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BREAKING NEWS!!!

Nadal pulls out of the Olympics.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/18909111

http://www.marca.com/2012/07/19/mas_deportes/caminoalondres/1342709163.html


Interesting no ?

comment by WOW (U14335)

posted on 19/7/12

I published one before you. I told you we are wums

comment by WOW (U14335)

posted on 19/7/12

I knew this was coming. Finally the effects of that physical tennis are taking place. But I wish him speedy recovery. It would have been good had he played here and won it (fair and square).

posted on 19/7/12

Some thought it was not the injury but the threat of more severe doping testing

comment by WOW (U14335)

posted on 19/7/12

I thought that, think that.

posted on 19/7/12

go and have a look what Tim wrote on the other forum on the ITF thread. Fascinating stuff.

posted on 19/7/12

GSK launches new advertising campaign to highlight the role that science will play in keeping the London 2012 Games clean

GSK today marks its role as Official Laboratory Services Provider for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games by launching its first UK advertising campaign to celebrate the role that anti-doping science will play in helping ensure this summer’s Games are the cleanest possible.

The campaign launches on the day the official London 2012 anti-doping laboratory, provided by GSK in partnership with the London Organising Committee for the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) and King’s College London, becomes operational 24 hours a day, seven days a week. More tests will be carried out at the London 2012 lab, based at GSK’s Harlow site, than at any other Games with every medallist and up to 50 per cent of all competing athletes being tested.

From today, the new campaign, featuring British Olympians and Paralympians including Phillips Idowu, Beth Tweddle, David Weir, Graham Edmunds and Marlon Devonish, will celebrate the motivation and ambition that drives athletes to perform and win drug-free. The campaign will appear on television and outdoor advertising space across the UK and includes the UK’s largest London2012 outdoor sign, which covers GSK’s Brentford headquarters.

Phil Thompson, Senior Vice President, Global Communications at GlaxoSmithKline, said: “Our contribution to the London 2012 Games, through our partnership with LOCOG and King’s, is to help ensure that every medal winner can celebrate their athletic achievement in the knowledge they have won through a fair competition. Our advertising campaign aims to showcase the hard work, determination and natural ability that is central to each athlete’s performance.”

Marlon Devonish, Olympic gold medallist and one of the athletes featured in the campaign, said: “Winning an Olympic medal is the best feeling in the world and as an athlete it’s so important to know that anyone who stands on the podium has got there through their own hard work and dedication, not by doping. The work done by GlaxoSmithKline, LOCOG and King’s to provide the London 2012 anti-doping programme helps to give athletes the assurance that the Games will be fair and athletes are competing clean.”

Graham Edmunds, Paralympic gold medallist, whose image appears on the side of GSK’s headquarters, said: “Winning medals is like an addiction; once you have one, you want another. It’s my biggest motivation. And knowing you’ve reached the podium because of all the hard work you’ve put in; 9 sessions a week, 2 hours each session, 3 gym sessions a week for four years, is the greatest feeling. I’m confident that everything possible is being done to catch drug cheats at London 2012 and that makes these Games really special.”

Jonathan Harris, Head of Anti-Doping at The Organising Committee for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, said: “The fight against doping within sport continues. GSK have been instrumental in providing services to help us deliver the anti-doping programme for the Games and with their help we have a state of the art laboratory with the ability to process a record number of tests during the Olympic and Paralympic Games.”

posted on 19/7/12


Up to 6250 samples will be tested during Games time – more than any other Games
The anti-doping workforce at the Games will include over 1000 people
Up to 50 per cent of all competing athletes will be tested at the Olympic Games including every Olympic medallist
The laboratory will operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week during the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games
Up to 400 samples will be tested every day
The shortest test turnaround will be 24 hours (some tests will take longer)
The laboratory is 4400 square metres in size – the same size as 7 tennis courts
A team of more than 150 anti-doping scientists from around the world will carry out the testing during Games-time, led by Professor David Cowan from the Drug Control Centre at King’s College London
Over 240 prohibited substances will be tested for

posted on 22/7/12



No wonder they are all running scared!!

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