// mali nga ako sa sinulat ko nung una.. mali yung view ko talaga when ive written this blog at first.. here is my new comment na.. :)
//i was reading a yahoo featured news about the olympics.. then kung titignan pa lang sa title wala naman sinabi about the Philippines, but when i was reading further ayun na nga..
Host China wins gold medal race; US first overall
BEIJING (AP)—China proved an acquisitive first-time Olympic host, topping the gold-medal chart with one of the most dominating and diverse performances ever. The United States, Britain and an array of small nations also had reasons to celebrate.
China’s haul of 51 gold medals was the largest since the Soviet Union won 55 in Seoul in 1988. Fielding athletes groomed since childhood in sports academies, it won medals in 25 different sports, including its first ever in sailing, beach volleyball and field hockey.
Not since 1936, when Nazi Germany prevailed at the Berlin Olympics, had a country other than the U.S. or the Soviet Union/Russia led the gold medal list.
The United States trailed well behind the Chinese in golds with 36, the first time since 1992 it didn’t lead the category. But the Americans did break their own mark for total medals in a non-boycotted Olympics; they won 110 in all, two more than their previous high set in 1992 and 10 ahead of China’s overall tally this year.
ADVERTISEMENT |
Britain, getting an early jump on its host role for the 2012 Summer Games, had its best Olympics in a century with 19 gold medals—good for fourth place behind the Russians. Its cyclists and sailors were the class of the field, and 19-year-old Rebecca Adlington stunned the swimming world with two golds in distance events.
It was also a satisfying Olympics for many of the world’s weaker sporting nations. A record 87 nations won medals, seven more than the previous high in Sydney in 2000, and a dozen nations won either their first-ever gold medal or first medal of any color.
If there was a prominent loser at the games, it was Russia, whose team was deprived of 10 athletes due to doping accusations. The Russians finished a distant third in both gold medals, with 23, and overall medals with 72—down from 27 and 92 four years ago in Athens. Germany and Japan also fared noticeably worse than in Athens.
The United States was disappointed by its boxing team (one bronze medal) and a lack of golds by its sprinters, but was delighted by breakthroughs in lesser sports such as fencing, as well as by the historic eight golds for record-smashing swimmer Michael Phelps.
“Both on the field of play and off, this will go down as one of the greatest performances ever for a United States Olympic Team,” spokesman Darryl Seibel said Sunday.
Overshadowing the entire U.S. effort, however, was a recognition of China’s arrival as the dominant Summer Olympics power.
“China has been systematically targeting every single available medal, and we’re going to have to do that in the future,” said U.S. Olympic Committee chairman Peter Ueberroth.
“The resources that they put toward their Olympic team and the population base and the dedication is fantastic,” he said. “It’s much more difficult for the rest of the world to compete, but that’s the way it should be.”
China, of course, has the largest population pool—1.3 billion people— from which to recruit athletes. Several far smaller nations distinguished themselves in medals per capita.
Jamaica’s sprinters and hurdlers—led by triple-gold sensation Usain Bolt— won 11 medals, one for every 245,000 of its 2.7 million people. With a population of 21.4 million, Australia won 46 medals, one for each 465,000 people. Cuba won 24 medals, one for each 470,000 of its 11.3 million citizens.
Populous countries with no medals included Pakistan, the Philippines and Bangladesh.
Kenya, despite election-related unrest which killed hundreds and disrupted its preparations, had a great games with five golds and 14 medals overall. Ethiopian runners Kenenisa Bekele and Tirunesh Dibaba each won rare double golds in the 5,000 and 10,000.
Overall, Africa won 40 medals—the most ever. Those included the first-ever Olympic medals for Togo in canoeing, Mauritius in boxing, and Sudan in the 800 meters. Also winning first-ever medals were Tajikstan,Bahrain (a gold by Rachid Ramzi in the men’s 1,500), and war-torn Afghanistan.
Two other athletes, in addition to Ramzi, won their countries’ first gold medals—Panamanian long jumper Irving Saladino and Mongolian judoka Naidangiin Tuvshinbayar.
Tuvshinbayar’s medal triggered raucous celebrations in Mongolia’s capital, Ulan Bator, and a presidential decree declared him a “hero of Labor.”
There were other breakthroughs—Tunisia and South Korea won golds in swimming for the first time; long jumper Maurren Higa Maggi became the first Brazilian women to win a gold in track.
<THIS WAS MY FIRST COMMENT> mali lahat ito.. MALING MALI.. im very sorry
//for me hindi ko naman sinisisi yung mga athletes natin with what had happened kasi talagang tough naman yung competition..
pero kasi talagang inaasahan na magkaroon ng medals is the boxing(harry tañamor) at taekwondo(tony rivero)
pero both of them talo agad on their first matches, so pano ba yan..
actually kung tutuusin me laban naman talaga tayu, im not sure pero meron ata tayu 4th place, 6th place and 11th place, so hindi naman talagang malayo..
pero ganun pa rin eh,
anyway, sa tingin ko babawi talaga tayu sa London 2012 Olympics.. DAPAT LANG..
<This is my new comment> *again thank you sa lahat nagsabi ng kamalian ko...
So yun nga, siguro wag na lang natin pansinin yung mga ibang bansa na nagsasabi na wala tayu medal..
siguro nga mayabang lang sila(Yahoo->America?!) dahil marami sila nauwi na medal..
Sa lahat ng olympiads natin, im really sorry what i have said before..
We all should really be grateful with what they have done even though hindi sila nananlo ng medal..
Tama naman talaga,, its not the medal that really counts, its the courage and determination , which is more important..
Im changing the world na "DAPAT" silang manalo sa London Olympics, hindi dapat eh..
talagang mananalo sila!
panalo na sila ngaun pa lang..me medal man o wala..
basta isa lang masasabi ko
manalo't matalo cute pa rin kami! wahaha! :P
sayang din ung kay Willy Wang, ung sa Wushu. nka-gold xa eh. kaso demonstation lng un. tsk3. =(
ReplyDeletelagay lang nila si pacquiao sa boxing at tingnan nating kung sinong walang medal. hehehehhehehehehehehe
ReplyDeletenakakahiya.
ReplyDeletebe proud na nakakasali pa tayo sa olympics
ReplyDeletetsk tsk. kinawawa nanaman tayo. nakakalungkot.
ReplyDeletegot also info about the overall medal standings..
ReplyDeletegrabe..
Afghanistan got 1 bronze medal..
the fact na yung una they were not allowed from joining the olympics..
and the fact na sila yung may pinakakonting delegates this olympics.. kasi they have only 4 delegates.. tapos one of them won pa.. san ka pa?!
just lke what marc said, at least nakajoin pa din tayo ng olympics. mahirap din magpadala ng reps dun. ang kailangan lang natin improvement, BIG TIME!
ReplyDeletetama tama.. animo philippines! ahahahaha.. kaya natin ito!
ReplyDeletemas madami pa kc ung mga bodyguard ng presidente kaysa sa athletes natin eh. tksa bat isa lng ung rep sa boxing eh dun nga tayo magaling. =))
ReplyDeleteOMG. Embarassing O___O But there's always the next Olympics! Yay. :)
ReplyDeleteAHEM pardon my being a troll but i think that..
ReplyDelete1. the government SHOULD support athletes
1.2 two million is a measly amount compared to other olympic athletes in other countries
1.3 two million madaming pwedeng paggamit tapos hindi rin sila nanalo, thats like your parents feeling your tuition fee is a waste because you dont end up like bill gates. honestly dont hate on them
2.DAPAT lang bumawi sa London 2012, uhm but didn't you just point out that the money spent on the athletes was wasted because they didnt win? so if sayang the money spent on them eh why pa tayo magtrain ng athletes diba? wag nalang sumali sa olympics kasi sayang lang ung money if they lose diba?
nyek.. >_<
ReplyDeletefirst of all, the government SHOULD really support the athletes nga..
second,hindi rin ako nagagalit sa kanila(athletes), alam ko nman they have done their best eh.. :)
for me,hindi naman nasayang yung money,dahil natalo sila..
what im pointing is that SOBRA naman ata yung binibingay sa kanila..
kasi if you will compute, 2 million/ 4 years/ 12months/ 30 days = siguro me budget sila na P1,500 a day..
iniisip ko kasi parang pangkain na yun siguro ng 3 families in one day.. @_@
o siguro malayo lang talaga yung view ko.. nyahaha..
im thinking in the sociocivic view kasi eh, medyo malayo talaga thinking ko in the sports minded thinking.. nyahahaha!
sa bagay meron pa sila mga binabayaran na maraming stuffs..
oh well.. i dont want to ague with it na..
nagkamali nga ako sa sinabi ko na
"ok lang siguro pagnanalo sila, sulit sana bayad"
mali nga ako dun.. @_@
*wahaha.. balik aral na.. grabe me time pa ako magcomment ang dami gagawin bukas..
Pilipinas "nakakahiya". Well if that is your outlook, try imagining yourself in the shoes of the athletes who represented us. What would you feel if you read this thread?
ReplyDeleteThey are the best in among their peers and being a delegate is an honor in its own right. Be proud of the filipino athletes for their courage and determination to prove themselves among with the best athletes from all over the world. Despite lack of government support, they still pushed through and gave their best for our country amidst all the pressure, stress and tension during the games. With or without medals, they are winners in their own right, in their own country.
And speaking of the government?? this is the Philippines, what do you expect??
uhm.. mali nga yung word ko na "nakakahiya".. sorry.. @_@
ReplyDeleteteka ano ba magandang word...hmmmm..
anyway, mali talaga yung view ko when i've written this blog..
thank you for all nagcomments.. i appreciate it very much..
sorry din for all the athletes.. >_<<
well I guess for me the 2million that was given to the athletes wasn't that much. kasi it's either ibubulsa lang nila iyan or bibigay sa mahirap at ang nagagawa lang nun is just to feed the poor, one time big time which is not really that much of a help to our people if hindi siya binigay sa athletes.
ReplyDeletedon't you think it would be more helpful if the money that was set for the poor be used as money that was spent to teach them rather than as money that was spent for just feeding programs?
think long term not short term.
another, 2million is not even that big, binubulsa nga lang nila iyan ng hindi nalalaman ng tao and without that 2million na binigay sa kanila(athletes) baka less than 15 pa ang athletes natin na nakapunta ng china. Majority of these athletes pay for their own training and their own ticket going to these places samantalang ang ibang bansa parang isang daan na katao ang dala nila dahil the government supports their athletes.
And never think na nasayang ang pera ng government, Toni Rivero was my schoolmate before and grade 4/5 palang ako during that time nagttrain na siya and naisip mo ba her training was really supported by her family siguro naman yung more than 5 years training niya dapat lang suportahan na siya ngayon ng government kasi sobra sobra narin ang gastos niya sa ilang taong nagttraining siya na parents niya ang gumagasta. And she's there to compete para lang itaguyod ang watawat natin sa olympics. She's one of the few that I know and that came from my former school, that used to train / had been training ng ginagamit before / now ang money nila to compete sa mga international competitions and some of them had been receiving medals and kinikilala sila as a Filipino athlete. I guess they deserve the support of our government kasi gobyerno din ang nakikinabang dito.
Dapat nga ang government pa ang mahiya sa kanila, our government is already doing bad tapos hindi pa nila susuportahan yung mga katulad nila considering na sports is one of the reasons bakit pansamantalang nawawala ang galit ng tao sa gobyerno.
**if schools support these athletes and even publish them on their school paper then bakit ang government hindi man lang magawa na ipagmalaki sila?**