Olympic Preview: Sailing This Day in history Today s Birthday Word of the Day The action will beheld at the Agios Kosmas olympic sailing Center on the coast of southern http://www.infoplease.com/spot/ol-sailing.html
Extractions: Formerly known as yachting , the sailing competition was given the new name in 2000 for a few reasons. Mostly because seven of the current classes of boats being used in Olympic competition are actually small dinghies or sailboards and are far from the definition of a yacht. Another reason Olympic officials decided on the switch was to lessen the public perception of the sport as one for the wealthy elite.
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Eurosport - Sailing - *Athens 2004 sailing *Athens 2004 Grael wins Star class to make olympic history Brazilian TorbenGrael made history on Thursday by becoming the first man to win five http://www.eurosport.co.uk/home/pages/v4/l2/s66/e6856/sport_lng2_spo66_evt6856.s
Times Online - Olympics Glory for British sailing team With two golds, one silver and two bronzes Select section here, The competition, Ancient origins, olympic history http://www.timesonline.co.uk/section/0,,10750,00.html
Extractions: With two golds, one silver and two bronzes Britain's sailers are the most successful team at these Games CLICK HERE FOR SAILING ARCHIVE CHOOSE A SECTION IN SAILING Select from dropdown Select section here The competition Ancient origins Olympic history Sydney results GB squad Qualifying CHOOSE A DIFFERENT SPORT Select from dropdown Select a sport here Aquatics Archery Athletics Badminton Baseball Basketball Boxing Canoeing Cycling Equestrianism Fencing Football Gymnastics Handball Hockey Judo Modern Pentathlon Rowing Sailing Shooting Softball Table Tennis Taekwondo Tennis Triathlon Volleyball Weightlifting Wrestling EDITOR'S OLYMPIC GAMES LOG GAMES LOG SELECT A DAY Sunday August 29 Saturday August 28 Friday August 27 Thursday August 26 Wednesday August 25 Tuesday August 24 Monday August 23 Sunday August 22 Saturday August 21 Friday August 20 Thursday August 19 Wednesday August 18 Tuesday August 17 Monday August 16 Sunday August 15 Saturday August 14 WHAT'S ON IN ATHENS TODAY?
Daily Briefing - Olympics - Times Online his friend, becoming only the fourth person in olympic history to win four The entire sailing section has been an olympic fixture since 1900, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,10510-1194062,00.html
Extractions: Football. Final: 8amArgentina has not won an Olympic title in any sport since 1952, but will be favourites to break the drought in the football. They also have the star of the tournament, the 20-year-old Carlos Tevez, who leads the tournament scorers with seven goals. Tevez, who plays for Boca Juniors, signed his first contract when he was just eight years old. STEVE BACKLEY Javelin. Final: 6.40pmBackley only just qualified for this, his fourth and final Olympic final. Whatever happens here, he will pack up his javelin after the sixth round (or the third if he is not in the top eight at that point) and never raise it again in international competition. The chances of the 35-year-old becoming the only British athlete to win medals at four successive Games are slim, as are the chances of Jan Zelezny, his friend, becoming only the fourth person in Olympic history to win four individual titles in the same event. But you should watch, just in case either happens. LEON TAYLOR
Dinghy Sailing Magazine :: 02392 388 009 spacer, main homepage, the only magazine dedicated to dinghy sailing olympic history, the British olympic sailing team has won more gold medals http://www.dinghysailingmagazine.co.uk/
Extractions: Comparative boat review, Winter gloves, 50 years of dinghy cruising, Rigs and tuning, Win! RYA kids competition, Trapezing techniques, Cat care checklist, Merlin Rocket restoration part four, Latest new products, Fowey Gallants sailing club, Shoreside fashion, Boat MOT, ISAF Youth World team interview, Rules Rambles, Bumper boats for sale section, Cowes Week diary, 24 Hour Racepreparation, Readers letters, Win! Fat Face kit. RYA and Team GBR celebrate as London gears up to host the 2012 Olympic Games
INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE - SPORTS sailing sailing history The olympic sailing programme in 2000 consistedof men s, women s and mixed events. In effect, sailing made its olympic http://www.olympic.org/uk/sports/programme/history_uk.asp?DiscCode=SA&sportCode=
INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE - SPORTS sailing first became an olympic sport in Paris in 1900, Discover this sportthrough its competition format, equipment, glossary and history. http://www.olympic.org/uk/sports/programme/index_uk.asp?SportCode=SA
Athens Olympics 2004 Australia will return home from the olympics with no sailing medals for history by becoming the first man to win five olympic medals in sailing. more http://smh.com.au/olympics/sailing/
Extractions: @import url("/olympics/css/athens_smh.css"); Welcome to 2004 Olympics. Skip directly to: Search Box Section Navigation Content Text Version ... Athens document.write(showDates('-7')); (max 22C) Sydney document.write(showDates('0')); (max 21C) August Sailing A post-mortem has begun after Australia's sailors failed to win a medal for the first time in 16 years. National coach Victor Kovalenko said the team's results were "the worst ever", adding work was already under way to ensure improvement in Beijing. more Australia will return home from the Olympics with no sailing medals for the first time in 16 years. more Brazilian Torben Grael has made history by becoming the first man to win five Olympic medals in sailing. more Sailing legend Colin Beashel - competing for Australia at his sixth Games - has his last race tomorrow with partner David Giles. more After being the host nation's second most successful sport at the Sydney Games, Australia's sailors had looked like leaving Athens without a medal. more Windsurfing: Israeli dedicates first gold to Munich victims Sailing: Soaring hopes wiped by false start Sailing: Medal chances scattered to the winds Sailing: Blanck slips to fourth Sailing: Blanck revels in light winds Shocked sailor: Dane to compete despite car death Sailing: Protest blows Blanck to fore Sailing: Wind plays havoc with schedule Sailing:
High Performance Sailing News from the HPU programs including the AIS Squad, olympic Squad, Informationrelating to the 2004 Games, along with a little olympic history. http://www.yachting.org.au/default.asp?MenuID=Racing/2/0,High_Performance_Sailin
Olympics Athens olympic sailing documents issued by ISAF. olympic history Past sailingOlympians Pocket history, Learn more about Australia s success at the http://www.yachting.org.au/default.asp?MenuID=Racing/2/0,High_Performance_Sailin
History In ancient times, sailing was linked with the history and activities of many sailing became an olympic sport in the 1900 olympic Games, in Paris. http://www.athens2004.com/en/SailingHistory
Extractions: Home Sports Sailing History Javascript must be enabled to view this page, although the important information on the page is also available to browsers that do not support scripts. In ancient times, Sailing was linked with the history and activities of many nations. It often played a crucial role in a countryâs growth and expansion due to mastering the seas through navigation. The Greek historian Pausanias relates that in the 2nd century BC, music, swimming and sailing contests were taking place in honor of Dionysus Melanaigidos in Ermioni at the Temple of Aphrodite. The first Sailing competition, which is still held today, was the Cumberland Cup, inaugurated in 1715. The first international competition, in 1851, was the âHundred Guineas Cupâ â now known as the Americas Cup, named after the first winning boat âAmericaâ. This marked the debut of competition Sailing as we know it today. Sailing became an Olympic sport in the 1900 Olympic Games, in Paris. There were three classes of boat. Greece first entered the Sailing events at the 1948 Olympic Games in London, where a crew consisting of G.Kalambokidis, C.Karolou, K.Potamianos and N.Vlangalis competed in the Star class and placed 10th. The International Sailing Federation (ISAF) â formerly known as IURY, was founded in 1906. It now includes 121 member-states, with over half a million sailors.
History For the first time in the history of the olympic Games, all the Aquatics Greek sailing olympic winner and World Champion Nikos Kaklamanakis was the last http://www.athens2004.com/en/HandballHistory
Extractions: Home Sports Handball History Javascript must be enabled to view this page, although the important information on the page is also available to browsers that do not support scripts. Handball is considered one of the oldest games in the history of sport. References in Homer's Odyssey provide evidence of a game similar to Handball, which was played on the island of the Faiakes (Corfu). Another sign is a 3rd century BC bronze statuette found in Dodoni, showing a boy carrying a ball in his hand. Depictions of humans playing a 'primitive' form of Handball are also found on a marble plaque found at the Athens Acropolis, dating to about 600 B.C. In Roman years, the game then called "arpastonâ, spread to the people of Germany and France. We come across a detailed description of it by the French author, Rabelais, around AD1500. At the end of the 19th century, Handball in its present form appeared in Denmark, Germany and Czechoslovakia, as a training sport for gymnasts and a fitness tool for football players during their off season. The Swedes, to whom the name of the game is attributed, adopted regulations similar to those of football around 1910. At the Berlin Olympiad in 1936, Handball made its debut to the public as an exhibition sport in an open stadium, with two teams of 11 players each. Handball was officially incorporated into Olympic Games competition in Munich in 1972. It was held in an indoor court measuring 20x40m with teams of seven players.
An Interview With Olympic Sailing Gold Medallist Sarah Webb Great Britain is the most successful sailing nation in olympic history, but it sa sport that Fusion yoga, What does winning the olympic race mean? http://handbag.com/healthfit/keepingfit/sarahwebb/
Extractions: 25 September 2005 document.write(''); Home Fashion home Fashion news Style spy ... home handbag.com Ask Jeeves handbag.com Keeping fit One blonde in a boat: Sarah Webb This week it's all about sailing. Cowes Week is upon us, and to get you in the mood we chat with Olympic gold medallist Sarah Webb about punishing exercise routines, competing with men, and sharks. by Sarah Webb (top right) and team mates Great Britain is the most successful sailing nation in Olympic history, but it's a sport that tends to get forgotten about until the medals are being handed out. Twenty-eight-year-old Sarah Webb has dedicated her life to the sport. She sails a Yngling (a small racing keel boat) as part of a team of three women and she's hoping her enthusiasm will rub off on you. Catch all the action at Cowes Week from 30 July to 6 August 2005. I heard you're injured at the moment?
Canadian Yachting Association Canadian olympic sailing Team history. In the spring of 1924 a group of yachtsmenfrom the Yacht Racing Association of Lake Ontario decided to hold a http://www.sailing.ca/cst/history.shtm
Extractions: Contact Us Canadian Olympic Sailing Team History In the spring of 1924 a group of yachtsmen from the Yacht Racing Association of Lake Ontario decided to hold a special competition. The purpose of the event was to select a sailor who could represent Canada at the Olympics in Paris that summer. This was the beginning of Canada's Olympic sailing effort. While sailing had been an official part of Olympic competition since 1912, it was not until 1924 that Canada entered a team. Under the auspices of the Royal Canadian Yacht Club of Toronto, a committee conducted trials in the grey, still-frigid waters of Lake Ontario. The trials consisted of four series with ten competitors form five clubs taking part. Eventually, Norman Robertson of Hamilton emerged to win the finals and the right to go to Paris and represent Canada in the single-handed class. Racing on the Seine at Meulan that July, Robertson finished seventh out of 17 nations in each of the two series that formed the basis of competition. It was a respectable first outing, but not surprisingly, he was eliminated from medal contention. Far more important than his standing, though, was the fact that Robertson's effort had finally broken the ice and Canada had officially entered the world of Olympic sailing. While the name of Norman Robertson will always stand in the annals of Canadian yachting as our first Olympic sailor, Canada's first team effort dates to the 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles. It was in that year that the Canadian Yachting Association (CYA) was formed and, under its aegis and inspiration, Canada sent crews to compete in the Six Metre, Eight Metre, Star and Olympic Monotype classes. Fleets in those pre-war years were considerably smaller than today's and it was only in the Star and Monotype classes that a truly international field competed. H.E. Wylie was Canada's Star skipper and Reg Dixon sailed the single-handed Snowbird dinghy. Wylie's final standing was fourth out of seven boats and Dixon's placed fifth out of 11. For an Association barely off the ground, these results were more than simply creditable.
Sailing At The Olympics - A Short History In effect, the sport of `sailing made its debut in the modern olympic Games For the first time in history the olympic Harbour was included as part of http://www.sailing.org/menu.asp?MenuID=j62`GBv,zBpOvIJ9SuH8NX6/T`bmJ9ENHMk~ZPhpI
Back Athens 2004 Athens 2004 Latest PostingsCoachboat Regulations olympic sailing A history, A short history of sailing s inclusion on the olympicSports Schedule, and evolution of events and equipment from 1896 to date. http://www.sailing.org/menu.asp?MenuID=dpv3GBv,zBpOvIJ9SuH8NX6/T`
Sailing News - Olympic Games London 2012 As the most successful sailing nation in olympic history, the British olympicsailing team has won more gold medals than any other country and are thrilled http://www.sailing1st.com/article.asp?ID=3421&ClassID=0&hid=Olympic Games London
Sailing1st.com - Coachworks By Rigo De Nijs Here you will find articles about tactical and technical sailing issues, has happened with the olympic sailing disciplines over its olympic history? http://www.sailing1st.com/coachworks_art2003011.asp
Extractions: Surf the main features of Sailing1st.com News - Read news of the regatta sailing community Events - View upcoming int/nat/reg events worldwide Web Cams - Real Time view at venues worldwide Notice Board - Real Time and latest regatta info MySailing - Join the Regatta Sailing Community Sailing1st Features MySailing Home Events Notice Board ... Tell a Friend Links ISAF World Rankings World Weather The Olympic Dance With all the best wishes for the next year 2003! This period in the season always makes me a little thoughtful about the meaning of things. So next article finds its roots in this mood. Its meant to make a point and stimulate a process which is having its influence on our sport for a long time, therefore its style. I dont mean to insult or intimidate anyone. To the faithful readers of the technical stuff I promise that the next article will be technical again. Please remember what the devil said. Vanity is my favourite sin Login Join as member of Sailing1st.com As you may have heard Im now trying to become a 470 coach again, preparing the German challenge for the gold in 2004 in Athens. Of course in a far, far away corner of my skull, there were some old memories from my starting period as a coach in the Dutch 470 class. Those were the days when guys like Hunger, Calafat, Walker and Kouwenhoven were ruling the class. These memories, together with the occasional discussion of the new Olympic classes brings me to the subject of this article. The everlasting dance about the Olympic classes, and its consequences that it brings upon our sport. Not that I feel smarter than all the guys in London at ISAF, but just from the fact that one brain cell more (sorry thats me!!) thinking about a problem will hopefully lead to a better decision. So Im trying to be involved in the hope of adding a perspective which may lead to a better world. (or an even bigger mess!! Dreamer!)