Tom Degun: Basketball stealing the show at Youth Olympics

Duncan Mackay

Situated in the heart of Singapore’s busy major shopping belt at Orchard Road, the *scape Youth Space is a two-hectare space of land that has been set aside as an iconic community space for youths.

And it is this futuristic looking venue that is quickly becoming the place to be at the 2010 Singapore Summer Youth Olympic Games.

The reason being is that this location is playing host to the basketball. Not basketball as you and I recognise it though because this basketball has revolutionary new and exciting format that you would expect at an inaugural Youth Olympics.

Rather than the usual 5-on-5 format you might be use to watching, it is 3-on-3 basketball debuting in Singapore. This is not the only exciting new move as in addition to this; the adrenaline-packed game is played on half a court with just one basketball hoop to aim, a system you would expect to use if you were playing basketball in the park with your mates.

With 14-18-year-olds going at it full throttle, some so talented that you can expect to see them in the NBA in the near future, the matches consist of just five minute sessions each. The first team to score 33 points - or the team leading the game after regular time - is the winner.

But it is not the changes made to induce fast-paced action that make this event so interesting. It is the brightly coloured stands that provide a view of the urban road outside as well as the court, the non-stop music blearing out from the loud speakers that seems to dictate the speed of the action and the young, screaming fans you might expect to be in attendance at a community space for youths that really bring this buzzing arena to life.

While the majority of the sports at these Youth Olympics are no different in structure to their counterparts at the senior Olympic Games, basketball has decided to be different.

Radical changes have been made to reflect the fact that were are actually at a Youth Games and basketball is reaping the rewards. Wherever you are in Singapore, the local people, particularly teenagers, are either talking about the action at the *scape Youth Space of flocking there in their droves to see it first hand for themselves.

The 3-on-3 games undoubtedly look great on television but when you are there in person, you really do feel the passion, energy and youth on display. When the Singapore teams are in action, these feelings only intensify as the home crowd are so deafening, your truly believe your eardrums are in real danger of imploding. Everyone is caught up in it though and even the "old guys" in the crowd - like London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe who was among the spectators today - can be seen rocking from side to side as the hip hop, R&B and dance music plays.

It is fun, it is fast and the five minute matches are so quick, that you will one by simply blinking.

Come to Singapore and this is where the party’s at.

On the court, the skills on show are everything you would expect from a high quality game of basketball only more high-octane due to the fact that these short games are sprints rather than marathons.

In perhaps the only similarity to basketball at the senior Olympic Games, the United States is the dominant force and look like early frontrunners for the gold medal in both the male and female discipline.

The men’s team in particular never seem to miss and their star player Sterling Gibbs is so outrageously talented, it looks like he could soon be earning the big bucks back home with the likes of Lebron James, Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant.

All-round, it’s a great Youth Olympic Games so far but the *scape Youth Space is in danger of stealing the show here.

Yes, the Opening Ceremony was spectacular and expect big stories to come from a variety of the sports in Singapore over the next two weeks, but when it is all said and done, basketball will be the will be the real winner of these Youth Olympics and others disciplines should take note of their brave approach to making their sport appeal to the young.

No risk, no reward.

Tom Degun is a reporter for insidethegames


Mike Rowbottom: On the buses

Duncan Mackay

Nobody could say Andy Turner wasn’t ready and willing.

After years of being a nearly man, and two years of being a shunned man, at least as far as Lottery funding was concerned, Britain’s high hurdler was determined to relish his new status as a European champion - and all the publicity that went with it.

Which was why he found himself on an open top bus on Thursday crawling through central London’s mid-afternoon traffic with a BBC TV crew in attendance - and a host of media representatives becoming increasingly agitated about the time it was taking for the transport to take them from the lofty headquarters of the Aviva insurance company, sponsors of the London Grand Prix for which these publicity wheels were in motion, and the hotel from which the bus had set out oh so many hours earlier in the morning. So they could get on with their work. For deadlines.

You couldn’t blame the bus.

Well, you could blame the bus.

In that it was the kind of bus you see in black and white Ealing comedies, with a chirpy Cockney sparrer of a conductor on board shouting "Room for a little ‘un inside!" before ringing the bell - ding ding - and winding another ticket out of the little machine slung round his neck.

Which meant that it was small and cramped. No doubt by the standards of 1952, when this particular London Transport model had been constructed, it represented state-of-the-art comfort for the capital dwellers who hopped on and off it on all those distant, smoggy mornings and evenings.

Perhaps people were smaller in 1952. Maybe a population still enduring rationing simply took up less space. I’ve noticed that about cars, too. When I was the eldest of three children, in a family of five, we used to manage to get up and down the M1 in a cream and red Wolseley 1500. I saw a Wolseley 1500 the other day. It looked like a toy.

But I digress.

So here was Mr Turner, looking as casual as anyone could be who had been asked to be interviewed on the top of a bus by BBC TV. And as we rattled through the City in a northerly - northerly? Weren’t we supposed to be heading back down to the hotel in Croydon? - the interviewer and camera lady concentrated their attentions on the hurdler, asking him a question that was drowned out by the sound of a jackhammer from a passing high rise construction project.

The sound was very loud, and it went on for a long time.

After everybody felt it had gone away, the interview resumed.

To be interrupted by the continuous clamour of an alarm.

And...we were back. 

"Just to elaborate Andy, how do you build on that European performance going forwards?"

As Andy put his mind to the request - at least he hadn’t been asked how he could build on it going sideways, which would have been a much trickier question - might even have required planning permission - the bus remained static in one of those mysterious accumulations of traffic that can occur in the capital at any time.

Years later, sorry, only half an hour or so later, we had passed the Blind Beggar pub, where I recalled there had been some shooting incident back in the 60s over the choice of record on a Juke Box - what’s so bad about The Sun Ain’t Going To Shine Any More anyway, I’d like to know?

And we had passed a Porsche dealership, where the hyperactive David Oliver - didn’t I mention that the world’s fastest high hurdler was also on the bus to discuss his imminent race? - seemed to have gone at least part of the way to arranging delivery of a shiny new model to his home with a bloke standing in the forecourt before the driver disobligingly set the ancient motor into juddering progress once again.



Oliver was clad in the tracksuit top of the team he has supported vehemently on television, Arsenal. And he was talking animatedly about how much he was looking forward to seeing them in real life when he went up to see them play Liverpool at Anfield the day after his race.

Off this bus by Sunday. You had to love the man’s optimism.

It became clear that the unexpected northerly diversion was in fact the main point of the exercise for what the nearest thing to the bus conductor called "the client." The Olympic Park was to provide the imposing backdrop to their Oliver interview.

But without agreed access to the site, finding that backdrop proved to be a long and increasingly unpopular process.

At one point we slowed with the stadium in view, only to have that view blocked by a very large McDonalds restaurant.

After circling the Olympic park at least once, the bus juddered to a decisive halt.

A tiny sliver of the Olympic stadium was visible between warehouses with Rose Bay Willow herb growing out of them. To the right, out of sight when the transmission went out but very much in sight at the time, was a billboard featuring the swarthy face of Eric Cantona and the slogan: "The unmissable should be just that".

As the French Big Brother stared frankly down, the bouncy Oliver - Tigger in human form - was persuaded to angle his large frame into the frankly inadequate space of a top deck seat so that questions could be put to him of an Olympic persuasion.

The questions continued.

Oliver stayed as still as he could and answered them.

After a while, one of the young ladies working for the sponsors very kindly visited a nearby Shell garage and came back bearing bottles of water.

We were parked by Autumn Street. Hadn’t it been Spring Street when we had first arrived?

In retrospect, the journey didn’t take a long time - when compared, say, to the average lifetime. An hour and a half later, after a leisurely, juddery progress from the north to the south of the capital, we had almost arrived! A PR triumph.

Tyson Gay, who had taken the original bus ride up from Croydon to the press conference which had been organised at HQ Aviva, was apparently not a happy bunny when he arrived - and had elected for swifter, quieter transport for the return journey.

As it turned out, we were close to arriving with only one competitor on the bus.

Our departure from the Olympic Park offered  another fleeting glimpse of stadium which caused Oliver, who is not a small man, to rise from his seat in order to take a picture on his mobile phone.

A low bridge loomed in front of our open top bus.

Had the world’s third fastest high hurdler not sat down immediately after deeming his snap satisfactory, there might have been a different story to tell about this magical mystery tour.

In which case, of course, none of this would have been written.

Mike Rowbottom, one of Britain's most talented sportswriters, has covered the last five Summer and four Winter Olympics for The Independent. Previously he has worked for the Daily Mail, The Times, The Observer, the Sunday Correspondent and The Guardian. He is now chief feature writer for insidethegames


Philip Barker: Singapore's Opening Ceremony was modern yet traditional

Duncan Mackay
The challenge for Youth Olympic Games organisers in Singapore has been to make them distinct, and yet still Olympic. Nowhere more than at the Opening Ceremony.

Olympic Founder Baron Pierre de Coubertin once said "the Olympiad should include solemnity and ceremony" to make it distinct from "mere world championships".

What then ,would the Baron have made of events on the waterfront in Singapore?  

The changes were apparent from the very start.This was first Olympic Opening ceremony held not in a stadium, but  in the heart of the host city.

A long parade of nations was avoided. The teams entered in a style more reminiscent of a Closing Ceremony and settled in to enjoy the entire show.

The 204 flag bearers followed later. Led according to long established tradition by the Greeks, their entry was accompanied by music synonymouis with previous Olympic Games. Hand in Hand for Seoul 88, Amigos Para Siempre ( Barcelona 92) Reach (Atlanta 96) Sydney's theme song The Flame and  Forever Friends from Beijing.

The Olympic flag was trooped  into the stadium by eight great champions from the past, including Youth Olympic Ambassador Yelena Isinbeyeva. But in another break with tradition, the colour party were met by eight Singaporean Youth Athletes.The flag was thus passed to the young generation .

The Olympic Anthem is the only part of Olympic ceremonial which dates back to the 1896 Games.

Here, as at the 2005 IOC Session in Singapore, the hosts performed it  in the original Greek as intended by composer Spyros Samaras and lyricist Costis Palamas. London 2012 please note!

The Olympic oath offered something new. Introduced in 1920 and first taken by Belgian.Fencer Victor Boin, the ceremony has incorporated a similar oath for judghes since 1972. 

Here for the first time, David Lin Fong Jock took the stand on behalf of the coaches: "Committing ourselves to ensuring that athletes combine sport, culture and education in accordance with the fundamental princilples of Olympism."

The  use of the harbour was not entirely withour precedent. In 1988 the Opening Ceremony Seoul Olympic Games began with a display from the Han river, and in 2000, the flame itself made the last stage of its journey to Sydney's Stadium Australia up the Paramatta river.

Appropriately then, the flame was lit by a local hero in Sailing,  Byte world champion Darren Choy. The only other sailor to light an Olympic cauldron was Greece's Worid Champion windsurfer Nikos Kaklamanakis in 2004 Olympics in Athens.

Philip Barker, a freelance journalist, has been on the editorial team of the Journal of Olympic History and is credited with having transformed the publication into one of the most respected historical publications on the history of the Olympic Games. He is also an expert on Olympic Music, a field which is not generally well known.

Andy Hunt: Youth Olympics already feel new and different

Duncan Mackay

As we are now in the final hours before the Opening Ceremony of the first-ever Youth Olympic Games, it’s natural to think not only about this event, but how it might impact the future....

To that moment in London 2012 or Rio 2016, when an Olympic champion talks about how his or her experiences here in Singapore helped transform their Olympic journey.

To that moment when a young athlete who has earned the honour of representing Team GB in the Olympic Games talks about how they were first inspired to take up sport by what they saw in the Youth Olympics.

And to that moment decades from now when two sportsmen who first met here in Singapore - young athletes from countries that currently do not enjoy warm relations - are reunited in the timeless Olympic spirit of friendship and respect.

As the curtain is about to be drawn on the first-ever Youth Olympic Games, these are the moments that ultimately will endure.

One magic moment that is set in stone in the hearts and minds of everyone connected with British Olympic sport is the moment, here on this very island, on July 6, 2005, when IOC President Jacques Rogge uttered the words we were all hoping to hear, "The Games of the XXX Olympiad, are awarded to, the city of,........long, suspense ridden pause,.....LONDON!"

Cue ecstatic celebrations amid scenes of euphoria in Trafalgar Square, in pubs and offices across the UK and among the leaders of the bid team here in Singapore who punched the air with delight.

Fast forward five years, and today we see LOCOG, the ODA and other Olympic stakeholders delivering on the promises made here in Singapore.

While a patch of East London is being transformed before our eyes in preparation for 2012, Team GB’s athletes united the nation with a break-through performance at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, setting numerous records and bringing home our greatest bounty of gold, silver and bronze for a century.

47 medals to be precise. Truly magnificent.

So Team GB’s next generation of potential Olympians, 39 of whom are here in the heat and humidity of South East Asia testing themselves against the world’s best of their age group across 16 Olympic sports, have no shortage of role models and inspirational figures to look up to.

In fact, they need look no further than Team GB’s most recent Olympic Champion, skeleton slider Amy Williams who claimed gold in such fine style in Canada six months ago.

I’m delighted that Amy has travelled with us to Singapore to give Britain’s young athletes advice, confidence and highly valued words of encouragement.

Team GB is packed with exciting talent and great potential.

Among the athletes competing for Britain here are diving world champion Tom Daley, triple junior European champion gymnast Sam Oldham, the fastest under-18 100 metres runner in the world this year - David Bolawinra, Wimbledon junior semi-finalist Oliver Golding (pictured), junior world taekwondo silver medallist Jade Jones and Victoria Ohuruogu, who is looking to follow in the footsteps of sister and reigning Olympic champion Christine in the 400m.

The Youth Olympic Games feel new and different. They’ve got that familiar Olympic buzz, but everything is young, fresh and dynamic, like a brand new BMX ready to be raced out of the starting blocks. The International Olympic Committee is to be congratulated for their commitment to engaging the youth of the world through sport and friendship.

Lest we forget, a key piece of the successful London 2012 bid puzzle was our pledge to excite and inspire the youth of the world and create a lasting sports legacy both in the UK, and around the globe.

With that at the forefront of my mind, it is a huge privilege for Team GB athletes and officials to be present in Singapore once more, for the momentous first chapter of a truly innovative and youth-focussed festival of world-class sport.

Five years on from that historic day in 2005, we have the opportunity to be part of another piece of Olympic history, by marching proudly into the Opening Ceremony of the first-ever Youth Olympic Games.

Andy Hunt is the chief executive of the British Olympic Association


Hugh Robertson: New unified British body will be fantastic legacy from London 2012

Duncan Mackay
During the five years that I shadowed my current job in Opposition, one complaint dominated all others - namely that the organisation of British sport was too disparate and complicated. Report after report urged Government to simplify the structure and, to be fair to them, many of my Labour predecessors agreed.

That process has been given added impetus by the financial situation that we have inherited. Given this backdrop, it is incumbent on me, as the Minister for Sport and the Olympics, to ensure that as much money as possible reaches the front line - whether it is to athletes preparing for London 2012 or to the sport national governing bodies and community sports organisations trying to increase participation.

At the end of last month, we, therefore, announced that UK Sport and Sport England would be brought together under one roof. I also want to incorporate as much of the Youth Sport Trust (YST) as is practical, given their charitable status, into the new body. In my mind, it will retain separate divisions for elite sport, community sport and school sport, largely replicating the functions of the existing bodies.

However, it will produce a more unified and coherent structure and will enable the new organisation to share a number of back office and associated functions. It will also end the unfortunate current situation where all three organisations occupy separate, and expensive, Central London offices - although, to be fair, the YST’s London base is relatively small.

This should not be seen as a reflection on the performance of the current organisations. UK Sport played a key part in delivering our record medal haul in Beijing and Sport England’s new Whole Sport Strategy, focused on increasing participation through sport national governing bodies, is already yielding promising results. The Youth Sport Trust, which has achieved much in recent years, is also vital to the delivery of the new Schools Olympic-style competition - that will drive up the amount of competitive sport played in schools.

As you would expect, given that the coalition Government is barely three months old, some of the detail remains to be finalised.

In particular, we need to safeguard the UK focus of UK Sport’s work through arrangements that command the confidence of our partners in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. We also need to decide upon an appropriate location for this new body and the exact governance arrangements to control it.

The Youth Sport Trust’s status as a charity needs careful handling and I am also acutely conscious of the need not to disrupt preparations for London 2012, either in athlete or community sports legacy terms. It is, therefore, likely that we will wait until 2012/13 before vesting the new body.

Having lived through a period of structural change whilst I was in was in the army in the early 90s, I know that this has the potential to be an unsettling period for those working in the organisations affected. I have already been to Sport England to talk to the staff about this and will make a similar visit to UK Sport after the summer break.

However, this is a genuine opportunity to make the structure of sport more unified, focussed and cost effective. Post-2012, I want this country to have the best sports structure anywhere in the world.

It would be a fantastic legacy from London’s Olympics.

Hugh Robertson is the Sports and Olympics Minister

Alan Hubbard: Singapore is catching up world in recognising importance of sport

Duncan Mackay

If Simon Cowell had as good an eye for sporting talent as he has for precocious hip-hoppers and matronly warblers he would have been walking on air (as well as his built-up brogues) around Heathrow’s Holiday Inn earlier this week.

For assembled there, being kitted out prior to flying that night to Singapore, were some 40 of the nation’s finest young sportsmen and women.

As not-so-simple Simon has discovered to his financial advantage, Britain may well have talent when it comes to showbiz. But it also has it in abundance in the games our young people play.

The place was teeming with teenage talent from just about every Olympic sport excitedly heading for the inaugural Youth Olympics in Singapore and all hoping to make a name for themselves.

A few already have, like world champion diver Tom Daley, no longer a boy wonder at 16, and worldly enough to inform us in the Team GB handbook that apart from scooping even more medals his ambition is to meet Cheryl Cole. There was 400 metres runner Victoria Ohuruogu, Christine’s little sister, not-so-little big shot Sophie McKinna ,15-year-old  Great Yarmouth shot-put protege of Geoff Capes and Sam Oldham, a gymnast tipped to exceed the Olympic bronze medal achievement of training partner Louis Smith.

But by and large the British Olympic Association’s youth squad are not familiar to the general public, appreciated as they may be by families and friends and within their own particular sport.

The hope is that the forthcoming Games will be a springboard to fame, perhaps even fortune, in London two years hence, or more likely Rio in 2016.

These kids hold the key to Britain’ sporting future, and so widespread  is the talent from archery to taekwondo, athletics to triathlon, that it augurs well for some golden moments in the Olympics to come.

Before then, though, these Youth Olympics will be a real test of the extent of their ability. Not just because of what the event is, but,  where it is taking place.

Hot, humid Singapore is not normally a place one would associate with big-time sport. When I worked there in the eighties, as a deputy editor of the renowned English language newspaper The Straits Times, fun and games were simply not on the agenda of the authoritarian government headed by the redoubtable Lee Kuan  Yew.  

Education, eating and making money occupied the top three places on Singapore’s podium of priorities. Sport (which could be defined as anything outside jogging), was an also ran, receiving little in the way of encouragement or inducements.

But if evidence is needed to prove that sport has the power to change political will it comes with the staging of the Youth Olympics. From being among the last places on earth one would expect to be associated with sports meet of such magnitude, this tiny multi-cultural former British colony, the size of the Isle of Wight, has seen the sporting light under the enlightened stewardship of Lee’s son, Lee Hsien Loong.

Now Singapore has discovering that not only does sport bring social benefits healthwise but there’s money and political kudos in it, too. Business, as they say, is business.



Hence their successful bid for the Youth Olympics, which follows the  staging of two night-time F1 Grands Prix and hosting the International Olympic Committee congress when London got the nod for 2012.

"Yes, we have now recognised the powerful influence sport has on society," the Singapore Sports Council senior director Bervyn Lee tells us.

So next week the young Brits will be among the 3,600 athletes from 203 nations competing in 26 Olympics sports. Also there will be will be 30 London youngsters, who between them speak six languages, chosen to assist as volunteers, a reward for the spare time work there with underprivileged kids. A really nice touch, that, as is the appointment of two outstanding and most delightful British Olympians to act as team mentors, modern pentathlon silver medallist Georgina Harland and Amy Williams, the bubbly bob skeleton queen of speed. 

All will find that Singapore, sticky and sultry as it is climatically, is the perfect host nation-as long as the guests stick to the rather rigid rules. Penalties for misbehaviour can be severe in a nation where hanging and flogging anachronistically remain in vogue.

So what will Singapore reap from the Youth Olympics? Well, should they be successful, it will be another feather in the cap of Ser Miang Ng, their International Olympic Committee member who became a vice-president under Jacques Rogge on the strength of his masterminding of that fateful 2005 IOC congress.

How incredible that a country which once had no time for sport might now have a Singaporean in contention for the most powerful post on Planet Sport,  the presidency of the IOC. Fascinating thought.

So is the notion that Singapore is using the Youth Olympics as a barometer for a bid to stage the Commonwealth Games in 2022. And why not? It seems the ideal place for them: safe, sanitised, super-efficient and economically stable: Quite a contrast to New Delhi…and, er, come to think of it, Glasgow!

Alan Hubbard is an award-winning sports columnist for The Independent on Sunday, and a former sports editor of The Observer. He has covered a total of 16 Summer and Winter Olympics and 10 Commonwealth Games


Mark Dolley: Ping-pong points the way to ensure London 2012 legacy

Duncan Mackay

St Pancras Station recently provided a glimpse of how London 2012 might best be used to encourage more sporting participation. Throughout the station’s concourses, amid the hurried din of rush hour, was the clicking of ping pong balls against bat and table.

Commuters faced Olympians, as Ping! London was launched, a new initiative bringing table tennis out of the leisure centre and onto the streets.

This summer, Ping! will see 100 temporary tables set up in busy areas throughout the capital, linked via challenges and a series of events that ranges from the obvious "The Ping Pong Ball"  to the offbeat "Literary Ping Pong".

Next Summer, the tables will take to the road. They will return in 2012 to allow visitors and residents the chance to play Olympic sport in London’s best known public places. Permanent tables, meanwhile, have been built from concrete in the East London boroughs that will host the Games, ready for anyone to use.

Emphasising the social side of the sport is key to the English Table Tennis Association’s (ETTA) strategy for developing popularity. "Informal participation, alongside club participation is really important to us," said ETTA chief executive Richard Yule. "We think that self-organised people getting together using social media will be massive for table tennis. It’s just so easy to do.

"We also expect there will be people who will come in through that route who will get hooked on the game and find their way into our organised structures."

The informal ways to play sport have been significant sources of growth in recent years, from casual jogging in preparation for a charity 10K to the renting of seaside kayaks. And this is the kind of sporting opportunity most likely to tempt the sedentary off the sofa in the context of 2012, according to research by Professor Mike Weed of the University of Canterbury.

Sports hoping to emulate table tennis with new initiatives - which have been embraced by London Mayor Boris Johnson (pictured) - are likely to encounter some fairly high hurdles, however.

Especially if they look to the same source of funding as Ping!, Sport England.

Deep cuts from the Government department that funds Sport England, Department for Culture, Media and sport, are certain, even after being offset by a raise in the share of Lottery money paid out to sport and the arts.

Speaking to staff at DCMS recently, Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt said: "The best-case scenario is still going to be a scenario in which there are going to be bigger cuts than any of the areas we represent have ever had to face, probably in their history."

Sport England’s Olympic legacy plan, originally expected this month, has now been delayed at least until the completion of the Government’s Comprehensive Spending Review, due to be made public in late October.

Faced with cuts, the national governing bodies of sport may well be inclined to retrench, protecting their traditional club structures. Britain’s sedentary majority will most likely respond by sticking to the sofa - more people are sedentary now than in 2005. The opportunity to use 2012 as a means to sustainably bring more informal sport to the host country’s streets and parks will not come around again.

But there may yet be cause for optimism. Increased media coverage for community sport in the lead-up to the Games, combined with the commercial potential of high-visibility street sport - Ping! is also sponsored by Yahoo! - may still see the private sector make a meaningful contribution.

Mark Dolley is the managing director of Taking Part, a social enterprise working to link 2012 with community sport. He was formerly head of communications for the Olympic Games at the IOC. For more details on Ping! click here


Sascha Kindred: Why elite youngsters in sport need championship experience

Duncan Mackay

There is something really very special about competing at major championships. The atmosphere is electric, the stakes are high and the months of training and preparation are put to the ultimate test. 

This month I’m competing at the IPC World Swimming Championships in Eindhoven - a chance to pit myself against some of my key rivals and gauge where I’m at with two years to go until the London 2012 Paralympics.

For me one of the most compelling elements about competing in major championships is the psychological games that go on ahead of a big race. If your head’s not right and you’ve let your rivals get the better of you in the mind games, a competition can be lost before you’re even in the pool. 

For me, I learnt on the job how to deal with this aspect of elite sport - the importance of keeping focused, keeping a low profile where necessary and keeping my mind on what I need to do in the race rather than worrying about my competitors. It’s an approach that works for me - but others may have very different ways of dealing with this aspect of competition.

Next month I’ll be attending the Sainsbury’s UK School Games, a major multi sport event managed by the Youth Sport Trust, which provides the perfect platform for young people to experience the same pressures of elite sport that I face when competing.   

Over 1,600 elite school aged athletes will descend upon North East England to compete in cycling, athletics, badminton, fencing, gymnastics, hockey, judo, swimming, table tennis and volleyball, with disability events in swimming, athletics and table tennis, including learning disability for swimming, table tennis and for the first time, athletics.  



For many it will be their first experience of a major competition and a chance to learn about the pressures of top level sport, which of course includes dealing with the mind games!  They will also face the usual distractions you would expect from a major sporting event. 

The opening ceremony, the athlete’s village, the meeting new people and travelling around a city you may not be familiar with - all these things can take your mind off the main task in hand - competing and winning. Some will undoubtedly get swept up in the atmosphere and will let it affect their performance, whilst others will keep the focus on the one thing that really matters - their performance.

Allowing young people the opportunity to face these kinds of pressures at an early age can only benefit them later in their careers when they’re competing for major honours. To know what to expect and how to deal with it will ensure they make the perfect preparations and be at their very best when it matters most.

Sascha Kindred is a School Sport Ambassador for the Youth Sport Trust. He has won a total of six Paralympic, eight World and eleven European Championship gold medals and has represented Great Britain in four Paralympic Games thus far. He currently holds a number of British, European, Paralympic and world records. The Sainsbury’s UK School Games take place September 2-5 in North East England.  For further information click here


Mike Rowbottom: The secret that gives Usain Bolt the edge over Tyson Gay

Duncan Mackay

The front cover of Sweden’s Sport Bladet paper carries a picture of a sprinter arriving in Stockholm  for his latest race. He’s wearing a blue t-shirt and jeans, with a denim men’s bag slung over his shoulder and a blue baseball cap set slightly back on his head.

Alongside his giant image are the words he uttered to the waiting world as he made his way through Arlanda airport: "What’s up? What’s up? What’s up?  I’m here."

Quiz question. Is this a) Usain Bolt or b) Tyson Gay?

For those of you who guessed a) - well yes, obviously. For those of you who guessed b) - I beg you, seek treatment.

The way these two outstanding athletes engage with the wider public is as contrasting as their sprinting techniques. And I can’t help feeling that the public dynamic works for Bolt in a way it doesn’t for Gay.

It is not simply that Gay, with a meek voice that puts you in mind of Michael Jackson, is an introvert and Bolt, affable and easy, is an extrovert.

Bolt, as he mentioned again this week at the press conference preceding the DN Galan Diamond League meeting in the Swedish capital, is a bit of a stay-at-home. He spends many hours at his house in Kingston playing PlayStation games either alone or with his younger brother. When he is on the athletics circuit, he heads not for the lobby, but the privacy of his room.

But where Bolt differs so dramatically from Gay is the way he responds to the clamour of attention once he has left that room.



The press conference, in a cramped space within the Nordic Sea Hotel, was a perfect case in point. Gay preceded Bolt into the cockpit of jostling cameramen, photographers and reporters, and for a few moments his eyes seemed to widen with apprehension.

"I’m pumped up a little bit right now," he said. Quietly. "The reality is hitting."

Asked how he liked running against Bolt, Gay responded: "I don’t know why you are all here, whether it’s for me or for him. But this is the first time this year I’ve got this attention, and I’m loving it. Even giving autographs outside the hotel. It’s great."

Well, he said he was loving it. But he didn’t act like he was loving it. Having said he would not be following the proposed course of going to a separate table to answer further press enquiries - his name-tag awaited him along with three bottles of still water - he looked as if he wanted to employ one of his famous smooth starts and get the hell out.

Bolt, naturally, revelled in the attention. Clearly he didn’t want to be all day answering questions, but his responses were immediately engaging and interesting. In sprinting terms, public appearances make Gay tighten up and bring a performance out of Bolt.

Gay (pictured) was asked a follow up question by the event compere about his apparent surprise at being noticed: "When you look in mirror, do you see yourself as a star?"

His reply was down-to-earth and instructive.

"This morning I saw that I needed a shave, so I got a shave," he said. "I guess I don’t look at myself like that  because my family don’t  treat me like that, if you know what I’m saying.

"Even though I’ve been here several times, every time I come back I’m still shocked to see that someone might want my autograph. It might sound naive, but I find it strange to think that people from another country should know me."

As a follow up, both men were invited to ask each other a question. Bolt asked Gay about his daughter - who it transpires is already starting at the track.

Gay’s question of Bolt was almost plaintive.

"I would like to know," he said, "how do you mentally prepare yourself, with all the excitement, before you go into a race?"

And the response said everything about the dynamic that has made Bolt into a figure who has transcended his sport.

"For me I kind of like it," he said. "I like the energy the crowd gives me, it helps me to relax, and it helps me to build up my motivation to get ready for the race."

It doesn’t mean that Bolt will win every race he runs. But it does mean that, whenever he goes to the line, he is able to access an enormous additional power. And that gives him another huge advantage along with his outrageous natural gifts.

Mike Rowbottom, one of Britain's most talented sportswriters, has covered the last five Summer and four Winter Olympics for The Independent. Previously he has worked for the Daily Mail, The Times, The Observer, the Sunday Correspondent and The Guardian. He is now chief feature writer for insidethegames


Tessa Sanderson: Newham Sports Academy is smiles better

Duncan Mackay

The Newham Sports Academy with Tessa Sanderson (NSA) was launched in October 2006.  It is a unique sports programme which I have shaped with Newham Council, who are the main funder of the NSA. The rest of the funding I simply have to dig deep to find from sponsors, using persuasiveness and a smile.

The concept came from me thinking about what I, as someone from a working-class background, needed to help me succeed as a young athlete. I wanted to make it a little bit easier for those wanting to emulate me in winning my gold medal in 1984. 

It is amazing that we now have over 70 members drawn for a range of sports.

The NSA works under a talent identification process in schools, colleges, community centres, and then train the members we identify.

Athletics coaches include Lloyd Cowan, the UK Athletics sprint hurdles and 400 metres; Clarence Callender former UK Athletics junior team coach; Ayo Falola, who coaches 800m, Greg Richards, Britain's former multi event coach, and Tony Jarrett, the 1993 world 110m hurdles silver medallist.

We also have coaches from boxing, GB Paralympic wheelchair track and field events, as well as Michelle Weltman, who coaches triathlon and is a Disability Swim coach, and another former Olympian Linda Strachan coaches our fencers.

The Academy could not function without these special coaches, or without the range of community coaches and clubs that underpin the work the Academy does.

I took a leading role in appointing the coaches, and I was determined to use people that had competed on the international stage, and had the experience and coaching qualifications. It is also vital that the coaches are able to communicate effectively, as it is really important that they help with life skills of the young members, as well as their technical training.

As well as coaching the NSA provides bursaries for the youngsters to travel to and from competition, training at local grounds free, working with physios, nutrition and bio-mechanics and whenever possible making sure they have the equipment for competition. 



Members have increased to a higher level in the sport and have shown tremendous changes in their ability and performance in competitions. 

For example:

• Four of the NSA fencers went on to be selected for GB young cadets, and two of the four went on to compete in the European and World Championships for their age group

• Boxer Dudley O'Shaunessy has recently competed for England against USA at York Hall

• Vicky Ohuruogu has qualified for the Summer Youth Olympic Games in Singapore with a time of 54.17sec,  knocking a full five seconds of her best result last year 2009 of 59.3 and this only being her second year at the events. Vicky is the younger sister of Christine, the Beijing Olympic champion, and I am hopeful that for the first time we could see sisters running in the same event for Team GB at the 2012 London Olympic and Paralympics        

Vicky is coached by Lloyd Cowan, who, in my personal opinion is the best coach Britain has, which is reflected in his coaching of Andy Turner, the gold medallist at the recent European Championships in Barcelona.

Tessa Sanderson is the 1984 Olympic javelin champion. She competed in a record six Olympic Games. The Newham Sports Academy is the first scheme of its kind to offer full support to non-elite athletes in a range of Olympic sports. It gives local young people, in one of the poorest areas in England, the opportunity to take their sporting talent to another level and a chance to compete in the London 2012 Olympic Games


Alan Hubbard: Time Britain's sporting heroes stopped playing second fiddle to football flops

Duncan Mackay

I wonder how many of England’s World Cup wallies watched the European Athletic Championships last week end and hung their heads in shame?

Certainly not Wayne Rooney who, if you believe what you read in The Sun (and actually, sometimes you can) was otherwise preoccupied carousing into the early hours peeing, in the street and puffing a fag. 

The way Britain’s athletes went about their task reminded me of that line from the Punch and Judy shows that were so popular before the pc brigade outlawed Mr Punch’s antics, "That’s the way to do it".

Indeed it was. The golden headlines of Barcelona were splashed across the front pages of most weekend sport sections, and rightly so. The success of Jessica Ennis even led the front page of my own paper, the Independent on Sunday.

But had all this happened in just over a week’s time when the Premier League kicks off, would the exploits of our athletes still have got the same treatment?  Unlikely. After all Rooney might have stubbed his big toe - which at least would make a change from stubbing out a roll-up. There was even less chance that the footy flops would have been shame-faced when reading about the achievements in Barcelona - that is if they ever read anything other than the club programme notes and their own match reports. 

I’d hate to be a football journalist these days - it would depress me. Try setting up an interview with even a player of modest talent and you have to go through a network of managers, agents, lawyers and press officers - and then you usually find he wants "copy approval". That is, to vet the interview before it goes into print and additiopnally he will probably insist on a tag line crediting the latest product he is endorsing. Oh for those times some of us can happily remember when we had the likes of Bobby Moore’s home number, could ring him up and arrange to meet him in his local hostelry for a chat and a beer (or two).

But enough wishful thinking. Back to Barcelona. What happened there underscored that Britain really does have sporting talent, even if it really shows itself when it matters on the football pitch. These past few weeks have seen a spell-binding performance from several of the young group of acrobatic gymnastics geniuses known as Spelbound, who followed up their Britain's Got Talent telly triumph by swinging and swirling their way to the World Championship in the sport which surely deserves to become an Olympic discipline. This followed the performances by British gymnasts led by the redoubtable Beth Tweddle in the European Championships where they won 15 medals, an accomplishment on a par with that of the athletes.

Gymnastics is by no means alone in registering international glory this year. Recently fencing, modern pentathlon, boxing, taekwondo, triathlon and archery have also seen young Brits climbing on to the world or European podium, yet their successes, like that of the phenomenal Chrissie (Iron Woman) Wellington, who has set a new world long distance triathlon record seemed to have slipped under the sporting radar while England’s footballers were skulking their way to ignominy in the World Cup.

While Fabio Capello’s crew may have thought they could walk on water before they were forced to walk the plank one squad who proved they actually can are Britain’s consistently prolific water-skiers who have dominated the sport for some years and have now cleaned up in the World wake-board championships, winning men’s, women’s, girls’, boys’ and team titles in Germany. 

How refreshing it was too, to hear the delightful Ennis articulate about her victory, a contrast to the formulaic, often monosyllabic responses from the majority of the over-paid and over-valued football fraternity when ever a microphone is thrust in front of them. 

And what is it that GB head coach, Charles Van Commonee has got that Capello hasn’t? For a start he has athletes working under him who seem intrinsically proud to be representing their country and do not regard taking part in a major competition as an irritating chore. Steven Gerrard and his not so merry men looked as if they could not get away quick enough to play beach football rather than the real thing. 

In some ways, the Dutchman reminds me more of Sir Alf Ramsey than Capello in the way he commands the respect of his athletes. 

Mind you, dear old Sir H’Alf would never have bollocked anyone within earshot of the media - or the public as van Commonee has been known to do. 

Both have got results because of discipline and mutual trust. The way Van Commonee has helped British athletics pick itself up after a dismal spell is quite heartening. 

Of course, counting chickens is not yet an Olympic pursuit so we must hope that the track and field scribes do not fall into the same craven trap as their football correspondent counterparts and start hanging Olympic medals around the necks of the athletes on the strength of what happened in Barcelona’s Euros.

My one time colleague, Neil Wilson got it bang on in the Daily Mail when he reminded us not to get ahead of ourselves, pointing out that despite the shed-load of European medals, only heptathlete Ennis and triple jumper Phillips Odowu can be pencilled in now as favourites for the 2012 podium. It is still a sobering thought that hurdler Dai Greene was the only track athlete in Barcelona whose performance ranks him in this years top six - at sixth. 

As Wilson wrote, "the cold shower of reality will hit us when the Africans, Americans and Aussies come out to play in the World Championships and Olympics." Double gold medallist distance runner Mo Farrah, delightful bloke and formidable athlete that he is, will need to beat a whole string of Kenyans and Ethiopians if he is to be anything other than just a contender in London. 

A final thought on the advancing football season (not that it ever seems to have gone away): Wembley is likely to be less than half full, even with cut-price tickets for the forthcoming meaningless international against Hungary. Presumably it was intended as an occasion to celebrate an England homecoming after a triumphant or even half decent performance in South Africa. 

Instead it is now a more of a mournful wake, an opportunity for the frustrated fans to vent their disappointment - even disgust is not too strong a word  - at the way their fallen idols have let them down. The best thing the FA could have done is to let the public in free as a penance for that woeful World Cup showing. They might also invite the heroes and heroines of Barcelona to do a lap of honour and insist Capello and co stand, watch and learn.

Alan Hubbard is an award-winning sports columnist for The Independent on Sunday, and a former sports editor of The Observer. He has covered a total of 16 Summer and Winter Olympics and 10 Commonwealth Games


Daniel Keatings: I am on the mend and well on the way to competing again

Duncan Mackay

Fresh from my success at the European Championships, I unfortunately experienced the worst injury of my career to date.

Preparing for the World Championships in Rotterdam, I fell on the on the tumble track and landed awkwardly during a normal routine that saw me hyper extend my legs. An MRI scan showed a tear to my Anterior Cruciate Ligament which meant I would need an operation to reconstruct the ligament. 

Sine then I have been through an intense rehabilitation programme and worked with some of the best physiotherapists and surgeons.

In the early stages I was unable to do much. Doctor’s orders were plenty of rest with a little upper body conditioning to improve my strength on the rings. At the time it seemed that there was such a long way to go, but I felt positive and confident that I would return even fitter and stronger than before.

Being out of the gym for that length of time I was a little concerned about my fitness and was prepared for it to be a challenge to get back to where I was before my injury.  But as I enter the12th week of my rehabilitation programme, I am back at the gym full time and apart from some obvious weakness in my legs my overall condition is 70 per cent, which I am really happy with. 

These last couple of weeks I have been back on the pommel and parallel bars, working on some key elements of my routines.

However my main focus is now to re-build the strength in my legs and increase my overall condition before I can get back on the other four apparatus. So far my training is going really well; fingers crossed it continues.

It’s great to be back in the gym training with my team mates again. I am currently aqua jogging which is going really well and I hope to move onto jogging on dry land after I get the go ahead from my surgeon in two weeks time.

I would like to say a big thank you to my physiotherapy team and surgeon who have managed my rehabilitation programme so well and kept my fitness level high throughout.  They have helped me get back to gymnastics as quickly as possible and it is down to them that I am on the mend and well on the way to competing again.

Daniel Keatings, who is powered by Opus Energy, made history last October when he became the first British gymnast to win a medal in the All-Around event at the World Gymnastics Championships. To find out more about his sponsorship deal with Opus Energy click here


Niels de Vos: Barcelona was wonderful but the whole sport is blossoming

Duncan Mackay
Stats and numbers. The entire sporting world is obsessed with them, be it Britain’s fourth place in the medal table in Beijing or Muttiah Muralitharan’s amazing 800 test match wickets and athletics is no different.

Times, distances and heights are the very foundation of our sport and beyond that some would question the need for other stats in athletics and often I would agree.

But I was presented with some numbers this week that really gave me food for thought, signalling that British athletics is a sport with a very bright future.

The IAAF World Junior Championships were held last month in Canada and many of you may have read some of the extensive coverage on Jodie Williams (pictured) and her outstanding gold medal in the women’s 100 metres. But she wasn’t the only GB medallist in Monkton nor the only gold medallist, with Sophie Hitchon also a World Junior champion, winning the hammer in style with a superb final throw. In fact British athletics had its best world junior event for two decades or to use another stat, for the last ten editions of that event.

This, combined with a series of other results from last year, including our best ever World Championships since 1993, our best ever European under-23 and World under-18 showing, clearly demonstrates rising performances across the board in all disciplines as well as an increase in strength and depth as athletes move up the age groups.

So there were eight medals for the Aviva GB Junior team in Canada, that’s three more than in 2008 and 2006 and eight more than we achieved in 2004. But what we are trying to achieve in athletics goes beyond the medal tally, it’s about each athlete stepping up and performing beyond expectations and progressing at each and every major championship. We saw that this year, there were nine outstanding personal bests from some young and very talented athletes, across a range of events taking in running, jumping and throwing, all of which bodes well for the future of athletics.

Additionally beyond those eight medals a further seven athletes placed in the top eight . This is a particularly important statistic; once an athlete has made a final anything can happen. However we generally work off of a fifty percent conversion rate in finals with half of those in finals expecting to medal. So clearly the more finalists we have the more medals we have a chance of winning.

We have similar stats for our senior programme, that also demonstrate improvements, not just year on year, but Olympic cycle on Olympic cycle which is excellent news just two years out from London. But more about that on another day.

We have also revolutionised the way we support these young athletes and their coaches. Previously they would have been put on funding and become part of the World Class Performance Programme. Instead we now support the athlete coach pair directly, recognising that the needs of these young athletes are different to their senior counterparts and the hugely important role that their coach plays in nurturing their talent. The coach is supported as much as the athlete as it is clear both will play such a central role in the future of our sport.

The progression of the junior programme, led by our Head of Coaching and Development Kevin Tyler and former Olympian Jo Jennings is a crucial part of our 2012 legacy.

As the guardians of the sport in the UK we must strike a very fine balance between success and medals at our home Olympic Games in 2012 and ensuring we use this once in a lifetime opportunity to get the sport in the best shape possible to continue that success at 2016 and beyond.

So all things considered as I sit and write this from Barcelona on the morning of the penultimate day of European Championships where the Aviva GB team has won 11 medals after four days of competition, with, I’m sure more to come, the number one Olympic and Paralympic sport is faring well. Those green shots of recovery have started to blossom and the numbers show you how.

Niels de Vos in the chief executive of UK Athletics

Jim Cowan: Merger of UK Sport and Sport England is right way forward

Duncan Mackay

News broke last week that the Government is to merge UK Sport and Sport England in order to streamline the running of sport in this country.

I believe such a merger is not only welcome but long overdue. That said it is with cautious optimism that I welcome the announcement for the new structure will be meaningless without the right strategy in place.

What the proposed streamlined structure does is to align the way sport is managed in this country in a way the current model does not.

The development of sport from the very bottom of the grass roots to the very top of the podium should be a continuum, an unbroken chain. Indeed, there is something called "the Sports Development Continuum" which has been overlooked by Government and its Quangos for too long.

The Sports Development Continuum provides a simple model to ensure sport is catered for at all ages, stages and abilities and although only four words long (Foundation, Participation, Performance and Excellence) serviced properly, it covers all elements required in a way that lumping great aspirations together and hoping they find linkage does not.

Under the previous Government, we have seen little understanding of this basic principle as sport has been "lumped" into either "elite" or "mass participation" or "school sport". No flow, no continuum.

This has, in part, been due to the fractured administration of sport where UK Sport looks after their "lump", Sport England theirs and the Youth Sport Trust theirs. Although each has their "strategy", this is horizontal integration of strategy where vertical integration is clearly called for.

That vertical integration of strategy will be further aided when other Government departments, who have a stake in sport, such as Education and Health, find they only need to communicate with one body when coordinating plans. Revolutionary thinking I know, but I did say cautious optimism and I am typing with my fingers crossed!

In bringing the different bodies together care and consideration will be needed to ensure that where there has been good work it is continued and ultimately improved upon while the lower quality delivery all too often seen in many areas must not be mistaken for being better than it is.

UK Sport, for example, have overseen a rise in excellence in elite sport in this country the envy of much of the world although behind the headlines there are sports which have struggled to keep pace and medal counts have been boosted by a small group of overachieving sports rather than higher levels across all (or at least the majority).

Delivery of excellence can only be maintained and improved if the supply route bringing talent through foundation, participation and performance is strong; you cannot plan one part of the continuum without consideration for the rest.

Below national level there will undoubtedly be a rush to restructure before any new unified, Sports Development Continuum based strategy is in place. Such restructuring must be avoided until the demands of strategy are known for, as I have said before in this blog, structure should be strategy’s servant, not its master; a mistake from the past which must not be repeated.

A further benefit to sport which I am sure the Minister has considered, and much of grass roots sport will applaud, will be the reduction in waste as, theoretically at least, more money finds its way to sport rather than to its (currently) overpopulated administration.

So; cautious optimism from this corner but, as ever, the real devil will be in the detail.

Jim Cowan is a former athlete, coach, event organiser and sports development specialist who is the founder of Cowan Global, a company specialising in consultancy, events and education and training. For more details click here


Mike Rowbottom: Farah heading in the right direction at last

Duncan Mackay

The list of Britain’s European 5000 metres champions is not long, but it is illustrious: Sydney Wooderson, Bruce Tulloh, Ian Stewart, Brendan Foster, Jack Buckner.

The list of those Britons who have won both the European 5000 and 10,000 is even less long. It comprises one name: Mo Farah.

It is also illustrious.

Farah, already in the happy position of being the first Briton to win the European 10,000m title, has now managed an achievement that is both historic and hugely popular.

There will be those who tut-tutted at the way the Somali-born athlete slowed and gestured to the Spanish champion Ayad Lamdessem to take the lead in the 10,000m after the two men had broken away from the rest of the field with three laps to go.

Farah didn’t want to lead, but to follow; and to choose his moment to strike. It was a calculated action which he would probably not have had the confidence to take four years ago, when another Spaniard, the convincingly named Jesus Espana, beat him to the European 5.000m title by just 0.09sec.

But the naturalised Briton managed to achieve the desired switch with charm, smiling that dazzling smile of his until the poor home runner could no longer resist his mischievous invitation.

Of course, those actions would have had the effect of making the Spaniards in the 5.000m final all the more determined to tip back Farah’s ambitions.

However, after he discovered an apparent extra chamber of energy over the final 200 metres, no one was able to prevent the Briton from becoming only the fifth man to complete a European 5000/10,000m double - not even his nemesis from 2006, Espana, who congratulated his emotionally stricken opponent at the finish line after finishing in silver medal position.

Viva Farah!

Like so many others, I have looked forward to the time when this amiable young man would have the reward his talent and increasing dedication deserved. Now his moment has finally arrived, and he is looking forward to next year’s World Championships in Daegu, South Korea, and the small gathering in London a year after that, with rising ambition.

Farah is finally arriving at the position that was being forecast for him a decade ago when, as a hugely promising 16-year-old, he started to produce performances that made him stand out.

I first spoke to him in unpromising circumstances early in 2000 - nearly seven years after he had arrived in England as a refugee from a war-torn Somalia to join his father, who was already living in the country. Young Mo was waiting at a bus-stop with his school mates, and as I strained to hear his quiet voice the task suddenly became more vexed as a bus arrived and everybody piled on.

Against a background of noise which made it seem as if his fellow pupils were systematically destroying their means of transport, Farah recalled how his knowledge of the English language was so limited when he arrived in Hounslow from Mogadishu that he got into a fight on his first day at school.

He also remembered how, during his first cross-country race for the Borough of Hounslow club, he had lost the chance of winning when he took a wrong turning, baffled by the signs on the course.

But that talented, if confused young athlete has now very definitely found his way – and cross-country has been his means of reaching the position in which he now finds himself.

In December 2006, I saw him earn his first significant gold after six consecutive silver medals as he took the European Cross-Country title at San Giorgio su Legnano.



Earlier that year he had had a reward for throwing in his lot with the Kenyan athletes who used Teddington as their European training base when he produced the second fastest 5,000m time by a Briton, 13min 09.40sec.

Clearly, when he took to the course in Italy he was in a position to win. And, like Paula Radcliffe, who gave him a pep-talk on the eve of the last European 5,000m final, he has followed up a breakthrough on the grass with one on the track. 

Had circumstances been different, Farah might have been giving the Netherlands cause for celebration this week. When he emigrated in 1993, the original plan was for him to come to Britain and then go on to Holland to live with his grandmother. But he liked Britain so much that he stayed.

David Bedford, the Virgin London Marathon’s international race director, likes to recall the time he managed to persuade Farah to have a night out with him and others in 2006, at the end of which the runner decided to take off all his clothes and jump into the Thames off Kingston Bridge.

"I don’t have as many nights out nowadays," he told me. "But if I have something to celebrate in the future, anything can happen!"

Let’s hope that, once he had recovered his emotions after completing his Barcelona double, someone was keeping a careful of an eye on him…

Mike Rowbottom, one of Britain's most talented sportswriters, has covered the last five Summer and four Winter Olympics for The Independent. Previously he has worked for the Daily Mail, The Times, The Observer, the Sunday Correspondent and The Guardian. He is now chief feature writer for insidethegames