More stories

  • in

    Who is Daley Thompson, what events did he compete in and how many world records does he hold?

    DALEY THOMPSON is a former British decathlete who broke the world record four times.Aged 60, the London-born superstar overcame the brutal murder of his father – shot dead when he was 12 – to become arguably our greatest athlete of all time.
    Daley Thompson won the first of his Olympic gold medals in 1980Credit: PA:Press Association
    In later life he was an ambassador for the London 2012 Olympics and helped teach children to play football in war-torn Moldova.
    To some he is a warm, endearing iconic hero feted as a majestic sporting envoy.
    Others, like The Sun’s Colin Hart in 1992, view him as “overpowering, arrogant and rude” because of his robust relationship with the media and his fans.
    It’s fair to say this won’t be the Daley we see during his European Championships stint with the BBC. And no one can deny Thompson’s achievement on the track…
    The king of the ten-event decathlon is still renowned as Britain’s greatest ever athleteCredit: Getty – Contributor
    In 1996 Thompson launched the Royal Mail’s new set of first class stampsCredit: PA:Press Association

    For between 1978 and 1986 he won three Commonwealth and two European golds. And when he bagged gold at the 1983 World Championships he held all major decathlon titles.How many events make up the decathlon?
    Ten. Day 1 – 100-metre dash, long jump, shot put, high jump and 400m.
    Day 2 – 110-metre hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin and 1,500m.
    Thompson was often came across as a controversial figure off the trackCredit: AP:Associated Press
    But the superstar often showed he has a heart of goldCredit: Times Newspapers Ltd
    So, how man Olympic golds did Thompson win?
    Daley was the golden boy of the 1980 Games in Moscow and again in Los Angeles four years later.
    His two victories in the Olympic decathlon are a feat shared only with the Americans Bob Mathias and Ashton Eaton. Thompson’s 1984 performance is still the UK record
    Tell me about all those world records?
    In 1980 Thompson set a world decathlon record of 8,648 points at Gotzis in Austria in May and followed up with a comfortable win at the Moscow Olympics.
    Daley’s greatest rival was West German Jurgen HingsenCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    But it was Thompson who came out on top at the main eventsCredit: Getty – Contributor
    Back at Gotzis in 1982 he raised the world record to 8,730 points and then in September, at the European Championships in Athens, took the record up to 8,774 points.
    By 1984 West German Jurgen Hingsen had succeeded Thompson as the world record holder but at the Los Angeles Olympics Daley took the lead in the first event and was never headed.
    But by easing off in the 1,500 metres it seemed he had missed tying the world record by just one point. When the photo-finish pictures were examined it was found that Thompson should have been credited with one more point in the 110m hurdles so he had, in fact, equalled Hingsen’s record.
    After retiring from athletics Thomson took up motor racingCredit: PA:Press Association
    Then when the new scoring tables were introduced, Thompson became the sole record holder once more with a recalculated score of 8,847 points – a world record that stood until 1992 when it was surpassed by the American athlete Dan O’Brien with a score of 8,891.Who was his greatest rival?
    Without doubt Hingsen, who drove Thompson on to even greater achievements during their ding-dong battles.
    But Thompson had the upper hand in the major events, remaining undefeated in all competitions between 1979 and 1987.
    In 2000 he carried the Olympic torch in the build up to the opening ceremony in SydneyCredit: PA:Press Association
    These days Daley continues to work as a fitness trainer, motivational coach and broadcasterCredit: Brad Wakefield – The Sun
    Was he involved in any great controversy?
    Yes. In 1984 at Los Angeles Thompson had just won his second Olympic decathlon gold medal and wore a T-shirt that read “is the world’s 2nd greatest athlete gay?”
    US sprinter Carl Lewis had been dealing with rumours of homosexuality and the shirt was regarded as being cruelly directed at him.
    But Thompson claimed: “The second athlete could be anybody, Carl Lewis, anybody.”
    Diamond League athletics chiefs blunder after setting steeplechase barrier too high causing carnage
    How was Daley recognised away from track and field?
    He was voted BBC Sports Personality of the Year award in 1982, appointed an MBE in the 1983 New Year Honours and promoted to a CBE in 2000.
    He was well known for his appearances in commercials for the drink Lucozade in the 1980s.
    What happened after athletics?
    Thompson was forced to retire in 1992 with persistent hamstring trouble. In the 1990s he played pro football for Mansfield Town and Stevenage FC and Ilkeston FC. He also worked as fitness coach for Wimbledon and Luton Town.

    He also took part in motorsport, entering the Ford Credit Fiesta Challenge Championship in 1994.
    What has he been doing since?
    Mainly worked as a fitness trainer an motivational speaker, along with radio work with talkSPORT. More

  • in

    Who is Jessica Ennis-Hill? Olympic heptathlon gold medallist – all you need to know

    DAME JESSICA ENNIS-HILL is one of the most decorated British sportswomen in history, having conquered the world as a heptathlete.As a professional, she has won gold medals in the Olympics, the World Championships, the World Indoor Championships and the European Championships.
    Jessica Ennis-Hill proudly showing off her gold medal she won at the 2012 Olympic GamesCredit: Getty Images
    However after last year’s Olympics in Rio, she retired from competing, leaving behind a glittering career that brought her vast amounts of success.
    Here’s everything you need to know about the 31-year-old…How old is Jessica Ennis-Hill? What’s her background?
    The superstar was born on January 28, 1986 in Sheffield, where she is one of two daughters to father from Jamaica, and a mother from England.
    Both her parents had an interest in athletics – her dad was a keen sprinter, whilst her mum preferred the high jump – and they introduced her to the sport as a child taking her to the Don Valley Stadium to watch events.
    She ended up joining the City of Sheffield and Dearne Athletic Club aged 11 where she excelled, and attended King Ecgbert School, before graduating from the University of Sheffield with a 2:2 in psychology.
    The 31-year-old has enjoyed a glittering career when she won gold medals in all of the major competitionsCredit: PA:Press Association
    What was Jessica Ennis-Hill’s career record?
    In junior competitions, Jessica won two silver medals in the 2004 Commonwealth Youth Games, and won in the heptathlon at the 2005 European Athletics Junior Championships.
    Her professional career took off when she took home a bronze in the Commonwealth Games in heptathlon in 2006 at Melbourne.
    In 2009 she won the gold medal in World Championships, a whopping 238 points ahead of Jennifer Oeser in second, and in 2010 took won the gold in the World Indoor Championships and the European Championships.
    In 2011 she won a silver medal in the World Championships, although this has now been upgraded to a gold medal after Tatyana Chernova was proved of being a drugs cheat. She also won at the World Championships in 2015.
    After winning a silver medal at the 2012 World Indoor Championships Jessica cemented herself in Great British folklore after picking home the gold medal at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.
    However, she couldn’t defend her title in Rio last year as she had to settle for a silver.
    The Sheffield star holding aloft her silver medal she won in the heptathlon at the 2016 Olympic GamesCredit: PA:Press Association
    When did Jess get married? How many children do they have?
    In 2013, Jessica Ennis married Andy Hill in Derbyshire, and announced she would be known as Jessica Ennis-Hill.
    She was forced to withdraw from participation in the 2014 Commonwealth Games as she was pregnant with her first child – her son Reggie was born in July 2014.
    On March 16 Jess announced she’s pregnant again on Instagram with a photograph of Reggie holding a book entitled “I’m Going to be a Big Brother!”.
    She wrote: “Someone’s going to be a big brother 😊 Another little Ennis-Hill on the way. So happy.”

    She gave birth to to her daughter Olivia on September 23, 2017.What does DBE mean?
    In 2017, Ennis-Hill was appointed as Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2017 New Year Honours list.
    The 31-year-old was awarded the second highest class for her services to athletics in which she has achieved so much success. More

  • in

    Brit Paralympian Olivia Breen left ‘speechless’ after being told her sprint briefs ‘too short and inappropriate’

    PARALYMPIAN Olivia Breen was left ‘speechless’ after being told her sprint briefs were ‘too short and inappropriate’.The Welsh star, 24, was competing in a long jump event at the English Championships in Bedford at the weekend when a volunteer raised concerns about her Adidas attire.
    Olivia Breen was left ‘speechless’ after being told her sprint briefs were ‘too short and inappropriate’Credit: Rex
    The comment was made by a volunteer during the English ChampionshipsCredit: Rex
    The 24-year-old will represent Team GB at the Tokyo Paralympics beginning on August 24.
    Breen, from Guildford, won bronze at the 2012 Paralympic Games in London for the 4x100m Relay T35-T38.
    She failed to medal four years later in Rio, but brilliantly bounced back to win gold in the long jump title at the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast.
    Breen posted on Twitter: “I am always grateful for the incredible volunteers who officiate at athletics events.
    “They do an amazing job and make it possible for us to compete.
    “However, tonight I feel disappointed because just as I finished my long jump competition one of the female officials felt it necessary to inform me that my sprint briefs were too short and inappropriate. I was left speechless.
    “I have been wearing the same sprint style briefs for many years and they are specifically designed for competing in.
    “I will hopefully be wearing them in Tokyo. It made me question whether a male competitor would be similarly criticised.
    “I hope no other female athletes had similar issues.
    “I recognise that there needs to be regulations and guidelines in relation to competition kit but women should not be made to feel self-conscious about what they are wearing when competing but should feel comfortable and at ease.”
    Breen, who has cerebral palsy, revealed to The Guardian that she intends on making an official complaint to UK Athletics.

    British shot putter Amelia Strickler backed up Breen’s comments and believes officials who make ‘unnecessary’ comments should not officiate.
    Strickler, 27, said: “Female athletes shouldn’t be subjected to such criticism when there is already so much pressure on women to be ‘perfect’.
    “We are there to compete. You don’t like the outfits? Don’t officiate. We don’t need officials adding unnecessary stress in those moments.”
    Ugandan weightlifter Julius Ssekitoleko goes missing from Tokyo 2020 training camp and ‘leaves behind just a note’ More

  • in

    Inside Tokyo’s Covid-19 secure Olympic and Paralympic village – where athletes are forced to sleep in anti-sex beds

    TOKYO is a city full of famous buildings and iconic architecture.And its Olympic and Paralympic Village comes across as a homely, if slightly sterile, home for athletes that will descend upon it next month.
    Olympians will sleep in eco-friendly, anti-sex single bedsCredit: Getty
    Chairs will bring some colour to athletes’ roomsCredit: Getty
    Stars will be instructed to eat alone in the dining areaCredit: Getty
    Athletes will sleep in single beds, with decoration kept to a minimum within the Covid-19 secure bubble.
    The Tokyo 2020 pads possess a clean feel, while tenants will be ordered to eat alone.
    Rio’s 2016 Olympics was a Tinder hotspot, with matches having rocketed up 129 per cent in the area during the games.
    Sex is set to be BANNED at this summer’s edition – but precautions have been taken anyway.
    Organisers are distributing a staggering 160,000 condoms for the event, to encourage romping athletes to be safe.
    The official line is that the mass distribution is to ‘raise awareness’.
    And rule-breaking rompers could be left red-faced if they attempt to have threesomes, as the beds will likely COLLAPSE.
    Tokyo organisers are committed to being as eco-friendly as possible, with each bed having been built from recycled cardboard.
    Athletes will take questions in a state of the art media centreCredit: Getty
    Athletes will walk these streets between July 23 and August 8Credit: Alamy
    Press were given a tour of the village this morningCredit: Getty
    FREE BETS: GET OVER £2,000 IN NEW CUSTOMER DEALS

    A spokesperson for Airweave, who made the beds, stated: “We’ve conducted experiments, like dropping weights on top of the beds.
    “As long as they stick to just two people in the bed, they should be strong enough to support the load.”
    In the main dining hall, where athletes will be instructed to eat alone, hand sanitising stations are a regular feature.
    Pink and orange signs add some colour to the otherwise dull features.
    And multi-coloured chairs aim for the same effect.
    Competitors will be tested by anti-doping officials hereCredit: Getty
    Beds will be fully recyclableCredit: EPA
    The world’s greatest athletes will descend upon TokyoCredit: Getty

    Snowboard king Shaun White talks about sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll in Olympic village More

  • in

    Who is USA sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson and what substance did she test positive for?

    THERE are few greater thrills in sport than watching an Olympic sprinter run on the biggest stage.And that was the dream for US 100 metres star Sha’Carri Richardson, who was tipped by many for a medal at this summer’s Olympics in Tokyo.
    Richardson had been expected to take the Olympics by storm this summerCredit: Reuters
    Who is Sha’Carri Richardson?
    Born in Dallas, Texas in 2000, Richardson is one of Team USA’s rising stars.
    An exciting sprinter, she competes in the 100m and 200m and rose to fame after a stunning run for Louisiana State University in 2019.
    Sha’Carri ran a 10.75sec race for the 100m, breaking the NCAA record and in turn becoming one of the fastest teenagers of all time.
    Fast forward to 2021 and she was breaking records again, recording a personal best 10.72sec in the run-up to the Olympics in Tokyo.
    As a result of that run, she is now the fourth-fastest American woman in history.
    But the US star will not be competing in TokyoCredit: Getty
    Richardson has always been a talented sprinter and won the 100m title at the Junior Olympics in 2016.
    She is known for her colourful hair styles and revealed after qualifying for the Olympics that her girlfriend picked the colour.
    She told USA Today: “My girlfriend actually picked my [hair] colour.
    “She said it like spoke to her, the fact that it was just so loud and vibrant, and that’s who I am.”
    Richardson’s stunning athleticism has seen fans compare her to the legendary Florence “Flo Jo” Griffith Joyner.
    Flo-Jo won gold medals in the 100m, 200m, and relay race at the 1988 Seoul Olympics in South Korea.

    What did she test positive for?
    Unfortunately, Richardson will not be competing this summer at the Olympics.
    She was disqualified last month from participating in individual Olympic events after testing positive for THC, the chemical found in marijuana.
    Cannabis was banned by WADA as of January 1 this year and could carry a ban of up to four years.
    Sha’Carri claims that she only smoked weed to cope with the pain of finding out that her biological mother had died. 
    Richardson had qualified for the Olympics earlier this year but that run has been scrubbed from the record booksCredit: Reuters
    Her cousin Chasity Lanell told the US Sun: “I really feel [the ban] is unfair.
    “Sha’Carri really does inspire a lot of people and everybody makes mistakes. 
    “She is going through a very hard time because of the loss of her mother. 
    “It’s unfair to take something from someone who started from the bottom and made their way up to the top, from nothing. 
    “People are judging her from the outside but they don’t really know what she’s going through on the inside. 
    “It was just a little marijuana, it is a legal substance in the state where she took it.” More

  • in

    Australian basketball star Elizabeth Cambage pulls out of Tokyo Olympics over ‘terrifying’ coronavirus bubble in Japan

    AUSTRALIAN basketball star Elizabeth Cambage has pulled out of the Tokyo Olympics over fears of living in a Covid-19 bubble.Several athletes have already withdrawn from the Games due to Covid concerns, with British tennis player Dan Evans testing positive for the virus.
    Elizabeth Cambage, 29, has pulled out of the Olympics due to mental health concernsCredit: Getty
    Tokyo’s 68,000-seater stadium, built for the Olympics, will be empty this summerCredit: EPA
    All athletes competing in the delayed Games will be forced to live in a bio-secure bubble in Tokyo until their participation ends.
    Social contact will be kept to a minimum during that time, with stars even being forced to eat alone.
    There are fears the strict environment will have a detrimental effect on the mental wellbeing of the athletes, with Cambage being the first to pull out.
    The 29-year-old said: “Anyone that knows me knows one of my biggest dreams is winning an Olympic gold medal with the Opals.
    “Every athlete competing in the Olympic games should be at their mental and physical peak, and at the moment, I’m a long way from where I want and need to be.
    “It’s no secret that in the past I’ve struggled with my mental health and recently I’ve been worried about heading into a ‘bubble’ Olympics.
    “No family. No friends. No fans. No support system outside of my team.
    “It’s honestly terrifying for me. The past month I have been having panic attacks, not sleeping and not eating.
    “Relying on daily medication to control my anxiety is not the place I want to be right now. Especially walking into competition on the world’s biggest sporting stage.
    “I know myself, and I know I can’t be the Liz everyone deserves to see compete for the Opals. Not right now at least.
    “I need to take care of myself mentally and physically.
    “It breaks my heart to announce I’m withdrawing from the Olympics, but I think it’s best for the Opals and myself.
    “I wish them nothing but the best of luck in Tokyo and I hop they go forth and win a gold medal.”
    The Olympics are due to begin on July 23 – despite several athletes pulling out of the Games due to Covid-related problems.

    JOIN SUN VEGAS: GET A FREE £10 BONUS WITH 100s OF GAMES TO PLAY AND NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED (Ts&Cs apply)

    Tennis stars Evans, Alex de Minaur and Johanna Konta have all been forced to withdraw from the event due to a positive Covid test.
    And tennis icon Serena Williams has decided against competing, although she hasn’t clarified whether the pandemic is a reason for her decision.
    Covid cases in Tokyo have hit a six-month high and there are fears the Olympics could become a super spreader event.
    Fans will not be in attendance at the Games but thousands of people are still expected to flood in and out of Japan in the coming weeks.
    The lack of spectators has led to tennis star Nick Kyrgios withdrawing, claiming ‘it doesn’t sit right with me’ to play with no fans.
    The Olympic village in Tokyo is deserted ahead of the GamesCredit: AP
    British tennis star Dan Evans will miss the Olympics after contracting Covid-19Credit: Getty
    Man Utd hero Gary Neville pulls hamstring during race with Team GB’s Tokyo 2020 Olympics star Dina Asher-Smith More

  • in

    Ex-long jump star Susen Tiedtke spills sex secrets of Olympic village with noisy romps keeping athletes up all night

    OLYMPIC stars ‘release their energy’ in crazy athletes’ village parties after the Games, a former long-jumper has revealed.Tokyo 2020 organisers have officially banned athletes from having sex at this summer’s showpiece due to the threat of coronavirus.
    Competitors are housed in a huge complex for this summer’s OlympicsCredit: AP
    But ex-athlete Susen Tiedtke claims that officials are powerless to stop the alcohol-fuelled romps that are a fixture of every Games.
    The German, 52, told Bild: “[The ban] is a big laughing stock for me, it doesn’t work at all.
    “Sex is always an issue in the village.
    “The athletes are at their physical peak at the Olympics. When the competition is over, they want to release their energy.
    “There is one party after another, then alcohol comes into play. It happens that people have sex and there are enough people who strive for that.”
    Tiedtke competed in the 1992 and 2000 Olympics, meeting Joe Greene, her former husband of over four years and a fellow long-jumper, during the Barcelona Games.
    But any horseplay was firmly off the agenda until after her competition had finished.
    She continued: “Our competitions were towards the end of the games.
    “Nothing would go on before, that was tough. The coaches said, ‘When you have sex, the body first has to recharge itself energetically. So you shouldn’t do that’.
    “After the competition, however, roommates were considerate if you needed the room for yourself…”
    PLENTY OF CONDOMS
    Team GB star Jade Jones has previously described how competitors waste no time in starting the party after their tournament is over.
    Tokyo chiefs have organised 160,000 condoms to be made available at the athletes’ village to ‘raise awareness’ of safe sex.
    The manufacturers of the socially-distanced beds have even advised that each can only hold the weight of two people – in what served as a stark warning against threesomes.
    But athletes will be hoping that their colleagues and rivals keep noise to a minimum.
    Tiedtke admitted: “You always heard the ‘party’ of the others, sometimes you could hardly sleep.
    “Sex was always a huge topic, especially before the Games.
    JOIN SUN VEGAS: GET A FREE £10 BONUS WITH 100s OF GAMES TO PLAY AND NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED (Ts&Cs apply)

    “My coach was my father and he was very strict.
    “If a boy wanted to go out with me, he’d have to do 100 pushups first.
    “I had to meet secretly, otherwise I would never have met anyone. The whole village knew the story.”
    Rock superstar Bruce Springsteen’s daughter Jessica selected for US equestrian team at Tokyo Olympics More

  • in

    How many false starts are sprinters allowed in athletics? 100m, 200m, 400m, hurdles and relay rules explained

    SPRINTERS are allowed ZERO false starts at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, and if found guilty will be instantly disqualified.From January 2010 onward, the official track and field false start regulation indicated that any athlete starting within 100 milliseconds of the gun being fired would be disqualified from the race.
    Usain Bolt’s false start in the men’s 100m final at the World Athletics Championships in South KoreaCredit: AP:Associated Press
    James Dasaolu holds head in hands after disqualification from 2016 World Indoor Championships, OregonCredit: Reuters
    Research has found that a reaction time faster than one-tenth of a second is impossible for a human, and the runner is therefore deemed to have anticipated the gun.
    On the ‘Track & Field 101: Rules’ on the Olympics website, it states: “If a sprinter commences his or her starting motion from the set position before the Starter’s gun is fired, it is deemed a false start. The first false start of a race results in an automatic disqualification to the offending runner.”
    How can they detect a false start?
    False start detection systems were introduced in 1979 and Omega’s false start detection system made its Olympics debut at the Los Angeles Olympics Games.
    In major athletics competitions, reaction times are currently detected using IAAF accredited false start detection systems.
    These systems determine athletes reaction time using encased accelerometers or force sensors fixed to the rear of the starting block rail to detect changes in force or acceleration exerted on the blocks through the feet.
    RT’s can now be instantly calculated accurately to 0.001 of a second, but for results, are recorded to the nearest 0.01 second.
    For athletics and specifically sprint athletes reaction times and overall sprint time detection methods have improved dramatically since the original 1896 Olympic Games.
    Were false starts previously allowed?
    Originally, before 2010, the “one-and-done” regulation was implemented meaning one false start per race in events up to 400 metres would be allowed rather than one false start per athlete as in the past.
    This means the athlete making the second false start of a race, breaking the accepted reaction time of 0.10 seconds, will be disqualified regardless of whether he or she was responsible for the first one.
    However, sprinters would often take advantage of the previous false start rules, purposely jumping the gun either to play mind games with their competition and set them on edge before the race or use the extra leniency to predict the gun and gain bonus milliseconds from their efforts.
    So, World Athletics just decided to just ban any false starts – it’s one and YOU’RE OUT.
    Famous false starts at previous track and field events
    Usain Bolt
    At the 2011 IAAF World Championships in Athletics in Daegu, South Korea, Usain Bolt, 100-meter world record holder, jumped the gun in the 100-meter final over a year after the new regulations had been put into place.
    Bolt walked off the track, head in hands, only to watch his Jamaican teammate Yohan Blake take the gold.
    Usain Bolt after disqualification at 2011 World ChampionshipsCredit: AFP
    Jon Drummond
    Drummond’s infamous “I did not move!” plea after his disqualification at the 2003 World Athletics Championships in Paris.
    Drummond protested his disqualification by storming into the infield, repeatedly yelling in front of officials and laying on the track.
    His tantrum delayed the 100-meter final by ONE HOUR. 
    A race official shows Jon Drummond the red card after his false start at the 2003 World Athletics Championships in ParisCredit: AP:Associated Press
    Linford Christie
    The 1992 Olympic 100-meter champion was disqualified under an even older false-start rule.

    Before 2003, any sprinter could false start once and get away with just a warning however Christie reacted early twice, delayed the competition and refused to leave the track.
    This was the first time a previous champion was unable to defend his title live on TV.
    Linford Christie walking back to his starting blocks after disqualification at the 1992 Barcelona gamesCredit: Reuters More