The All England Lawn Tennis Club (AELTC) has signed an excusive deal with video sharing platform Dailymotion to stream live coverage from this year’s Wimbledon tournament in a bid to bolster its digital media offering to fans.
The AELTC will use the video sharing platform to launch Live@Wimbledon, its digital media service that shows matches as well as pre-filmed content such as behind-the-scenes interviews, match previews, highlights and archive footage.
Coverage will be streamed on Wimbledon.com, the tournament’s official iPhone and Android apps, as well as on Dailymotion, whose global audience reaches 115 million monthly unique visitors according to its vice-president of international content Daniel Adams.
It will air everyday throughout the two weeks the Championship is contested to tennis fans in the UK, US, and all South American countries except Brazil. The two markets with the largest audiences for the tournament are the UK and USA, according to the AELTC, with 204 million and 123 million viewing hours respectively in 2010.
Adams says the tie-up aims to build on the platform’s sports offering, which has previously showed UEFA Europa Cup matches.
He adds: “This [partnership] will be a mix of live action, exclusive background and behind the scenes material to compliment the live broadcast. This builds on our heritage of showing exciting and exclusive live sports action to our global audience of 115 million monthly unique visitors.”
The move is part of a series of initiatives the AELTC is launching to raise the profile of the only grass court-based grand slam tournament on the ATP circuit. It signed an exclusive deal with EA Sports for the release of Grand Slam Tennis 2 in February and last year Wimbledon sponsor Sony filmed the finals in 3D for the first time ever.
Source: www.marketingweek.co.uk
London Broncos need mental toughness, says Chad Randall - BBC News
Chad Randall believes London Broncos must improve their mental approach to turn around their current form.
The Broncos, who lost to Catalan Dragons on Sunday, are currently second bottom of the Super League.
The hooker told BBC London 94.9: "We're all training hard but every week when you walk out on the field the doubts start to come in.
"The best players in the world learn how to put them aside. At the moment, we're struggling with that."
The Twickenham Stoop outfit have only won two of their 15 league games this season and have lost their last six Super League games.
"Sometimes on game-day as we're walking out the tunnel, those doubts are starting to creep in," the 31-year-old Australian added.
"We've got to keep working on that mental toughness and belief. We're trying to turn it around.
"This time of year, every single team is pretty much doing the same weight programmes, a lot of time on the training ground and a lot of running,
"At the end of the day, it's a mental thing - your confidence as a team and individuals."
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
London 2012 Olympics: Jessica Ennis breaks Denise Lewis' UK heptathlon record in some style in Götzis - Daily Telegraph
Tatyana Chernova, the 6ft 2in Russian who dethroned her at last summer’s World Championships in Daegu, finished a huge 132 points behind in second place, while Nataliya Dobrynska, the Ukrainian Olympic and world indoor champion, was a long way adrift on just 6,311 points in ninth place.
But Ennis said her record-breaking points total was not about sending a message to her rivals but proving to herself that she was capable of a big score.
“I wanted to do it for me, to prove to myself that I can do it, that I am capable of scoring a big score and that I am in good shape,” she said. “That gives me the self-belief and the mental capacity going forward.”
Ennis said the most important aspect of her weekend’s work was that if confirmed that she was in excellent shape just two months out from the Olympics.
The key now was to maintain her physical condition without risking the kind of devastating injury that wrecked her Olympic dreams four years ago when she suffered multiple stress fractures in her right foot at the same Götzis meeting.
“I am going to train sensibly,” she said. “I have done a big block of my work now, so it is freshening up, sharpening up and getting race sharp. It’s nice to be here in Olympic year and not be injured and have a great result as well.”
She said her recent defeats had been an impetus to work harder in training, and the weekend had reassured her that everything was going in the right direction.
Leading overnight on 4,113 after lowering her 200 metres lifetime best by a huge 0.31sec, Ennis knew that if she get could close to her personal bests in her three remaining events, it would be enough to overhaul the record set by Lewis in Talence, France, in 2000.
Her first event of the day, the long jump, provided the perfect platform as she leapt out to 6.51m with her third and final attempt, equalling her lifetime best and, crucially, beating Chernova in the Russian’s specialist event.
But it was the javelin, the event that proved Ennis’s nemesis at last year’s World Championships, that had the Sheffield athlete punching the air in celebration as she opened up with a huge throw of 47.11m — 40cm in excess of her lifetime best.
In the final event, the 800m, Ennis adopted her usual tactic of striking out from the front and crossed the line in 2-09.00 — the third fastest outdoor time of her career — before sinking to the ground in exhaustion.
But, in a telling moment, Chernova put in a desperate effort to catch her in the final straight, and passed her with a couple of strides to go. It was a clear message to the Briton that she has no intention of backing down in August. But there can be now doubt that the pendulum has now swung in Ennis’s direction, and it could not be better timed.
She made her breathrough with with her runaway victory at the 2009 World Championships in Berlin. Further multi-events triumphs in 2010 at the World Indoor Championships in Doha and the European Championships in Barcelona served only to cement her status as one of Britain’s outstanding gold-medal prospects for London.
But the first sign that the weight of expectation was beginning to weigh heavily on her shoulders emerged in Daegu last September where her disastrous javelin performance opened the door for Chernova to take her world crown.
Then, in Istanbul three months ago, she displayed more vulnerability under pressure when a misfiring long jump allowed Dobyrnska to walk away with her world indoor pentathlon crown.
That is why Sunday was so important. After losing two world titles, another defeat in her last heptathlon before London would have been a psychological hammer blow.
But, having complained in the past that too many people have been “hanging a gold medal around my neck” before the Olympics have even started, Ennis will not be getting too carried away.
Four years ago, the inconsistent Dobrynksa finished ninth in Götzis before going on to win Olympic gold in Beijing, and she is certain to be in far better shape in London than she was in Austria this weekend.
The Ukrainian admitted before the meeting that she had only been training properly for a month following the death from cancer of her husband and coach, Dmytro Polyakov, in March. Chernova, too, looked undercooked compared to her brilliant performance in Daegu.
Ennis said her next competition would be the Bislett Games in Oslo on June 7, where she would be taking part in the 100 metre hurdles, before she gets ready for the UK Olympic trials in Birmingham.
Ennis may have ensured her place in the history books, but she will need to run, jump and throw like she did over the last couple of days if she is to become Britain’s Olympic golden girl.
Heptathlon results
1. Jessica Ennis, Britain, 6,906 points.
2. Tatyana Chernova, Russia, 6,774.
3. Lyudmyla Yosypenko, Ukraine, 6,501.
4. Austra Skujyte, Lithuania, 6,493.
5. Lilli Schwarzkopf, Germany, 6,461.
6. Jessica Zelinka, Canada, 6,393.*
7. Dafne Schippers, Netherlands, 6,360.
8. Jennifer Oeser, Germany, 6,345.
9. Nataliya Dobrynska, Ukraine, 6,311.
10. Nadine Broersen, Netherlands, 6,298.
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
2010 Wimbledon runner-up Zvonareva pulls out of French Open - firstpost.com
Source: www.firstpost.com
London 2012 Olympics venues: All England Lawn Tennis Club - Daily Telegraph
Hosting: Tennis
Schedule: July 28 – Aug 5
Capacity: 30,000
Fact: Wimbledon has been inhabited since the Iron Age.
Post games: na/a
Test event: Jun 20-Jul 3, 2011: Tennis, The Championships
Transport: Wimbledon (London Underground, National Rail, Tramlink), Southfields (London Underground), South Wimbledon (London Underground)
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
London 2012 Olympics: venue guide - Daily Telegraph
6) Venue: Greenwich Park
Location: In south-east London on the south bank of the river Thames.
Hosting: Equestrian- Jumping, Dressage, Eventing and Paralympic Equestrian. Also Modern Pentathlon.
Capacity: 23,000.
About: Existing venue, which is an enclosed royal park, with the Old Royal Naval College and the National Maritime Museum also within its grounds.
Fact: Henry VIII introduced deer to Greenwich Park in the 16th Century for him to be able to hunt them. He did not catch them all however, and some still remain in the park today.
Post Games: The temporary structures will be taken down and the park will return to the way it was.
7) Venue: Hadleigh Farm
Location: East of London in Essex
Hosting: Mountain Bike
Capacity: 3,000, not including standing around the course
About: It is a new, 550 acre venue, which is the alternative site to the original Weald County Park which was deemed not challenging enough.
Fact: Hadleigh Farm is owned by the Salvation Army
Post Games: The temporary structures will be taken down.
8) Venue: Handball Arena
Location: In the west of the Olympic Park
Hosting: Handball, Goalball, Modern Pentathlon.
Capacity: 7,000
About: New, permanent venue which will host the handball games up to the quarter-final, but the semis and the finals will be played in the larger Basketball Arena.
Fact: Rainwater collected from the venue’s roof will be used to flush lavatories and reduce water usage by 40%.
Post Games: It will be adapted to become a multi-use sports centre for the community to use, as well a training centre for athletes and a venue for small to medium sized competitions.
9) Venue: Hockey Centre
Location: Olympic Park
Hosting: Hockey, Paralympic 5-a-side Football, Paralympic 7-a-side Football.
Capacity: 15,000
About: New venue, composed of two pitches, the main pitch with a capacity of 15,000 and the second pitch with a capacity of 5,000.
Fact: The first Olympic Hockey final was played in 1908 in London, where England defeated Ireland 8-1.
Post Games: The hockey pitches will relocate to the north of the Olympic Park, joining a collection of facilities in a place known as Eton Manor.
10) Venue: Horse Guards Parade
Location: In Whitehall, in the heart of London next to Downing Street and Buckingham Palace
Hosting: Beach Volleyball
Capacity: 15,000
About: The venue will be new, however the Parade has a long history, hosting the Queen’s official birthday celebration each year with the Trooping of the Colour.
Fact: At the 1996 Olympics, The USA men's side were so good that they had two teams playing each other in the final.
Post Games: The temporary facility will be taken down.
11) Venue: Hyde Park
Location: In the West End of London
Hosting: Triathlon, 10k Open Water Swim.
Capacity: 3,000
About: Hyde Park is the largest of London’s Royal Parks and has been open to the public since 1637. The seating will be a new but temporary addition to the park.
Fact: Queen played a concert here in 1976 with an estimated audience of between 150-200,000 people turning up.
Post Games: The course and the grandstand will be removed.
12) Venue: Lee Valley White Water Centre
Location: 30km north of the Olympic Park
Hosting: Canoe Slalom
Capacity: Up to 12,000
About: The centre will be a new, permanent venue which is made up of two courses, one for training, one for competition.
Fact: 15 cubic metres of water per second will flow into the 300m competition course – enough to fill a 50m swimming pool every minute.
Post Games: The venue will remain a Canoe centre open to the public as well as elite athletes, but the temporary seats will all be removed.
13) Venue: Lord’s Cricket Ground
Location: North-west London near Regent’s Park
Hosting: Archery
Capacity: 6,500
About: Lord’s is an existing venue and in sporting terms, is the ‘home of cricket’ and has been since 1814, hosting international matches on a regular basis.
Fact: The ground slopes 8ft 8in from one square boundary to the other.
Post Games: The ground will go back to being home for the Marylebone Cricket Club and Middlesex County Cricket Club. Archery equipment from the Games will be given to schools across the country.
14) Venue: North Greenwich Arena
Location: Right at the point of the Greenwich peninsular in East London near Canary Wharf
Hosting: Artistic Gymnastics, Trampoline, Basketball, Wheelchair Basketball
Capacity: 20,000
About: The Arena (also known as the O2 Arena), is an existing venue which currently hosts hundreds of concerts a year as well as sporting events such as tennis. It is widely regarded as one of the best venues in the world, attracting the biggest names in entertainment.
Fact: If the Eiffel Tower was laid on its side, it would still fit inside the arena.
Post Games: It will remain an entertainments venue, attracting people from all over the world.
15) Venue: Olympic Stadium
Location: In the south of the Olympic Park
Hosting: Athletics, Paralympic Athletics
Capacity: 80,000
About: The Stadium is being built from scratch and aims to be constructed by next year. 55,000 of the 80,000 capacity is removable, which apparently has never been attempted before.
Fact: 10,000 tonnes of steel are being used to build the venue, compared to the 42,000 used by Beijing for their ‘Bird’s Nest’.
Post Games: Negotiations are still ongoing as to what exactly will happen to the Stadium, with various sporting clubs in London all expressing interest in using or leasing it.
16) Venue: Olympic Village
Location: In the Olympic Park
Hosting: All athletes and officials.
Capacity: 17,000
About: As well as residential apartments, the village will comprise of shops, restaurants, medical, media and leisure facilities. There will also be a ‘Plaza’, where athletes can meet up with friends and families.
Fact: The plan of the village has been based around London’s tradition of building homes around communal squares and courtyards.
Post Games: The village will become housing for new residents in east London, transforming into 2800 homes.
17) Venue: The Royal Artillery Barracks
Location: On the edge of Woolwich Common in south-east London.
Hosting: Shooting, Paralympic Shooting, Paralympic Archery
Capacity: 7,500
About: The artillery barracks were constructed in the 18th century and it only seems fitting that the shooting events take place here. Four temporary indoor ranges will be built for Pistol and Rifle shooting, with outdoor ranges for Trap and Skeet events.
Fact: Hungarian shooter Karoly Takac, taught himself to shoot left-handed after a grenade blew off his right arm in 1938. 10 years later, he won two gold medals at the London 1948 Games.
Post Games: There is still uncertainty as to where elements of the venue and sports equipment could be reused after the Games.
18) Venue: Velodrome
Location: In the North of the Olympic Park
Hosting: Track Cycling, BMX, Paralympic Track Cycling.
Capacity: 6000 in the Velodrome (permanent), 6000 at the BMX track (temporary)
About: Totally new venue with the velodrome having two tiers, with a glass window in between the tiers for a 360-degree view of the Olympic Park.
Fact: Sir Chris Hoy was involved in the design process of the Velodrome.
Post Games: The BMX seating will be removed and the track reconfigured. A new mountain bike course and road cycle circuit will be added to create one venue which will encompass all disciplines of the sport.
19) Venue: Wembley Arena
Location: Northwest London, 6 miles from the city centre.
Hosting: Badminton, Rhythmic Gymnastics
Capacity: 6,000
About: Wembley Arena is one of the most famous concert venues in the world and has been host to many of the biggest names in the music industry. It has also hosted sporting events such as boxing, ice hockey and darts, so very little preparation needs to be done for it to be ready.
Fact: Wembley Stadium was the primary venue the last time the Games were held in London, in 1948. Was built for the equivalent of the Commonwealth Games (The Empire Games) in 1934 by Sir Arthur Elvin, and originally was intended to be a swimming pool.
Post Games: It will return to being a world-class concert venue.
20) Venue: Weymouth and Portland
Location: In Dorset on England’s South Coast
Hosting: Sailing, Paralympic Sailing
Capacity: No seating at venue
About: Weymouth Bay and Portland Harbour provide some of the best natural sailing waters anywhere in the UK, along with facilities to match on land. It has already hosted the World Youth Championships which was attended by over 60 nations.
Fact: Great Britain has been the most successful sailing nation at the last three Olympics.
Post Games: The venue will be used predominantly by the National Sailing Academy after the Games, who will no doubt benefit from the improved facilities. Local community use will also be allowed.
21) Venue: All England Lawn Tennis Club
Location: Wimbledon
Hosting: Tennis
Capacity: 30,000
About: Wimbledon is the home of the All England Tennis and Croquet Club and is the setting for arguably the best tennis tournament in the world which takes place every summer. It is famous for being the only major grass-court venue in the world.
Fact: ‘Love’ – the term for ‘no points’ in tennis – is thought to come from the French word ‘l’oeuf’, meaning ‘egg’ – the shape of a zero.
Post Games: Wimbledon will go back to being host of the major tennis tournament.
22) Venue: Water Polo Arena
Location: Olympic Park
Hosting: Water polo
Capacity: 5,000
About: designed to complement the look of the Aquatics Centre, the wedge-shaped arena will rise from 12 metres to 25 metres and feature a rippling roof made of recycled PVC cushions inflated with air to provide extra insulation.
Fact: the Aquatics Centre and Water Polo Arena will be adjacent to each other in one of the most tightly-packed areas of the Olympic Park.
Post Games: the arena will be taken down, although it is expected that materials will be reused or recycled.
23) Venue: Eton Manor
Location: Olympic Park
Hosting: Wheelchair tennis
Capacity: 10,500
About: the formerly disused sports club will house nine competition courts and four warm-up courts, as well as temporary training pools – three 50m pools for swimmers, and smaller pools for synchronised swimmers and Water Polo players.
Fact: Eton Manor acted as a temporary base for the Construction College East London, a training centre for people hoping to work in construction. When the college moved to its permanent base in 2009, many students stayed on to work on the Olympic project.
Post Games: the site will serve as a sports centre for the local and regional communities and will include a tennis centre with four indoor and six outdoor courts, a hockey centre with two competition pitches and five-a-side football pitches. The site will be able to accommodate elite hockey events with up to 15,000 spectators.
24) Venue: Brands Hatch
Location: In Kent, one hour away from the Olympic Park
Hosting: Paralympic road cycling
Capacity: TBC
About: The internationally-renowned motor racing circuit plays host to many British and international racing events throughout the year. The Paralympic course, which passes through Sevenoaks, will start and finish at Brands Hatch.
Fact: The venue was originally a mushroom field, before its potential as a racing track was spotted by a group of cyclists in 1926. The track was used for 12 runnings of the British Grand Prix between 1964 and 1986.
Post Games: The track will revert to its role as one of Europe's leading motor racing venues.
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
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