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  1. #1
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    2016 Rio Olympics

    Here's a good excuse to kick off next year's thread. Seems like ages since London.

    Anderson Silva pushes to compete for Brazil at 2016 Olympics
    By Ryan McKinnell
    April 13, 2015 6:06 PM
    Cagewriter


    Anderson Silva celebrates after the referee stop the fight in the second round during his UFC 148 middleweight championship fight against Chael Sonnen at the MGM Grand Garden Arena Saturday, July 7, 2012 in Las Vegas. Silva won with a TKO
    .

    View photo
    Anderson Silva celebrates after the referee stop the fight in the second round during his UFC 148 middleweight championship fight against Chael Sonnen at the MGM Grand Garden Arena Saturday, July 7, 2012 in Las Vegas. Silva won with a TKO. (AP Photo/David Becker)

    When the Olympic Summer games head to Rio de Janeiro next summer, Brazil could have former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva helping its medal count.

    [DraftKings: UFC contests are live today – draft your team now!]

    That is, if "Spider" has anything to say about.

    Silva, who is 5th-degree black belt in taekwondo, penned a letter to the president of the Brazilian Taekwondo Federation (CBTKD), Carlos Fernandes, expressing his desire to compete for the national team in the 2016 Summer Games.

    "Everybody knows that for a high-performance athlete, the Olympic games is the dream of every athlete, and it wouldn't be different with me," Silva wrote on the CBTKD webpage. "It will be a great pleasure to be part of this golden team, which has a serious institution, commanded by president Carlos Fernandes, who honors us very much, along with his team. Therefore, I wish to represent taekwondo and Brazil in the Olympic games in 2016. With all my esteem, strength and honor."

    Whether or not Silva actually represents Brazil is anyone's guess at this point; however, Silva is, in fact, meeting with President Fernandes soon to discuss, as Fernandes has stated, this "magnificent possibility."

    Silva began his taekwondo training at just 14 years old. Since that time, he used it to become one of the most heralded strikers the sport of mixed martial arts has ever seen. Silva, 39, is currently suspended by the Nevada State Athletic Commission for failing drug tests before and after his fight with Nick Diaz in January at UFC 183.

    Silva has expressed interest in a potential Olympic run in previous years, but the talk was quickly shut down as Silva focused on his MMA career.

    Testing for the Olympics is conducted by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and is much more stringent than the tests he faced during his MMA career. If Silva is looking to put his PED debacle in MMA to rest, a clean and authoritative run in Rio may just help in restoring his championship legacy with fight fans.

    Beach Volleyball, a sport that gets way overexposed here in the U.S. IMO, is going to rock at Rio.
    Gene Ching
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  2. #2
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    Can't believe it is this summer already.
    Felt like London was just 4 year ago, ;P

    Looking forward to judo, wrestling, weightlifting, boxing, track and field, swimming, diving, in short, everything !

    LOL
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

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    Quote Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin View Post
    Can't believe it is this summer already.
    Felt like London was just 4 year ago, ;P

    Looking forward to judo, wrestling, weightlifting, boxing, track and field, swimming, diving, in short, everything !

    LOL
    Not to mention women's gymnastics, diving, hurdles, pole vaulting and especially that spinney ribbon dance thing and contact juggling.
    Kung Fu is good for you.

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    Quote Originally Posted by David Jamieson View Post
    Not to mention women's gymnastics, diving, hurdles, pole vaulting and especially that spinney ribbon dance thing and contact juggling.
    Have you seen the bodies, er, I mean the skill level of the women in those sports?
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

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    Quote Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin View Post
    Have you seen the bodies, er, I mean the skill level of the women in those sports?
    dem skills...yes...
    Kung Fu is good for you.

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    Zika Virus

    Researchers Weigh Risks of Zika Spreading at Rio Olympics
    By SIMON ROMERO and REBECCA R. RUIZJAN. 28, 2016


    Kleisse Marcelina and her 2-month-old son, Pietro, who has microcephaly, in Salvador, Brazil, on Thursday. Credit Christophe Simon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

    RIO DE JANEIRO — With about 500,000 people expected to visit Brazil for the Olympics here this year, researchers are scrambling to figure how much of a risk the Games might pose in spreading the Zika virus around the world.

    Infectious disease specialists are particularly focused on the potential for Zika to spread to the United States. As many as 200,000 Americans are expected to travel to Rio de Janeiro for the Olympics in August. When they return to the Northern Hemisphere and its summer heat, far more mosquitoes will be around to potentially transmit the virus in the United States.

    Brazilian researchers say they believe that Zika, which has been linked to severe birth defects, came to their country during another major sports event — the 2014 World Cup — when hundreds of thousands of visitors flowed into Brazil. Virus trackers here say that the strain raging in Brazil probably came from Polynesia, where an outbreak was rattling small islands around the Pacific.

    As many as 1.5 million people are believed to have contracted the virus in Brazil since then, and the authorities are now investigating thousands of reported cases of babies being born recently with brain damage and abnormally small heads. Zika has spread to more than 20 nations and territories in the Western Hemisphere, according to the World Health Organization, illustrating how quickly the epidemic can expand even without a big international gathering.

    By itself, the virus is not normally life-threatening, and most people who become infected have no symptoms at all.

    The big question is whether Zika is responsible for the huge increase in birth defects reported by doctors, hospitals and other medical officials in Brazil over the last few months. That connection has still not been proved.

    “There is more and more concern that there may be a causal relationship, but a lot of the work so far is to rule out other possible causes,” Dr. Bruce Aylward, an assistant director general at the World Health Organization, said on Thursday, adding that it might take six to nine months to know for sure.

    Asked whether the W.H.O. would advise people not to travel to Brazil for the Olympics, he replied: “I would think that would be very, very unlikely.”

    American officials in the United States said Thursday that there was little likelihood of a Zika outbreak in the United States, adding that the country’s long history of mosquito-control efforts had curbed other mosquito-borne diseases, like dengue or chikungunya, in the past.

    But because the virus can be carried in a person’s blood to a new country, then passed to others by mosquito bites, researchers are trying to determine whether a big global event like the Olympics could add to the global transmission of the disease.

    “Infected travelers departing from Brazil are expected to return to regions that have the potential to sustain transmission,” said Moritz Kraemer, a scholar at Oxford University who researches the global spread of viruses, emphasizing that many travelers would return to their home countries during the summer. “So the international spread of the virus might increase substantially due to higher activity of mosquitoes.”

    Using worldwide temperature profiles and air travel routes, Mr. Kraemer and other researchers found that more than 60 percent of the population of the United States lives in areas where Zika can be transmitted during the Northern Hemisphere’s summer, when the Games will be held. A much smaller number, about 23 million people, live in parts of the United States where Zika can be transmitted year-round, like Florida and Texas, the researchers found.


    In the Southern Hemisphere, by contrast, it is summer right now, and mosquitoes are rapidly spreading the disease in Brazil and other warm parts of Latin America and the Caribbean.

    That may pose a particular risk for big events like Brazil’s Carnival, which goes into full swing next month, but Olympics officials emphasize that it will be winter in Rio when the Games are held, which could limit the spread of mosquito-borne diseases.

    Even so, Brazilian virologists contend that mosquitoes can still easily transmit viruses in Rio and other tropical cities year-round, pointing out that Zika may have begun spreading in Brazil during its winter in 2014.

    Brazil has been one of the hardest hit countries and the authorities are under intense pressure domestically to contain the Zika epidemic right away, regardless of the Olympics.

    Mario Andrada, a spokesman for the Rio Olympics organizing committee, said that there had been no discussions about canceling the Games or moving them to another city because of Zika.

    He added that teams were reviewing Olympic venues daily to eliminate problems like stagnant water where mosquitoes can breed. He said officials were also seeking to work on the “psychological aspect” of athletes being fearful about getting Zika by guaranteeing a supply of mosquito repellent and by keeping teams from every nation informed about the virus.

    “The risk is no joke, so we will maintain this inspection program until the end of the Paralympics,” Mr. Andrada said, referring to the multisport event that will be held in September, after the Olympics.

    Some Brazilian virus specialists contend that the measures adopted by Olympic officials are meager given the scope of the Zika epidemic in Brazil. Beyond the risk to infants, hundreds of people around the country have been stricken by Guillain-Barré, a syndrome that Brazilian officials warn may be connected to Zika and can leave patients paralyzed for weeks.

    “It’s a step in the right direction to inspect facilities, but this is something that should have been done on a broader basis five years ago, not just in the months before the Games,” said Carlos Granato, an infectious diseases specialist at the Federal University of São Paulo. “Mosquitoes persist in a multitude of areas around Rio and other Brazilian cities, so simply keeping Olympic venues free of them is not enough.”

    The fears over Zika are merely the latest challenge to the Rio Olympics. Sailors have complained angrily about competing in the city’s sewage-infested bay. Prosecutors have asserted that builders paid bribes to win contracts for Olympic venues. Clashes have broken out over evictions to make way for Olympic projects. Deep spending cuts have come as Brazil reels from its worst economic slump in decades.

    “Plagued by so many problems, Rio is clearly in a league of its own among host cities of the Olympics in recent memory,” Andrew Zimbalist, a scholar who specializes in sports economics at Smith College, said.
    continued next post
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    Quote Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin View Post
    Can't believe it is this summer already.
    Felt like London was just 4 year ago, ;P

    Looking forward to judo, wrestling, weightlifting, boxing, track and field, swimming, diving, in short, everything !

    LOL

    Yep. So time flies by, and this is Olympic year again. Even without the Zika outbreak, Brazil is still a very questionable candidate to host the Game. Of course, I hope for the best. Let's the Game runs smoothly and be successful.

    I will watch the events as much as possible: track and field, swimming, TKD, table tennis, diving.


    Regards,

    KC
    Hong Kong

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    I'm hopeful for a smooth and successful Olympic Games too, SteveLau

    Meanwhile, our cover story from our MAY+JUNE 2016 issue is now available for free online, and it's relevant to this here thread: The Olympic Martial Arts of Asia By Gene Ching and Gigi Oh

    Gene Ching
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    tomato and eggs

    China unveils 'tomato and eggs' 2016 Olympic uniform
    By Robert Sawatzky, for CNN
    Updated 10:49 AM ET, Wed June 1, 2016

    Zika-proof uniforms for Olympic athletes 01:02

    Story highlights
    Chinese male athletes will wear red coats, female competitors will wear yellow
    Stir-fried tomatoes and eggs are a common Chinese dish
    Hong Kong (CNN)The idea was to wrap Chinese athletes in the flag.

    Instead, the team being sent to the Rio Olympics this year will be wearing what some have likened to "stir-fried tomatoes and eggs."
    It's not a unique criticism.
    For years, China's national colors of red and yellow have attracted unflattering comment when used as inspiration for team uniforms.
    "It's 'fried eggs with tomato' again," tweeted state media People's Daily.

    Follow
    People's Daily,China ✔ ‎@PDChina
    Uniform for Chinese delegation to Rio Olympics unveiled: it's 'fried eggs with tomato' again http://en.people.cn/n3/2016/0601/c98649-9066521.html

    11:49 PM - 31 May 2016
    32 32 Retweets 52 52 likes

    "Stir fried tomatoes and eggs never change. Can't you use a different color? It's so ugly," said Weibo user @zhuzhuzhuzhurou.
    Another, @woshiyamiedie, slammed the outfits as too Western. "Don't we have our own style? As for colors, even though it's national flag colors, there must be a smarter way to use them."
    The uniform features a red coat, white shirt and patterned tie for male competitors. Female athletes will wear a yellow coat, white shirt and skirt.
    A number of countries have unveiled their team uniforms ahead of the 2016 Games, even as doctors urge the World Health Organization to postpone or move them due to fears the Zika virus will spread.
    South Korea has infused its new Olympic wear with insect repellant to reduce the threat of infection.


    South Korean Olympians and models pose during the uniform launch, April 27, Seoul.

    Australian designers also opted for blazers, with the added twist of a lining that features the names of past gold medalists.


    The Australian team uniform was unveiled in Sydney in March.

    Germany opted for a casual look.


    The German team kit for Rio 2016.

    For Team GB, designers took inspiration from the British Coat of Arms to create "cutting-edge designs mixing tradition with 21st Century attitude."
    Meanwhile, Team USA was careful to make this year's Polo Ralph Lauren uniforms in the United States, to avoid the backlash faced in 2012 when they were made in China.
    While China has stuck closely to the colors of its flag, another country dealing with red and yellow has taken a different tack. Spain has opted for a more subdued combination of red and blue.


    Spain has opted to abandoned heavy yellow accents for red and blue.

    The designer of China's kit Ye Chaoying told Chinese state news agency Xinhua that "we hope our athletes will feel like wearing our national flag" as they enter the stadium when the Games open in August in Rio.
    Chaoying's family business, the Hengyuanxiang Group has been Chinese athletes' clothing sponsor since the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. He has reportedly embraced the reaction to his bold designs by dubbing himself "The father of stir-fried tomatoes and eggs".
    I'm rather fond of tomato and eggs, but for breakfast, not as a uniform.
    Gene Ching
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    still looking grim

    There's a vid too. Couldn't cut&paste the infographic.

    Olympic Games: Is Rio ready?
    By Nick Paton Walsh and Vasco Cotovio, CNN
    Updated 12:15 AM ET, Thu June 9, 2016

    Rio de Janeiro (CNN)There's a pretty big question in Rio that doesn't have an answer just yet. How do the countless Olympic guests expected to stay in the luxury hotels lining the beaches of Copacabana and Ipanema get from there to the Olympic Park without being stuck in hours of Rio's least popular asset: its traffic?

    The city thought it had a ready answer: an extension to its subway system, the Metro, known as Line 4, that would go from the beach areas, under all the car-clogged roads, almost all the way to the Olympic Park.
    But with Brazil reeling from unprecedented political and economic turmoil, the plan hit a snag; it was meant to be ready in July, but organizers announced recently the timing would be a little tighter than expected.
    It is now due to open on August 1 -- just four days before the Games begin.
    Today, the subway station nearest the Olympic Park is a hive of activity, packed with workers doing what organizers say are tests on the equipment, but clearly also some construction too.
    Rodrigo Vieira, secretary of transportation for the state of Rio, is on hand to check on progress. Over the noise of construction work, he told us: "We are completely sure that everything will be done by August 1.
    "Of course the schedule is tight, but we have 8,000 people working during the days and nights. Everything is on schedule."

    Final preparations
    Across the city, the sound of jackhammers is at times overwhelming, as the city moves as fast as it can to fix the last bolts and apply the final coats of polish, ahead of the Opening Ceremony on August 5.
    The highways all the way to the Olympic Park are lined with last-minute construction; it's a dash to the finish line you often see ahead of huge sporting events, but one that has left some a little more disconcerted than usual, given the upheaval Brazil is going through at the moment.
    Cabinet resignations, a bid to impeach former President Dilma Rousseff, an outbreak of Zika virus, a financial crisis -- most countries could be forgiven for giving up even halfway through a list like that, but Brazil is fighting on.



    When we visited the edge of the Olympic Park with just 66 days to go to the Games, another struggle was in evidence.
    It was being led by Maria da Penha and Sandra Daniel. They are residents of a collection of homes called Vila Autodromo and for months they have steadfastly refused to get out of the way of the Olympic juggernaut.
    When we visited the community in February, it was a few houses stronger. Now it is mostly rubble. The community of hold-outs has shrunk -- some enticed away by new homes elsewhere.
    Maria da Penha amid the rubble of Rio de Janeiro's Vila Autodromo neighborhood near the city's Olympic Park.
    Maria da Penha amid the rubble of Rio de Janeiro's Vila Autodromo neighborhood near the city's Olympic Park.
    But Sandra and Maria are staying put, waiting for new homes that the state is rushing to build, just a few meters away from their original houses.
    Is Maria concerned the government might try to move her on before the Games? "I'm not afraid, as I don't think they can," she says. "Especially because it is very close to the Olympics. And if that happens we will start a protest right in the middle of the Olympics."
    Gene Ching
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    Slightly OT

    Not quite sure what to make of this one

    Kiwi sportsman Jason Lee: 'I got kidnapped in Brazil'
    8:48 AM Monday Jul 25, 2016

    A Kiwi sportsman in Brazil says he was kidnapped by men in police uniform and forced to withdraw money from ATMs.

    Jason Lee, Jiu-Jitsu athlete and boyfriend of New Zealand journalist Laura McQuillian, tweeted "What did you guys get up to yesterday? I got kidnapped. Go Olympics! #Rio2016."

    Jason Lee @jasonleejitsu
    What did you guys get up to yesterday?
    I got kidnapped. Go Olympics!#Rio2016
    11:53 AM - 24 Jul 2016 · Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Brazil
    349 349 Retweets 191 191 likes
    On Facebook, Lee wrote "yesterday I got kidnapped in Brazil."

    Lee said he was kidnapped by people in police uniforms, "not by some random people with guns."

    He added "I was threatened with arrest if I did not get in their private car and accompany them to two ATMs to withdraw a large sum of money for a bribe.

    "I'm not sure what's more depressing, the fact this stuff is happening to foreigners so close to the Olympic Games or the fact that Brazilians have to live in a society that enables this absolute bull**** on a daily basis. This place is well and truly f***ked in every sense of the word imaginable."

    Laura McQuillan @mcquillanatorz
    Boyfriend was accosted by Policia Militar cops who drove him to two ATMs and forced him to withdraw cash #roadtorio https://twitter.com/jasonleejitsu/st...87544463749121
    1:11 PM - 24 Jul 2016
    103 103 Retweets 42 42 likes
    In February Lee spoke about his life in Rio - where he had been living for 10 months.

    "I decided to pack up my life and move here to pursue my dream of being a professional athlete and training in Brazilian jiu-jitsu full time at one of the best gyms in the world," he said in a Fairfax column about Kiwis living overseas.

    "I would have to say the greatest advantage (of living in Rio) would be the weather, which is amazing almost all of the time - even during the winter it's hot enough to go swimming at the beach. Also the cost of living is much lower than New Zealand," he said.

    "There are obvious disadvantages, such as crime and personal safety but I would urge this isn't a big enough problem to discourage people from visiting. The language barrier can be tough at times as very few people speak English, so learning Portuguese is a must for day-to-day life."

    This came after two members of the Australian Paralympic sailing squad were robbed at gunpoint last month.

    Paralympic sailor Liesl Tesch and team official Sarah Ross were confronted by two men while riding their bicycles in at Rio park, Dailymail reported

    One of the men was carrying a pistol and the women were robbed of their bicycles.

    A spokesman from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it did not have information on the incident but pointed to its advice section.

    "Reports of express kidnappings in Brazil are common in major cities. This is when criminals abduct a victim for a short amount of time and force them to withdraw funds from their bank account. To reduce the risk of this occurring we recommend you use ATMs that are located in public places during daylight hours or ATMs located within bank branches."

    Security issues ahead of Rio Olympics

    Security of fans and athletes has became a major concern on the eve of next month's Olympics.

    Murders rose sharply in the first half of 2016, just as officials wanted to use the Aug. 5-21 Olympic Games to showcase the city as a tourist destination. Shootouts erupt daily, even in Rio slums where community policing programs created to pacify them had successfully rewritten the narrative in recent years, AP reports.

    The number of people killed by police, who many residents accuse of shooting first and asking questions later, has spiked in the past two years after dropping significantly the previous six. Police, in turn, are increasingly under attack: 61 have been killed in Rio since January, the majority while off duty.

    "2016 has been a very bad year. We have seen a dramatic increase in homicides, robberies and other crimes," said Ignacio Cano, a sociologist at the Violence Studies Lab of Rio de Janeiro State University. "We lost a big opportunity to transform police and develop a new public safety model."

    Law enforcement experts say Brazil's worst recession since the 1930s is at the heart of the surge in violence in Rio. A financial crunch in the oil-producing state has put thousands of government workers' salaries and pensions on hold, police budgets have been slashed and daily announcements of layoffs have added to the angst.

    Rights groups additionally blame a culture of combat still at the core of much of Rio's law enforcement, instincts more likely to emerge when officers feel under attack.

    Cano says tourists coming for the Olympics will likely be spared the violence lived daily in the slums, though it periodically does spill into the city's tourist-friendly and affluent south. The 85,000 soldiers and police assigned to patrol the streets is a force double that of the 2012 Games in London.

    On a recent afternoon, two Associated Press journalists watched as half a dozen officers sheltered behind a cable car station shot it out with suspected drug traffickers in Complexo do Alemao, a sprawling cluster of slums in north Rio. Minutes after the gunfire stopped, several schoolchildren walked by the building as gun-toting police stopped and frisked drivers and bikers.

    Amnesty International counted 265 such shootings last week, the first since launching a crowdsourced app to help alert people living in violence-plagued areas.

    - NZ Herald
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    I ate it so you don't have to: Lay's 'Passport to Flavor' chips

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    Tkd

    We've mentioned the colored uniforms here before. Do other sports even bother with such trappings?

    The Octogon part is silly.

    Martial art mixes it up at Rio
    Friday, July 29, 2016 12:21 a.m. CDT
    By Ian Ransom

    MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Taekwondo's battle for relevance at the Olympics continues at the Rio de Janeiro Games, with tournament organizers introducing colored pants and a mixed martial arts flavor in a bid to spice up the competition.

    The fringe sport, which made its Olympic debut at the 2000 Sydney Games, is assured of its place until Tokyo in 2020 but is feeling the heat to modernize as the International Olympic Committee looks to appeal to a younger demographic.

    Taekwondo is far from a blood sport, but appears to have taken a cue from mixed martial arts by changing its square fighting mat to an octagon, the shape of the Ultimate Fighting Championship's cage.

    Competitors will also be allowed to wear colored pants with their national flags at the Aug. 17-20 tournament at the Carioca Arena 3, which may upset purists accustomed to the starched-white trousers of Olympics past.

    "The introduction of colored pants for athletes will transform the look of competition, adding to the vibrant, carnival atmosphere in Rio, and will give athletes an even greater sense of national pride as they compete for their countries," World Taekwondo Federation (WTF) president Chungwon Choue said.

    The WTF has had its critics in the past for being aloof and reactive but earned praise at London for introducing a new scoring system and instant video reviews which banished much of the refereeing controversy that blighted previous tournaments.

    In Rio, fighters will now be fitted with electric sensors in their protective head gear to help referees detect scoring shots, adding to the torso sensors introduced at London.

    Competitors will also enter the arena to theme music of their choice, adding a bit of theater to a discipline which has its origins in ancient Korean martial arts.

    The improved scoring system at London saw all eight titles go to different nations and the field is expected to be wide open again.

    Chinese double Olympic champion Wu Jingyu will bid for a hat-trick of golds in the women's 49kg flyweight division, while South Korea's Oh Hye-ri is under pressure to continue the country's reign over the 67kg category which was won by Hwang Kyung-seon at London and Beijing.

    The men's heavyweight 80kg category also offers plenty of intrigue.

    England-born former world number one Aaron Cook, who was controversially omitted from Team GB at his home London Games, will compete under the Moldovan flag at Rio, with top-ranked Iranian challenger Mahdi Khodabakhshi, nicknamed 'The Terminator', another strong medal chance.

    (Editing by Frank Pingue)
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    clever scam

    There's a vid, but not of the incident of course. It's just a news vid.

    Rio Olympics 2016: Chinese hurdler robbed as part of elaborate hoax
    July 30, 2016 10:28am EDTJuly 30, 2016 10:25am EDTShi Dongpeng, who competed in the 2012 London Olympics and specializes in the 110-meter meter hurdles, was a victim of a "professional job."
    ATHLETICS
    By Jordan Greer @jordangreer42
    Published on Jul. 30, 2016

    How are things going in Rio de Janeiro less than a week away from the 2016 Olympics? More than half of the Olympic Village buildings haven't passed safety tests, athletes might have to literally "row through s—" to win a medal and now a member of the Chinese track and field team has become a victim of some crazy vomit-based trickery.

    Shi Dongpeng, who competed in the 2012 London Olympics and specializes in the 110-meter hurdles, was robbed as part of an elaborate hoax, according to Inside The Games (H/T to ESPN's Rachel Nichols). Shi reportedly checked into his hotel alongside a cameraman when a stranger who appeared drunk approached them. The man vomited on Shi, and the cameraman chased the man out of the hotel.

    It turns out the drunk man was the first step of a clear plan. With Shi off cleaning himself up and the cameraman gone, someone stole both men's baggage as well as the cameraman's equipment. Inside The Games says surveillance footage shows Shi and the cameraman were victims of a "professional job."

    To make matters worse, when both men went to report the incident at a police station, they had to wait two hours behind a line of mugging victims.

    The incident with Shi comes only days after Jason Lee, a jiu-jitsu champion from New Zealand, says he was kidnapped by Rio police and forced to pay an unreasonable fine. In a Facebook post that has since been taken down, Lee said of Rio, "This place is well and truly f— in every sense of the word imaginable."

    Shi might share a similar sentiment after that experience.
    Gene Ching
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    another scam, not as clever

    sort of a classic scam, this one.

    Australian Olympic team robbed during fire evacuation at Olympic Village
    Stephen Wade, Ap Sports Writer Updated 9:36 am, Sunday, July 31, 2016


    Workers install barricades in preparation for the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games inside Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, July 29, 2016. Photo: Patrick Semansky, AP / Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribu
    Photo: Patrick Semansky, AP
    IMAGE 1 OF 44 Workers install barricades in preparation for the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games inside Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, July 29, 2016.

    RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Australian Olympic team members were forced to evacuate their lodgings on Friday at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics after a small fire in a basement parking area caused smoke to fill the stairwells.
    Australian team spokesman Mike Tancred said about 100 athletes and officials were evacuated from their building in the sprawling athletes' village. The compound contains 31 buildings and will accommodate 18,000 athletes and officials at the peak of the games, which open in a week.
    "The stairwells filled with smoke, but the fire was confined to the carpark and no one was injured," Tancred said in a statement.
    Upon their return, Australian 9 News reports that they discovered three laptops and other personal belongings had been taken. The Australian Olympic Committee has reportedly added security guards to their building.
    The fire will once again draw attention to Rio's spotty preparations, which have been marred by the Zika virus, severe water pollution, crime, and slow ticket sales.
    Tancred said team members returned to their rooms after 30 minutes.
    This comes after a tension-filled week in which Australia refused to occupy its building, citing gas and plumbing leaks, electrical shorts, and general filth. At least a dozen other teams also complained of problems that affected about 400 of the 3,600 rooms in the sprawling compound.
    Rio officials on Thursday declared the compound "fully ready" after deploying hundreds of plumbers and electricians, who worked around the clock to ready the buildings.
    Australia finally moved staff and athletes into the village on Wednesday, three days after the official opening on Sunday.
    Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes on Wednesday met Australian delegation head Kitty Chiller and apologized to dozens of athletes for the slipshod preparations.
    ___
    Stephen Wade on Twitter: http://twitter.com/StephenWadeAP . His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/stephen-wade
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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