Wednesday 5 February 2020

SUPERB TOKYO 2020 VOLLEYBALL VENUE OPENED TO THE PUBLIC FOR THE FIRST TIME

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.

SUPERB TOKYO 2020 VOLLEYBALL VENUE OPENED TO THE PUBLIC FOR THE FIRST TIME

ariake stadium tokyo 2020GETTY IMAGES
DATE
03 FEB 2020
TAGS
OLYMPIC NEWSTOKYO 2020ALL ABOUT TOKYO 2020
THE ARIAKE ARENA, THE TOKYO 2020 VOLLEYBALL VENUE, HAS BEEN OFFICIALLY INAUGURATED, FOLLOWING A CEREMONY THAT COMBINED SPORT, CULTURE AND ENTERTAINMENT. THE SPECTATORS GOT A GLIMPSE OF WHAT TOKYO 2020 WILL BE LIKE, WHILE THE JAPANESE CAPITAL LOOKS FORWARD TO HOSTING THE WORLD DURING THE GAMES WITH GROWING ANTICIPATION.

The Ariake Arena was constructed by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government and was completed in December 2019, highlighting that Tokyo’s preparations are well on track. The venue has an iconic design, with a concave roof that reduces the indoor space in order to minimise the need for air conditioning and lighting.

The Ariake Arena will host volleyball at the Olympic Games. Both the men’s and women’s tournaments will see 12 teams competing. There will be 16 days of competition – with the men’s final on Saturday 8 August and the women’s final on Sunday 9 August, the last day of the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020.
ariake stadium tokyo 2020GETTY IMAGES
The venue is also set to host the wheelchair basketball tournaments during the Paralympic Games.
The volleyball tournaments will have a nostalgic feel for volleyball fans, as the sport for both men and women featured at the Olympic Games for the first time at the Tokyo 1964 Games. Japan’s men’s team took the bronze medal and the women’s team surprised the world by winning gold.
ariake stadium tokyo 2020GETTY IMAGES
The Ariake Arena comprises a main arena and a “sub arena” and will have a seating capacity of 15,000 at Games time. After the Games, it will become a new hub of entertainment, sport and culture for the city of Tokyo. It will reopen in August 2021 and will then be operated by Tokyo Ariake Arena Inc., a new special-purpose company which has concluded Japan’s first ever concession agreement with the Tokyo Metropolitan Government.
ariake stadium tokyo 2GETTY IMAGES
The layout of the venue is based on the Tokyo 2020 Accessibility Guidelines, with the facility designed to be accessible to all, including the elderly, people with impairments, parents with young children and those with guide dogs. The venue also has solar panels and geothermal heat equipment to help reduce the facility’s carbon footprint.

Friday 13 September 2019

UNCCD COP 14

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.

Fourteenth Session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (COP14) was taken place on 2-13 September 2019 at the India Expo Centre & Mart, Greater Noida, Delhi NCR, India.

Government of India video portal https://webcast.gov.in/unccdcop14india/

Saturday 20 October 2018

Curtain comes down on a record-breaking Buenos Aires 2018

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.

IOC/OIS
Date
18 Oct 2018
Tags
Olympic News, Buenos Aires 2018, YOG
Buenos Aires 2018

Curtain comes down on a record-breaking Buenos Aires 2018

The Youth Olympic Games Buenos Aires 2018 came to an end on Thursday 18 October, with the Youth Olympic Village providing the setting for an intimate Closing Ceremony full of colour and spectacle.


Addressing the athletes assembled in front of the stage, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach said: “And now I have a sad duty to fulfil, because now I have to say a sentence which we may not like. But it’s time for me to say that I declare closed the third Youth Olympic Games, Buenos Aires 2018. Muchas gracias Argentina. Nos vemos en Senegal!”
And with that, the Youth Olympic flame was extinguished in the cauldron in the Youth Olympic Park, an image relayed to the athletes on a big screen.
IOC/OIS
The third Summer Youth Olympic Games proved to be a record breaker, as a grand total of 1,001,496 spectators attended the 12-day celebration of sport, from the Opening Ceremony at the Argentinian capital’s famous Obelisk through to the last of the events. It was a figure that exceeded the attendance at both Singapore 2010 and Nanjing 2014.
“It was a fantastic Youth Olympic Games,” said Bach, addressing the athletes. “For me the best thing was to follow you, to watch you in all your competitions. And I would like to say thank you, dear athletes, for your great performances, for your fair play, for your Olympic spirit. You were really the best.”
Taking his turn to speak, Local Organising Committee President Gerardo Werthein said: “I would like to congratulate all the athletes. Our volunteers did a fantastic job too.”
IOC/OIS
Flagbearers from the 206 national delegations paraded as part of the farewell celebrations, while the contribution of the more than 10,000 volunteers was also recognised. Gisella Bonomi and Richard Kierkegaard, two members of the 142-strong Argentina team, also read a pledge on behalf of all the athletes.
IOC/OIS
The highpoint of the ceremony came with the handover from Buenos Aires to Dakar, the capital of Senegal, which will host the next Summer Youth Olympic Games in 2022. The moment was symbolised by Horacio Rodríguez Larreta, the mayor of Buenos Aires, handing the Olympic flag to Bach, who in turn passed it on Soham El Wardini, the mayor of Dakar.
IOC/OIS
Fireworks filled the night sky above Buenos Aires as the ceremony came to an end, bringing a colourful and spectacular conclusion to what has been a truly colourful and spectacular Youth Olympic Games.
IOC/OIS

Buenos Aires 2018 karate party comes to an end

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.


Date
19 Oct 2018
Tags
Olympic News, YOG, Buenos Aires 2018
Buenos Aires 2018

Buenos Aires 2018 karate party comes to an end

The inaugural Olympic karate competition came to a conclusion on Thursday 18 October, the final day of the Youth Olympic Games Buenos Aires 2018.



Gold medals were awarded in the women’s kumite +59kg, men’s kumite -68kg and men’s kumite +68kg categories. Norway’s Annika Saelid, Belgium’s Quentin Mahauden, and Islamic Republic of Iran’s Navid Mohammadi were the respective gold medallists at the Youth Olympic Park’s Europe Pavilion, which once again drew large crowds for a second intense day of karate action.
Saelid won her gold at the expense of Japan’s Sakura Sawashima, the Norwegian compiling a 3-0 victory in a competition in which the bronzes went to Great Britain’s Lauren Salisbury and Islamic Republic of Iran’s Negin Altooni.
“It’s completely different at the Youth Olympic Games,” said Salisbury when asked for her view on competing in the Olympic spotlight. “Everything is focused on one mat and you don’t normally get that, even in a world or European championships. All eyes are on one match.”
IOC
Looking ahead to the possibility of competing on home soil in two years’ time, Sawashima said:  “I am very happy Tokyo is hosting karate at the Olympics. I don’t know if I’m going to be able to participate in the Olympics, but I’m going to try. At the same time I feel pressure because it’s quite a challenge, but I have always enjoyed this sport.”
Belgium’s Mahauden beat Morocco’s Yassine Sekouri by a narrow 1-0 margin to secure the men’s -68kg gold. Kazakhstan’s Abilmansur Batyrgali and Italy’s Rosario Ruggiero shared the bronzes.
Highlighting the camaraderie among the athletes, the Belgian said: “We forget the friendships for two minutes, but afterwards it is a different game.”
Mohammadi claimed the sixth and final karate gold of Buenos Aires 2018 courtesy of an emphatic 5-0 defeat of Morocco’s Nabil Ech-Chaabi in the men’s +68kg final, with Ireland’s Sean McCarthy Crean and Turkey’s Enes Bulut sharing the last place on the podium.

Building a Better Experience for Fans of Future Olympic and Paralympic Games thanks to Visa’s innovations

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.

Visa
Date
19 Oct 2018
Tags
Olympic News, IOC News, Sponsors
IOC News

Building a Better Experience for Fans of Future Olympic and Paralympic Games thanks to Visa’s innovations

With the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 less than two years out and following its renewal with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) through 2032, Worldwide TOP Partner Visa is committed to using its global network of Innovation Centres to bring improved and integrated payments for Olympic and Paralympic Games fans on-site and at home.



Using its global network of 11 Innovation Centres – from Asia to Europe and the United States – Visa is tapping into its transit, retail and conversational commerce expertise to propose forward-looking payment experiences for Olympic Games fans. This includes remote, mobile ticket purchasing, in-seat ordering and new ways to pay in retail such as making a purchase right from your television. Fans can look forward to a future with a faster and enhanced Olympic experience whether watching in-person or from home. “There has been no better payment technology partner historically and there is no better payment technology partner for the future we are building together,” said IOC President Thomas Bach. “As we introduce innovations that help improve fan experiences both on-site and at home, we know that no matter where in the world the Olympic Games take us, Visa is the right partner to help us deliver them.”
For more than 30 years, Visa has been the exclusive payment partner of the Olympic Games. The company has continually used that global stage to introduce and implement new payment technologies. Moving forward under the renewed partnership, together Visa and the IOC will tap into the network of resident designers and developers at Visa’s Innovation Centres around the world to continue this important innovation.
Visa
How will the fans of the future consume the Games?
This vision was brought to life at a media event in Beijing, where Visa shared the blueprints for three Olympic Games-inspired payment moments. The innovative moments were conceived and designed in Visa’s Innovation Centres. They include dynamic new imaginings of remote digital ticket purchase, biometric authentication for stadium entry, smarter and streamlined retail shopping, and in-home couch commerce using augmented reality.
“Our Global Innovation Centres are immersed in solving every day consumer challenges and discovering improved commerce experiences, that can be shared and scaled globally,” said Ryan McInerney, President of Visa. “Planning for the upcoming Olympic Games helps Visa develop industry-leading payments solutions that will redefine fan experiences and leave a legacy of improved digital commerce everywhere.”
Visa’s Everywhere Initiative in Japan
This event, hosted in Beijing, follows a challenge Visa organised, calling on start-ups to bring cutting-edge payment innovations to the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, and in doing so reinforcing the Japanese government’s goal to double the cashless payment ratio to 40 per cent by 2025. Of more than 80 submissions, nine finalists were selected to face three challenges, and three awards were delivered for the best ideas.
Find out more about Visa’s Everywhere Initiative in Japan:
https://www.visa.co.jp/visa-everywhere/everywhere-initiative/initiative.html
Visa and the Olympic Games
Visa International has been a Worldwide Olympic Partner since 1986, when the company joined the TOP Programme as a charter member. Visa is the world's leading payment brand, generating more than USD three trillion in annual card sales volume. Visa has unsurpassed acceptance in more than 150 countries, and plays a pivotal role in developing innovative payment products and technologies to benefit its 21,000 member financial institutions and their cardholders.
Visa is a leader in internet-based payments, and is pioneering the creation of u-commerce, or universal commerce – the ability to conduct commerce anywhere, anytime, and any way.
www.corporate.visa.com
To learn more about Visa and its Olympic Games sponsorship, visit https://usa.visa.com/about-visa/sponsorships-promotions/olympics-partnership.html.

The stars of Buenos Aires 2018

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.
News
IOC/OIS
Date
19 Oct 2018
Tags
Olympic News, Buenos Aires 2018, YOG
Buenos Aires 2018

The stars of Buenos Aires 2018

They have won medal after medal. They have led the way in new disciplines, some of which will appear on the Olympic programme at Tokyo 2020. And they have thrilled the large crowds that have filled every arena. They are the stars of the third Summer Youth Olympic Games, staged for the first time and with great success in South America.

 

The most prominent heroes of the latest edition of the Summer Youth Olympic Games, held in the Argentinian capital, were the local fans. They packed the stands at every venue, created a wonderful atmosphere and deafening noise, and were hailed by all the young athletes, who were pleasantly amazed to receive their wholehearted support, regardless of which part of the world they hailed from. The success of South America’s first YOG belongs to them, and also to the army of volunteers who ensured the competitions all ran smoothly.
In the sporting arena itself, the young athletes showed that they have rich promise and bright futures ahead of them when they embark on their careers at the very highest level, which some of them have already reached. Shining bright among them was Japan’s Takeru Kitazono, who lit up the men’s artistic gymnastic competitions and won no fewer than five gold medals to announce himself as the heir to the throne of Kohei Uchimura, regarded as one of the greatest gymnasts of all time. “I am definitely planning to be at Tokyo 2020 and to achieve the same level of performance. I am going to step up my training with that goal in mind,” said the Japanese phenomenon, who celebrates his 16th birthday on 21 October.
IOC / OIS
Russia’s leading swimmers also showed an appetite for gold medals. Six each went to Kliment Kolesnikov, who won every individual men’s backstroke event, and team-mate Andrei Minakov, who was in a class of his own in the butterfly races and also won the 100m freestyle. The duo also won all the men’s and mixed relay events with their Russian team-mates, all of them, that is, except the mixed 4x100m medley relay, in which they finished second to China.
IOC/OIS

Also turning in a series of dominant performances was the Chinese diver Shan Lin, who claimed every gold available to her: the women’s 3m springboard, the women’s 10m platform and the mixed international team competition with Colombia’s Daniel Restrepo. And what of Italian equestrian athlete Giacomo Casadei, who got the most out of his mount Darna Z, allocated to him in the pre-competition draw? He did not incur a single fault in contesting two rounds and a jump-off as Europe 1 collected silver in the jumping international team competition and in contesting another two rounds and a jump-off in winning jumping individual gold.

IOC / OIS

Who could forget the extraordinary goalscoring feats of Portuguese futsal sensation Ana Sofia Gonçalves, better known as Fifó? She scored 21 goals in all in the women’s competition, including all four of her side’s goals as they beat Japan in the final. Egypt’s young modern pentathletes were also on top of their game: Salma Abdelmaksoud and Ahmed Elgendy respectively won the women’s and men’s individual titles, with Elgendy then joining forces with China’s Yewen Gu to land the mixed international team relay gold.
The heroes of Buenos Aires 2018 also include the Argentinian athletes who brought the home fans to their feet by winning gold. Among them were the men’s rugby sevens and basketball 3x3 teams and the women's hockey5s and beach handball; Maria Sol Ordas, who won the host nation’s first gold medal of Buenos Aires 2018 in the women’s single sculls (rowing); and the cape-wearing superhero Fausto Ruesga, who defied gravity and gave free rein to his imagination in taking the men’s dunk contest honours.

IOC / OIS

The events of the future
The last group of heroes of the first gender-equal YOG, which saw the same number of male and female athletes take part and a very large number of mixed competitions, are the athletes who led the way for the sports and disciplines that will make their first appearance at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 (among them basketball 3x3, karate, sport climbing and BMX freestyle), and the disciplines of the future, which enjoyed such spectacular success at their Buenos Aires testing ground.
Breaking, the urban, hip hop offshoot of dance sports, set pulses racing in the Argentinian capital over four enthralling days of competition, which saw B-Girl Ram of Japan win the women’s event as well as the mixed event and Russia’s B-Boy Bumblebee the men’s.

Getty Images

The future also looks bright for futsal, kiteboarding, beach handball, acrobatic gymnastics, roller speed skating, and hockey5s. In terms of events, it also promises much for the exciting, all new gymnastics multidiscipline team and badminton relay team competitions.
The Buenos Aires 2018 programme brought glory to a large number of mixed teams, many of them made up of athletes from different countries. They all had fun. They all made friends. They all enjoyed this new way of winning medals. And they all gave a glimpse of the future; while mixed-NOC events are a unique feature of the YOG, mixed-gender events are now set to become an integral part of the Summer and Winter Olympic Games programmes.

Tuesday 25 September 2018

IOC welcomes German athletes to discuss solidarity funding model for Olympic Games

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu. A Creative Commons license.
News
IOC/Greg Martin
Date
19 Sep 2018
Tags
Olympic News, IOC News
IOC News

IOC welcomes German athletes to discuss solidarity funding model for Olympic Games

At the invitation of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), German athlete representatives were in Lausanne today to discuss the IOC’s solidarity model for funding the Olympic Games and the athletes. Taking part were the elected representative and Chair of the IOC Athletes’ Commission, Kirsty Coventry; the IOC Director General, Christophe De Kepper; IOC Directors Kit McConnell and Lana Haddad; and the IOC President, Thomas Bach. From the German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB), President Alfons Hörmann and CEO Veronika Rücker attended.

The main topics discussed were as follows:
1. The IOC solidarity model was discussed at length: Solidarity is a core principle of the Olympic Games, to support all athletes from all countries, big or small, and from all sports, so as to give everyone an equal opportunity. It was highlighted that the IOC generates and distributes 90 per cent of its revenue via this solidarity model to support the staging of the Olympic Games, including the Organising Committees of the Olympic Games (OCOGs); the Olympic Movement stakeholders (206 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) and 40 International Federations (IFs)); sports development; promotion of the Olympic Movement; engagement with young people; and the protection of clean athletes. This solidarity model makes universal participation at the Olympic Games possible, creating more equality among participating NOCs, and more equality for participating athletes and their sports.
It was explained that the IOC’s solidarity model is not profit-oriented but a values-based model. If it were a profit-oriented model, it would for instance not be possible to have all the current Olympic sports as part of the Olympic programme. The same holds true for the athletes’ participation. If it were profit-oriented, the IOC could not support all the 206 NOCs and their athletes, and not all sports.
With regard to the support the IOC gives to athletes, it was explained that athletes’ support takes very different forms in all NOCs. There is no one-size-fits-all approach. For this reason, in addition to the support provided directly by the IOC through various programmes, the IOC also provides funding to the NOCs, leaving it to each individual NOC to customise its support to athletes according to local needs. Each individual NOC decides how to make the best use of the IOC funding. This support takes different forms in different NOCs, ranging from prize money to funding athletes in the time between Olympic Games, investing in sports infrastructure, coaching programmes and many more.
The IOC also contributes substantially to the fight against doping.  Fifty per cent of the costs of WADA are covered by the Olympic Movement.  And it is estimated that the sports movement contributes close to 300 million dollars annually towards the global anti-doping effort.
With regard to support provided to the IFs, it was pointed out that the IOC contribution helps the IFs to develop their respective sports and keep them functioning and relevant in the time between the Olympic Games. Support for the OCOGs is what makes the Games possible at all, and gives athletes the best possible conditions and a global stage on which to perform. Athletes and officials also benefit from IOC support through free travel, accommodation, medical services and more during the Games.
At the end of the day, the IOC can spend this money – the 90 per cent of its revenues which goes to supporting sport and the athletes – only once.  It is up to each NOC and IF, in consultation with their athlete commissions, to decide how best to support the athletes, in accordance with the specific needs of the respective country and respective sport.
Ultimately, the distribution of this IOC funding must be left to each NOC to use in different ways. For example, some pay prize money, others do not. In Germany, the DOSB ensures that Team Deutschland and its athletes have the best conditions in preparation for and during the Olympic Games. Every athlete benefits from such efforts and the strength of the Team Deutschland brand. The German House as the home of Team Deutschland, as well as many other events such as the welcome ceremony, are funded by the DOSB, too. The financial resources are also used to fund the High Performance Department of the DOSB, which works to provide the best framework for elite sport in Germany in cooperation with the National Federations, 52 weeks a year.
2. Athlete representation in the Olympic Movement: Olympic athletes are in the unique position of electing their own representatives and having an elected representative on the 15-member IOC Executive Board. The Chair of the IOC Athletes’ Commission, Kirsty Coventry, announced that an Athlete Rights and Responsibilities Declaration is currently under preparation.
The IOC is in regular contact with athletes’ representatives from around the world and has an ongoing dialogue. One of the regular calls with elected athlete representatives took place last week. Many of the athletes’ representatives were also present at a specially organised meeting in the Athletes’ Village at the Olympic Winter Games in PyeongChang to discuss this issue, although unfortunately the German athlete representatives did not attend. The IOC President regularly meets athletes and their representatives - this month at the Asian Games and also at the FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships and the FISA World Rowing Championships in Bulgaria.
After the meeting, IOC Athletes’ Commission (AC) Chair Kirsty Coventry commented:
“This was a valuable meeting, and everyone agreed on the fundamental need to support athletes.  In my position of Chair of the IOC AC it is important for me to continue to have these constructive discussions and hear the views of athletes globally. There will always be differing opinions on the best way to support athletes, depending on the needs of that country. Funding should continue to go to the athletes in the most effective manner possible.  A finance structure should ensure fairness and universality, particularly to help the majority of athletes from smaller and less well funded National Olympic Committees.  This is why the IOC uses Olympic Solidarity to distribute funds in a fair manner to athletes, whatever part of the world they are from and whatever the sport they practise.”