Sunday, December 20, 2009

Canadian skiers 'dropping like flies'


Francois Bourque has been ruled out of the 2010 Olympics after suffering a suspected anterior cruciate ligament tear in his left knee.Photograph by: Herald Archive, Reuters, Canwest News ServiceJust three days ago, Larisa Yurkiw's Olympic dream was still alive.

But in a matter of minutes, in what felt like a snowball to the back of the head, the Canadian national team skier joined the list of spectators for the Vancouver Games when she crashed on Wednesday during a training run in Val d'Isere, France.

There was just one thing going through her mind as she was carried off on a stretcher.

"It was the Olympics," said the 21-year-old native of Owen Sound, Ont. "There's so many sides of this. It was painful and tough, but physical is probably being one of the last. The timing of it obviously sucks, for the lack of a better word."

It also sucks for John Kucera. And Kelly VanderBeek. And Jean-Philipe Roy. And Francois Bourque.

All five members of the Canadian alpine team have seen their season come to an end in the past three weeks, with Kucera suffering a broken leg and the other four suffering knee injuries.

"The list of injuries on the men and women's side is awful," said Yurkiw. "It's kind of spooky, actually. It's easy for me to say now because I'm out and I'm on that list, but as a racer still going, I think there are still a lot of racers questioning what's going on.

"How are you supposed to push out of the start gate with full confidence when they are dropping like flies."

Yurkiw returned to Canada on Friday and was slated to see doctors in London, Ont., to confirm the initial diagnosis of a torn anterior cruciate ligament or medial collateral ligament in her left knee.

Regardless, she'll have nearly a year before her next world cup race. "There's a lot of parts of this that are tough. But from what I've heard, this also may be a rite of passage, too," she said. "There are so many girls in the races that are so competitive, that win world cups and they've all been through this. That alone is comforting, but it's definitely a tough time right now."

Veteran national team member Emily Brydon of Fernie, B.C., knows what some of the skiers are going through. She injured both her knees leading up to the 2002 Winter Olympics. And while she still competed in the slalom and giant slalom races at the world's big show, she wasn't competing at 100 per cent.

On Friday, she finished a career-best seventh in a super combined race in Val d'Isere, but most of the talk was on the hard-luck Canadian team, which is garnering international headlines with its injury woes.

"This has been probably some of the hardest times that I can remember being on the team," said Brydon. "With Johnny and then J.P., it was a real slap in the face. Then, when it hits so close to home, it really makes you think and it really affects you.

"With Larisa, it was really sad and really hard. With Kelly it started to become more of a, 'why,' 'why is this happening?' There is luck involved and it just feels like it is not on Canada's side."

For Yurkiw, she still had to qualify for the Games. There was plenty of work ahead and there was no guarantee she'd be strapping on the boards in Whistler.

Alpine Canada was hoping she'd get her feet wet in February and then build for the 2014 Games in Sochi, Russia.

"Stuff like this happens and your route just changes a little. By no means are my goals different. I'm just hoping one day along this career path, I look back and this is somewhat insignificant," she said.

Alpine Canada plans to work with the International Ski Federation to attempt to find a solution to the rash of injuries for the Canadians and the world's other skiers. Yurkiw isn't sure much can be done about a sport where its athletes are expected to hurl down a mountain at breakneck speeds.

"Everyone wants to analyze a situation like this, because you feel like if you can blame it on something or fix something, then it won't happen," she said. "The truth is, what we do is risky, and it's extreme. I think it comes with the job. If things are avoidable, we'll find out what part of it is. It's kind of sick what has happened already this year."

Source:vancouversun.com/

Vancouver 2010 Olympic Torch Relay Media 1 convoy vehicle information and technical briefings to be held for Leamington and Windsor

VANCOUVER, Dec. 18 /CNW/ - The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) will hold media technical briefings for Leamington and Windsor on Monday, December 21 related to 2010 Olympic Torch Relay community celebrations.

The briefings are intended to help media prepare to cover the relay and include an overview of Day 55, Wednesday, December 23 when the Olympic Flame will visit these communities, as well as route materials and community celebration plans. It is critical for media planning to cover these events to participate in, or be aware of, the technical briefings listed below: Please note that this is a technical briefing for media, not a press conference - no spokespeople from VANOC will be available on site for interviews.


No.1 Media Technical Briefing for Leamington
---------------------------------------

What: A technical overview of Day 55 (December 23) when the flame
visits Leamington

Where: Leamington Kinsmen Recreation Complex- 249 Sherk St

When: Monday, December 21 11 a.m. (local time)
(xx)NOTE - NO CONFERENCE LINE AVAILABLE

Participating: VANOC media relations representatives

No.2 Media Technical Briefing for Windsor
------------------------------------

What: A technical overview of Day 55 (December 23) when the flame
visits Windsor

Where: 350 City Hall Square West 2nd floor, Suite 202

When: Monday, December 21 2 p.m. (local time)

Participating: VANOC media relations representatives


Media dial-in information:

Conference ID: 2315464
Local dial in: 604-678-9970
Toll-free: 1 866-792-1316


Media vehicle registration: The registration process for Media 1 is available on FLAME, the torch relay's digital asset management system. You can access FLAME on www.vancouver2010.com/flame, click on visit FLAME and Register Now.

Once on FLAME:


- Select Editorial
- In the drop down menu of categories on the left hand side, select
Media 1 registration and press Search
- Click on the link in the page called Editorial Media 1 and a window
will open
- Click on Download tab above the picture
- Click on Add to download list and download the document
- Follow the instructions in the document


It is critical that you follow the registration process outlined in the document, otherwise we will not be able to capture your request.

For further information: Media contact: Vancouver 2010 Torch Relay Team, Tel: (604) 403-9328, E-mail:

Source:newswire.ca/

Hamilton set out welcome mat for Olympic torch


Ryan Bennett, left, has his Olympic Torch lit by Mathew Piccioni, centre, in Brampton, Ont.Friday, December 18, 2009. Bennett carried the Torch by sledge hockey sled, a first in Olympic Torch Relay history.Photograph by: Brett Gundlock, National PostHAMILTON — Day 51 of the Olympic torch relay ended as it began Saturday — with boisterous revellers celebrating the passing of the flame in the Canadian cold.

The atmosphere at the day-ending community celebration in Hamilton was slightly smaller, colder and darker than when the torch set out from Toronto in the morning, but the crowd was excited nonetheless when torchbearer Ron Foxcroft ran through the crowd.

Foxcroft, a pro-basketball referee for over 35 years, is known as the inventor of the Fox 40 whistle — which has no moving parts and is used by professional sports organizations.

“This is a life-changing moment,” said Fox. “I’m a lifer Hamiltonian and Canadian and this is unbelievable.”



Songwriter John Ellis and Juno-award-winning singer Tom Wilson were among entertainers, and to bookend the lighting of the cauldron seven former Olympians from the community were invited onstage.

But the running tribute by hosts, presenters and dignitaries alike was to Dr. Gene Sutton — a lifelong supporter of amateur sport in Hamilton and across Canada, who died last August at the age of 64.

“She was a great believer in the Olympic spirit,” said Mayor Fred Eisenberger.



The morning was cold, too, but not quite cold enough to suit torchbearer Barbara Calderone in Mississauga.

“I prefer running in the winter,” said Calderone, a stay-at-home mother of two. “I like the cold air, I like the sound of the snow when I run on it — it’s like our sand in Canada.”

She’s a self-described “proud Canadian” who trains six times a week and ran the Boston Marathon twice. A lack of the white stuff, then, was never likely to hinder her 300-metre leg of the relay. Her only anxiety was a wish to get through without crying in public.

“Seeing my kids, seeing their faces watch me, seeing my husband,” said Calderone. “The pride in being a Canadian is just amazing.”



It was a pride shared by thousands of residents who showed up at a community celebration down by Mississauga’s City Hall, when the torch made a midday stop.

They took time out of their last holiday shopping weekend to wave flags and rattle tambourines. Cameras at the ready, and Canada Olympic gear on, they stopped to pose with hockey players on stilts and the Vancouver 2010 mascot, Quatchi.

Late in the morning, crowds surrounded the stage to watch performances by aboriginal singers, Afro-Franco Canadian dancers and a South Asian dance academy that specializes in the art of Bharata Natayam.

Percussionists, rhythmic gymnasts and MCs kept frostbite at bay, pumping up the crowd with music and cheering in the run-up to the flame’s debut in this west-of-Toronto community.

“The Olympic flame is ours here in Mississauga, Ont.,” was shouted over and over again, as the crowd joined in a spontaneous and enthusiastic round of O Canada.




Cheers for the flame’s reception were rivalled only by chants for Mayor Hazel McCallion, in her Olympic gear.

“Mississauga did it again!” she proclaimed from the stage. “Thousands of you here today ... what a delight, what an inspiration!”

McCallion praised the families and young people for turning out and supporting what she called a symbol of the “peace and harmony” identified with Canada, the “best country in the world.”

“We need more gold medallists from Canada at the Olympics,” she said.



The flame arrived in Mississauga at noon, carried onto the stage by former national women’s hockey team member and two-time Olympic gold medallist Cheryl Pounder.

Pounder said carrying the torch and lighting the community cauldron was an experience that went “hand in hand” with winning gold at Salt Lake City and Turin.

“It was unbelievable,” she said. “Seeing my community and my family, I started crying instantaneously.”

The Olympic Cauldron will be lit in Vancouver on Feb. 12, 2010, to open the Games.

National Post

Source:montrealgazette.com/

Art seller accuses 'monster' Olympics of stealing First Nation brand

VANCOUVER — The First Nations owner of a B.C. art seller says Vancouver 2010 has “stolen” the authentic aboriginal product brand and put it on items made in China.

“Our branding has been usurped or appropriated or stolen by this monster organization — and now their suppliers stand to profit to the tune of millions of dollars,” said Shain Jackson, owner of Spirit Works Ltd. “Our biggest issue with the Olympics is this: if you Google the term ‘authentic aboriginal products,’ the first item you see is the 2010 site.”

That web page includes a selection of T-shirts, baseball caps and purses manufactured offshore.

Jackson says they don’t look like anything produced by aboriginal people.

And while 2010 sponsors like HBC stand to make millions of dollars in sales, Jackson says his business is on the verge of bankruptcy.

Spirit Works specializes in items like bentwood cedar boxes and jewelry inlaid with abalone.

Its items sell in 70 retail outlets, including the Vancouver Art Gallery, Grouse Mountain, the Museum of Anthropology, the Bill Reid Gallery and the Royal B.C. Museum.

Jackson, a 38-year-old former aboriginal rights lawyer, said he invested $500,000 in the two-year-old company after believing promises about 2010 native opportunities.

“If there is anything that I thought they could never outsource, it’s authentic aboriginal products,” he added. “I’m sitting here and having to consider pink slips pretty soon. We’re going to make it through the Christmas season by the skin of our teeth.”

After that, on the eve of the Olympics, he says he’s going to have to start laying off his four employees.

Jackson, originally from Sechelt, B.C., said he bid on a contract to supply the Four Host First Nations pavilion, but was only offered enough business to make a $300 profit.

“We wanted a substantial opportunity — and that means not sitting here going bankrupt while other companies are making tens of millions of dollars off our culture,” he said.


Jackson said he could have easily doubled his staff and made thousands of bentwood boxes and pieces of jewelry each month, and outsourced jobs to native communities to do sanding, gluing and inlay work.

Jackson said he’s not opposed to the Olympics, but says the event has been “hijacked” by big business.

He plans to post a blog and a petition online for people to sign in support of aboriginal businesses.



Tewanee Joseph, CEO of the Four Host First Nations, denied that Vancouver 2010 stole the “authentic” brand from aboriginal people.

“We define aboriginal products by who creates the artwork behind it,” he said.

He said that while Jackson is entitled to his opinion, there are many definitions of what “authentic” means.

“Even if a totem pole is created today, you probably use a chainsaw, which wasn’t done hundreds of years ago,” Joseph added.



He said B.C. aboriginal artists will get a huge amount of exposure from the Olympics.

“We have a number of products in our aboriginal line,” said Dennis Kim, 2010’s director of licensing and merchandising, “from our Inuksuit sculptures, which are handmade by Inuit, from a single piece of local stone found in the Arctic, to other items that feature authentic aboriginal artwork, which are applied to products produced by our licensees, some with facilities in Canada and some with facilities offshore.”

Kim said one-third of royalties from aboriginal products goes to the Vancouver 2010 Aboriginal Youth Legacy Fund.

Vancouver Province

dinwood@theprovince.com

Source:canada.com/

Olympics Straight Talk,73 percent of Canadians want women's ski jumping in 2010 Olympics, poll finds


Most Canadians believe women’s ski jumping should be included in Vancouver’s 2010 Winter Olympics, a new poll has found.

Seventy-three percent of Canadians support the inclusion of women’s ski jumping as a medal sport in the Games, according to an Angus Reid Public Opinion survey released today (December 18).

Ten percent are opposed to seeing women’s ski jumping in the Games, while 17 percent aren’t sure where they stand on the issue.

On December 1, a group of female ski jumpers asked the Supreme Court of Canada to hear its appeal of two B.C. court rulings that found the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms doesn’t apply to the selection of Olympic sports.

Those rulings determined that the International Olympic Committee made the decision to exclude women’s ski jumping from the Games, which will include men’s ski jumping.

Support for women’s ski jumping is highest in Quebec, at 79 percent. British Columbians’ level of support is the same as it is nationally, at 73 percent.

Asked if they would support cancelling the men’s ski jumping competition if the women’s event isn’t added, most Canadians (55 percent) and British Columbians (71 percent) disagreed.

However, 51 percent of Quebeckers said they’d support this move.

In addition, 63 percent of Canadians and 75 percent of British Columbians oppose moving the men’s ski jumping contest out of the country if the women’s competition isn’t included in the Olympics.

Sixty-three percent of Canadians and 62 percent of British Columbians support the female ski jumpers asking the Supreme Court to hear their case.

In a July ruling, B.C. Supreme Court justice Lauri Ann Fenlon called the exclusion of women’s ski jumping “discriminatory” but found it wasn’t a breach of the charter.

In response, the IOC issued a statement denying it had discriminated against female ski jumpers.

The IOC stated its decision was “based on technical issues, without regard to gender”.

Angus Reid polled 1,006 Canadian adults from December 7 to December 8. The results of its on-line survey have a margin of error of 3.1 percentage points.

Source:straight.com/

Organizers shrug off Lululemon's ploy with big sales numbers


Pan Pacific general manager Tim Tindle, wearing red Olympic mittens, is ready to welcome the world to Vancouver. He says the Olympics will present new challenges and the hotel’s usual February complement of 375 workers will be expanded to 475.Photograph by: Ward Perrin, Vancouver SunVANCOUVER — The day after harrumphing at a cheeky marketing ploy by Vancouver's Lululemon, 2010 Olympic organizers fired the big guns in the PR battle for clothing supremacy.

They announced they'd hit the million sales mark for $10, red mittens.

And 2010 marketing boss Dennis Kim made it clear that even if Games organizers are frowning on Lululemon's line of clothing, the official merchandise is doing quite well, thank you.

"Early on, we were talking about how, if we reached one million pairs, what a fantastic accomplishment that would be," said Kim. "Here we are with two months left before the opening ceremonies and we've already hit a million pairs."

Not only that, but 2010 hoodies, toques and scarves have been flying off the shelves to the tune of 500,000 units, he said.

In the downtown HBC Olympic "superstore" alone, 70,000 pieces of official merchandise have been sold.

And Kim said that the official Team Canada jersey is on pace to exceed the 120,000 that sold during the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympic year.

"Our merchandise revenue target was $53.8 million and we are very confident that number will be hit and we're even hedging that we might exceed that a little bit," he said.

Kim said it was pure coincidence that Vancouver 2010's good news story came out the day after Lululemon's new clothing line made front-page news.

The line is named "Cool Sporting Event That Takes Place in British Columbia Between 2009 and 2011 Edition."

Olympic organizers accused Lululemon of being unsporting, but admitted legal action is unlikely.

"What's clear today is people want the authentic product," said Kim.

Source:.calgaryherald.com/

55 Days until 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics

Canada ranks seventh all-time in medals won at the Winter Olympics with 119 (38 gold, 38 silver,43 bronze). Ranking ahead of Canada are Norway (280), the United States (217), the Soviet Union (217), Austria (185), Germany (179) and Finland (151).

OLY BITS AND PIECES
Comedian RJ Currie came up with a Beatles Top 5 curling hits during last week's Roar of the Rings in Edmonton. Counting down: 5. Paperback Slider; 4. A Guard Day's Night; 3. Hack in the U.S.S.R.; 2.

You're Going to Lose That Curl; 1. I Should Have Thrown Better... Maple Leafs GM Brian Burke, who is also the GM for the American hockey team, is to carry the Olympic torch today in downtown Toronto and his leg comes between former CFLer Tom Hipsz and John Craig, a member of the 1980 Can­adian Olympic track and field team that did not go to the boycotted Moscow Olympics. "People have been very cute about it," Burke told The New York Times. "A guy on the sub­way the other day came up to me and said, 'Mr. Burke, I'd like to congratulate you on your silver medal.'"... Russian Oly wannabes in the KHL will have one more shot at impressing head coach Vyacheslav Bykov this weekend at the Channel 1 Cup in Moscow. The four-team event also features Finland, Sweden and the Czech Republic.

The Moscow News reports the Russian coaching staff wants to construct two lines from NHL stars,w with the two other lines likely to be drawn from an NHL-KHL combination.

TEAM CANADA WATCH

Hockey Canada will announce its 23-man roster for the Olympic team on Dec. 30. ESPN.com's Pierre LeBrun said the brain trust is now down to watching nine defenceman and 16 forwards, with a handful of others still on the radar screen. Here's our take on some candidates who have seen their stock rise or plummet of late:

RISING

Mike Cammalleri, LW, Montreal Canadiens

Entered Friday's action just 17th among Canadian­born players in scoring (18 goals, 12 assists), but highest among left-wingers. He has a superb touch around the net -- his 39 goals last year was fourth-best among Canadians and more than Sidney Crosby, Jarome Iginla and Evgeni Malkin. As well, he has a very respectable +10 plus-minus this season.

Dustin Penner, RW, Edmonton Oilers

Why is it that so many continue to snicker when Penner's name is mentioned as an Oly candidate? Last week, Kevin Lowe sug­gested the big Manitoban was one of six players who were not originally invited to the summer camp but are now being considered.

He has seven points in his last five games and has played well with Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry, two former Anaheim teammates who will likely wear Canada's colours in February.

Duncan Keith, D, Chicago Blackhawks

Went through a bad spell at the beginning of December where he was a minus 6 over four games, but has found his game again. Smooth-skating puck handler (born in Winnipeg) who is third among Canadian defencemen in scoring with 25 points (5G, 20A), behind Mike Green (32 points) and Dan Boyle (29 pts).

FALLING
Marc Savard, C, Boston Bruins Some observers wailed when Savard wasn't invited to the orientation camp this summer and with good reason -- his 88 points last year put him among the NHL's top 10 scorers. But he broke his foot in October and, aside from a three-point night against the Leafs last week, has struggled of late with no points in four of his last five games.

Dion Phaneuf, D, Calgary Flames

Love the idea of him lighting up unsuspecting forwards while wearing Canada's red and white, but trade rumours have been following him for a spell for a reason: His play has been inconsistent.

Source:winnipegfreepress.com/

Strong finish puts Powers in good Olympic position

TELLURIDE, Colo. — Seven years after he won the gold medal in the Olympic halfpipe, Ross Powers has taken a key step toward qualifying for the Vancouver Games in snowboardcross.

The 30-year-old American finished third in a World Cup event Saturday, putting him squarely in the mix for the 2010 Olympic team. It was the second of five World Cup qualifying events for snowboardcross.

"I grew up doing a little of everything, racing gates, doing freestyle," Powers said. "In 2006, I was the alternate in the halfpipe, went over to Torino, watched these guys do snowboardcross, and I was fired up about it."

At least two snowboardcross riders will qualify for the American team based on results in the five World Cup qualifiers. Powers joins defending Olympic champion Seth Wescott and Graham Watanabe as the third American with a top 3 finish.

Powers, who led an American medals sweep on the halfpipe in 2002, finished behind Pierre Vaultier of France and Robert Fagan of Canada. Wescott finished sixth.

America's top woman was eighth-place finisher Faye Gulini. Defending Olympic silver medalist Lindsey Jacobellis finished 11th and hasn't made a final in either of the first two World Cup qualifiers, both of which have both been won by Maelle Ricker of Canada.

Ricker clipped Jacobellis's board in the first heat race, and Jacobellis wiped out.

"Lindsey rode great, and I don't think she did anything wrong," U.S. Snowboarding coach Peter Foley said. "She had a great race, she smoked the top, she and Maelle just tangled it up. Sometimes you can stay on your feet and sometimes you can't, but she went down."

Source:http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i6YD6uU0royELyXz-9Oz4IExe0pwD9CMODQ80

Vancouver 2010 Gameplay Trailer

0:58 of gameplay footage
SEGA also released a new movie from Vancouver 2010, a game developed by Eurocom Entertainment Software and scheduled for winter of 2010, for PC, PS3 and Xbox 360. Vancouver 2010 is a simulation of a host of events from the upcoming Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games, focusing on the adrenalin rush that comes from the extreme speed of winter sports. In addition to the new challenge mode, Vancouver 2010 also offers revamped online gameplay and brand new control schemes new to an official video game of the Olympic Games. Local Download:

Source:gamershell.com/

2010 Olympic volunteers begin picking up uniforms, credentials


Enthusiastic volunteers at the Uniiform and Accreditation Centre in Vancouver. Volunteers started picking up their accreditation and uniforms today for the 2010 Olympic Games.Photograph by: Ian Smith, Vancouver SunThe Vancouver 2010 Olympic Uniform and Accreditation Centre officially opened Monday at the PNE Forum — dispersing credentials and distinctive Wave Blue uniforms to five Games volunteers.

The 44,000-square-foot facility will eventually distribute 25,000 Olympic and Paralympic uniforms, with another 5,000 to be distributed at a similar centre in Whistler

The six-piece uniforms include a jacket, vest, two long-sleeve shirts, a toque and pants. Vancouver area volunteers get "city pants" while Whistler volunteers receive thicker insulated "mountain pants" to cope with colder weather.

The tops of the uniforms are an aquamarine-type "Wave Blue" colour while the pants are a darker navy or "Deep Sea Blue."

Volunteers get to keep the uniforms, which are worth between $700 and $800 each as it cost more than $20 million for 34,000 uniforms sized from extra small to extra large.

Vancouver Olympic Organizing Committee vice-president of workforce operations Allen Vansen said Vanoc has received more than 75,000 applications so far for about 25,000 volunteer positions. Applications have come from more than 130 countries but about 90 per cent are from Canadians, with most coming from B.C.

Vansen said most positions have been filled but Vanoc is still looking for volunteers who can drive or be transportation attendants and for people who live in the Sea-to-Sky corridor.

Vancouver education administrator Larry Hoe, who received his credentials and uniform today, said he's thrilled at the prospect of working during the Games. He will drive vans carrying athletes, officials and VIPs from venue to venue during the Olympics.

"It's such a huge global event and to be a part of it is just exciting," he said. "I'm really looking forward to meeting people from other countries and learning about their culture."

bconstantineau@vancouversun.com

Source:vancouversun.com/

Support rolls in for Bramwell Tovey’s stand on declining Olympic offer


Bramwell Tovey conducts the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra.Photograph by: Handout, Vancouver SunVANCOUVER — Internationally renowned conductor Bramwell Tovey said on Friday that the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra has received a flood of support after it refused to allow its name to be associated with the opening ceremonies of the 2010 Winter Olympics.

The decision came after Tovey, who has led the VSO since 2000, was asked to conduct the recording session, but then was told another conductor would mime his performance at the ceremonies.

Tovey, who has been a guest conductor at the London, New York and L.A. philharmonics, said that what happened was “a shame” but that he had received many letters of support for the decision.

“I’m delighted by the response we’ve had today,” Tovey said on Friday. “We even had people send the VSO money today, but it has been a very special day in terms of people’s support.”

Tovey declined to comment on why Vanoc wanted to use another conductor for the ceremonies. One reason might be that producers of big events often pull together many different artists in an ensemble production.

“I don’t find it surprising that [the VSO] would not want to do that job under those conditions,” said George Laverock, program director for MusicFest Vancouver.

“It’s really a much more complicated issue. These shows have so many elements, and that’s just one section of the show so they have to have someone there that looks like he is conducting the overall thing, but they put together sections and some of it would be more pop and many other different styles of music.”

A Vanoc official contacted Friday said there was nothing to add to the statement issued earlier by David Atkins, the executive producer of the opening and closing ceremonies.

In that statement, Atkins said for “international televised live spectacles of this size and scope, it is standard practice to prerecord the musical segments to ensure the integrity and security of the broadcast transmission.”

He also said sections of the pre-recorded music will feature a larger ensemble than appears on stage.

British actor Christopher Gaze, best known as the artistic director of Vancouver’s Bard on the Beach, praised Tovey’s decision Friday.

“I admire Bramwell Tovey enormously; he is one of the great musicians of the world and I am extremely sympathetic and supportive of what he’s done because I think it’s a very bold move,” he said, shortly before hosting the VSO’s A Traditional Christmas Friday evening.

Gaze, who is also an ambassador for Vanoc and will be carrying the Olympic torch on Jan. 24, said it was his “Christmas wish” for Vanoc to sit down with the VSO and find a middle ground.

Art Willms, chair of the board for the Vancouver Symphony, said the VSO had “a very good relationship” with Vanoc. He suggested the controversy had been blown out of proportion and that Vanoc had simply made a decision about how to deliver some music.

He said the board was pleased because the VSO would still be heard at the Games.

VSO president and CEO Jeff Alexander said the orchestra was asked to record a piece of music for the ceremonies, but was not asked to appear in the show. He said although Vanoc offered to credit Tovey and the VSO, it “wouldn’t have made sense to allow the VSO name to be used.”

The VSO will perform at three events co-produced by Vanoc during the Games, he said.

ticrawford@vancouversun.com

With files from Randy Shore, the Vancouver Sun

Source:vancouversun.com/

Olympic hero Michael Phelps is beaten as 'Rocky' rules the waves in Manchester

Michael Rock beat the greatest swimmer of all time as the Duel in the Pool encapsulated everything about swimming in 2009.
Rock relegated Phelps to second in the 200metres butterfly, something the 22-year-old can celebrate for the rest of his days.
But the Stockport man was wearing a performance-enhancing suit, while the Olympic and world champion was wearing the Speedo 2010 textile-only jammer.



Delight: Michael Rock celebrates after beating Michael Phelps in Manchester
In no way was it a level playing field and in all probability this was Rock’s first and last victory over Phelps.
However, the young Briton described it as ‘a fantastic experience’.
Phelps, who was racing for the first time in this country, finished the two-day, 30-race extravaganza by guiding the US 100m freestyle relay team home in a world record 3min 3.30sec, the eighth world record set by the Americans at the Duel.
The Baltimore Bullet is the greatest Olympian of all time, but 2009 began with a three-month ban from the sport after he was photographed smoking from a marijuana pipe at a college party, and although he won six more world titles in Rome last August, he has been consistently defeated, in part due to his decision to wear the trunks-only ‘jammers’ in readiness for next season.
None of which will bother 22-year-old Manchester University law student Rock, who beat the Olympic and world long-course 200m butterfly champion by more than a second in a time of 1min 51.46sec.
Phelps, who finished second to add to his three firsts and two thirds in this meet, hardly looked enamoured with his work.
‘I’ve just beaten the best,’ said the man nicknamed Rocky. ‘It’s the greatest
achievement of my life. It’s not every day you beat Michael Phelps, is it? Maybe I had an advantage, I don’t know, but it’s given me a real boost for the Commonwealths and Olympics.’
Legend: Michael Phelps in action at the Manchester Aquatics Centre




Phelps admitted his disappointment at what was for him a below-par performance.
‘It’s not been too bad, but it’s not been great, either,’ said the 24-year-old. ‘Michael beat me because he was better prepared. I’d rather lose the ones that don’t count than the ones that do and these are steps towards being ready for the next world championships and the London Olympics.’
Rebecca Adlington got back to winning ways as she took one of the six races won by Britain’s impressive women’s squad. Against her in the 800m freestyle, her favoured distance, was the open water 10km world champion Kerri-Anne Payne, who had been given two days’ notice that she would be competing in Manchester.
It was a classy display from the 20-year-old from Mansfield, which suggests a better 2010 than this year. Double Olympic gold medalist Adlington has endured a difficult 2009, not helped by her insistence on wearing a Speedo swimsuit that placed her at a disadvantage.
After the highs of 2008, Adlington, despite the post-Beijing euphoria, could only finish third and fourth in the world 400m and 800m and ended up in tears in Rome.
Brit of all right: Rebecca Adlington




On Saturday she wore a far happier expression, having beaten a decent field in 8min 10.59sec, just over six seconds outside the short-course world record. ‘I’m really pleased with that,’ she said.
Lizzie Simmonds had an even better Duel, adding a win in the 100m backstroke to her 200m victory on Friday. At 18, the girl from Lincoln promises to be one of the stars of London 2012 and another indication that British swimming, especially women’s, is growing in strength.
Fran Halsall underlined this by adding the women’s 50m freestyle to the 100m freestyle and butterfly victories from Friday night.
The 19-year-old’s exploits made it six wins from British girls out of the nine in total won by the E-Stars.
Despite the drubbing by the Americans - they won 21 races to nine - the Duel in the Pool was an exciting example of how much British swimming is developing and how, when the Olympics are in London, tickets for the pool will be among the hottest in town.

Source:dailymail.co.uk/

Canada cause of concern for U.S. women's hockey team


Containing their resurgent Canadian rivals is going to be a tall order for defender Angeila Ruggiero (center) and company.
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Now that it's official, and the 2010 U.S. Olympic women's hockey team has been named, is the pressure lifted or does it only get heavier from here?

As the two-time defending world champions, of course, the Americans were tabbed the early favorites to take gold in Vancouver, but after dropping five of their last six games against archrival Canada, the balance of power seems to be tilting back into the Olympic host nation 's favor.

In the essentially bipolar system of women's hockey -- the U.S. or Canada has won every gold medal awarded at Worlds or Olympics since international competition began in 1990 -- no matchup means more. And even though Team USA's recent slide against Canada can't bode well, U.S. defenseman Angela Ruggiero, now a four-time Olympian, doesn't seem too worried.

"On the pre-Olympic tours, we do have an opportunity to see each other more often," she says. "To be honest, it's gone back and forth. Going into 1998, we were dead even in games won and lost against them heading into Nagano, and we ended up on top. The next [Olympics in Salt Lake City], we were 8-0 against them and then ended up second. So as far as the record goes, it really doesn't matter. It matters who shows up in February."

What's been seen so far this season, however, is an offensively potent Canadian team that has outscored the U.S. by 28-17 in eight meetings since August. Seven of Canada's goals have come at the hands of Meghan Agosta, a talented 22-year-old forward who also led the NCAA with 2.44 points per game last season for Mercyhurst.

Team Canada, however, has perhaps been more impressive defensively, holding the Americans to two goals or fewer in their last five meetings. That can be frustrating for the Team USA's attack-minded players, led by University of Wisconsin standout Hilary Knight. The 5' 10" forward, whose size and long reach helped her net an NCAA-high 45 goals last year, scored a tournament-high seven goals for Team USA at the World Championships in April, but has scored just three in the last two-and-a-half months.

Coach Mark Johnson, an Olympic gold medalist on the famed 1980 Miracle Team, concedes that a string of losses can lead to some confusion, but he maintains that the most important thing is staying positive through it.

"Part of the process in getting to the end is dealing with these frustrations," he says. "Certainly, we don't like to lose. It's not fun. It's not enjoyable. I don't sleep well when we lose, but in the big picture.... I see improvement and strides being made."

As the Games near, the Americans will meet Canada twice more -- Dec. 30 at the Xcel Energy Center in Minneapolis and two days later in Ottawa -- before they begin playing for the real thing. These meetings will be the litmus test for Team USA. Any pressure that any player felt about making the team is now gone, and it's time to see if they can regain some swagger going into Vancouver, where the Canadian crowds will be vocally partisan and decidedly not in favor of the red, white and blue.

A Team USA primer
* Ruggiero isn't the only four-time Olympian on the team. Jenny Potter, a 30-year-old mother of two, will also dress for her fourth Games. "What she's done just amazes me," Johnson says. "The first time I coached her, as we got ready to go to Winnipeg for Worlds [in 2007], she had just had her second child. I've got five kids and I watched what my wife went through after each baby was delivered, and I'm thinking there's no way this young lady is going to be able to help us in Winnipeg. And boom, 10 weeks later, she's on the ice and we're doing conditioning drills up in Grand Forks, and she's out there doing them. And I'm like, 'Wow. This is special.'"

* Ruggiero and Potter also have an entire set of medals (gold in '98, silver in '02 and bronze in '06). But they're aiming to go full circle and get back to gold. A gold medal in Vancouver would complete the set for two-time Olympians Julie Chu and captain Natalie Darwitz.

* Of the 21 players on Team USA's roster, 19 are world champions, but only six are former Olympians. As the men's roster is expected to be (it will be announced Jan. 1 at the NHL's Winter Classic), this iteration of Team USA will be young (average age: 23.5), but teeming with potential. Knight, the team's leading scorer through this pre-Olympic tour, with 21 points, is the team's youngest, just nine days younger than twins Jocelyne and Monique Lamoureux.

* The Lamoureux twins are the first pair on a US Olympic hockey team. They are not the first twins to ever play Olympic hockey. Henrik and Daniel Sedin of the Vancouver Canucks, of course, represented Sweden at the 2006 Turin Olympics and won gold.

* Goalie Jessie Vetter, who turns 24 tomorrow (Dec. 19), got an early birthday present by making her first Olympic team. The University of Wisconsin netminder set NCAA records with 39 career shutouts and a .941 save percentage, and was also named Sportswoman of the Year by the Women's Sports Foundation in October.

Source:sportsillustrated.cnn.com/

Weldon LeBlanc: Impact of the 2010 Winter Olympics


Business ColumnistsWeldon LeBlanc: Impact of the 2010 Winter Olympics
Friday, December 11th, 2009 | 9:46 am


Weldon LeBlanc
By Weldon LeBlanc

The 2010 Olympic Winter Games will take place in Vancouver and Whistler from February 12 to 28, 2010, and the 2010 Paralympic Winter Games from March 12 to 21, 2010.

An estimated 5,500 people from more than 80 countries will take part in 86 medal events during the Olympic Games, with another 1,350 people from more than 40 countries participating in the Paralympic Games.

More importantly, it is estimated that the combined Olympics will have a global audience of three billion people.

I did an interview recently on CTV challenging me on the economic impact of the 2010 Olympics. It was suggested that the economic spinoffs to the Okanagan would be minimal.

I see it differently.

An in-depth report was released in 2007 called “Legacies of North American
Olympic Winter Games” which analyzed the economic impact of the three Olympic Winter Games held in North America since 1980: in Lake Placid (1980), Calgary (1988) and Salt Lake City (2002). The report considers each of these three Olympic venues to be successful, and provided positive spin-offs to the host communities.

In examining the Calgary Olympic experience, the report notes that the Olympics made Calgary internationally famous as a tourist destination. The Canada Olympic Park has become the second most popular destination in Alberta, next to the Rocky Mountains.

In the Legacies report, Tracey Grindal, manager of market research for Tourism Calgary, is quoted as saying that the most significant impact of hosting the Winter Games is the increase in international importance. “It puts you on the world map. It sets you apart. It broadens your image.”

Being removed from the limelight of the Lower Mainland, what does the Olympic activity mean for Kelowna and the Okanagan?

In Kelowna we’re already seeing the benefits of the Winter Olympics. Early efforts by the Economic Development Commission and the Kelowna Chamber on Olympic procurement opportunities have resulted in local businesses tapping into lucrative business opportunities.

Additionally, we are now seeing Olympic athletes using local facilities as training venues.

In February and March, Whistler and Blackcomb will not be accessible to skiers. Big White and the hospitality sector of Kelowna are well positioned to take advantage of this opportunity.

Kelowna is also well positioned to take advantage of the inaccessibility of Vancouver during February and March. The anticipated traffic congestion in Vancouver during the Olympics will make our city a great winter get-away destination.

During the Olympics, people around the world will get glimpses of the Okanagan and Kelowna through the efforts of Tourism Kelowna who are making sure the media have footage of our region. It is hoped that tourists and investors will find their way to the Okanagan in the months and years following the Olympics as a result of the heightened international media coverage. The results of the Legacies report of the three other Olympic venues support this assumption.

At this late stage, according to the VANOC website, Olympic organizers are currently focusing procurement activities in areas where immediate requirements for goods and services exist. Requests for Proposals (RFPs), Invitations to Quote (ITQs), Requests for Expression of Interest (EOIs), and other bid opportunities may be issued at www.vancouver2010.com and through www.bcbid.gov.bc.ca.

Regardless of our thoughts, the 2010 Winter Olympics will have an impact on Kelowna and the Okanagan. Only time will tell to what extent.

Source:kelowna.com/

Bulletin: Senators to participate in 2010 Olympic Torch Relay

Fisher, Murray, Leeder and Courchaine to represent clubThursday, 10.12.2009 / 10:09 AM / News Ottawa Senators OTTAWA - Four members of the Ottawa Senators organization will serve as torchbearers during the 2010 Olympic Torch Relay as it passes through Gatineau and Ottawa.

Centre Mike Fisher leads the Senators torchbearers with his opportunity on Friday, Dec. 11. At approximately 6:50 p.m., Fisher will be handed the torch from the Preservation Centre along Boulevard du Carrefour to the intersection of Boulevard de la Cité. A community celebration will be underway as the Olympic Flame arrives at Place de la Cité at 7 p.m.

On Saturday, Dec. 12, at approximately 12:10 p.m., general manager Bryan Murray will carry the torch as the relay crosses the Alexandra Bridge to St. Patrick Street between the Samuel-de-Champlain Monument and Sussex Drive.

Bill Courchaine, the Senators director of sales and corporate partnerships, will take the Olympic Flame along Palladium Drive up to Scotiabank Place at 8:40 a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 13.

Senators president Cyril Leeder is the last of the team’s representatives to take part in the honour. On Monday, Dec. 14, around 7 a.m., Leeder will take the torch on King Edward Avenue near Laurier Avenue East and go south up to Osgood Street.

Each of the torchbearers will carry the Olympic flame for a distance of approximately 300 metres.

The torch relay began its schedule across Canada on Oct. 30 in Victoria and concludes at the opening ceremony, signalling the start of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games on Feb. 12. The Olympic flame will travel by land, air and water during its 106-day journey as it visits more than 1,000 communities across Canada. The torch arrives in Gatineau on Day 43, Friday, Dec. 11.

Source:senators.nhl.com/

Olympic glory 26 years later


DEAN RUTZ / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Brothers Steve, left, and Phil Mahre from Yakima won Olympic medals in the slalom at the 1984 Winter Games. Phil finished first and Steve second in the race. They grew up skiing in the Cascades at White Pass.






Her moment in the spotlight lasted a few scant minutes. Their achievements were measured by fractions of seconds. Yet their legacy has been timeless. P Nearly 26 years ago, the U.S. Winter Olympic team in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, was dominated by four precocious young athletes from the state of Washington.

Skiers Phil Mahre and Debbie Armstrong came away with gold medals. Phil's twin brother, Steve, and figure skater Rosalynn Sumners left with silvers, both losing gold by infinitesimal margins.

That Evergreen quartet accounted for half of the eight medals won by the U.S. delegation. And as the 2010 Winter Games approach less than two months from now in Vancouver, B.C., those Olympian moments on the ice and snow still loom large in their lives.

They insist they haven't allowed what happened more than a quarter-century ago to define them. Yet they still can't help but see themselves — and invariably be seen by others — through the prism of their Olympic success or failure. A stunning upset for Armstrong on snow contrasts with the bitter disappointment of Sumners on ice. And one Mahre twin's golden moment was the other's agonizing near-miss.

Scratch just below the surface with the right question, and you can find those moments, still powder fresh.

"It's there forever," said Phil Mahre, now 52 and living in Yakima — near Steve, as always. "You know if you're ever having a bad time, you plug in the tape and you're a gold medalist, and you feel great again."

Phil can't resist a good-natured brotherly needle.

"Steve, on the other hand, is always a silver medalist. It's kind of a bummer for him."

Responds Steve, equally good-natured: "He gets to rub that in. It's so funny — I can watch the race and say, 'Maybe this time I'll win.' But, no, I still don't win."

Phil refuses to let others categorize him because of his Olympic achievement.

"I can't base my life on a minute and 40 seconds," he said. "It's something I'll always cherish and I'll always have, but it doesn't define me. It's not who I am, per se. But I learned a lot of life's lessons throughout my career that I've been able to put into everyday life."

To be more precise, Mahre's combined winning time in the slalom, on the final day of those XIV Winter Games, was 1 minute, 39.41 seconds — 21 hundredths of a second ahead of Steve.

Steve, who had led Phil by seven-tenths of a second after their first runs, came to terms long ago with his runner-up finish. That's not to say that he doesn't relive every perceived flaw that kept him from gold.

Before Steve made his final run, he talked via walkie-talkie to his brother at the bottom of the mountain. Phil had already raced, and, as always, gave Steve tips on the course — essentially a road map to beating him for the gold.

"It was a hard pill to swallow, but what better person to lose to than my brother?" said Steve. "We had a saying our entire career: Keep it in the family."

Phil's family had expanded by one that very day. His wife Holly gave birth to a son, Alex, in Scottsdale, Ariz., at roughly the same time Phil was racing down the slopes of Bjelasnica. Phil was informed of the birth as he went to the awards ceremony, and broke down at his news conference.

Steve couldn't resist his own wisecrack: "If they would have told me his son had been born, I would have definitely told Phil. Because I know he would have left, and I would be gold medalist right now."

Debbie Armstrong

For Armstrong, a 20-year-old barely two years removed from Seattle's Garfield High School, it was a 2-minute, 20.98-second ride to fame and glory.

Unheralded when the Olympics began, Armstrong was on the cover of Sports Illustrated when it ended with her having earned the U.S.'s first gold medal in the Sarajevo Games, in the giant slalom.

It was the high point of a seven-year career on the U.S. ski team that earned her the nickname "Debstrong" for her mental and physical toughness.

"My mind that day was crystal, crystal clear," recalled Armstrong, now 46 and Alpine Technical Director for the Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club in Steamboat Springs, Colo.

"There was a certain innocence. I was there that day to win a medal. No deterring. I was full of life and joy, but fiercely independent and competitive. Then, on that day, it was the epic, ultimate release of setting your mind to do something and then accomplishing it."

Yet as exhilarating as that moment was, Armstrong embraces Mahre's premise of not letting it define her. She has embodied that philosophy with a life of exploration and growth. She went back to school and earned a degree in history from the University of New Mexico, then trained to become certified as a ski instructor.

Armstrong also made a pilgrimage to Sarajevo in 2001 after the Bosnian war ravaged the country, an experience she said "gave me so much more context and understanding. When you're there as an athlete, it's tunnel vision. To go back and see the devastation, but also see the hope and energy in building the city back, and the pride of the residents, made it a wonderful trip."

In Sarajevo, Armstrong planted trees and helped with environmental restoration.

"Phil couldn't be more accurate," she said. "That medal can't define you — yet you can't separate the fact that it's part of who you are. Not necessarily because it's in your consciousness every day, because it absolutely isn't. But as far as the majority of people who don't know you, that's how they see you.

"I embrace it. It's wonderful, but I had a lot of life to live after being 20 years old on that day."

Rosalynn Sumners

Sumners admits that putting aside the disappointment of narrowly missed gold was hard. She entered the Olympics at 19 as the reigning world champion. She was expected to breeze to the gold and then cash in millions on the pro tour.

Sumners, raised in Edmonds, had begun skating as a youngster at Lynnwood's Sno-King Ice Arena and dedicated her youth to the dream of a gold medal.

"I chose it, or it chose me, at 7," she said. "I was fine going to bed at 8, and setting the alarm at 4 a.m. I loved being different. I wanted to be different. It was part of the motivation. ... There was no question in my mind I was going to be a champion."

In Sarajevo, however, Sumners finished second to Katarina Witt of East Germany by one-tenth of a point. It came down to the long program. A strong showing would have given her the gold.

"It took years to come to terms with it, and I'm sure whatever happened that night affected my whole life, negative and positive, in its own ways," Sumners said.

"The older you get, you realize, 'Wow, I went to the Olympics.' But that night, I was there for one purpose, and one purpose only, that I had chosen at 7. You're trying to do it for your family, and your country, and every eye is on you. That's a lot on a 19-year-old's shoulders."

Instead of executing a triple jump, as planned, Sumners did a double. And a double jump became a single. Those omissions no doubt cost her the gold.

"Really, that night, some part of me sort of gave up a little bit," she said. "Because the pressure had gotten so bad."

Finishing second, she said, "always kept me hungry, for sure, as a skater. ... If I hadn't made it to the Olympics, or hadn't been world champion, that would have been life-crushing. But other than the fact I would have been announced every night as 'Olympic champion Rosalynn Sumners,' I never looked at something and said, 'If I had won the Olympics, I could have gotten to do that.' "

She added wistfully, "It would have been fun to be announced as Olympic champion."

After two unfulfilling years on the Disney on Ice tour, trying to entertain kids who came to see Mickey Mouse, Sumners was invited to join the fledgling Stars on Ice tour by its founder, Scott Hamilton.

"That call saved my life," Sumners said. "I don't know if I would have skated again, or what I would have done. It was so much fun, and so rewarding."

She stayed with Stars on Ice for 13 years, riding the figure-skating boom and becoming as close as family with fellow competitors like Hamilton, Witt, Kristi Yamaguchi and Brian Boitano.

Sumners, now 45, has been married since 2004 to Bob Kain, her longtime beau and former president of the powerhouse IMG sports agency. They have a home in Palm Springs, Calif., and one in Kirkland. She says she'll never abandon her Puget Sound roots.

Since retiring from skating in 2007 — she's contemplating a brief return to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Stars on Ice — Sumners has begun a second career as an entrepreneur.

After dabbling in building homes by starting a residential real-estate development company, she now operates two adjoining stores in Kirkland, Bella Tesori and Bella Bambina. The former specializes in custom furniture and home décor, while the latter sells clothing and other items for babies and small children.

Despite the lagging economy, she loves the challenge.

"I have great fun buying all the cute stuff," she said, laughing. "It's like choreography — constant ideas. How can I move it around and make it look inviting?"

None of the four have plans to attend the Vancouver Olympics, though the Mahres, who do corporate appearances as well as running the Mahre Training Center in Deer Valley, Utah, might wind up there if they have a client.

That doesn't mean they won't all watch and remember.

When Phil Mahre recently was on the podium with aspiring 2010 Olympians during a Comcast news conference, he teared up as he addressed the athletes.

"The farther you get away from your career, the more you realize how much it meant to you," he said.

Larry Stone: 206-464-3146 or lstone@seattletimes.com

That medal can't define you — yet you can't separate the fact that it's part of who you are." — Debbie Armstrong

Source:seattletimes.nwsource.com/

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Aggreko Equipment Hits the Slopes in Vancouver


With fewer than 60 days to go before the 2010 Winter Games, Aggreko equipment — such as the heaters and electrical distribution shown at the Richmond Olympic Oval venue, which will host the speed skating competition — has already begun to arrive in Vancouver.

With less than 60 days to go until the Opening Ceremony for the 2010 Winter Games, Aggreko, a global leader in temporary power generation, temperature control and oil-free compressed air solutions, has dozens of technicians on the ground in Vancouver, installing and fine tuning equipment at the venues for the big event. As the official supplier of temporary power and temperature control solutions, Aggreko will support BC Hydro, the primary provider of clean hydro-electric energy, by providing temporary power, heating and cooling equipment at all of the Vancouver and Whistler venues throughout the Games. These venues include: the BC Place Stadium for the opening and closing ceremonies; various celebration sites; the main media center; the Whistler broadcast and press center; the Olympic and Paralympic Villages in Vancouver and Whistler; and all competition venues.

“The Olympic Games are the epitome of sporting events, with a worldwide audience in the billions,” said George Walker, president, Aggreko North America. “The elements that are Aggreko’s responsibility — designing and installing temporary power distribution, cooling and heating infrastructure — are crucial to the overall success of the event. We’ve been working with the event organizers and BC Hydro for more than a year to coordinate all of our efforts, and now it’s time to put that plan into action.”

The Vancouver Olympic Winter Games represent the largest temporary heating project in Aggreko’s history, with 90 percent of the heating requirements used for snow-melting applications. By January, more than 2,700 pieces of Aggreko equipment will have been installed by the 85-strong Aggreko crew, including:
• 40 megawatts of electric heaters, or enough for 3,000 medium-sized homes
• A minimum of 90 megawatts of stand-by and primary generators and power distribution, enough to power 8,000 medium-sized homes
• 250 miles of cable, enough to stretch from Vancouver to Portland

Aggreko will provide stand-by power at the International Broadcast Centre. In addition, Aggreko will provide the main power supply to the opening and closing ceremonies and medal ceremonies at BC Place. At the UBC Thunderbird Arena, which is hosting the opening round of the ice hockey competition, Aggreko is working with organizers to convert a practice rink into a temporary locker room and office space infrastructure. In addition, nearly all of the mountain venues are temporary, requiring huge amounts of heat — primarily to melt snow to prevent it from collecting on the roofs of temporary structures and endangering them.

Aggreko has a wealth of experience providing power and temperature control to the most high-profile events in the world, including eight Olympic Games, the U.S. Presidential Inauguration, the Ryder Cup and the Daytona 500.

With North American headquarters in Houston, Aggreko is No. 10 on the RER 100.

Source:rermag.com/

Speed Skating at the Olympics


Speed skating began in Holland in the 13th century as a form of transportation. Speed skating is both elegant and fast, with skaters reaching speeds of more than 60 kph (37 mph). Speed skating has been part of the Winter Olympics since they began




Canadian Clara Hughes Speed Skating at Turin Olympics

Robert Laberge / Getty Images

at Chamonix, France in 1924, although it was only the men then. Ladies' speed skating didn't become a full medal event until the Squaw Valley Winter Olympics in 1960.

How Speed Skating at the Olympics Works
Speed-skating at the Olympics takes place on a 400 m oval ice rink. The skaters compete in pairs. They skate in lanes, changing lanes once every lap to even out the distance covered. The athletes are timed electronically to one-hundredth of a second.

There are 12 speed skating events at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics, six each for the men and ladies. The men's events are 500 m, 1000 m, 1500 m, 5000 m, 10,000 m and the team pursuit; the ladies' events are 500 m, 1000 m, 1500 m, 3000 m, 5000 m and the team pursuit.

The team pursuit was introduced at the Turin Olympics in 2006. In the team pursuit two teams of three skaters compete. The team members take turns leading to take advantage of air currents. The race finishes when the last team member crosses the finish line. A series of elimination rounds leads to a final race.

Speed Skating Venue at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics
All speed skating events at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics are held at the Richmond Olympic Oval in Richmond, BC. The facility holds about 7,600 people.

Speed Skating Schedule at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics
The speed skating events at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics begin on Saturday February 13 with the men's 5000 m event and go through to Saturday February 27 with both the men's and women's team pursuits. For detailed Vancouver Olympics speed skating schedules see:

Source:canadaonline.about.com/

Why leave the Olympics to the amateurs


Courtesy Big White Ski Resort
The sunset as seen atop Big White in Kelowna, B.C. If the slopes here are good enough for aerial skier Steve Omischi, they’re probably good enough for you. If not, there’s also tubing.
Instead of hanging around the house glued to your TV set during the 2010 Olympics, why not schedule a winter getaway during which you watch the games but also try an Olympic sport? It would be fun to stay in the heart of the action at the Fairmont Chateau Whistler (fairmont.com/whistler), say, but Canada is a vast marshmallow world waiting to be explored. Most Olympic activities can be done at several locations; here's our top pick for each sport.


Freestyle Skiing/Ski Jumping

Big White

Kelowna, B.C.

It's not likely that you are an accomplished ski jumper or freestyle skier doing back flips with twists, but after getting in touch with your inner daredevil at Big White Ski Resort (bigwhite.com) you can boast that you graced the same slopes as aerial skier Steve Omischi, World Cup champ and Olympic-podium hopeful, who lives in nearby Kelowna.

With an uphill lift capacity of 28,000 skiers and riders per hour, Big White Ski Resort is B.C.'s second-largest resort. It features tubing and snowboard parks, skating pond and snowmobile rentals and trails. Moreover, it's celebrating the Olympic Games with its own mini-version, complete with opening and closing ceremonies, Olympic-sport activities (you can try curling on the pond, for instance) and daily medal presentations to participants.

In Kelowna (kelownatorism.com), check-out the town's new outdoor rink in Stuart Park and visit Mission Hill Family Estate for a bottle of its award-winning ice-wine.


Biathlon

Silverstar

Vernon, B.C.

When considering biathlon, which combines cross-country skiing and marksmanship, you can't - as in bowling, say - simply show up at a facility and give it a whirl. The sport, with its military roots and use of weaponry, is something folks train to do over time. To get a taste of it, however, head to Silverstar resort (skisilverstar.com) in Vernon (vernontourism.com), where many of the world's elite teams are training this winter to prep for the Olympics. Hit the resort's 60 kilometres of cross-country trails, and once your heart rate is up, add a target-shooting component - for example, throwing snowballs at a spot on a tree.

Silverstar has snowboard and tube parks, an outdoor rink, snowshoe tours and sleigh rides. Be sure to take a winter walk through Vernon's outdoor art gallery, Heritage Murals of Downtown Vernon (vernonmurals.ca). It has 27 murals, some as long as 300 feet and 40 feet high.


Luge, Bobsleigh, Skeleton

Canada Olympic Park

Calgary

One of Canada's top female luge athletes, Regan Lauscher, says you don't need a track to experience the thrill of a slider - she got hooked as a kid tobogganing in her hometown of Red Deer. However, if you want to experience the real thing, head to Canada Olympic Park (winsportcanada.ca), the premier location during the 1988 Calgary Games. On Feb. 13 and 14, the facility is opening the luge and bobsleigh tracks to the public, offering slides to those over 16 years of age. To book, call guest services at 403-247-5452 (no experience is necessary but there are some physical requirements to meet). Public bobsleigh rides are available through the winter and are listed on the website.

Visitors to Calgary can expect the usual big-city amenities with a bonus: The Calgary Mid-Winter Blues Festival (calgarybluesfest.com) runs Feb. 22-27.


Curling

Caledonian Curling Club, Tartan Club

Regina

Canada's first Olympic Gold medal in women's curling was awarded to Regina's Sandra Schmirler and her team at the 1998 Nagano Olympics, just two years before her death at age 36 from cancer. Considered the provincial sport of Saskatchewan, visitors to Regina can book ice time at Schmirler's home club, the Caledonian Curling Club (callieclub.com; 306-525-8171) or Tartan Club (tartancurling.ca; 306-522-1649), which offers ice time, private lessons and glow-in-the-dark curling (think disco ball, black lights, glow strips on the rocks and music.

Honorable mention goes to Quebec's Fairmount Le Chateau Montebello (fairmont.com/montebello), which has a curling club right on its property. Guests are invited to book ice time when they make a reservation or attend weekend curling clinics. Special family packages that include curling are available during the games.


Hockey

Deerhurst Resort

Huntsville, Ont.

With ponds, lakes and indoor and outdoor rinks flooding our nation, it's hard to think of a place you can't play a game of hockey in Canada during the month of February. However, Deerhurst Resort (deerhurstresort.com), in Ontario's Muskoka region, has more ice surface than you can shake a hockey stick at: It's home to the world's largest pond-hockey tourney, the Canadian National Pond Hockey Tournament, which brought together almost 300 teams over two weekends last year. Weather permitting, the upscale resort maintains up to 24 rinks on Peninsula Lake, and has its own zamboni. This swank winter wonderland also offers horseback riding, kid's pony rides, cross-country skiing trails and equipment rental, snowshoeing and tubing. A free shuttle whisks guests to the ski hill next door.

This is celebrity-studded cottage country, so expect to see fur and brand-name outerwear.


Skating

Rideau Canal Skateway

Ottawa

At 7.8 km long, the world's largest skating rink snakes its way through the heart of the capital, with more than one million skaters a year gliding over is its icy skin.

During Winterlude, Ottawa's famous frosty festival, which will be held on the three weekends between Feb. 5 and 21, the canal and surrounding venues swell with hundreds of thousands of tourists and locals taking in various activities - be sure to check out the masterpieces at the snow and ice-sculpture competitions.

Folks who resist stuffing themselves with beaver tails, a delicious fried dough pastry shaped like the distinctive appendage of our national animal at kiosks scattered along the canal, take advantage of the prix-fixe menus and wine pairings at the many restaurants participating in Taste of Winterlude.


Speed skating

Iqaluit Speed-Skating Club

Iqaluit, Nunavut

It's cold on Baffin Island. And in the month of February, it's usually dark, too. Still, the people of Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut (nunavuttourism.com), are warm and sunny and the speed-skating club is one of the few such facilities in the country opening its doors to the public in February. Nunavut Speed Skating Club (nanuvutspeedskating.ca; 867-979-1226) is hosting a slew of events, including demonstrations, open practices where you can watch elite athletes train and free skating sessions for which you can rent speed skates or wear your own (hockey and figure skates are both acceptable).

The adventuresome family, looking for an epitome-of-winter destination steeped in Inuit culture, can partake in once-in-a-lifetime escapades such as dog sledding, cold-weather camping and hiking tours beneath the Northern Lights.


Snowboarding

Ski Morin Heights, Station de Ski Alta

Quebec's Laurentian heartland

The first Olympic gold medal for snowboarding ever awarded went to Canada's Ross Rebagliati, who despite his B.C. roots cites small resorts in Quebec as his favourite place to ride. Why? Back in the 1980s, when he learned to snowboard, snowboarders weren't allowed on chairlifts, so he and his pals had to climb local hills. Since then, of course, the sport has gone mainstream, but Rebagliati says that a lot of snowboard enthusiasts are using local hills or riding at small resorts.

Ski Morin Heights and Station de Ski Alta (laurentians.com) are two old-fashioned resorts nestled in the Laurentians, less than an hour from Montreal. After a day of boarding, Rebagliati suggests a trip to the city, on the grounds that Montreal best reflects the freedom-of-expression snowboarding culture. "It's the centre of urban snowboarding, too. So don't be surprised to see someone dropping off a rooftop or riding a stairway rail." Adding to the joy, Montreal High Lights Festival (montrealhighlightsfestival.com) runs Feb. 18-28.


Cross-country Skiing

Les Aventuriers

Charlo, N.B.

Charlo, a small town on New Brunswick's north shore, is home to Les Aventuriers Ski Club, where many elite nordic athletes train and compete.

Beautiful by day with its a frozen waterfall and its river views, the five-kilometre trail, the Serpentine, is lit up at night. Skiers can venture forth and explore other trails after dark, by moonlight or headlamp.

Nearby Heron's Nest Cottages (heronsnestcottages.com) offers cross-country skiing packages, alpine skiing at Sugarloaf Ski Resort and a Valentine's Day package that includes chocolates, wine, jetted tub, fireplace and king-size bed in your love cabin.


Alpine Skiing

Marble Mountain

Corner Brook, N.L.

If you ask the average Canuck to rattle off the best ski havens in the country, a resort in Newfoundland might not immediately make the list. But at Marble Mountain (skimarble.com), which boasts a puffy quilt of the white stuff, you can ski, cat ski (wherein skiers are taken to back-country terrain via a snow-cat machine) and kite ski (the skier is pulled by a kite, but mercifully his skis stay on the ground). Take advantage of Marble Villa at the foot of the mountain, with its ski-in/ski-out accommodations, or stay at the other hotels, motels and B&Bs nearby or in Corner Brook. The community of 20,000 celebrate the season with Corner Brook Winter Carnival (cornerbrookwintercarnival.squarespace.com), a 10-day festival beginning Feb. 19.

A few words from the carnival's theme song to get you going:

Winter is a world all of its own

That is why we say now don't stay home.

Source:nationalpost.com/

Vancouver 2010 Olympic Torch Relay Media Briefing Scheduled for Mississauga


The City of Mississauga and The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) will hold a media briefing on Thursday, December 17, 2009 related to the 2010 Olympic Torch Relay community celebrations in Mississauga.

The briefing is intended to help media prepare to cover the relay and includes an overview of the relay through Mississauga as well as route materials and community celebration plans.

It is critical for media planning to cover these events to participate in, or be aware of the briefing. Please note that this is a technical briefing for media, not a press conference - no spokespeople will be available on site for interviews.


What: A technical overview of the 2010 Olympic Torch Relay in Mississauga

When: Thursday, December 17, 2009
11 a.m.

Where: Auditorium
Mississauga Civic Centre, Ground Floor
300 City Centre Drive

Who: City of Mississauga media relations and event staff
VANOC media relations representatives


As Canada’s sixth largest city, Mississauga is home to 730,000 residents and 55,000 businesses, including 61 Fortune 500 companies with Canadian head offices or major divisional head offices. A diverse, progressive and award-winning municipality located on the shores of Lake Ontario in the heart of the Greater Toronto Area, Mississauga is one of Greater Toronto's Top 90 Employers for 2010. Enhancing its citizens’ quality of life by providing superior services, revitalizing its infrastructure and conserving the environment, Mississauga is committed to innovation, operational excellence and fiscal responsibility which is reflected in its motto: “Leading Today for Tomorrow.”

The 2010 Olympic Torch Relay will Travel through Mississauga
Join in the excitement! Saturday, December 19, 2009


Source:mississauga.ca/

Stephen Colbert to attend Vancouver 2010 Olympics


VANCOUVER — Stephen Colbert, who has been critical of Canada and the access U.S. athletes are being given to the Olympic speedskating oval, is going to the Vancouver Winter Games.


Colbert is going to the Vancouver Winter Games and has accepted the City of Richmond’s offer to be the Olympic Oval Ombudsman. He made the announcement on his satirical comedy show The Colbert Report Thursday night.


He said he has no idea what it means to “ombud,” but “as long as it requires no effort from me, I proudly accept.”


What the comedian didn’t do, however, was don the ombudsman’s official uniform — the baby-pink toque that Richmond had sent to him.

Further putting his speedskate where his mouth is, Colbert has vowed to try out and make the U.S. Olympic team and attend as part of the squad. In the weeks to come, Colbert has vowed to "try out" for various winter sports, having already tried skeleton, above. Next week, he'll be in a bobsled.

Of course, should he fail to make it, the satirical host has already become the official sponsor of the U.S. speedskating team, and he always has the Ombudsman position to fall back on.


Source:nationalpost.com/

Capitals star Alex Ovechkin gets 'movie star' treatment in Vancouver


VANCOUVER, B.C. — As Washington Capitals star sniper Alexander Ovechkin walks down the busy Vancouver streets, he can go nary a few steps without being recognized.

"Everybody just comes to me and says, 'What's up?' It's pretty cool. I feel like a movie star," Ovechkin, flashing his trademark toothless smile, told reporters Friday.

He's yet to appear in any Hollywood feature films, but Ovechkin might be the National Hockey League's leading man when it comes to awe-inspiring YouTube clips.

The 24-year-old two-time most valuable player has put together a highlight reel complete with tumbling goals and bone-crunching hits, earning him a legion of fans who are every bit as passionate off the ice as Ovechkin is on it.

Ovie's first visit to Vancouver in more than three years generated no shortage of buzz. More and more red Capitals jerseys suddenly started springing up around the city as Friday's tilt with the Canucks drew closer.

Thursday, hundreds of fans lined up at a downtown Vancouver store for an Ovechkin autograph signing.

Friday, dozens more waited outside General Motors Place after a Capitals skate, hoping Ovechkin would have time during the two-metre walk from the door to the team bus to greet the crowd.

Ovechkin said he always enjoys the added attention when his Capitals head north of the border, though he wouldn't mind if the media was a little more original with what it asked him.

"Sometimes it's kind of boring because it's the same questions," he said Thursday, laughing. "I can put (them) on a list and just give it to you guys. But it's your job and you have to do it so it's normal stuff."

Many of the questions posed to Ovechkin had to do with the upcoming Vancouver Olympics.

Ovechkin, who scored 56 goals last season one year after posting a career-high 65, will play for Russia at the 2010 Games.

But he's doing his best to focus on the task at hand and not the one in February.

"I'm looking forward to it but it's still two months away so I don't think about it a lot," he said.

"Of course you get excited. You can see (the) Olympic logo everywhere and you start to realize this is an Olympic city."

While NHL players will participate in the 2010 Winter Games, the NHL has yet to commit to the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, Russia.

Ovechkin has said he will play in the Sochi Games whether the NHL participates or not and he believes it's unfair for the league to treat the Canadian Olympics differently from those held in Russia.

"You represent your country," he said. "You represent your home, parents, family and friends. I just want to play there. It's the biggest tournament for national teams and everybody wants to be there, so me too."

Among Ovechkin's fans are his on-ice opponents.

Canucks goaltender Roberto Luongo, who will head to the Olympics himself as a member of Team Canada, raved about Ovechkin's mix of power, speed and skill.

"He's an exciting player to watch and he brings a lot to the game," Luongo said, quickly adding his appreciation for Ovechkin ends as soon as the two players hit the same ice.

Vancouver defenceman Willie Mitchell echoed Luongo's words Friday.

"(Ovechkin is) the most exciting player in the game, I think. I love his passion, I love how he plays, I love his celebrations. I like how he plays physical," Mitchell said.

When asked how his game has changed since he entered the league, and if he prefers to score goals or see his teammates light the lamp, Ovechkin, characteristically, answered with a grin.

"It's probably 55 per cent to score, 45 per cent to get assist."

Source:http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5jA5mOnqbJ2__sPo82VX0G2hX0HKw