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Empty seats overshadow Games, China dominates
Published in The Egyptian Gazette on 29 - 07 - 2012

LONDON - Organisers fought to quell growing public outrage on Sunday over empty seats across venues at the London Olympics, where China has laid down an early marker with a world record win in the pool and a commanding early lead in the medals table.
Dispiriting images of rows of vacant rows at football stadiums, Wimbledon, the aquatic centre and beyond has angered Britons who tried and failed to buy tickets in the buildup to the Games having been told they had sold out.
More empty seats were reported on Sunday including at the equestrian dressage at Greenwich Park, despite the draw of Queen Elizabeth's granddaughter Zara Phillips making an Olympic debut.
Heavy rain after a hot, dry spell also put a dampener on outdoor events on the second day of full sporting contest, as did the announcement that Uzbek gymnast Luiza Galiulina was provisionally banned from the Games for a positive drugs test.
Olympic organisers launched an urgent inquiry into the seating fiasco to nail down precisely who had not taken up their places and why, given the degree of public outcry.
"It is a shame this happened but we are going to do everything we can to make sure we fill up those stadia," said Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt, the British minister responsible for the Olympics.
"I was at the Beijing Games in 2008 and one of the lessons we took away from that was that full stadia create the best atmosphere, it's best for the athletes, it's more fun for spectators and it has been an absolute priority."
The embarrassment took some of the shine off the Games, where sport has began in earnest after a surreal and exuberant opening ceremony on Friday night which thrilled Britain but baffled much of the world because of its arty eccentricity.
China jumped to the head of the rankings with four gold medals on Saturday, the first full day of competitive sport at the July 27-Aug. 12 tournament.
China added to that tally on Sunday when Guo Wenjun won the women's 10 metre air pistol shooting gold from France's Celine Goberville. And still to come is the women's synchronised three-metre springboard diving final, where few would bet against victory for He Zi and Wu Minxia.
China's Yi Siling became the first gold medallist of the Games in the 10-metre air rifle while compatriot Wang Mingjuan extended a 10-year unbeaten international record to win the women's 48-kg weightlifting crown.
Chinese swimmers Sun Yang and Ye Shiwen also took gold on Saturday, with 16-year-old Ye wiping more than a second off the world record in the women's 400 metre individual medley final.
Sun, who became the first Chinese man to win an Olympic swimming title to take gold in the men's 400 freestyle, is overwhelming favourite to win the 1500 and is also targetting the 200, where he will square off against American Ryan Lochte.
Lochte grabbed the headlines on Saturday by eclipsing compatriot Michael Phelps in the 400 individual medley final and replacing him as the world's best all-round swimmer.
Lochte already has three gold medals from his two previous Olympics but is primed for a bigger haul this time with three more individual events and at least one relay still to come.
"I'm ready to rock this Olympics," the 27-year-old declared.
For Phelps, things can only get better after the man who swept eight golds at Beijing four years ago was forced into fourth position and missed out on a medal for the first time at the Games since he was a 15-year-old in Sydney in 2000.
The US face a tough task in the 4x100 metres freestyle relay against an Australian team boasting the fastest two men in the world.
But there should be a medal of some colour for Phelps, who is bidding to add three to his tally to overtake Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina's record haul of 18.


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