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Indian men's 4X100m freestyle relay team in final

Monday, October 4, 2010 2 comments

Led by India's biggest hope in swimming -- Virdhawal Khade, the India quartet clocked 3:28.06 to make a cut for the final of the Men's 4x100m Freestyle relay, after they finished sixth in their event at SPM Aquatics Complex in New Delhi on Monday.
The other three members of the team are Aaron Dsouza, Arjun Jayaprakash and Anshul Kothari.
India could make their presence felt in two more categories, even as most of them failed to advance further.
In men's 50m backstroke, Badrinath Melkote clocked 27.52 to qualify for the semifinals, while Subha Chittaranjan clocked 29.96 to enter the last four stage in women's 50m butterfly.
However, India put up a disappointing show in all other categories, including women's 200m freestyle, men's 400m freestyle, women's 200m individual medley, men's 200m butterfly, women's 50m breaststroke, as none of the swimmers could qualify in these events.
Meanwhile, a formidable Australian team, followed by England and Canada have already established their dominance in the pool.

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Commonwealth Games Opening ceremony

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Fennell checks out CWG Village, England athletes arrive

Saturday, September 25, 2010 0 comments

NEW DELHI: Commonwealth Games Federation chief Mike Fennell on Friday inspected the Commonwealth Games Village and said "considerable improvements" have been made there even as embattled organisers continued their sprint against time to complete preparations for the October 3-14 event.

"It is good to be in Delhi, and the briefing I received from my CEO, Mike Hooper, last night, was that considerable improvements have been made within the Village, with further significant resources deployed by Delhi Chief Minister, Mrs Dikshit, to make good what was a concerning situation," Fennell said in a statement.

Fennell, accompanied by Organising Committee chairman Suresh Kalmadi, secretary general Randhir Singh CGF CEO Mike Hooper, took stock of the arrangements at the athletes Village, which was dubbed "filthy and uninhabitable" by visiting international delegates a couple of days ago.

His statement came even as the first batch of 22 English athletes landed in the capital but headed to hotels instead of the Village as their living area is still not ready.

The CGF boss, who was unimpressed with the pace of the work and even shot off a letter to the Cabinet Secretary a few days ago, also briefed the delegates about the work.

Fennell will meet Cabinet Secretary, KM Chandrasekhar this afternoon.

"I am looking forward to spending the morning with my colleagues from the Commonwealth Games movement and evaluating the situation with all the key stakeholders," Fennell said.

"I am certainly pleased to arrive in Delhi with the news that Australia has moved into the Village to get ready for the arrival of their athletes, and with the confirmation late yesterday that England and Wales will be on their way to Delhi shortly.

"Already so many athletes from around the Commonwealth have started their journey to Delhi. Our job across the next week is to help ensure that all the corrective work is completed in good time," he added.

Fennell said the organisers have to provide a good environment for the visiting athletes and officials.

"We must ensure that a suitable environment is provided to ensure the welfare of the athletes and their support staff.

"It is vital that all remedial work that has already started continues with the greatest urgency," Fennell said.

However, the grim build-up to the Games continued with four top British cyclists, including world champion Welshman Geraint Thomas, pulling out of the event along with New Zealand's Greg Henderson.

The New Zealand delegation will take another 24 hours before deciding whether to compete at the event.

Read more: Fennell checks out CWG Village, England athletes arrive - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/events-tournaments/commonwealth-games/top-stories/Fennell-checks-out-CWG-Village-England-athletes-arrive/articleshow/6618906.cms#ixzz10XKjVerL

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Malaysian delegation arrives in New Delhi to assess CWG state of affairs

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New Delhi, Sep. 25 (ANI): A 15-member delegation from Malaysia arrived here to assess the state of affairs just one week before the opening of the Commonwealth Games 2010.

The Malaysian delegation accompanied by two security officials will visit all the stadiums to assess the situation.

The delegation will leave on Monday. A total of 203 Malaysian athletes will be visiting India to participate in the Commonwealth Games.

The athletes will compete for medals in aquatics, archery, athletics, badminton, boxing, cycling, gymnastics, hockey, lawn bowls, rugby sevens, table tennis, shooting, squash and weightlifting.

Several other countries had raised concern over the preparedness of the venues after reports of hygiene issues, dengue fever outbreak and security incidents in the lead up to the event which is scheduled to begin in nine days.

India is scrambling against the clock to clean up the games venues.

Meanwhile, authorities tightened the security cover around the Games venues on Friday by deploying thousands of security personnel as athletes from various countries start trooping in for the embattled Games.

Paramilitary troops and heavily armed commandos had cast a tight security net around the Jawaharlal Nehru stadium, where the opening and closing ceremony would be held for the October 3-14 Games. (ANI)

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Commonwealth Games Village unliveable, complain four countries

Monday, September 20, 2010 1 comments

NEW DELHI: Amid all the gloom about chaotic preparations for the Commonwealth Games, there was at least one silver lining: the widespread applause for the "world class" Games Village at its soft launch on September 16. Unfortunately, the Organising Committee has run into a rude reality check even on this front.

New Zealand, Canada, Scotland and Ireland have objected strongly to the condition of the accommodation given to them, say highly placed sources. The reason - lack of maintenance of apartments in the towers allotted to these teams and their abysmal, "unliveable" condition, say team delegates. Toilets in particular are said to be in a "mess".

Sources said the apartments, which are left unlocked through the day and night, were found to be dirty. In some flats, labourers had defecated. In others, fixtures and other facilities were still to be provided. Though athletes are to start moving in after September 23, work in just 18 of the 34 towers is said to be complete. The advance teams are reportedly of the view that the remaining work is not likely to get over for weeks.

The delegates are learnt to have told the OC that unless the apartments are set right, their teams should be put up in a Games Family hotel - the Ashoka or Janpath - or some other accommodation. This could add to the OC's logistical problems.

1. Condition of Games Village has prompted delegates from New Zealand, Canada, Scotland and Ireland to issue ultimatum to OC

2. Apartments in towers allotted to these countries, especially Kiwis, filthy.

4. Site workers have been using the unlocked flats.

5. Toilets are stained, fixtures haven't been installed, don't work or are broken

6. Size of contingent: Canada 400, New Zealand 325, Scotland 300

7. Those happy with Village: Australia, England

source >> http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/events-tournaments/commonwealth-games/top-stories/Commonwealth-Games-Village-unliveable-complain-four-countries/articleshow/6595540.cms

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Fennell inspects Commonwealth Games venues

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Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF) president Mike Fennell Wednesday embarked on a whirlwind tour of the stadiums and Commonwealth Games village here as part of his two-day visit to monitor the preparedness for the Oct 3-14 Games.

Fennell’s visit comes at a time when the Commonwealth Games are embroiled in controversies ranging from financial irregularities, unpreparedness and sub-standard quality of work in Games projects.

The Jamaican, who arrived in India Tuesday night, went around the city checking out the facilities at the stadiums. He was accompanied by CGF chief executive Mike Hooper, Commonwealth Games Organising Committee (CGOC) vice-chairman Randhir Singh and secretary general Lalit Bhanot.

Fennell began his day visiting the Thyagaraj Stadium at 9 a.m and then went on to see Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, the venue for the opening and closing ceremonies, Major Dhyan Chand National Stadium, Indira Gandhi Complex, Games Village and Yamuna Sports Complex.

He will also be visiting Delhi University’s Rugby Stadium, Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Swimming Complex, Talkatora Stadium, Siri Fort Stadium and R.K. Khanna Stadium to complete his day.

Fennell will visit the two shooting ranges — Karni Singh and Kadarpur — Thursday.

The CGF president is also expected to have a series of meetings with government officials, Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit, and Urban Development Minister S. Jaipal Reddy, who is the heading the Group of Ministers overseeing the preparations of the Games.

He is also expected to address the Organising Committee executive board.

Before Fennell’s ongoing tour, Randhir and Bhanot made a round of all the facilities except the Kadarpur Shooting Range following the uproar over their unpreparedness.

Final touches are still to be given to the venues and garbage and construction materials are littered all over the stadiums.

The CGOC top brass, after their four-day tour of the venues, said they have scanned through the minute details related to the finishing touches and overlays and they appeared satisfactory.

The CGOC gave Aug 25 as the deadline when all the venues will be completely ready while the Games Village will be thrown open Sep 16 when foreign delegates will start arriving.

source >> http://www.thelatestnews.in/fennell-inspects-commonwealth-games-venues/41091.html

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Commonwealth Games 2010: Delhi working through the night to beat deadline

Friday, September 17, 2010 1 comments

With only 15 days to go until the start of the Commonwealth Games, the Indian capital is in a frantic rush to be ready for its big opening night.

"My motto is 'Not tomorrow, today. Not today, now'," said Lalit Bhanot, the hard-pressed secretary general of the Games organizing committee.

"There is absolutely no time to waste. We know it will be hectic. We have to work day and night and I am fully aware that from now until the end of the Games there is no holiday and no day off or night off."

After months of delays and missed construction deadlines, Delhi now has a deadline that cannot be moved. On Oct 3, the Prince of Wales will open proceedings at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium before competition gets under way the following day.

One can only assume that the area around the stadium, currently an expanse of monsoon-soaked mud, will have been landscaped by then and that the sound of hammering and sawing that reverberated during a media open day this week will have ceased.

Comically, while officials gave interviews at the stadium about the completion of the refurbishment work, a painter was perched above them whitewashing the ceiling.

It was a similar story when the Mukherjee swimming complex opened its doors last Sunday. Although the competition area was to all intents and purposes complete, the 10-metre diving platform still needed surfacing, while the warm-up area was being repainted and retiled.

At the Siri Fort sports complex, which will stage the badminton and squash competitions, the gleaming interior was in marked contrast to the scene outside – a temporary slum for the hundreds of migrant labourers laying paving slabs and painting kerb stones.

Bhanot insists that such landscaping is a straightforward job that will be completed within a few days. What he has no jurisdiction over is the "beautification" of central Delhi – a government project of far greater scale in which miles of roads and pavements are still in the process of being relaid in readiness for the Games.

"I feel it is going to be complete very shortly," said Bhanot. "Maybe after one week, maybe after 10 days.

"By the time the athletes start arriving, you will find everything in order. I tell all my competition staff and organising committee staff that the government will complete their work and all the work will be completed on time. There should be no doubt at all."

The lateness of the preparations has turned what should have been a celebration for Delhi and India into a public relations disaster at home. Local press coverage is unremittingly negative.

But not all of the carping is fair. Final preparations may be behind the clock but the Games have already brought the city a magnificent new airport terminal, a state-of-the-art metro system and new roads and flyovers to improve the flow of Delhi's notoriously clogged traffic.

And, external landscaping apart, the new stadiums are of undeniably world-class standard. The Thyagaraj sports complex, where netball will take place, and the Talkatora indoor stadium, which will stage boxing, are both gems, while the velodrome at the Indira Gandhi sports complex is rated by cycling's world governing body as second only to the Beijing velodrome in terms of build quality. What a shame neither Sir Chris Hoy nor Victoria Pendleton will be there to enjoy it.

But the fact that none of the venues received its building completion certificate until Sept 6 has frayed the nerves of the organising committee and the Commonwealth Games Federation. The CGF had warned it would not allow competitions to go ahead without the proper approvals.

"If they'd got the certificates six months ago, life would have been a lot less stressed," said Mike Hooper, the CGF chief executive.

"There's no denying that, being so late, it has impacted on other operational areas, which means there is a lot of work to be done by a lot of people in the coming days.

"Delhi Police very publicly said that, ideally, they would have liked a month to get in the venues to do what they need to do. They haven't. They've got less than that.

"The same goes for the organising committee in terms of making the venues operational in relation to the delivery of sport. It's all very well having spanking new buildings that they got the keys to on Sept 6, but on Oct 3 they've got to play sport in them."

The CGF would be entitled to say "we told you so". As far back as October last year, CGF president Michael Fennell warned the Delhi organisers that "time is your enemy" as schedules started to slip.

But Hooper insists that now is not the time to criticise or apportion blame. There are more important priorities.

"I'm not interested in pointing fingers and saying, 'He should have done this' or 'This should have been done sooner'," said Hooper. "Of course there have been delays. We don't need reminding of that. We've been saying it for the last two years. But we are where we are. The glass is half full. Let's focus on getting it filled up and getting all the work done."

Delhi by numbers

14 million people live in Delhi

190,000 kilometres will be covered by the Queen's Baton Relay

80,000 Delhi police officers will be on duty

6,500 athletes are expected, the most ever for a Commonwealth Games

2,000 CCTV cameras have been installed

700 pounds for a top-priced Opening Ceremony ticket

371 English athletes will be in action

103 Indian athletes have failed drug tests this year

71 nations will take part in the Games

70 pence to watch any first-round lawn bowls match

36 gold medals were won by English athletes in Melbourne four years ago

17 sports will be contested

14 pounds for the cheapest Opening Ceremony ticket

11 venues have either been built from scratch or refurbished


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2010 Commonwealth Games: Pendleton pulls out of event

Monday, July 19, 2010 0 comments

Olympic champion Victoria Pendleton has told BBC Sport she will miss the Commonwealth Games in Delhi to focus on October's European Championships.

The 29-year-old's decision mirrors Sir Chris Hoy, who pulled out of the 2010 Games on Friday because of the clash.

The European event will count as a qualifier for the 2012 Olympics and Beijing sprint gold medallist Pendleton said London remains her main focus.

"It's a no-brainer, points for Olympics qualification are on offer," she added.

"Unfortunately you are not going to jeopardise going to the London Olympics, so we have to go to the Europeans.

"It's really unfortunate we can't do both competitions and support the Commonwealth Games."

We have been put in a situation where the European Championships clash and we can't ignore an opportunity to gain points for the Olympics

Victoria Pendleton

And British cycling chief Dave Brailsford believes other cyclists will continue to prioritise those events offering qualification points for the Olympic Games.

"Those who have clear Olympic ambitions have to prioritise: is it the Commonwealth Games or is it Olympic points and those who want to compete in the home Games in London will 100% go for the Olympic points," he told BBC 5 Live.

"Their thinking is that they would like to get as many points on the board as early as possible. They don't want to end up running into the 2012 Games looking at preparation periods being compromised by having to chase points to qualify.

"It's a very tough decision but ultimately they have gone for the Olympic qualification points considering that is what their careers are based around."

The first senior European Championships - an event formerly restricted to riders under the age of 23 - takes place from 5-7 November.

Pendleton disappointed to miss Commonwealths

However, the competition has suddenly become more significant for Britain's top riders because of the changes agreed by the International Cycling Union (UCI), with results counting towards qualification for London 2012.

The quest for an Olympic place began after March's World Championships in Copenhagen and will run until the Track World Championships in Melbourne in 2012.

Four-time Olympic champion Hoy said the Olympics must "take precedence over everything" following Friday's decision to withdraw from the Commonwealth Games.

And Pendleton, the defending sprint champion having won gold at Melbourne in 2006, said she had little choice but to miss the Delhi Games.

"The Commonwealths have been a really important competition in the schedule just one below the Olympics," stated Pendleton.

"But if you can't qualify for the Olympics, then it puts us in an awful situation.

606: DEBATE
The Commonwealth Games is a nice event, but lets be honest it is to the Olympics what the Champions League is to the Europa League in football

Sgyrsiau Sbwriel

"I'm really disappointed that I can't support India in their Games as it's somewhere I really want to visit.

"But we have been put in a situation where the European Championships clash and we can't ignore an opportunity to gain points for the Olympics."

A venue for the European championships has yet to be confirmed but the competition will limit the number of riders to one from each country per event, along with the number of European teams allowed to race in the team sprint.

Pendleton compared the changes - which will be in place for London 2012 - with Jamaica choosing between sprinters Usain Bolt and Asafa Powell for their athletics team.

source >> http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/other_sports/cycling/8835499.stm

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The Commonwealth Games in Delhi come at a high price for the poor

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An estimated 140,000 families will be evicted to clear space for lavish facilities in Delhi that offer no lasting benefits

As we await the start of another great carnival of sport, uneasily suppressing our reservations about the possible benefits – or the lack thereof – to the great majority of the South African people from the 2010 World Cup, news arrives of a disturbing report into the next such event, also taking place in a corner of the former British Empire where the desperately poor vastly outnumber even the modestly affluent.

The Commonwealth Games, which begin in Delhi on 3 October, are already surrounded by concerns over security. Far more worrying than the possible threat to a few thousand privileged visiting foreigners, however, is a new report by the Housing and Land Network, an arm of the global movement Habitat International Coalition, suggesting that by the time the Games begin about 140,000 families will have been evicted from their homes to clear the space for the lavish facilities now compulsory for such events.

For 100,000 of those families, it is already too late. They have been moved out of their shanty towns and "resettled", a word which has a deceptively comforting sound. Usually the policy's victims find themselves relocated to distant places where the prospects of work are even more remote and there are no schools for their children. It is anticipated that a further 40,000 families will soon share this experience in order to allow athletes to demonstrate their prowess and commercial sponsors to advertise their wares to a worldwide audience.

Miloon Kothari, a former United Nations human rights expert, wrote the report and also discovered that "tens of millions of dollars" originally intended to fight poverty in Delhi have instead been used to fund the Games, whose budget is now around 20 times its original estimate, making the fourfold rise in the London 2012 budget seem almost like good housekeeping.

Back in January it was suggested by Kothari that the Indian government needed to be held accountable for "persistent human rights violations against the homeless" and "a clear violation of [its] commitments under constitutional and international law" to provide for its poor. Now the opportunity to present Delhi as a "world city" and to make money for those with their fingers in the pie appears to be taking precedence over such commitments, as it seems to have done in South Africa, where the "people's game" will be out of the reach of all but a tiny minority of the actual people.

Corruption and the immoral misallocation of resources are more easily spotted in developing countries, partly because that is what we expect to find. In the developed world we are less blatant in our venality – not least because of our inquisitive media. When we pander to sponsors' needs, whether they be soft-drinks manufacturers or television networks, the collateral damage is less obvious. But it is still present in the skewing of priorities and the tacit expectation that a good party will make people forget the problems undermining their society, such as the ever-widening gap between rich and poor.

Those making the decision to hand a sporting event of global significance to a developing nation are not always entirely devoid of decent motives. But the downside, for the voiceless majority, is too great to be tolerated. The XIX Commonwealth Games will not significantly advance Delhi's progress towards membership of an international community. Instead it will increase the prosperity of a handful of globalised "partners", make a few already prosperous people even richer, and leave behind a few very costly facilities for elite sport, to be stared at by those whose homes and lives were destroyed to make it all possible.

Perhaps the time has come to stand back and think about where the recent explosion in festivals of sport has led us. Given that a decision to restrict the hosting of all such events to countries with existing facilities would be unacceptably discriminatory, a 20-year moratorium on all such events, until the world sorts out its finances and its priorities, might not be such a bad idea.
Holding fast to a uniquely pleasing rhythm

It was my good fortune to see Anderson Roberts and Michael Holding bowl in tandem in the 1970s but an abiding memory comes from an afternoon several years after their retirement, when they strode together into the pavilion of Melbourne Cricket Club in Kingston, Holding's home club, still enveloped in the sort of aura with which they struck fear into batsmen's hearts. It was like watching Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday entering a Tombstone bar, or Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker walking into a 52nd Street club.

Fast bowlers are quite a lot like jazz musicians. They all do the same thing, more or less, but each one has his own signature, immediately recognisable from beyond the boundary, created by the combination of physique, run-up, delivery and follow-through. An assertion that Holding was the greatest of all would draw fire from admirers of Harold Larwood, Dennis Lillee and others but he was without question the most aesthetically pleasing.

Fast bowlers' autobiographies seldom amount to much but No Holding Back, the great Jamaican's new effort, published this week, is substantial enough to remind us that he has also become one of the game's better television commentators. He is modest enough not to mention the bass-heavy 1976 reggae classic in which Prince Far I celebrated "the 'eavy, 'eavy bowlin' of a man called Michael Holding". If it's not in your collection, hear it on YouTube.
Diarra's drive to succeed ends in disappointment

Spare a thought for Lassana Diarra, who moved from Arsenal to Portsmouth looking for the first-team exposure that would secure him a place in his country's World Cup squad. A courageous decision worked out so well that Diarra won not only the approval of the eccentric Raymond Domenech but a big move to Real Madrid. At the weekend, however, the news emerged from France's training camp that a genetic disorder of the red blood cells, causing chronic fatigue, will prevent his participation in South Africa.

source >> http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/blog/2010/may/25/commonwealth-games-delhi

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Gill inaugurates swimming pool complex for Commonwealth Games

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New Delhi, July 18(ANI): Union Sports and Youth Affairs Minister M. S. Gill on Sunday inaugurated the ‘remodelled and reconstructed’ Dr. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Swimming Pool Complex, one of the venues for the 2010 Commonwealth Games, at the Delhi University campus.

The function was held in the presence of Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit, Commonwealth Games Organising Committee Chairman Suresh Kalmadi, several sports persons and senior Sports Ministry officials.

“This is an outstanding complex and a remarkable engineering marvel. It is equipped with all the modern facilities even better than the Melbourne Games,” Gill said.

The complex, which was constructed in 1982 to hold the Asian Games, has been upgraded and renovated with state of art facilities to meet the international standards required for hosting world-class aquatic events.

With a total seating capacity of 5000 spectators, the complex now has the largest cohestrand supported, breathable and elliptical shaped aluminum roof.

It is the largest covered aquatic stadium in the country having Olympic-sized racing and diving pools with a six lanes warm up pool.

The 12-day sporting extravaganza will be India’s biggest sporting event since the 1982 Asian Games in New Delhi. (ANI

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Commonwealth Games to do without world’s fastest man

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BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, CMC – Sprint superstar Usain Bolt will miss this year’s Commonwealth Games in India, his coach Glen Mills has confirmed.

Organisers were hoping the World record holder in the 100 and 200 metres would show up for the October 3-14 Games scheduled for Delhi, but the latest announcement is sure to be a huge blow.

“Bolt made it known long ago that he is not going to the Commonwealth Games,” Mills said.

Bolt’s absence is expected to allow him to continue his preparation for the London 2012 Olympics where he will defend his sprint titles in the 100 and 200 metres.

Before that, the 23-year-old will also defend both sprint titles at next year’s World Championship in Daegu, South Korea.

It will be the second successive time Bolt has missed the Commonwealth Games after pulling out of the 2006 edition in Melbourne because of injury.

He will also be a no-show at the Jamaica National Championships next weekend, another meet Mills said the Jamaican was never carded to attend.

“He was never down to run at trials,” Mills said.

Bolt is currently on the mend from an Achilles tendon injury which forced him out of the last IAAF Diamond League event in New York.

He has already shown glimpses of his ominous form this year, posting 19.56 seconds in the 200 metres in Jamaica g earlier this month before returning to run 9.86 seconds in the 100 metres in Daegu.

source>> http://www.stabroeknews.com/2010/sports/06/21/commonwealth-games-to-do-without-world%E2%80%99s-fastest-man/

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10,000 school guides for Commonwealth Games

Sunday, February 7, 2010 1 comments

The Delhi Government will provide 10,000 school guides for the inaugural ceremony of the Commonwealth Games come October, Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit announced on Friday at the inauguration of the wrestling training venue for the Games at Ludlow Castle Rajkiya Pratibha Vikas Vidyalaya near Kashmere Gate here.

She also announced that the demand for another 50,000 volunteers made by the Indian Olympic Association would be met in a phased manner.

The Chief Minister said all projects related to the sporting event would be completed well in time and funds would not be a problem as an additional Rs.1,300 crore has already been made available under the Plan outlay for the current year.

Ms. Dikshit said construction of both Thyagraj and Chhatrasal stadiums was also going on in full swing and they are expected to be completed in March.

Commonwealth Games Organising Committee chairman Suresh Kalmadi appreciated the pace of construction of the Games-related project and expressed confidence that they would all be completed within the stipulated time.

He said by organising the Commonwealth Games successfully, India would get an opportunity to lay its claim on hosting the Olympics.

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Indian shooters hire coach, pay him from own pocket

Saturday, January 30, 2010 0 comments

The men's hockey team showed the way a few weeks ago and the women followed in their footsteps. Now, the shooters have got officialdom in their sights and are proving that where there is a will, there is indeed a way

The latest message, this time to the National Rifle Association of India (NRAI), comes from six top pistol shooters who've hired a foreign coach to train them at the national camp.

With NRAI unable to recruit a coach to replace Hungarian Czaba Gyorik who left after the Beijing Olympics, the shooters have availed of the services of a top coach, with each spending around Rs 50,000 a month.

"How long should we wait? The authorities can take their own time but the competition dates won't change. Now, we're spending from our pockets to pay renowned coach Anatoli Poddubni of Ukraine for his expertise," Samaresh Jung, nicknamed 'Goldfinger' for his medal haul in the 2006 Melbourne Commonwealth Games, told TOI.

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English Commonwealth Games officials dismissed reports of pulling out of 2010 CWG

Thursday, January 14, 2010 0 comments

The England’s Commonwealth Games officials dismissed any reports on Wednesday that England are all set to pull out of 2010 Commonwealth Games in New Delhi. The London officials said that no such move is planned in them and a team from England will definitely travel to India for participation.

A report in The Daily Telegraph (Egland) on Tuesday claimed that “England is poised to pull out of next year’s Commonwealth Games over fears that athletes will be victims of a terrorist attack.”

The newspaper report also claimed that Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson visited New Delhi this month for inspecting the Games sites and he was said to have voiced “serious concerns” about the security arrangements for the 2010 Commonwealth Games.


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