altBRITISH athletes' families, like Chris Hoy (pictured), will be guaranteed tickets for the London 2012 Olympics after many were forced to resort to the black market in Beijing.

 

As reported first on insidethegames in August, the parents of double gold medal-winning swimmer Rebecca Adlington paid out £1,100 to con artists for Beijing tickets that did not exist, while the parents of cycling's triple gold medallist Hoy only managed to watch him after being given tickets by a sponsor at the last minute.

 

The British Olympic Association (BOA) have now secured an agreement with London organisers for an allocation of tickets for families and talks will now follow on the number that can be provided.

 

BOA chairman Colin Moynihan said: "Our first priority is an allocation of tickets to the athletes.

 

"The principle has been agreed and we will be sitting down in 10 days' time to discuss the detail of that - how many and how we organise that.

 

"We definitely learned from Beijing to make sure the athletes' immediate families are there to see their events and enjoy the Games.

 

"There were a number of cases.

 

"Chris Hoy and a number of the cyclists in a small velodrome didn't receive the tickets we would have hoped they would receive.

 

"We were not the host nation then but we have learned that lesson and we cannot have that.

 

"The athletes have given their lives to be members of Team GB and their family should be given the opportunity of enjoying the Games around them."

 

Moynihan was speaking after a press conference following the Beijing Olympics debriefing, held in London to give 2012 Games organisers a chance to learn from the previous hosts.

 

The issue of tickets generally was one of the major subjects after the embarrassing spectacle of rows of empty seats in Beijing.

 

Gilbert Felli, from the International Olympic Committee (IOC), said:  "We are trying to analyse why there were empty seats, it's hard to find out the exact reason.

 

"People say that it is because we give many tickets to our partners [sponsors] but this is not fair because I think you will find they were sitting in their seats.

"It's a difficult question.
 
"Sometimes people do not want to sit for long sessions.
 
"Also, discussions we had with our partners at BOCOG (Beijing 2008) suggest that tickets were allocated to different groups around China but sometimes they did not come."
 
London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe said the debriefing had provided valuable lessons for London as preparations for hosting the Games continue.
 
He said despite the global economic crisis, London was confident it could meet the promises it made to the IOC during the bidding process.
 
Coe said: "We are absolutely committed to the promises we made.
 
"I can't think of any project that is more important to London at the moment than the Olympic Games."