2012 Olympics in Cardiff

2012 Olympics in Cardiff

2012 Olympics in Cardiff is a section of the website dedicated to whats going on in Cardiff during the London 2012 Olympics. Cardiff has many sporting facilities which are to be used for holding events and as training facilities for olympic athletes during the games. Please feel free to comment on articles about the 2012 Olympics in Cardiff and offer suggestions to others when possible.

Olympic Flame in Cardiff

Olympic Flame in Cardiff

Olympic Torch relay route map in Cardiff - London 2012 Olympics

Cardiff is set to hold an Olympic Torch evening celebration event on Friday 25 May.

Amazingly 8,000 people will carry the Olympic Flame during the Torch Relay. Their personal stories will have the power to inspire millions of people watching around the world.

The Olympic Flame will travel to within 10 miles of 95% of the UK’s population.

You can see the street by street level map on the official London 2012 website where its show Cardiff’s street level route.

Day 6 of the Olympic Flame Torch Relay will see with the Torch event in Cardiff coming in from Newport, leaving at 15:46 and heading into Cardiff. Day 7 sees the Olympic Torch sees events starting at 06:29 on Saturday 26 May in Cardiff Bay and heading through the streets of Cardiff, Through Grangetown and up to Penarth Rd. It is then due to start at Dinas Powys at 07:00 and 07:16 in Barry. The Olympic Torch will then take a route through several Welsh villages and up to day 8 where it will be in Swansea.

http://www.london2012.com/olympic-torch-relay-map

Last Updated on Saturday, 14 April 2012 17:55

The Millennium Stadium

The Millennium Stadium is on the banks of the River Taff, right in the heart of Cardiff, Wales.

Sport: Football
Capacity: 74,600
New or existing: Existing, permanent

With a retractable roof, the Millennium Stadium has hosted many top sporting events, including FA Cup finals and the 1999 Rugby World Cup Final.

It is a short walk from the main Cardiff train station and there is easy access from the M4 and M5 motorways.

source: http://www.london2012.com/

Last Updated on Monday, 16 May 2011 20:19

2012 Olympic Football

Football

Olympics 2012 Cardiff Football

Key facts

At the London 2012 Games, Football will be taking place at grounds across the UK

During the Football competition, approximately 2,400 footballs will be used.

Hungary has won three Football gold medals – more than any other country.

The only time a gold-medal match has been decided on penalties was in Sydney 2000, when Cameroon won.

The only time a replay was needed to decide a Football final at the Games was in Amsterdam 1928. Uruguay beat Argentina 2-1 in the decider.

Despite its successes in the FIFA World Cup, Brazil has never won an Olympic gold medal in Football.

Great Britain won the first Olympic Football gold medal at the London 1908 Olympic Games.

Venues: Wembley Stadium (finals), Old Trafford, Millennium Stadium, St James' Park, Hampden Park and City of Coventry Stadium (preliminaries)

Dates: Wednesday 25 July – Saturday 11 August
Events: 58 matches
Gold medals up for grabs: 2
Athletes: 504

Football: a history of the sport

Football is one of the most widely played and oldest games in existence. The ancient Chinese, Greeks and Romans played something very similar to football long before the English Kings in the 1300s and 1400s tried to outlaw what they described as a violent sport.

In modern terms, football began when the Football Association of England was founded in 1863. The game was spread throughout the world by English sailors who used to play it wherever they went.

Football at the Games

Men’s Football was a demonstration event at the first modern Olympic Games in Athens 1896. It became a full medal sport from London 1908.

At Barcelona 1992, professional players were allowed to take part in the Games for the first time. The rules were changed to make it an under-23 event, with three players over this age allowed in every team.

Women’s Football has no age limits and appeared at the Games for the first time in Atlanta 1996.

How to play – and win

Football is played on an outdoor grass pitch by two teams of 11 players.

The aim of the game is to score a goal by putting the ball in the other team’s net. The team that scores the most goals wins.

Only the goalkeepers on each team are allowed to touch the ball with their hands. The other players use their feet, head and body to move it around the pitch.

Matches are played over 90 minutes – two 45-minute halves.

Jargon buster

  • Foul: Any illegal interference with a player on the other team, such as kicking, pushing, shoving, tripping and dangerous or aggressive play.
  • Own goal: A goal scored for the other team when a player accidentally puts the ball into his or her team's goal.
  • Striker: An attacking player whose main job is to try to score goals.

source: http://www.london2012.com/games/olympic-sports/football.php

Last Updated on Tuesday, 27 March 2012 17:21