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Tag: Olympics

  • Oscar Pistorius In Hiding, Surrounded By Pics Of Girlfriend

    Oscar Pistorius has gone into hiding since he shot and killed his girlfriend, model and law school graduate Reeva Steenkamp. He now lives with his uncle in Pretoria, South Africa, and would be unrecognizable to anyone who knew him before the tragic incident.

    Pistorius’ uncle, Arnold, says his nephew is inconsolable and has surrounded himself with photos of Reeva; while the state prosecutors want to try him for murder, the Olympian claims it was a horrible accident. The trial won’t begin until at least early next year.

    “What can you say if the person you love the most dies, and you were the instrument? How would you feel? It’s unthinkable,” Arnold Pistorius said. “He’s got photos in his room, photos all over the place. He’s housebound, you know. He doesn’t go out in public places.”

    Pistorius was charged with Steenkamp’s murder after he shot her in the early morning hours on Valentine’s Day. He says he heard noises in the bathroom and thought it was an intruder and, after retrieving his gun, shot through the bathroom door. The double-amputee claims he thought Steenkamp was still in bed and that it was dark in the bedroom.

    However, officials say that Steenkamp suffered wounds on her arms that looked defensive, and stories began floating around the web that it might have been a domestic violence dispute that led to the shooting. As attorneys prepare for the trial, a staggering amount of evidence will have to be examined. Pistorius faces another court hearing next Tuesday.

  • Andrew Simpson Dead After Being Trapped Under Boat

    Andrew Simpson Dead After Being Trapped Under Boat

    Gold medalist Andrew Simpson died on Thursday after being trapped beneath a capsized boat.

    Simpson won a gold medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing and a silver medial in the 2012 Olympics in London, both in the Star class of sailboats. He was in San Francisco training with the Artemis Racing team for the upcoming America’s Cup when the boat, which had a crew of 11 men, capsized. Andrew was trapped beneath the platform for more than ten minutes, and was unable to be revived when he was finally pulled out.

    Artemis CEO Paul Cayard released a statement on the group’s website, saying:

    “Our prayers are with Andrew Simpson’s family, his wife and kids, and also the rest of my teammates. It’s a shocking experience to go through, and we have a lot to deal with in the next few days in terms of assuring everybody’s well being. The boat’s under control, but that’s not the first of our concerns. We’re focused on the people. That’s what we’re working with and on and we’ll give you more information when we’re able to.”

    As of now, it’s not known what caused the boat to tip over. At least one other person was injured in the accident.

    (image)

  • Gold Medalist Dead After Boat Capsizes

    Gold Medalist Dead After Boat Capsizes

    “Gold medalist dead” is something you don’t want to hear before the weekend starts, but it’s the unfortunate truth.

    The Atlantic Wire reports that British Olympic gold medalist Andrew “Bart” Simpson, 36, died in a boat accident on Thursday after his catamaran capsized with him on it. He was underwater for 10 minutes as rescuers tried to get him out. After being pulled from the boat, he was brought ashore and pronounced dead at the scene.

    Simpson was reportedly training for the America’s Cup in the San Francisco Bay at the time of the accident. The boat race has a reputation for being dangerous, and it has become even more so in recent years as the races become faster and more fierce.

    Before the accident, Simpson had won a gold medal in the 2008 Beijing Olympics in Men’s Sailing. He won a silver at the 2012 London Olympics.

    The accident probably won’t change plans for 2013’s America’s Cup race. It’s still scheduled to take place in September of this year in San Francisco with the Golden Gate Yacht Club as the defender and the Kungliga Svenska Segelsällskapet as the Challenger of Record.

    Here’s some raw footage of the rescue operation:

    [Image: Team GB]

  • Woods With Vonn In Public For The First Time

    Tiger Woods and Lindsey Vonn made their couple debut last night at the Costume Institute Gala at the Met, grabbing headlines as they walked the red carpet together for the first time.

    Of course, the two made it official in March when they posted photos of themselves on Facebook to tell the world that they are, in fact, dating. But seeing them out together is a whole different media ballgame.

    Woods released a statement about the pairing on the social media site, saying, “This season has been great so far and I’m happy with my wins at Torrey and Doral. Something nice that’s happened off the course was meeting Lindsey Vonn,” the star athlete captioned the album—which features four perfectly posed pics of the happy couple—on his social media page. “Lindsey and I have been friends for some time, but over the last few months we have become very close and are now dating. We thank you for your support and for respecting our privacy. We want to continue our relationship, privately, as an ordinary couple and continue to compete as athletes.”

    The couple glowed on the red carpet last night, with Vonn wearing a cream-colored floor-length gown with sheer panels and Woods going for the traditional black-tie look.

    Image: Facebook

  • 2000 Gold Medalist Dies of a Heart Attack at age 35

    Olympic gold medalist Soraya Jimenez has died at the age of 35.

    Reuters is reporting that Jimenez died of a heart attack at her home in Mexico City. She reportedly had multiple health issues, and only one lung.

    Jimenez won gold for Mexico in the women’s 58 kg weightlifting competition at the 2000 summer Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia. She lifted a total of 222.5 kg (490.5 pounds), beating the North Korean silver medalist Ri Song-Hui. The victory made her the first female gold medalist from Mexico.

    Jimenez retired from the sport of weightlifting after the 2004 summer Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, where she did not place.

  • Oscar Pistorius Charged With Valentine’s Day Murder Of Gf (BREAKING)

    Oscar Pistorius, the first man to ever compete in both the Paralympics and the Olympics, has been charged with the murder of his girlfriend.

    Police were called to the athlete’s home in the early hours of Thursday morning after a shooting was reported; when they arrived, they found that Pistorius’ girlfriend, model Reeva Steenkamp, had been shot to death, suffering wounds in her arms and head. Right now, officials aren’t releasing many details, but it is widely believed that Steenkamp entered the home in order to surprise her boyfriend for Valentine’s Day and he shot her, believing her to be an intruder.

    Pistorius–known as “Blade Runner” because of his high-tech prosthetics–is said to have kept several weapons in his home in South Africa due to “previous incidents”, which the police aren’t detailing at this time. It’s thought that the athlete has dealt with intruders in the past, leading him to stock up an arsenal.

    Writer Jonathan McEvoy interviewed Pistorius at his home in 2011 and saw the weapons for himself, speculating that Pistorius had begun storing them because of his country’s high crime rate.

    “I spoke to him at his house and when we went upstairs to his bedroom so that our photographer could take photos of his running blades, that was when I saw the weapons,” said McEvoy. “There was the pistol by the bed, the machine gun up against the wall, the baseball bat under the window, a cricket bat too. He was concerned by safety and security to a high level, there was no doubt about that.”

    The investigation is still ongoing, obviously, and Pistorius has a court date which will likely be held tomorrow. Despite the rumors that it may have been an accident, neighbors reported hearing the sounds of an argument and shouting coming from the home before the shooting occurred.

    Reeva Steenkamp
    Image: FHM

    (image)

  • Olympics Drops Wrestling From Its Core Sports Lineup

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) today announced its 25 “core sports” for the 2020 Summer Olympic Games. Notably absent from the list was wrestling – a sport that has been part of the olympic games since the very first olympics in 1896.

    That doesn’t mean that wrestling won’t be an event at the Olympics, however. The sport will now have to compete with other “shortlisted” sports for inclusion in the 2020 games. Baseball/softball, karate, roller sports (inline skating), sport climbing, squash, wakeboarding, and wushu are other shortlisted sports that will make presentations to the IOC executive board at a meeting in St. Petersburg in May. Following that meeting the executive board will choose which of the shortlisted sports to include in the 2020 games.

    From an IOC statement:

    In an effort to ensure the Olympic Games remain relevant to sports fans of all generations, the Olympic Programme Commission systematically reviews every sport following each edition of the Games.

    The 25 core sports that will definitely be included in the 2020 games are athletics, rowing, badminton, basketball, boxing, canoeing, cycling, equestrian, fencing, football, gymnastics, weightlifting, handball, hockey, judo, swimming, modern pentathlon, taekwondo, tennis, table tennis, shooting, archery, triathlon, sailing and volleyball.

    The location for the 2020 Summer Olympic Games will be chosen in September 2013 at the 125th IOC Session. The candidate cities are Istanbul, Tokyo, and Madrid.

  • Double Gold Medalist James Cracknell Talks @ Google

    In one of its recent @Google Talks, Google hosted rowing champion and double Olympic gold medalist James Cracknell and his wife, TV presenter Beverley Turner. The two talked about their story before and after an accident, which threatened to damage their lives.

    From Google’s description:

    In October 2011 James Cracknell, two-time Olympic gold-medal rower and one of the greatest endurance athletes the world has ever known, suffered a seizure at home as his young son looked on in horror. A man who had known no limits, a man who had practically achieved the impossible, was now struggling to master life’s simple challenges.

    A year earlier, as James undertook yet another endurance challenge in Arizona, he was knocked off his bike by the wing mirror of a petrol tanker. It had smashed into the back of his head at high speed, causing severe frontal lobe damage. The doctors weren’t sure if he would recover and, if he did, whether he would ever be the same again.

    Check out a few of Google’s other recent At Google Talks here.

  • Four Olympians Lose Medals Over Steroid Use

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) today announced that four athletes who competed in the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens will be stripped of their medals after analysis of stored urine samples revealed “adverse analytical findings.”

    Yuriy Bilonog, Svetlana Krivelyova, Ivan Tsikhan, and Iryna Yatchenko have all been ordered to return their medals and diplomas to the IOC “as soon as possible.” Bilonog, the Ukrainian who won the gold medal in men’s shot put, and Krivelyova, the Russian who won the bronze medal in women’s shot put, both tested positive for oxandrolone metabolite. Tsikhan, who won the silver medal in men’s hammer throw, and Yatchenko, who won the bronze medal in women’s discus throw, are both from Belarus and tested positive for methandienone metabolite. Both oxandrlone and methandienone are anabolic androgenic steroids.

    In addition to these four athletes, the IOC stated that it has one case still pending.

    The IOC and the World Anti-Doping Agency decided to re-test “a number” of samples from the 2004 Games after targeted testing based on intelligence and new methods of detection. The committee keeps urine samples for eight years after each Olympic Games so they can be re-tested when new detection methods are discovered or when new substances are added to the list of banned substances.

  • Milt Campbell Dies at 78, First African-American Olympic Decathlon Winner

    We mourn the loss of a historic figure in the life of sports (especially the Olympics) as we hear about the passing of Milt Campbell, who was the first African-American decathlon gold-metal recipient of the 1956 Summer Olympics held in Melbourne, Australia.

    Campbell’s athletic talents started while he was in high school when he got involved in track (as well as swimming). During high school, Campbell secured a place in the 1952 Olympics for the decathlon event. During the 1952 Olympics, Campbell did not win; however, he did come pretty close with a silver medal. Four years later in the 1956 Olympics, Campbell achieved victory by winning the gold medal for the decathlon event. This made Campbell the first African-American winner for the decathlon.

    In 1957, a year after his success, Campbell was drafted for the Cleveland Browns football team, later playing for the Montreal Alouettes until he retired from football in 1964.

    Earlier this year, Campbell was inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame (his home state).

    On Friday, November 2nd, 2012, Milt Campbell died at the age of 78. His long-time partner Linda Rusch reported to the Associated Press that Campbell had been fighting prostate cancer for quite a long time.

    Various fans of Campbell’s talent in the Twitterverse have been posting their respects:



  • Paralympic Games Begin Tomorrow in London

    Paralympic Games Begin Tomorrow in London

    The 2012 Paralympic Games are set to kick off tomorrow evening in London. The 14th Paralympic Games will host around 4,200 athletes from 166 countries, including over 200 athletes from the U.S. Many of the U.S. athletes competing are military veterans who lost limbs or sustained other injuries during their service.

    Tonight a 24-hour torch relay will begin the countdown to the opening of the games. The Paralympic Flame will be carried by torches 92 miles through English communities. 116 teams of five people will carry the torch to its destination at the opening ceremony in Stoke Mandevill Stadium tomorrow evening. The torches will originate from the four highest mountain peaks in Scotland, Wales, England, and Northern Ireland.

    The London 2012 Paralympic Games will run from tomorrow until September 9 and will use many of the same venues that the London 2012 Olympic Games did. Many of the sports featured in the Paralympic Games are also the same as those in the Olympics, including, archery, equestrian, judo, powerlifting, rowing, and swimming. Special equipment is often used by Paralympic athletes when competing, and some sports, such as sitting volleyball, wheelchair fencing, wheelchair tennis, wheelchair rugby, and wheelchair basketball are unique to the Paralympic Games.

    The Summer Paralympics began in 1960 with the first games held in Rome. The Paralympic Games are held immediately following the Olympic Games, and Winter Paralympic Games began in 1976. Paralympic athletes compete in categories specific to their impairment, including limb deficiency or loss, ataxia, visual impairment, short stature, and intellectual impairment.

    Sports fans can watch the 2012 Paralympic Games from the Paralympics website, which will stream five different channels of live Paralympics coverage. Check out the preview video of the games below, which look every bit as exciting as this year’s Olympic Games.

  • YouTube: 231 Million Total Olympic Streams, 500K+ Livestreams at Peak

    YouTube: 231 Million Total Olympic Streams, 500K+ Livestreams at Peak

    Say what you want about the coverage of the 2012 London Olympics in the States (and I’m sure you have a lot to say), but YouTube and NBC’s partnership accounted for a lot of streaming hours over the two+ weeks.

    Today, YouTube has released their statistics for the Olympic Games coverage and the immediately eye-popping number is 231 million total streams (worldwide, including the U.S. and 64 other countries). YouTube says that out of those 231 million, 72 million come directly from the IOC YouTube channel.

    At one single time, YouTube says that they had over 500,000 livestreams going at the same time.

    That aforementioned partnership with NBC (YouTube powered NBCOlympics.com) saw over 159 million streams.

    And it wasn’t just live streaming video that saw a spike in views. The TeamUSA channels saw 6.75 million views of their behind the scenes coverage.

    Youtube also talks about a 7X improvement in quality “based on low buffering and high frame rates” for live video. I’m not sure that I noticed that much of a difference between Olympic streams and other streaming content on the site, but I guess I’ll take their word for it.

    Facebook and Twitter also released their own Olympic Games stats. Facebook says users generated over 116 million Olympic-themed communications, while Twitter announced more than 150 million Olympic-themed tweets.

  • McKayla Maroney Is Somewhat Impressed By Her Meme

    Team USA gymnast McKayla Maroney has been a pretty good sport about becoming the internet’s most-prevalent meme. In London, the vault expert was caught on camera with a rather prickly expression on her face shortly after being awarded the silver medal in the women’s vault final. Subsequently, her “meh” face blew up on the interwebs, as photoshoppers decided to place her unimpressed look in various pop culture situations.

    Shopped photos began appearing on reddit, and eventually “MehKayla” found herself the subject of her own Tumblr blog called McKayla is not impressed.

    Ever since, she’s played nice – discussing her memedom with the media and tweeting about it. I mean, a small part of her has to be annoyed that this is why she’s an internet star. After all, she did win a gold medal…

    But it’s funny. And even if the internet continues to beat it like the dead horse that we know it can be, it’ll still be remembered as funny – at least for a brief time.

    Now, it looks like McKayla has found her favorite version of the McKayla not impressed meme:

    The Instagram photo shows the unimpressed gymnast in the middle of a famous Charlie Brown scene (seen above).

    It even looks like her parents are getting in on the fun:

    (image)

    “It is pretty funny,” she recently told David Letterman.

    Being a meme is both an honor and a chore, but most people take it pretty well. Famous meme subjects like Bad luck Brian and Scumbag Steve have participated in reddit AMAs. Astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson (watch out, we got a badass over here) once said that being a meme was “initially really weird and creepy.”

    “..And then I said well, this in total is a celebration so I should not object.”

    A celebration, indeed.

  • Facebook Sees 116 Million Olympic-Themed Communications

    The Olympics are over, and we can say, without a doubt, that this year was the first true “social media games.” And unprecedented amount of people took to social networks to not only discuss the action, but to follow athletes and get up-to-the-minute results that they weren’t able to find through traditional TV broadcasts.

    Today, Facebook has released their stats for the 2012 Summer games, and they are reporting over 116 million Olympic-themed communications. That includes posts and comments on said posts.

    Not only that, but Olympic athletes saw their Facebook pages expand to the tune of 12.2 million “likes” throughout the games.

    Here are some specific stats, from Facebook:

    • More than 1M people liked Jamaican Usain Bolt’s Page during the games, bringing his total to more than 8.1M.
    • More than 850K people liked Michael Phelps’ Page during the games, bringing his total to more than 6.3M.
    • Jessica Ennis saw an increase of 632%, bringing her to a total of 801K people connected to her Page – starting from just 108.7K.
    • Tom Daley saw an increase of 672%, bringing him to a total of 1M – starting from just 120K.
    • Jordyn Wieber started out with 33K people who had liked her Page – and won over the hearts of more than 288K more, bringing her to a total of 324K (+818%)
    • Marcel Nguyen won more than silver for Germany – he added 193K new people to his Page’s starting base of 7.5K – for a new total of more than 200K (+2524%)
    • Gabby Douglas wins the “Rising Star” award – adding more than 591K people to her starting base of a slightly over 14K on her Page – she’s now at more than 600K (+4045%)

    And when Michael Phelps won his final medal to become the best Olympican ever, mentions of his name went through the roof – a 1200% spike.

    Earlier this week, Twitter told us that they saw more than 150 million tweets about the Olympics from open to close. Considering that Twitter has around half the user base as Facebook, I guess that means that Twitter was the preferred place for Olympic-themed communications in 2012.

  • The Olympics Generated More Than 150 Million Tweets

    Now that the London 2012 summer games have come to a close, Twitter is releasing some figures that shine a light on just how gigantic a role social media played in this year’s Olympics. 2012 is no doubt the first ever Twitter-fueled Olympics, as the amount of engagement on the site dwarfed anything seen in the 2008 Games in Beijing. More tweets concerning the Olympics were coming in on single days before the opening ceremony than came in during the entire 2088 Games.

    Twitter did their part to get people excited about the Olympics by launching their own dedicated event page.

    And now, Twitter is saying that the Olympics generated more than 150 million tweets from start to finish (a 16-day period).

    Among those 150 million+ tweets, it was Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt who ran away with the show (apologies). Bolt was responsible for the two biggest tweet-spiking events during competition. He garnered 80,000+ tweets per minutes when he won the 200m dash and 74,000+ TPM when he beat the field in the 100m dash.

    The rest of the top five TPM moments belonged to Andy Murray (men’s tennis gold medalist), the Jamaican relay team (4×100 gold medalists), and Team USA (basketball, after beating Spain for the gold) – in that order.

    Twitter also reports that ten different athletes generated more than 1 million tweets each. The aforementioned Usain Bolt leads the pack, followed by Michael Phelps, Tom Daley, Ryan Lochte, Gabby Douglas, Andy Murray, Kobe Bryant, Yohan Blake, Lee Chong Wei, and LeBron James.

    Of all the sports, it was soccer that reigned supreme with over 5 million tweets.

    But in all, it wasn’t an Olympic athlete (or even a sport) that drew the most TPM. That title belongs to the Spice Girls, whose closing ceremony performance brought in a whopping 116,000 TPM.

  • London 2012 Rhythmic Gymnastics Doodle Hits Google Homepage

    The latest in Google’s series of Olympics-themed doodles celebrates rhythmic gymnastics. The previous three were interactive, playable games, but Google appears to have gotten back to the more traditional doodle style. Perhaps they just couldn’t figure out a way to make a game out of rhythmic gymnastics.

    The previous doodle was for soccer, which was preceded by slalom canoe, basketball, hurdles, and the javelin throw. Google has featured a sport-themed doodle each day since the Olympics’ opening ceremony.

    The hurdles doodle even drew some controversy, as some people claimed that it was racist. This led to a bit on Conan O’Brien.

    The new doodle is currently live in parts of the world where it has already become August 11. You can see it at google.co.au, for example. The rest of the world’s native Google sites should be getting it soon enough.

    The rhythmic gymnastics events began on Thursday, and will continue through Saturday. You can check out the official page for the events here.

  • London 2012 Soccer Google Doodle is a PK Simulator

    Google has unleashed yet another time-wasting Olympic Google doodle upon web browsers everywhere. While Google has created a different Google doodle for each day of the London 2012 Olympics, the past few days have featured an easy to learn, yet difficult to master mini-game based on an Olympic sport. Yesterday’s doodle saw players navigating rapids in a slalom canoe.

    Today’s doodle features a simulated penalty kick shootout in which the player takes on the role of goalkeeper. The game is vastly simplified, as players can only move left to right and jump. Three goals scored ends the game and the total number of balls deflected counts toward a possible three medal tiers. The shots come faster as the game progresses, so just the same as the past two days, quick reflexes and spot-on timing will be required to achieve three medals. A helpful feature players might not realize at first is that their computer mouse can be used for faster, smoother left-right movement.

    As for real Olympic soccer, the U.S. women’s soccer team won their third Olympic gold medal in a row after beating Japan 2-1 in the championship match on Thursday. U.S. goalkeeper Hope Solo is being singled out as saving the game for the U.S. after a magnificent save in the 85th minute of the game.

    The Olympic men’s soccer competition is still ongoing, and the bronze medal match between South Korea and Japan will take place at 2:45 pm EDT this afternoon. The gold medal match between Brazil and Mexico is scheduled for tomorrow morning at 10:00 am EDT.

  • Twitter’s Been Buzzing About the Olympics [INFOGRAPHIC]

    During the Olympic games, there’s a good chance that somewhere, on some channel, there’s some coverage nearly all day long. The Olympic games are also a popular global event with a lot of built-in drama. Couple all of that with the fact that Americans have turned to social media for their Olympic news (thanks to NBC’s delay), and you can see why Olympic-themed tweets have dominated Twitter for the past two weeks.

    Social integration platform Mass Relevance decided to look at the Twitter activity from the first 10 days of the games – and whoa are the game popular in the world of 140 characters.

    In the first ten days, over 28.4 million tweets went out that were somehow related to the Olympics. That’s an average of nearly 2,000 a minute.

    It’s no surprise that swimming legend Michael Phelps was the most talked-about athlete in the games – but he was followed closely by Lebron James. U.K. Diver Tom Daley, fatest man on Earth Usain Bolt, and U.S.A. baller Kevin Durant rounded out the top 5.

    Swimming was the most-talked about sport on Twitter. Of course, swimming was only showcased for those first days. Gymnastics still had events to go on August 7th and 8th, a time period that this doesn’t take into account.

    Check out the full infographic below:

  • Zuckerberg’s Harvard Roomie Goes for Gold Today in the Triple Jump

    Zuckerberg’s Harvard Roomie Goes for Gold Today in the Triple Jump

    Samyr Laine is a triple jumper who holds both the indoor and outdoor records for his University. On Tuesday, he qualified for the finals in the Olympics games in said sport. Laine, who is competing under the Haitian flag, is a remarkable athlete. But there are plenty of remarkable athletes in these London Games – so what distinguishes Laine from the rest?

    His company.

    The University for which Laine hold the triple jump records happens to be Harvard, and his freshman roommate happened to be one Mark Zuckerberg.

    And so the storyline goes; today, Mark Zuckerberg’s college roommate will go for an Olympic gold medal.

    But he definitely has some work to do if he’s going to cement a spot on the podium – much less the top spot. In the qualifying round, Laine’s best jump was 16.81m, a full .4m behind the leader, American Christian Taylor. This puts him in 10th place going into the finals (only 12 qualified), but as we all know, the finals are a whole new ballgame.

    Samyr Laine

    Just had quite the motivational and encouraging conversation with the President of the Republic of Haiti, Michel Martelly. It seems he’s all in and I know all of you are too. We’ve got one more step to go and trust me, I won’t be playing any games out there tomorrow!

    A few weeks before the Olympics, people began to make the connection and realize that Zuck’s roommate was an actual Olympian. In an interview, Laine revealed some interesting facts about his time spent living with the Facebook CEO.

    He said that they played a lot of PlayStation.

    The final in the men’s triple jump takes place at 2:20 pm EST today. The would record in the event is 18.29m, set by Brit Jonathan Edwards back in 1995.

  • London 2012 Slalom Canoe: Google Doodle Lets You Navigate the Rapids

    Today, Google continues their run of Olympic-themed Doodles with their third straight interactive Doodle. Since the opening ceremony, Google has provided us with a different Doodle every day, showcasing one of the many Olympic sports.

    And for the last couple of days, those Doodles have been playable. On Tuesday, the Doodle featured a hurdles game. Yesterday, it was a basketbal mini-game. And today, it’s the Canoe Slalom.

    Brace yourselves. Maybe you happened to get three gold stars in either of the previous games – but this one is much harder. Not only do you have to alternatively press the arrow keys to give the canoe forward momentum, but you have to deftly guide it through gates and avoid obstacles as well.

    This guy’s time is pretty good, but there has already been rumblings of sub-12, even sub-11 second times.

    The Slalom Canoe was first held as a competition in 1932 in Switzerland. At first, it was held on flat water, but later changed to the white water rapids that we’ve come to love. It was originally modeled after the ski slalom. In 1972, the event made its Olympic debut – but it didn’t become a permanent Olympic event until 1992.

    The course for the Canoe Slalom is 250 meters long, and athletes’ times down the course determine their success. There can be up to 25 gates throughout the course, and failing to properly pass through one can result in a penalty – 2 seconds for touching it, and 50 seconds for missing it altogether.

    Events include the Kayak (men’s and women’s) and the Canoe (single and double). This year, France leads the medal count with two, both gold.

    And the Canoe Slalom is just one of the many canoe events at these London Games. Check out the IOC’s short video on Olympic canoeing below:

  • Watch Epke Zonderland’s Ridiculous Gold Medal High Bar Routine

    There are good men’s horizontal bar routines. Then there is Dutch gymnast Epke Zonderland’s horizontal bar routine.

    Yesterday, during the final day of gymnastics competition at the 2012 Olympics, the Dutchman wowed spectators and TV audiences alike with his high-flying acrobatics on the way to a gold medal – The Netherlands’ first ever gold in the event.

    Zonderland, apart from sporting one of cooler names in these London Games, performed a routine with an insane start value of 17.900. The high difficulty was granted, in large part, because of a back-to-back-to-back (that’s three) release combination.

    And he nailed it. Check it out below:

    He was awarded a 16.533, which was just enough to beat German Fabian Hambuechen for the gold. For U.S. TV audiences, this was the last gymnastic event the NBC aired for 2012. I’d say it was a spectacular way to go out.