Bolt, Phelps, Farah and beating heart of London

By AFP
August 13, 2012

LONDON: Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps and Mo Farah delivered the signature performances of the Olympics as Great Britain shrugged...

LONDON: Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps and Mo Farah delivered the signature performances of the Olympics as Great Britain shrugged off its grim economic worries to stage a memorable, record-breaking showpiece.

As the curtain came down on the 16-day spectacular at an Olympic Park built on a toxic, east London industrial wasteland, the hosts basked in plaudits.

There was a glittering collection of memories from events played in and around some of the city's iconic sites.

Horse Guards Parade, in the shadow of Buckingham Palace and Whitehall, the heart of British political power, hosted beach volleyball.

Tennis was at Wimbledon, archery went to Lord's, the nerve-centre of cricket, while equestrian enjoyed the spectacular backdrop of Greenwich.

On the track, it was Jamaican superstar Bolt who was sprinting into the record books, his double-triple of 100m, 200m and a world-record setting 4x100m relay exhausting superlatives.

On the same night, Britain hailed Mo Farah's 5,000m-10,000m double, an emotional achievement for a man brought up in war-torn Somalia.

David Rudisha of Kenya set a world record in the 800m while the United States, who were to finish top of the medals table, shattered the 27-year-old record in the 4x100m womens relay.

There was no gold, but there was a slice of Olympic history for Oscar Pistorius on the Olympic track as the double-amputee who races on carbon-fiber blades competed against able-bodied runners in the 400m and 4x400m relay.

Phelps brought the curtain down on his career with four gold medals and two silvers, shattering the record for total medals in a career.

In fact, his 18 golds ended up matching the previous record for total medals amassed by Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina -- he was to finish with 22 altogether.

As Phelps bowed out, a quartet of teenagers ensured there will be no lack of storylines when Rio 2016 rolls around.

America's Missy Franklin and surprise 800m free winner Katie Ledecky, Lithuanian Ruta Meilutyte and China's Ye Shiwen were among the breakout stars poised to carry the sport forward.

Ye's tremendous finish in her world record-breaking 400m medley victory, however, prompted whispering in the Western press that provoked the ire of the Chinese team.

Australia were the biggest losers with one gold medal, six silver and three bronze. It was their lowest tally since Barcelona in 1992.

Britain, who enjoyed their best Games for a century and finished third in the medals table, celebrated the middle Saturday with poster girl Jessica Ennis taking the heptathlon and Farah lighting up the track in the 5,000m.

The sweltering Velodrome rocked most nights, none more so than when Chris Hoy cycled to a sixth career gold to become Britain's most successful Olympian.

Out on the road, Bradley Wiggins added time-trial gold to his Tour de France triumph.

Andy Murray stunned Roger Federer at a heavily-rebranded Wimbledon to take the men's tennis title with Serena Williams collecting the women's title in a spectacular demolition of Maria Sharapova.

There were heroic performances.

The 2012 Games were a landmark also for women athletes.

Nicola Adams, Katie Taylor and Claressa Shields became the first three Olympic boxing champions while Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Brunei sent their first women athletes. (AFP)
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