|
LONDON:
Medals are up for grabs in cycling and swimming on Saturday after a
spectacular opening ceremony to the London Olympics was watched by more
than one billion TV viewers.
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II
declared the Games open before seven young athletes lit the cauldron at
the Olympic Stadium at the end of Friday night's humour-filled showcase
devised by "Slumdog Millionaire" director Danny Boyle. Departing from
the tradition of choosing a gold medal winner to light the flame, the
event organisers handed the honour to seven youngsters nominated by
British Olympic heroes of the past at the show attended by an 80,000
crowd.
Five-time gold medallist rower Steve Redgrave had brought
the torch into the Olympic Stadium in east London before passing it on
to a series of young runners. They embraced their mentors, including
decathlete Daley Thompson and middle-distance runner Kelly Holmes,
before the teenagers lit a series of torches which hydraulically lifted
to create a high-tech cauldron.
The queen had earlier made a royal
entrance like no other in a spoof film with James Bond actor Daniel
Craig, declaring the Games open as London took on the role of host
nation for an unprecedented third time. After seven years of planning,
the Games officially began at the ceremony in the gleaming new stadium
in a once rundown area in the east of the British capital.
Saturday
sees the first 12 gold medals of the Games available with Britain's
Mark Cavendish favourite to win the men's cycling road race while in
swimming the men's 400m medley final takes place at the Aquatics Centre.
International
Olympic Committee chief Jacques Rogge told the audience: "In a sense
the Olympics are coming home," recognising Britain's role in developing
modern sport. The chief organiser of the Games, Sebastian Coe, thanked
his fellow Britons for "making all this possible". "In the next two
weeks we will show all that has made London one of the greatest cities
in the world," he said. The show before the cauldron was lit
quintessentially British, as its creator, British film director Danny
Boyle, had promised.
The queen was shown parachuting from a
helicopter with Craig into the stadium before the real 86-year-old
monarch took her seat to loud applause. The show traced Britain's
development from a bucolic past through the Industrial Revolution before
fast-forwarding to the present day. The show included a tribute to
Britain's state-run National Health Service while actor Kenneth Branagh,
"Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling and "Mr Bean" Rowan Atkinson all had
roles.
When the athletes paraded in, the world's fastest man Usain Bolt sauntered into the stadium carrying the Jamaican flag.
The
Israeli team wore black handkerchiefs in their pockets to mark the 40th
anniversary of the 1972 Munich Olympic massacre when 11 of their
compatriots were killed after Palestinian extremists stormed the
Athletes' Village. Rogge had refused pleas to stage a minute's silence
in their memory at the ceremony.
The British team was greeted
with a huge roar from the crowd as they marched into the stadium last --
an honour reserved for the hosts -- behind four-time Olympic champion
cyclist Chris Hoy. Then came the dramatic cauldron-lighting sequence.
Football star David Beckham escorted the flame in a speedboat up the
River Lea before it was passed on to Redgrave to bring it into the
stadium.
Britain's Saturday newspapers lavished praise on the
spectacular four-hour long ceremony, watched by an estimated one billion
TV viewers around the world. The Times ran the headline "A Flying
Start" on a souvenir wraparound photograph of the Red Arrows display
team flying over the stadium while Rupert Murdoch's market-leading
tabloid The Sun went simply with "Golden Wonder".
The stage is
now set for superstars Bolt, Michael Phelps and Roger Federer to dazzle
in competition, while an army of unsung competitors are also aiming for
gold.
A budget of #9.3 billion ($14.5 billion, 12 billion euros)
has been spent on bringing the Games back to London. In the pool,
Phelps, whose eight golds in Beijing took his overall medal tally to 16,
needs three more to surpass the all-time record of 18. He has seven
events in which to make more Games history and anchor a US team
determined to continue its dominance against Australia and a Chinese
squad spearheaded by 1500m free world record-holder Sun Yang. One of his
biggest challengers is teammate Ryan Lochte, who has emerged as a
serious threat in the 200m medley and 400m medley. Newly crowned Tour de
France winner Bradley Wiggins -- who also appeared in the opening
ceremony -- will fire up the home crowd in the cycling. Federer, having
won a record-equalling seventh Wimbledon title, returns to the All
England Club looking to add singles gold to the doubles he won with
Swiss compatriot Stanislas Wawrinka four years ago. And the United
States are hot favourites in the men's basketball with a Dream Team
boasting NBA superstars LeBron James and Kobe Bryant. |
|
Post a Comment
Click to see the code!
To insert emoticon you must added at least one space before the code.