts for the sailing team, he said the port could “serve up a dog’s breakfast” of swirling wind “with big shifts and deep holes.” By that, he meant it was a good idea to expect anything and everything.

“Days like these, with the winds so variable, kind of take the pressure off me,” he said, letting a smile be his umbrella on an intermittently rainy day. “Instead of aiming with a dart, I’m firing a shotgun.”

The sailing team has 16 athletes, 9 coaches, 3 physiotherapists, a psychologist, a rules expert and Charko. In the 2000 and 2004 Olympics, he worked for the Brazilians. In 2008, the Canadians. Meteorologists are now a standard part of the world’s better sailing teams.

XXX Olympiad- Day 11

Today is the ‘scandal ridden’ Badminton Women’s Doubles Final, 1:30 pm on MSNBC.

Broadcast Schedule

Time Network Sport Competitors
6 am Vs. Men’s Basketball RUS v ESP
7 am MS Men’s Football JPN v EGY
8 am Vs. Women’s Beach Volleyball (Round of 16) ESP v ITA
8:30 am CNBC Boxing (Light Fly, Light Welterweight, Round of 16) elimination
8:30 am MS Men’s Water Polo MNE v ROU
9 am NBC Tennis (Women’s Singles Final) (Medal) Williams v Sharapova
9 am Vs. Cycling (Track) all
9:30 am Vs. Men’s Basketball USA v LTU
9:30 am MS Men’s Football (Elimination) MEX v SEN
11 am NBC Women’s Trampoline (Final) (Medal) all
11 am NBC Track & Field (Men’s 100m, 400m, Women’s Pole Vault) all
11 am MS Badminton (Men’s Singles Final) (Medal) CHN v CHN
11:30 am Vs. Tennis (Men’s Doubles Final) (Medal) USA v FRA
11:30 am NBC Men’s Volleyball USA v RUS
noon MS Men’s Football BRA v HON
1:30 pm NBC Track & Field all
1:30 pm MS Badminton Women’s Doubles Final (Medal) CHN v JPN
2 pm NBC Cycling (Track Finals) (Medal) all
2 pm Vs. Women’s Field Hockey USA v NZL
2:30 pm MS Men’s Football GBR v KOR
2:30 pm NBC Men’s Water Polo USA v SRB
3:30 pm Vs. Equestrian (Jumping) all
3:30 pm CNBC Boxing (Light Fly, Light Welter, Light Heavyweight, Round of 16) elimination
3:30 pm NBC Rowing (End of competition, Women’s Single Sculls, Men’s 4, Men’s and Women’s Lightweight Double Sculls Finals) (Medal) all
4 pm NBC Track & Field (Men’s 10000m Final) (Medal) all
4 pm MS Track & Field all
4:30 pm Vs. Shooting (Women’s Trap Final) (Medal) all
5 pm NBC Men’s Beach Volleyball (Round of 16) USA v RUS
5 pm Vs. Men’s Volleyball BUL v ARG
5:30 pm MS Weightlifting (Medal) all
7 pm Vs. Women’s Beach Volleyball (Round of 16) BRA v CZE
8 pm NBC Prime Time (Swimming (End of competition) Men’s and Women’s Medley Relays, Women’s 100m (Track), Women’s Springboard (Diving), Women’s Beach Volleyball (USA)) (Medals) all
12:30 am NBC Late Night (Cycling (Track), Swimming Men’s 1500m Final, Women’s Discus Final) (Medal) all
1:30 am NBC Prime Time repeat
3 am CNBC Boxing repeats elimination
4 am Vs. Badminton (Men’s Singles, Bronze) (Medal) all
5 am Vs. Cycling (Track) all

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

Saudi woman is first to compete in Olympics

By Liz Clarke, Washington Post

Published: August 3

Clad in a white judo uniform and snug, black headcovering, 16-year-old Wojdan Shaherkani stepped onto a judo mat here Friday to enthusiastic applause after being introduced as “the first woman ever from Saudi Arabia!”

Eighty-two seconds into her competition, Shaherkani’s Olympics ended in defeat; the repercussions of her participation may be far more wide-reaching. As the first Saudi Arabian woman to compete in an Olympic Games in any sport, she has been vilified by some and quietly cheered by others in her country.



Shaherkani’s participation in London, along with that of fellow Saudi Sarah Attar, a U.S.-based runner who’ll compete in the 800 meters next week, has been hailed as a diplomatic coup by the International Olympic Committee, which pressed all competing nations to include at least one woman on their teams.

The three that had historically refused – Saudi Arabia, Brunei and Qatar – relented.

Track athletes enjoy some fast times at London Olympics

By Helene Elliott, Los Angeles Times

August 3, 2012, 5:45 p.m.

When Britain’s Jessica Ennis set an Olympic heptathlon hurdles record Friday morning, she also set the pace for the opening day of track and field competition.



In distances short and long, with hurdles to conquer or nothing between them and the finish line but raindrops, athletes covered ground in astonishingly fast times Friday. “It felt nice,” Cheruiyot said of conditions in the stadium. “The wind was very quiet. I enjoyed it.”



“It’s a very fast track. I love it. I loved the crowd,” said Kerron Clement, whose season-best 48.48 in the first round of the 400 hurdles led all three Americans into Saturday’s semifinals. “The crowd’s great on the first day. I’m pretty impressed by that.”

With an overturned result, US men’s boxing avoids total elimination from Olympics

By Associated Press

Published: August 3

A few hours after the U.S. men’s boxing team thought its London Olympics were over, amateur boxing’s governing body decided Errol Spence deserved to fight on.

The AIBA overturned Spence’s loss to Indian welterweight Krishan Vikas late Friday night, five hours after the defense-minded Vikas had apparently clutched and grabbed his way to a 13-11 victory.

After the American team protested the result, AIBA’s competition jury reviewed the bout and ruled Vikas had committed nine holding fouls in the third round alone. He also intentionally spat out his mouthpiece in the second round, which should have resulted in at least four points of deductions.



Spence felt he had won the bout afterward, expecting his hand to be raised in the ring, but wasn’t terribly surprised when Vikas got the nod. The welterweight from Dallas already was the last U.S. man standing after his eight male teammates lost in the previous five days, including three-time Olympian Rau’shee Warren’s 19-18 loss to France’s Nordine Oubaali an hour earlier.

Spence stopped the eight-fight skid, but must beat Zamkovoy to save the most successful country in Olympic boxing history from its first medal shutout and its worst showing at any games – although three U.S. fighters are in the first Olympic women’s boxing tournament, which begins Sunday.

Olympic Viewing: NBC’s Poorly Timed Commercial

By DAVID BAUDER AP Television Writer

August 3, 2012

NBC says no offense was intended by a poorly timed promotional ad featuring a monkey on gymnastics rings that aired on the network directly following a commentary by Bob Costas on Gabby Douglas’ gold medal inspiring other African-American girls to take up the sport.

The gymnastics-themed ad for the upcoming NBC comedy “Animal Practice” was specifically timed to run late Thursday night following the women’s gold medal competition. NBC said it was scheduled to run before the network knew about Costas’ commentary.

“Much of America has fallen in love with Gabby Douglas,” Costas said. “Also safe to say that there are some young African-American girls out there who tonight are saying to themselves, ‘Hey, I’d like to try that, too.'”

Then NBC switched to the commercial with the small, widely grinning monkey on the rings. Blacks in the past have been disparagingly referred to as monkeys to the point where it is considered a common slur.

XXX Olympiad- Day 10

Broadcast Schedule

Time Network Sport Competitors
6:30 am Vs. Beach Volleyball elimination
7 am Vs. Women’s Football SWE v FRA
7 am Bravo Tennis (Men’s and Women’s Semifinal) all
8:30 am Vs. Women’s Volleyball JPN v RUS
9 am MS Men’s Gymnastics (Trampoline) all
9:30 am Vs. Women’s Football USA v NZL
10 am NBC Track & Field (Opening, Women’s 400m) all
10:30 am NBC Rowing (Men’s Pair, Single and Quadruple Sculls, Women’s Double Sculls) (Medals) all
10:30 am MS Women’s Water Polo RUS v AUS
10:30 am NBC Swimming (Men’s and Women’s 4x100m Medley, Men’s 1500m, Women’s 50m Free) all
11 am Vs. Archery (Men’s Individual Final) (Medal) all
11:30 am NBC Track & Field (Qualifying) all
11:30 am MS Women’s Handball RUS v BRA
noon NBC Beach Volleyball elimination
noon Vs. Women’s Football (Elimination) BRA v JPN
12:30 pm MS Women’s Water Polo ESP v HUN
1:30 pm Vs. Shooting (Medal) all
1:30 pm MS Equestrian (Team Dressage Day 2 Qualifying) all
2 pm NBC Swimming (Men’s and Women’s 4x100m Medley, Men’s 1500m, Women’s 50m Free) all
2:30 pm NBC Women’s Water Polo USA v CHN
2:30 pm Vs. Women’s Football (Elimination) GBR v CAN
2:30 pm MS Table Tennis (Women’s Team) USA v JPN
3:30 pm MS Badminton (Mixed Doubles Final) (Medal) CHN v CHN
3:30 pm NBC Rowing (Men’s Pair, Single and Quadruple Sculls, Women’s Double Sculls) (Medals) all
4 pm NBC Cycling (Track Cycling Final) (Medal) all
4 pm MS Beach Volleyball elimination
4 pm Vs. Weightlifting (Men’s) (Medal) all
4 pm NBC Track & Field (Medal) all
5 pm Vs. Women’s Basketball CZE v USA
5 pm CNBC Boxing (Men’s Fly and Welter Weight) elimination
7 pm Vs. Beach Volleyball elimination
8 pm NBC Prime Time (Men’s 100m Fly, Men’s Trampoline (finals), Track & Field, Diving, Women’s Volleyball (USA v SRB)) (Medals)
12:30 am NBC Late Night (Cycling (Track Final), Heptathalon, Women’s Discus) (Medal) all
1:30 am NBC Prime Time repeat
3 am CNBC Boxing repeats elimination
4 am Vs. Triathalon (Medal) all

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

After Warnings of an Olympic Crush, Businesses Suffer in a Deserted London

By JOHN F. BURNS, The New York Times

Published: August 2, 2012

With the Games nearing the end of their first week, and 10 more days to go, there has been no sign of the normal tourist-inflated crush at this time of the year – much less the no-room-to-move congestion officials warned would come with huge throngs of Olympic visitors competing for space on London’s notoriously overcrowded roads and transit systems, and in its shops, theaters, museums, galleries and restaurants.



Jeremy Hunt, the culture and sport minister in the Cameron cabinet, said Thursday that people who saw the Olympics as an economic body blow were premature and taking too narrow a view. The government now acknowledges that there is unlikely to be any short-term boost from the Games. It has reassured those nervous about its outlay on the Games – put at about $15 billion by government officials and as high as $20 billion by some experts, with road, railway and other improvements factored in – that the expense will be recouped in the long term by a $20 billion boost in Britain’s trade.



Mayor Boris Johnson, one of the Games’ biggest boosters, has made a midcourse correction of his own. He has admitted that the instant Olympic bounce he once forecast for London’s economy has evaporated, replaced by a “patchy” performance across many important sectors. But holding out for a turnaround, he has said things could improve as people realize that London without the crowds has become an unusually inviting place to go.



Normally crowded sidewalks in areas like Knightsbridge, Oxford Street, Bond Street, Piccadilly and Soho have looked much as they do when the city empties for summer weekends. Tables at sidewalk cafes have gone begging, and tickets to the West End’s normally sold-out hit shows are readily available, often at 20 percent discounts.

Cabdrivers complain that business is down 30 percent from normal at this time of year. “Where are the million extra visitors that we were promised?” asked Steve McNamara, a spokesman for the Licensed Taxi Drivers’ Association. He coupled this with a palpable absence of the national pride Mr. Cameron has urged on a nation hosting its first Olympics since 1948. “I’m looking forward to the closing ceremony,” on Aug. 12, Mr. McNamara said.

Stores in the upscale West End shopping district have said sales are down by 10 percent and more, and restaurants used to turning people away are desperate for trade. Ricky McMenemy, managing director of the Rules restaurant in Covent Garden, popular with Americans for a menu specializing in traditional British foods, said that after a “disaster” last Friday, when diners stayed away to watch the opening ceremony, the restaurant was “seeing a 50 percent downturn” in diners this week. Hundreds of West End hotels that had advertised rooms at premium prices, in some cases five times the normal rate, have dropped prices back to the usual level or even offered heavy discounts.

Ha.  Ha.  Ha.  Brilliant!

A High-Profile Cheering Section for a Horse’s Olympic Debut

By MARY PILON, The New York Times

Published: August 2, 2012

Ann Romney, whose husband, Mitt, is the presumptive presidential candidate for the Republican party, was on hand as an owner of Rafalca, a 15-year-old mare.

Rafalca and her rider, the veteran equestrian Jan Ebeling, took the stage early and finished the opening round of their Olympic debut with a score of 70.243, placing 13th. They have to wait to see how the rest of the field fares Friday before knowing whether they will advance to the Grand Prix Special on Tuesday.

Well, people have asked.

The Goal Is Winning Gold, Not Winning Every Match

By SAM BORDEN, The New York Times

Published: August 2, 201

Derek Jeter is a career .313 hitter. And yet in certain situations, sometimes even important situations in important games, Jeter goes up to the plate with the intention of not getting a hit. If he is successful – that is, if he succeeds at failing – he will be congratulated by his teammates when he returns to the dugout. The rules of baseball and other sports create situations in which a type of failure can be good strategy.

In the badminton case, the teams’ ultimate goal was clear: win a gold medal. And what is one way to help do that? Avoid the best teams for as long as possible. This was not a sacrifice bunt because there was no sacrifice. The teams, after evaluating the tournament setup that was presented to them, saw an opportunity to give up nothing in the hope of gaining something significant. One could argue it would have been silly for them not to seize that opportunity.



On Tuesday in Cardiff, Wales, the Japanese women’s soccer team purposely played for a draw in its final group game, hanging back in the second half and never pushing forward to try to score. This strategy was ordered by the team’s coach, and his reasoning was simple: a draw meant his team would stay put and play its quarterfinal in the same city a few days later. A win meant the Japanese would have to travel to Scotland to play the knockout game.

To that coach, Norio Sasaki, less travel meant a better chance at winning the tournament. To those badminton players, a loss in the final group game meant the same. Fans who complained about having bought tickets to see something like that are not seeing the athletes’ big picture. The competitors’ main obligation is to do what sets them up best to win a medal. They trained to play well, yes, but more important, they trained to win a medal. And Tuesday, losing gave them the best chance to do that. If fans are still angry, they should be angry at the organizers who made the situation possible, not the athletes themselves.

At least someone agrees with me.

The Guardian interactive chart to see where Ye’s performance ranks against those of swimmers at similarly high profile competitions between 2010 and 2012.

XXX Olympiad- Day 9

Broadcast Schedule

Time Network Sport Competitors
7 am Bravo Tennis (Singles and Mixed Doubles Quarterfinals, Singles Semifinals) all
7 am Vs. Men’s Volleyball SRB v GER
8:30 am MS Men’s Beach Volleyball BRZ v ITA
9 am MS Men’s Water Polo MNE v SRB
9:30 am Vs. Women’s Field Hockey CHN v NED
10 am NBC Swimming (Men’s 100m Fly, 50m Free, Women’s 200m Back, 800m Free) all
10 am NBC Canoe/Kayak (Men’s Whitewater C-2) (Medal) all
10 am MS Men’s Water Polo ROU v HUN
10:30 am Vs. Women’s Beach Volleyball GBR v RUS
10:30 am NBC Swimming (4 events) all
11:30 am NBC Women’s Beach Volleyball USA v ESP
11:30 am Vs. Men’s Basketball BRA v RUS
11:30 am MS Men’s Volleyball POL v ARG
12:30 pm NBC Swimming (4 events) all
12:30 pm NBC Cycling (Medal) all
1 pm NBC Men’s Water Polo USA v GBR
1:30 pm Vs. Table Tennis (Men’s Semifinals)
1:30 pm MS Equestrian (Team Dressage! (day 1 of 2)) all
2 pm NBC Rowing (Women’s 8, Men’s Light 4 (Medal), Women’s Single and Light Double Sculls, Men’s 4 and Light 4 Semifinals) all
2 pm Vs. Archery (Women’s) all
2:30 pm MS Men’s Handball SRB v DEN
3 pm NBC Men’s Volleyball USA v BRA
3 pm Vs. Boxing (Round of 16 Light, Middleweight) all
4 pm MS Badminton (Semifinals) all
4:30 pm MS Judo (Medal) all
4:30 pm MS Shooting (Medal) all
5 pm MS Men’s Handball SWE v ISL
5 pm CNBC Boxing (Round of 16 Light, Middleweight) all
5 pm Vs. Men’s Basketball USA v NGR
7 pm Vs. Olympics TBA
8 pm NBC Prime Time (Women’s Gymnastics All-Around, Swimming Men’s 200m IM (Medals), Men’s Beach Volleyball) USA
12:30 am NBC Late Night (Women’s Whitewater K-1, Table Tennis Men’s Singles (Medals)) all
1:30 am NBC Prime Time repeat
3 am CNBC Boxing repeat
4 am Vs. Beach Volleyball elimination
5 am Vs. Women’s Volleyball BRA v CHN

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

The joys of obscure Olympic sports

By Mike Downey, Special to CNN

updated 11:47 AM EDT, Wed August 1, 2012

“Wait a minute. Didn’t you GO to Olympic women’s judo once?” Yes, indeed I did. Barcelona, 1992.



I saw a point go on the scoreboard under the word “koka.” It was my first time seeing an ippon go up on a koka. I was enjoying my first judo. I wasn’t yet ready for the National Judo League to put Monday Night Judo on TV, but I was having a good time.



I got a kick out of watching them fight. I looked up that day’s judo results later on a computer and found the following: 19 ippons, 13 waza-aris, 22 yukos, 35 kokas, 13 shidos, three chuis, two keikokus and no hansoku-makes.

Don’t you hate it when you watch judo all day without seeing a single hansoku-make?

XXX Olympiad- Day 8

More Dancing Horsies and a Tiara

Broadcast Schedule

This is the complete schedule for today.  It covers from 6 am to 6 am.

Time Network Sport Competitors
6 am Vs. Table Tennis (Men’s quarterfinal)
7 am Vs. Badminton (elimination round) elimination
7 am Bravo Tennis (round of 16 Singles, start Mixed Doubles) all
7:30 am Vs. Cycling (Women’s) all
9 am Vs. Archery (Women’s) elimination
9 am MS Fencing (Women’s Sabre) all
9:30 am Vs. Men’s Football BRA v NZL
10 am NBC Cycling (Men’s Time Trial) (Medal) all
11 am NBC Swimming (Men’s 200m Back, 200m IM, Women’s 4x200m Free, 200m Breast, 100m Free) all
11 am Vs. Women’s Water Polo HUN v CHN
11 am MS Boxing (Bantam, Heavy, Super Heavy weight) elimination
11:30 am NBC Men’s Beach Volleyball USA v LAT
noon MS Men’s Football JPN v HON
noon Vs. Men’s Football MEX v SUI
12:30 pm NBC Swimming (5 events) all
1 pm NBC Women’s Water Polo USA v ESP
1:30 pm MS Fencing (Women’s Sabre) (Bronze Medal) all
1:30 pm Vs. Boxing (Bantam, Heavy, Super Heavy weight) elimination
2 pm Vs. Archery (Men’s) all
2:30 pm NBC Canoe/Kayak (Men’s Whitewater K1) (Medal) all
2:30 pm Vs. Men’s Football GBR v URU
3 pm NBC Women’s Volleyball USA v CHN
3 pm Vs. Women’s Beach Volleyball BRA v CZE
3:30 pm MS Fencing (Women’s) (Medal) all
3:30 pm MS Men’s Football SEN v UAE
4:30 pm NBC Rowing (Women’s Pair, Quad Sculls, Men’s 8 (Medal) (5 more events) all
4:30 pm Vs. Archery (Men’s) all
5 pm MS Women’s Beach Volleyball CZE v AUS
5 pm CNBC Boxing (Bantam, Heavy, Super Heavy weight) elimination
5 pm Vs. Women’s Basketball USA v TUR
7 pm MS Table Tennis (Women’s Singles final) (Medal)
8 pm NBC Prime Time (Swimming and Diving Finals, Men’s Gymnastics All-Around (Medal), Beach Volleyball) all
12:30 am NBC Late Night (Cycling (Women’s Time Trial), Rowing (3 finals)) (Medal) all
1:30 am NBC Prime Time repeat all
3 am CNBC Boxing repeat elimination
4 am Vs. Men’s Basketball FRA v LTU
5:30 am Vs. Women’s Field Hockey USA v AUS

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

At London Olympics, empty seats have organizers scrambling, giving away tickets to children and soldiers

By Karla Adam, Washington Post

Published: July 29

A day after the city reveled in the splendor of Danny Boyle’s critically acclaimed Opening Ceremonies, many locals were piqued Saturday when television footage showed empty seats at some of the most popular sporting events, including swimming and gymnastics, that they had been told were sold out. Such scenes ignited speculation that corporate sponsors had been provided tickets they weren’t using, leaving the public on the outside looking in.



The International Olympic Committee moved quickly to quash those rumors, saying sponsors had been allocated about 8 percent of available tickets, while at the same time they tried to determine exactly whom the unused seats belonged to.



On Sunday, many venues appeared full, but there were reports of empty seats at the Basketball Arena, where the U.S. men beat France, and Greenwich Park, where Zara Phillips, the queen’s granddaughter, was competing in equestrian.

On a rainy day at Wimbledon, Doreen Beeton stood on Henman Hill lamenting the half-filled Centre Court she saw on a giant video scoreboard. She believes many sponsors who were provided with tickets have no interest in the early-round matches.



Scrambling to calm the furor, London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe said off-duty military and students already accredited for the Olympic Park would be offered the abandoned seats. British troops already were attending women’s gymnastics Sunday morning, Coe said.



This isn’t the first time organizers have come under fire for ticketing mishaps. Earlier this month, they withdrew 500,000 tickets for soccer matches following meager demand in large stadiums dotted around the country. They also announced in July they were offering refunds to thousands of ticket holders in the 10-meter platform diving event because the position of their seats meant that the divers would briefly jump out of view.



Faisal Lalani, 48, who had tried and failed last year to get tickets for swimming, came to the Olympic Park on Sunday hoping to snag one of the unused tickets he read about.

Standing outside of the entrance to the Olympic Park, with grandiose views of the Aquatics Centre and Orbit tower, he said, “I feel cheated.”

Badminton Doubles Pairs Face Match-Throwing Probe

By MIKE CORDER Associated Press

LONDON August 1, 2012 (AP)

Four women’s badminton doubles pairs, including the reigning world champions from China, faced a disciplinary hearing Wednesday after being charged with trying to throw their matches at the London Olympics to secure an easier matchup in later rounds.



World doubles champions Wang Xiaoli and Yu Yang of China and their South Korean opponents Jung Kyun-eun and Kim Ha-na were booed loudly by the crowd Tuesday after dumping serves into the net and making simple errors like hitting the shuttlecock wide.



The problem was repeated in the next women’s doubles between South Korea’s Ha Jung-eun and Kim Min-jung and Indonesia’s Meiliana Jauhari and Greysia Polii. Both teams were also warned for deliberately losing points in a match the Koreans won 18-21, 21-14, 21-12. The capacity crowd vented their displeasure on them, too.



“If we’re not playing the best it’s because it doesn’t matter – if we’re the first or the second (in the group) we’re already through. The most important thing is the elimination match tomorrow.”

You get no points for advancing to Q2, 17th or first.  Might as well save the tires.

XXX Olympiad- Day 7

So Saturday

Catch up guys, now we’re talking about this stuff-

A Five-Ring Opening Circus, Weirdly and Unabashedly British

By SARAH LYALL, The New York Times

Published: July 27, 2012

As is the case almost every Olympics, much of the speculation around it centered on how Britain could possibly surpass the previous summer host, China. In 2008, Beijing used its awe-inspiring opening extravaganza to proclaim in no uncertain terms that it was here, it was rich, and the world better get used to it.



That the Olympics come at a time of deep economic malaise, with Britain teetering on the edge of a double-dip recession, the government cutting billions of dollars from public spending, and Europe lurching from crisis to crisis, made the scene a bit surreal, even defiant in the face of so much adversity.



In The Guardian, the columnist Marina Hyde said government officials appeared to be rashly depending on the Olympics, which cost an estimated £9.3 billion (or $14.6 billion), to save the country’s struggling economy virtually single-handedly.

Referring to a British track-and-field star, Ms. Hyde wrote that according to the government’s thinking, “Jessica Ennis winning gold is no longer merely a sporting aspiration but something that would cause a massive and immediate recalibration of the balance of payments.”

Ok, maybe not that, how about this-

NBC fail shows network’s commitment to ‘the last great buggy-whip Olympics’

Heidi Moore, The Guardian

Monday 30 July 2012

I am using anti-internet-censorship technology of the kind that is favored by political dissidents trying to connect with the outside world against the wishes of oppressive regimes.

Normally, the Olympics would not require the kind of computer-address-scrambling technology used by revolutionaries, hackers and child pornographers – but good luck trying to get at live events any other way if you happen to live on US soil.



In response to the complaints, NBC stated its intentions publicly: to herd Olympics viewers into exclusively primetime viewership of the games. There was no sleight of hand in NBC’s admission: it was completely open.



It is absolutely extraordinary that smart viewers are frustrated with NBC’s coverage and flaunting their use of proxy services to watch the BBC. It is not piracy – the proxy services are legal, and the BBC has broadcast rights too – but the fact that tech CEOs, journalists and others are sharing tips about how to avoid a major network is a sign that the network is missing a crucial turning point in responding to what audiences want from Olympics coverage.

Why should they respond to what the people want when all the other elites don’t give a rat’s ass?  Personally I favor direct action-

South Korean fencer in protest after controversial Olympic defeat

Press Association, The Guardian

Monday 30 July 2012

The 25-year-old thought she was through to the final of the women’s épée when, to her horror and that of her coach, Shim Jaesung, the clock was reset from zero to one second. The score was 5-5 at the time, but that would have been good enough for her under the rule where one fencer is awarded “priority” when a contest goes into sudden death. When the action resumed the German Britta Heidemann, gold medallist four years ago, scored a do-or-die hit that eventually put her in the final against Ukraine’s Yana Shemyakana.

The Korean coach furiously launched an appeal against the decision that had allowed the fight to continue and it was nearly half an hour before it was announced to the crowd – slow-hand clapping by this stage – that Heidemann’s win stood. Shin … remained on the piste. The bronze medal match and the final both had to be put back while the row went on, but almost 75 minutes later Shin was led off.



Shin said: “I think it’s unfair. The one second was over – I should have won. The hour was really difficult, but I thought if I got a yellow card [for leaving the piste] I might not be able to fight for bronze. I’m very sorry for the spectators. They spent a lot of money and I just don’t understand how this could have happened.”

Broadcast Schedule

Time Network Sport Competitors
7 am Bravo Tennis (Men’s and Women’s Singles second round, Doubles quarterfinals) all
8 am Vs. Men’s Water Polo HUN v MNE
9 am MS Table Tennis (women’s quarterfinals) elimination
9 am Vs. Equestrian (Individual Jumping) all
9:30 am MS Women’s Football CAN v SWE
10 am NBC Canoe/Kayak (Whitewater C-1) (Medal) all
10:30 am NBC Swimming (Men’s 4x200m Free Relay, 100m Free, 200m Breast, Women’s 200m Fly) all
10:30 am Vs. Men’s Beach Volleyball BRA v SUI
11 am NBC Rowing (Men’s and Women’s Single Sculls quarterfinals, Men’s Double Sculls and Lightweight 4 semifinals) all
11 am Vs. Women’s Beach Volleyball BRA v GER
11 am MS Badminton (Men’s qualifying)
11:30 am NBC Men’s Volleyball USA v GER
noon Vs. Women’s Football USA v PRK
noon MS Women’s Football FRA v COL
1:30 pm NBC Swimming (4 events) all
2 pm Vs. Boxing (Fly and Welterweights) elimination
2 pm MS Women’s Field Hockey USA v ARG
2 pm NBC Rowing (9 events, Quarter and semifinals) all
2:30 pm NBC Men’s Water Polo USA v ROU
3 pm Vs. Men’s Basketball FRA v ARG
3:30 pm MS Women’s Football GBR v BRA
4 pm NBC Men’s Beach Volleyball USA v ESP
4:30 pm MS Table Tennis (Women’s Semifinal)
4:30 pm Vs. Shooting (Medal) all
5 pm MS Archery (Men’s) all
5 pm Vs. Men’s Basketball TUN v USA
5 pm CNBC Boxing (Fly and Welterweights) elimination
5:30 pm MS Weightlifting (Men’s and Women’s) (Medal) all
7 pm Vs. Men’s Volleyball BRA v RUS
8 pm NBC Prime Time (Women’s Gymnastics, Diving, Swimming (Men’s 200m Fly)) (Medal)
12:30 am NBC Late Night (Swimming (Men’s 200m Breast, Women’s 200m Fly Semifinals), Women’s Beach Volleyball (Quarterfinal)) USA
1:30 am NBC Prime Time repeat
3 am CNBC Boxing (Repeats) elimination
4 am Vs. Men’s Field Hockey ESP v AUS
5 am Vs. Women’s Volleyball DOM v JPN

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

Dancing Horsies

One thing I got to see yesterday was the Cross Country part of the Team Overall Equestrian event.  Men and Women, no discrimination (except by money) Zara Phillips (Elizabeth’s grand daughter) was part of the UK Team and put in a respectable performance.  It was fun to watch, like riding through a miniature golf course and there were lots of crashes for you Turn Left fans.  Today they finish with Jumping so no Dancing Horsies.

Ok, maybe some.

XXX Olympiad- Day 6

Rocky Anderson on the Olympics

From Up w/ Chris Hayes

Broadcast Schedule

This is the complete schedule for today.  It covers from 6 am to 6 am.

Time Network Sport Competitors
6 am Vs. Women’s Badminton (Singles) USA v CHN
6:30 am Vs. Women’s Volleyball SRB v KOR
7 am Bravo Tennis (Second Round) all
8 am Vs. Equestrian (Individual and Team Cross Country) all
9 am MS Women’s Water Polo ESP v CHN
10 am NBC Swimming (Men’s and Women’s 200m Butterfly and Free) all
10 am MS Badminton (Men’s Doubles) USA v JPN
10:30 am NBC Rowing (Men’s 4, Women’s Double Scull) all
10:30 am MS Women’s Beach Volleyball BRA v GER
11 am NBC Canoe/Kayak (Women’s K1) all
11 am MS Women’s Water Polo ITA v AUS
11:30 am NBC Women’s Volleyball USA v BRA
11:30 am MS Women’s Basketball RUS v BRA
12:30 pm Vs. Archery (Men’s Preliminary) all
1 pm Vs. Boxing (Fly and Light Heavy Weight) elimination
1:30 pm NBC Rowing all
1:30 pm MS Table Tennis USA
1:30 pm NBC Swimming all
2 pm MS Men’s Field Hockey GBR v ARG
2:30 pm NBC Women’s Water Polo USA v HUN
3 pm Vs. Women’s Volleyball ITA v JPN
3:30 pm MS Men’s and Women’s Weightlifting all
4 pm NBC Men’s Beach Volleyball USA v POL
4 pm MS Women’s Handball FRA v ESP
4:30 pm Vs. Shooting (Air Rifle) (Medal) all
5 pm MS Women’s Beach Volleyball AST v AUS
5 pm CNBC Boxing (Fly and Light Heavy Weight) elimination
5 pm Vs. Women’s Basketball ANG v USA
7 pm Vs. Olympics TBA
8 pm NBC Prime Time (Swimming (Men’s 200m Free), Diving (Men’s Synchronized Platform), Men’s Gymnastics (Team)) (Medals) all
12:30 am NBC Late Night (Swimming (Women’s 200m IM), Canoe/Kayak (Whitewater)) all
1:30 am NBC Prime Time repeat
3 am CNBC Boxing repeats elimination
4 am Vs. Men’s Basketball CHN v RUS
5:30 am Vs. Equestrian (Team) (Medal) all

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

Upsets

Spain gets bounced from Football.  Only the World and European champions.  World Champion Wieber does not Qualify in Women’s Gymnastics (Overall).

Olympic Coverage Criticism

Smug American Elitism at the Olympics Opening Ceremony

By: Kevin Gosztola, Firedog Lake

Saturday July 28, 2012 1:11 pm

It is a running joke that Americans learn geography or about countries outside the United States only when the US military decides to invade a country. Presumably, this is why NBC broadcasters Bob Costas, Matt Lauer, and Meredith Viera announcing the Olympics opening ceremony would be sharing trivia about each country, especially information that Americans might be able to understand even if they were terribly uneducated. But that should be no justification for the candor of the commentary during the broadcast of the Opening Ceremony, which was frankly an example of smug American elitism and often outright condescension.

For example, Bob Costas said North Korea’s greatest athletic achievement belongs to “dear leader Kim Jong-Il who, according to his official biography, carded 11 holes-in one, not over a lifetime but over the first round he played.



This went on for just about every other country. “Churchill never met Idi Amin,” Costas said as Ugandan athletes walked in the stadium. An anecdote about Kuwait mistakenly playing the Kazakhstan national anthem in the film Borat was shared as Kazakh athletes made their entrance. He mentioned the animated movie franchise Madagascar as Madagascan athletes strode by the camera. And, of course, like a school boy learning the country’s name for the first time or a character in a Christopher Guest film, he said, “There are some countries whose names just make you smile,” as Djibouti walked by.

The comments were not limited to quips that fell flat. Costas’ introductions of many of the countries seemed to highlight the worst aspects of each country’s history or inadequacies in the country that Costas himself may or may not have experienced personally. He said, Egypt is in “a transition of some sort,” and added, “From military dictatorship to Jeffersonian democracy? Not quite.” He noted that Kiribati does not have regularly scheduled flights to Honolulu. He ominously reminded audiences that world leaders are keeping a “wary eye” on Pakistan. He described how Australia was “originally founded as a penal colony.”



Coupled with the fact that NBC cut out the ceremony’s memorial of the 7/7 terror attacks in London and Saudi Arabia’s first female athletes entering, NBC’s presentation of the opening ceremony was appalling, hokey, and downright imbecilic. Broadcasters of the American idiocracy were in true form.

It is not like Americans are given much exposure to people or culture in countries outside of the United States. They are consistently indoctrinated with this idea from all politicians that they are citizens of the Greatest Nation on Earth. So, perhaps, it is not surprising that broadcasters on NBC would reinforce this predominant ideology of exceptionalism in our society. But is it too much to expect that NBC announcers would, for the few seconds that these countries go by, not offer smug or sneering remarks that call out the imperfections of each country’s current politics or past history?

XXX Olympiad- Day 5

Broadcast Schedule

Time Network Sport Competitors
6 am Vs. Men’s Basketball BRA v AUS
7 am NBC Cycling (Medal) all
7 am MS Men’s Volleyball RUS v GER
7 am Bravo Tennis all
8 am Vs. Men’s Beach Volleyball BRA v AST
8 am MS Men’s Handball CRO v KOR
8:30 am CNBC Boxing (Light, Welter) elimination
9 am Vs. Women’s Table Tennis (singles) USA v LUX
9:30 am Vs. Men’s Basketball USA v FRA
10 am MS Men’s Football BRA v BLR
11 am NBC Swimming (preliminaries, 6 events) all
11:30 am Vs. Men’s Basketball ESP v CHN
11:30 am MS Archery (Medal) all
1 pm MS Men’s Football SEN v URU
1:30 pm NBC Swimming (Qualifying) all
1:30 pm Vs. Badminton (Men’s Doubles) USA v MLY
2 pm NBC Women’s Gymnastics BRA, AUS, ITA
2 pm MS Men’s Water Polo HUN v SRB
2 pm Vs. Equestrian (Dressage) all
2:30 pm NBC Men’s Water Polo USA v MNE
2:30 pm MS Men’s Football GBR v UAE
3 pm Vs Women’s Beach Volleyball BRA v NTH
3:30 pm CNBC Boxing (Light and Welterweights) elimination
3:30 pm NBC Rowing (7 events) all
3:30 pm Vs. Men’s Weightlifting(Medal) all
4 pm NBC Men’s & Women’s Beach Volleyball USA Teams
4 pm Vs. Women’s Field Hockey USA v GER
4:30 pm MS Men’s Volleyball ITA v POL
5:30 pm Vs. Men’s Basketball ARG v LTU
7 pm NBC Primetime (Swimming (Men’s 4x100m Free), Diving (Women’s Synchronized Springboard)(Medal), Women’s gymastics (team Qualifying)) USA
12:30 am NBC NBC Late Night (Women’s Team Gymnastics, Canoe/Kayak Whitewater) all
1:30 am NBC Primetime (repeat) all
3 am CNBC Boxing all
4 am Vs. Men’s Field Hockey NZL v KOR
5 am Vs. Women’s Beach Volley Ball CHN v SUI

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

XXX Olympiad- Day 4

Nightmares I tells ya.  Fortunately I have a lot to write while I can’t sleep.

Broadcast Schedule

Time Network Sport Competitors
4 am Vs. Women’s Beach Volleyball CHN v RUS
5 am Vs. Women’s Badminton (singles) KOR v MLY
5 am NBC Cycling (road) all
6 am Vs. Women’s Shooting (Medal) all
6:30 am Vs. Women’s Volleyball CHN v SRB
7 am MS Women’s Football JPN v SWE
7 am Bravo Tennis (first round) all
8 am Vs. Fencing (Women’s foil) USA v tbd
8:30 am Vs. Women’s Handball ESP v KOR
8:30 am CNBC Men’s Boxing (bantam and middle weight) elimination
9 am MS Table Tennis (Women’s singles) USA v CRO
9:30 am Vs. Women’s Football (group) NZL v BRA
9:30 am MS Fencing (Women’s foil Sweet 16, Quarterfinal) all
10:30 am MS Women’s Football (highlights) CAN v RSA
11 am NBC Swimming (Men’s 400m IM, 400m Free, Women’s 4x100m Relay, 400m Free) all
11 am Vs Table Tennis (Men’s singles) USA v PRK
11:30 am MS Men’s Beach Volleyball USA v CAN
11:30 am NBC Women’s Basketball USA v CRO
noon Vs. Women’s Football (group) USA v COL
noon MS Women’s Football (group) GBR v CMR
1:30 pm NBC Swimming (400m IM) (Medal) all
1:30 pm Vs Equestrian (Dressage) all
2 pm MS Table Tennis (Women’s singles) USA v MEX
2:30 pm NBC Rowing (9 events) all
2:30 pm Vs. Women’s Football (group) FRA v PRK
2:30 pm MS Fencing (Women’s foil) (Medal) all
3 pm NBC Women’s Volleyball USA v KOR
3:30 pm CNBC Men’s Boxing (bantam and middle weight) elimination
3:30 pm MS Men’s Badminton (doubles) USA v KOR
4:30 pm Vs. Women’s Handball NOR v FRA
5 pm NBC Men’s Beach Volleyball USA v RSA
5:30 pm Vs. Archery (Men’s Team) (Medal) all
8 pm NBC Swimming (400m IM) (Medal), Men’s Gymnastics (Team), Women’s Beach Volleyball USA v ???
12:30 am NBC Late night roundup
1:30 am NBC Prime Time repeat
3 am CNBC Boxing roundup
4 am Vs. Women’s Beach Volleyball ITA v RUS

All this is sourced through the NBC Olympics broadcast schedule.  Competition starts again at 6 am tomorrow.  I’ve done a full day because as you see the evening isn’t much, yet.  Also I have evening and afternoon appointments.

Now might also be a good time to mention that we’ll be providing coverage for Formula One Hungaroring at 8 am today for Qualifying and Sunday at the same time for the race.

Competitions designated by (Medal) will award winners that day.  ‘all’ means not specified.  Sometimes NBC especially does mashups and doesn’t include event or competitor information.  Elimination means no round robin, one and done.

Today’s Cycling event pits all the names you remember from Le Tour back on the road.  Wiggins is favored but that’s just sentiment, this race tends to favor a Mark Cavendish type.  No teams.

But these guys are professionals.

So they are.  Just like Men’s Basketball.  The Women are coached by Geno of UCONN.  Rafalca will dance today.  Phelps starts collecting his golds.  Badminton!  Rowing!  Table Tennis!  Fencing!  All those nerd sports you never see.

These schedules are a place for you to make sure you don’t miss a sport you like and share your observations.  Have fun today!

XXX Olympiad- Opening Ceremonies

It will be a hot time in the Olympic Village tonight.

Of course every Olympics begin with the Opening Ceremonies in which the host nation showcases its culture, its history, and terrifying lockstep unity.

I can’t believe that one of the choreographed pieces is a 40 foot high Voldemort attacked by 30 Mary Poppins.  This is why I seldom bother with Opening and Closing at all  Another thing to watch for is Barack Obama’s new :30 spot, if you care for that sort of thing.

“World Class Feats of Athleticism”

London 2012: Unfamiliar Olympic sports explained

David Hills, The Guardian

Saturday 21 July 2012 17.01 EDT

Whether it is Olympic badminton, beach volleyball, handball, shooting, Taekwondo, trampoline, fencing or BMX cycling, you need to know a foil from an épée, and endos from bunnyhops.

He left out Sailing and Wrestling in the lede.

Of course, these used to be ‘sports’ too-

When the Olympics Included Mud Fighting and Tug of War

By Bill Mallon, Bloomberg News

Jul 23, 2012 6:30 PM ET

In 1900, a series of obstacles were set up in the Seine River in Paris. Swimmers lined up for a 200-meter (656-feet) race in which they had to climb over a pole and a row of boats, then swim under another row of boats. That was the only time the 200-meter Obstacle Swim Race was contested at the Olympics.

Also in 1900, cricket was contested for the only time at the Olympics. The match was purportedly between French and British teams, but the French contingent was actually composed of British expatriates working in Paris at the time. Croquet also was played in Paris, then replaced in St. Louis in 1904 with a variant known as roque. Roque was named after croquet, by dropping the first and last letters, but played with smaller balls and much tighter wickets. Roque was hailed as the Game of the Century in 1904, but only four Americans competed and today it is essentially defunct.



Tug of war was quite popular, being held in 1900, 1904, 1908, 1912 and 1920, before falling from the program. Lacrosse was contested in 1904 and 1908, and in 1904, a Mohawk Indian team from southern Ontario placed third.



In 1900, 1908, 1920, 1924 and 1936, polo was an Olympic sport, falling from grace only after Berlin in 1936. It was the last sport to have been discontinued, until baseball and softball were ousted from the 2012 games. They are to be replaced in 2016 by golf and rugby sevens — a smaller, shorter variant of rugby union. These two sports won out over karate, squash, roller skating and ballroom dancing. — but neither will be new to the Olympics. Golf was contested at those unusual Olympics of 1900 and 1904, and was on the program for both 1908 and 1920, though it was canceled both times. Rugby tournaments were held in 1900, 1908, 1920 and 1924. The U.S. won gold twice, in 1920 and 1924 — which is why when the sport returns in four years, the defending champions will be those great practitioners of the game, the U.S.

The Joy of Six: Discontinued Olympic sports

Scott Murray, The Guardian

Friday 6 July 2012

The plunge for distance was essentially the long jump for divers. Contestants would plunge into the drink from a standing start, in order to propel themselves underwater as far along the pool as possible. Their total distance would be measured at the point they came back up for air, or wherever they’d got to after 60 seconds beneath the surface, whichever came first. Plungers weren’t allowed to propel themselves through the water – after the initial dive, they had to remain motionless.



There were plenty of gun-based oddities back in the day. At the 1900 Paris Games, slavering maniacs paid upwards of 200 francs for the pleasure of bringing down real live pigeons from the air with their pieces. Leon de Lunden of Belgium took the cash prize of 2,000 francs for his unmatched total of 21 murders.



At the unofficial 1906 Games in Athens, a duelling pistol contest was held, which saw contestants firing at dummies tarted up in frock coats and top hats. The bullseye was situated on the thorax. Bang! Right on the windpipe.



Running target (1972-2004) saw a life-size cutout of a boar cross a 10-metre gap in two-and-a-half seconds; contestants had to shoot it in the ring (please behave) 30 times, then another 30 times at half speed. The precursor to this event was the running deer; you can fill in the gaps.

In Equestrian competition we have seen such events as Long Jump, High Jump, Hunter and Hack, and Four-in-Hand Mail Coach.

My doggie friend is still quite pissed that Softball has been replaced by Golf.

Our good buddy Mitt didn’t strap Rafalca to the roof of his Bain Capital Gulfstream to drop him off, he’s not even going to visit; but he did use his Salt Lake City cred to win the hearts and minds of his United Kingdom hosts.

David Cameron hits back at Mitt Romney over London 2012 doubts

Owen Gibson, Olympics editor, The Guardian

Thursday 26 July 2012

Romney said the fallout from the G4S security fiasco and a threatened strike by immigration officials were “disconcerting” and questioned whether British people would get behind the Games.

“Do they come together and celebrate the Olympic moment? And that’s something which we only find out once the Games actually begin. It is hard to know just how well it will turn out,” said Romney.

But Cameron, who was due to meet Romney later on Thursday, said: “In terms of people coming together, the torch relay demonstrated that this is not a London Games, this is not an England Games but this is a United Kingdom Games. We’ll show the world we’ve not only come together as a United Kingdom but are extremely good at welcoming people from across the world.”



Asked whether the Games and Danny Boyle’s opening ceremony, which will be watched by a predicted 1 billion people, offered an opportunity rebrand the country, Cameron said: “We don’t need to rebrand Britain. Britain has a great brand. I hope people will see all the things they like about Britain’s past, our history, our contributions to world development. But I also hope they will see a very open country and one that has an enormous amount to offer for the future.”

Olympic Games already have their share of controversies

By Shashank Bengali, McClatchy Newspapers

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Some 36,000 troops, police and hired contractors will stand guard at Olympic venues and on the streets of London and other cities. After the private security firm G4S acknowledged last week that it wouldn’t be able to furnish all of the 10,000 contractors it had agreed to, British officials called up additional service members to fill the gap.

The foul-up compounded what for many Londoners is beginning to seem like a long, costly summer, which began with a lavish diamond jubilee for Queen Elizabeth II and has coincided with ever bleaker economic news: The Office for National Statistics reported Wednesday that the economy had shrunk by 0.7 percent from April to June, a far worse contraction than had been forecast, deepening a double-dip recession that’s the severest in decades.

Meanwhile, the cost of staging the games has risen to several times the initial projection, exceeding even the infamous budget-busting standards of the 1996 Atlanta games. London’s now are expected to end up as the most expensive ever, at a cost of more than $14 billion.



Competition got under way Wednesday, but a women’s soccer match that involved Colombia and North Korea was delayed by an hour after North Korean players were introduced on a video with their faces next to the South Korean flag.

The BBC reported that the rather dramatic mix-up – the neighboring countries are still technically at war, having never signed a treaty after a cease-fire took effect in the 1950s Korean conflict – occurred at the studio that produced the pregame video. The Christian Science Monitor pronounced it perhaps the worst blunder by a host nation in the Olympics’ 116-year modern history.

If you are someone who think we are just ‘Exceptional’, you might be interested in this article from The GuardianLondon 2012 Olympics: 30 American athletes to watch out for.

Other than that they’ve tried to keep most of the spectacle ‘secret’, no spoilers, but you will find because of the time difference Opening Ceremony is already done.  Thank goodness NBC has tape delayed it for 7:30 pm.

Repeat at 2:30 am.  Regular events start tomorrow at 5 am.  Formula One Hungaroring Qualifying on Speed at 8 am.

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