Sochi Winter Olympic Games 2014.

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Sochi: History & Geo

Nicknamed the "Russian Riviera", Sochi is a spectacular combination of Mediterranean-like temperatures and vegetation with favorable winter sport conditions, just a short drive away. read more...

Sochi in facts

Sochi is the largest resort region of the Russian Federation. It stretches for 147 km along the Black Sea coast of the Krasnodar region and includes the Krasnaya Polyana mountain resort area. read more...

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Boukpeti - Africa's head of the river wins bronze medal

In Athens, Benjamin Boukpeti was the first canoeist to represent Africa at the Olympic Games. In Beijing, he planned on becoming the first to win a medal and he made it. Boukpeti, an Olympic Solidarity scholarship holder, won the bronze medal. It was the first medal Togo has ever won at an Olympic Games. “I don’t really know yet what this represents for the country. I just tried my best and paddled very, very hard”, he said after the medal course. For the Beijing Olympic Games, Olympic Solidarity awarded a total of 1,088 scholarships to 166 National Olympic Committees in 21 individual Olympic sports.

 
 Learn more about The Olympic Solidarity Commission
  Factsheet - Olympic Solidarity

 
African champion
Benjamin’s biggest fan is his older brother Oliver, a member of the French kayak team. Benjamin and Olivier were brought up by a French mother and a Togolese father near Paris, and both learnt canoeing at their local club.
Olivier quickly established himself in the French flatwater team, but shoulder injuries hampered Benjamin’s progress, and in 2003 an opportunity presented itself to represent his father’s country and play a part in the French federation’s development programme. Since then, the 26-year-old has gone from strength to strength, reaching the Olympic slalom K-1 semi-finals in 2004, becoming African champion earlier this year and qualifying for Beijing in the process.
 
Business plans
Along the way, he has provided inspiration for a country and a continent where canoeing is developing apace as a sport. When he’s not negotiating the rapids, Boukpeti admits to a liking for travelling, socialising and good parties, but he’s equally dedicated to a career in business, which he’s been studying for the past three years in Toulouse near to his training centre. “I’ve been tremendously inspired by the business world,” he says.
 
Enthusiasm
“I’ve learnt about professionalism and how a team works, and all that has helped me enormously with my preparations.” He has a job lined up to start immediately after the Olympic Games, and if the enthusiasm that leaps off the pages of his own website is anything to go by, Boukpeti will go as far in his professional life as he already has in his chosen sport.
 
Confidence and level-headedness
A striking combination of confidence and level-headedness will also play its part. “In competition it’s important to remain as lucid as you can,” he explains. “You need a lot of technical skill to navigate the river, but it’s also very important to keep your humility. Every day the river tells us we are not the masters. What has given me the most satisfaction is just the feeling of having made progress year after year.”
 
 
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The man behind the star

Liu Xiang is one of China’s most famous athletes. He won gold in the 100m hurdles in Athens in 2004.  He owes his success largely to his first coach, Fang Shuiquan. The men and women behind the star do not often get real recognition. www.olympic.org shows in this video clip how important they can be in  the career of an athlete.
 
 
 
 

Coca-Cola goes green and reveals its eco-friendly efforts

Coca-Cola might have its secrets (like the recipe for its famous soft drink, locked up in an Atlanta bank vault), but its relationship with the Olympic Games is anything but hush-hush. A sponsor since the 1928 Summer Games in Amsterdam, Coca-Cola holds the record as having the longest continuous partnership with the Olympic Movement.
 
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
At this year’s Summer Games in Beijing one of the things Coca-Cola is focusing on is how to help the environment. Its plan is to raise awareness about the many ways plastic can be reused.
 
“Coca-Cola is promoting recycling at the Beijing Games with extensive signage and numerous recycling bins,” reports David G. Brooks, General Manager of the 2008 Olympic Project Group.  “And we are very happy to report that all PET plastic bottles collected from all official venues will be fully recycled into valuable reuses, through a Coca-Cola partnership with BOCOG and the City of Beijing.”
 
One of their initiatives includes gifting every 2008 Olympian and Paralympian with an exclusive t-shirt made out of recycled beverage containers. The limited edition shirts will feature the slogan “I’m From Earth,” and the back will depict five beverage bottles, the same number of recycled containers it took to make the shirt.
 
Environmental Champions
On 13 August, the company will premiere its new documentary film, which tells the stories of seven torch relay runners selected by Coca-Cola in honour of their dedication towards the environment. Some of the featured “Environmental Champions” include: Alby Wooler of Australia, known for his volunteer environmental work, and China’s Liu Hong-Liang, a noted environmental scientist specialising in lake research. The movie was shot and edited by student filmmakers from the torchbearers’ respective countries and will be shown inside the “Shuang Experience Center” located on the Olympic Green.
 
China Air
And as if that wasn’t enough, Coca-Cola also plans to help improve the air quality in Beijing by using only electric or human powered delivery vehicles throughout the Olympic venues.  Additionally, within each stadium, Coca-Cola will be offering up its products out of high-tech coolers and vending machines that will emit upwards of 400 tonnes less greenhouse gases (the equivalent of taking more than 19,000 cars off the road for two weeks!).
 
  Find out more about Coca-Cola and the Olympic Movement

Archery: Korea, the modern masters

The Korean women set a world and Olympic record on the way to winning the Gold medal in yesterdays team event continuing their domination of women’s archery and making history by winning their sixth consecutive Olympic Gold medal at the Olympic Green Archery field. Korea led China by two points at the conclusion of the first end and then continued to increase their lead throughout the remainder of the final winning the game by 224 vs 215. With this win the Korean team entered the top 10 of longest winning streaks in any Olympic team event. The longest winning streaks are held in Athletics by the US Mens 4x100 relay and the US Men’s Eight in rowing, which both won eight times in a row between 1920 and 1956.
 
Dod father, son and daughter
The early days of Olympic archery were marked by inconsistent rules and participation – in St Louis in 1904 there were only Americans in the field. Four years later in London, Willy Dod, whose ancestor Sir Anthony Dod of Edge had commanded the English archers at the Battle of Agincourt, was triumphant in the men’s competition, and when his sister Lottie took silver in the women’s, they became the first brother-sister medallists in Olympic history. Lottie, incidentally, had already won five Wimbledon tennis titles, the first aged 15, and to this day she is still the youngest-ever singles champion there.
 
Modern era
After 1920 archery disappeared from the Olympic programme and did not reappear until 1972, the start of the modern era dominated by South Korea who have won 25 medals in this period, nearly twice the number of their nearest rivals the USA. Three of those individual medals belong to Kim Soo-Nyung who, with three team gold medals as well, is the leading medallist in modern Olympic archery.
 
Kim Soo-Nyung
As a 17-year-old, Kim won the gold medal on home territory at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul and followed it up with silver four years later. Then aged 21, she retired, married and raised two children, returning to competition for the 2000 Games in Sydney where she completed her set of individual medals with the bronze.
 
First for Indonesia
Back in 1988 the unheralded Indonesian team earned their nation’s first-ever Olympic medal by defeating the US in a shoot-out. “It is a silver, but for us it is more than one hundred golds, it is more even than a gold mine,” said their coach Donald Pandiangan. Meanwhile four years earlier, in Los Angeles, finishing in 35th place in the women’s individual event was Neroli Fairhall who competed while seated in a wheelchair. Paralysed from the waist down after a motorbike accident, she was the first paraplegic athlete to take part in the Olympic Games.
 
 
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 Learn more about archery

Nice to meet you, Zhang Jiayu

Volunteers make up a large part of the Summer Games. Not just in help, but also in mass. The National Stadium holds 91,000 people. The Olympic volunteers consist of 70,000 people, the Paralympic volunteers another 30,000. There are more volunteers than seats in the “Bird’s Nest”. The majority of the volunteers (who must be 18 or older) are stationed in and around the venues, and offer services to just about every department (e.g. guest reception, translation, transport, medical services, security, etc.). We met Zhang Jiayu at the Information Desk at The North Garden Hotel, and asked her a few questions about herself.
 
Why did you want to volunteer for the Olympics and how did you get chosen?
I took an examination that tested our English and I passed. Because we have to communicate a lot with foreigners, they were looking for students with language skills and knowledge about different countries and cultures. And I wanted to volunteer because I wanted to work for the Olympics. This is the first time for China to host the Olympics and I thought I had to do something for the Games, so I became a volunteer.
 
What does your day consist of as a volunteer?
I work about 8 hours, and my shift is 2.30 to 10 p.m. Mostly we explain many, many questions to all our guests. For example, where is the accreditation centre? Where is the subway? Can you write down the Chinese name of a place? But the most common question is, “How do I get to the Beijing Hotel?”, which is right across the street.
 
What do you like most about being a volunteer?
Because Beijing is such a big city there are many places that I don’t know, so I cannot guarantee I will know the answer to every question without getting on the Internet or calling someone. But every time I help a guest solve a problem I learn a new place and how to go there, and maybe next time I won’t have to check and can tell them the exact information. I think it is helpful for me to do all these things.
 
What will you do once the Olympics are over?
In September I will go back for my last year at Beijing Foreign Studies University. After that, I want to take a job.
 
 
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Sochi Photo Gallery

Vladimir Putin. Sochi 2014 presentation at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala.

Vladimir Putin. Sochi 2014 presentation at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala.

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