The Spanish Super Cup remains delicately poised after Barcelona secured a 3-2 win against Real Madrid in a pulsating first leg.

Real's Cristiano Ronaldo first headed in a corner, which Pedro levelled immediately from the kick-off.

Lionel Messi scored a penalty after Andres Iniesta was fouled, before Xavi slotted home a sublime third.

Angel Di Maria then pounced on keeper Victor Valdes' mistake to breathe life into next Wednesday's second leg.

The match was the first time the two sides had met since Pep Guardiola ended his reign as Barcelona manager and was replaced by assistant Tito Vilanova.

Jose Mourinho's Madrid side looked to pounce on the counter attack from the off, and could have gone ahead if former Manchester United winger Ronaldo had played a firmer pass to Karim Benzema on the edge of the penalty box.

Reigning Fifa World Player of the Year Messi - already on the receiving end of a strong challenge from the visiting defender Fabio Coentrao - then blazed over from 20 yards before Pedro tested Iker Casillas.

The first half continued in the standard tempo of a 'Clasico' as Spanish Cup holders Barcelona dominated the ball with their relentless 'Tiki-taka' passing, and La Liga champions Real threatened with their incisive speed and power on the break.

Their patience was rewarded in the 55th minute as Ronaldo freed himself from marker Sergio Busquets and headed in a Mesut Ozil corner to claim a goal in his fourth successive visit to the Nou Camp. Barcelona hit back one minute later as Javier Mascherano played in Pedro to slot under Casillas for a quickfire equaliser.

Messi then put Barcelona ahead from 12-yards after Sergio Ramos' clumsy foul, and midfield pair Xavi and Iniesta produced the move of the night as their artistry cut open Real for the latter to score a potentially decisive third goal.

Barcelona seemed to have the trophy sewn up, before Valdes dawdled on the ball and substitute Di Maria robbed him to slot home a vital away goal.

Mourinho jabbed Vilanova in the eye in a melee at the end of last year's Super Cup, but there was no repeat of that controversial scene on the final whistle ahead of next week's decider.

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Yohan Blake ran the joint-third fastest time in 100m history as fellow Jamaican Usain Bolt eased to 200m victory in the Diamond League meeting in Lausanne.

Blake, who won silver in both the 100m and 200m at London 2012, ran 9.69 seconds, beating American Tyson Gay into second place.

Only Bolt, the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay champion in London, has ever run faster over the shorter distance.

"I have been sick all week, thank God I recovered," Blake told BBC3.

"I have more races and I'm going to get better and better."

Compatriots Bolt and Blake have decided not to compete against each other for the remainder of the season, meaning the Swiss crowd were unable to see a repeat of their showdowns at London 2012.

But 22-year-old Blake added: "I would run with Usain any day, he's my training partner. I would love to run with him, but they have to put up big money."

Blake's time was 0.06 seconds better than his previous best and Bolt admitted he knew his training partner was going to run a quick time.

"I could tell Yohan would run fast, I've seen him in training," Bolt, 26, said. "I predicted 9.72, but he went a little bit faster."

Bolt himself was not troubled on his way to 200m victory in 19.58 seconds with Churandy Martina of the Netherlands second with 19.85 and Jamaican Nickel Ashmeade third with 19.94.

He added: "It's a good run, it's the end of season so I'm having some fun."

Elsewhere, Great Britain's Robbie Grabarz claimed a new national record in the high jump with a leap of 2.37m as the Olympic bronze medallist finished third again.

In a highly competitive event, Moutaz Essa Barshim Ahmed of Qatar jumped 2.39m to claim victory.

Another Briton, Lawrence Okoye, threw 65.27m in the discus to finish second behind Estonian Gerd Kanter, who threw 65.79m.

Aries Merritt of America, who won gold at London 2012, was disqualified from the 110m hurdles after false starting in an event won by compatriot Jason Richardson.

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

A new television channel showcasing Olympic sports, such as handball and cycling, is to be launched later this year in the hope of capitalising on the success of London 2012.

Independent television production company Highflyer is finalising plans for the new round-the-clock sports channel, London Legacy, devoted to 24 minority sports, that is due be on air in November.

While the channel will initially only be available through pay-television broadcaster BSkyB, Highflyer said it is seeking wider distribution in a bid to tap into the 51.9 million people in the United Kingdom who watched at least 15 minutes of the London Games on the BBC.

Yorkshire-based Highflyer recently lost its long-time contract to produce horse racing for Channel 4, which was awarded instead to IMG. 

John Fairley, the chairman of Highflyer, claimed that at least one Olympic sponsor had already agreed to back the new channel, which will show sports from grassroots level up to elite standard and will cost £5.5 million ($8.7 million/€7 million) to launch. 

"The amount of athletics on the main channels has been very small, especially when you think of all the disciplines within the athletics, but the [London 2012] Games have changed all that," said Fairley.

"There is this enormous opportunity...and no sign that any of the main broadcasters is going to pick it up and run with it.

"The London Olympics has brilliantly demonstrated the huge desire amongst the British public to watch sports which don't normally get the showcase on British TV that they deserve.

"The number of participants in these sports is already very high – a sport like judo has more than 40,000 [in the UK], many of them women and many of those under 16.

"London Legacy TV will satisfy the appetite to see more of these sports that the Olympics has created as well as encouraging people to take part in them."

The channel will showcase the sports at every level, from grassroots up to elite standard.

Among those to back the idea is London Mayor Boris Johnson.

"I am very excited by the prospect of a new London-based Olympic and minority based sports channel as proposed by Highflyer TV," he said.

"As well as creating a lasting legacy for the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, such a channel should raise interest in Olympic sports, and consequently participations rates and sponsorship funding in them too, whilst also giving a much needed platform to our younger athletes."

By Duncan Mackay in London

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki has ordered an inquiry into the country's disappointing performance at London 2012, where the team won 11 medals, including two gold.

It was actually the third best performance since Kenya made their Olympic debut at Melbourne in 1956 but represented a sharp decline from Beijing four years ago when they finished third in the athletics medals table with 14 medals, including six gold.

This time Kenya's only gold medallists were Ezekiel Kemboi, who won the 3,000 metres steeplechase, and David Rudisha (pictured), who produced arguably the performance of the whole Games by setting a world record as he claimed the 800m. 

"We are proud of Kenya's position as a leading sporting nation," said Kibaki.

"Let us never take that for granted."

Since the end of the Games details of deep divisions between the National Olympic Committee of Kenya (NOCK) and Athletics Kenya have emerged with the athletes unhappy at being forced to attend a pre-London 2012 training camp in Bristol and at one point allegedly threatening to quit rather than compete in the Olympics.

"The Bristol training was the cause of all the problems," said Julius Kirwa, Kenya's head athletics coach.

Kirwa claimed that NOCK officials tried to dictate athletes' training schedules and tried to sideline the coaches, who he claimed are now being unfairly blamed for the relatively poor performance in London.

He claimed that the only reason the athletes did not walk out of the camp in Bristol was because of the intervention of Kenyan Government official Wilson Lagat, who persuaded them to stay.

"I don't know why they [the athletics coaches] should be blamed yet they are the same ones who took the team to the Beijing Olympics," said Kirwa. 

"The athletes had decided enough was enough and packed to leave for home but I should thank Lagat for his visit since I had tried a lot to keep people together."

Kibaki claimed that personality clashes should not be allowed to undermine Kenya's teams performances in future. 

"They must, therefore, at all times put the needs and aspirations of the sporting fraternity above any other consideration," he said.

Kenya's Sports Minister Paul Otuoma promised a full report into what happened during London 2012.

"We shall not hide anything," he said.

"When the report is prepared we shall release it to the public to know what really happened.

"We will have to make hard decisions to avoid a repeat [of what happened in London]."

By Duncan Mackay

Source: www.insidethegames.biz

Just as there is nothing more satisfying for an athlete – to use the term in its broadest sense – than to win an Olympic gold medal, there is nothing more satisfying for a journalist – ditto – than to document the career of that athlete.

It's a ludicrous premise in a way. When the winning blow is struck, or the line crossed, the victory belongs to the protagonist, with lessening versions of credit accruing to their coach, psychologist, nutritionist, pharmacist – sorry, forget that last one.

But there is no getting away from it – in the moment of victory, one cannot help but rejoice the more if one has invested hours in speaking to the eventual winner and writing about them.

At the London 2012 Olympics that – thank the Lord – have just concluded with such success (the event which the Evening Standard gloomily warned on its front page would be the "Wettest Games on record" took place for the most part in glorious sunshine), there were clear examples of this truth.

Speaking personally, the second Saturday of the Games is still something I have to remind myself actually happened, rather than being something from a kind of hometown reverie.

Before spending the evening in dizzy contemplation of three home athletics golds in the space of an hour – pinch me someone – I had taken the trip down to Eton Dorney.

At the rowing venue since re-named Eton Adorney following the home successes there during the Games – not really – I watched the home team double its number of golds to four as the men's coxless four and the lightweight women's double scull of Katherine Copeland and Sophie Hosking crossed the line of foaming bubbles ahead of all opposition between two mountains of patriotic fervour.

It was stirring to witness the relatively new pairing win their title. But the victory which reverberated most was the one earned by the four which had been put together earlier in the year by the men's head coach, Jürgen Gröbler, after it became clear that Andy Triggs Hodge and Pete Reed, both Olympic champions in the 2008 four, were not going to find a way to get past the New Zealand pair who eventually won the 2012 Olympic title, Hamish Bond and Eric Murray.

In the course of the previous four years I had seen and spoken to the British pair and charted – along with many others – an emotional graph that had begun with soaring hope, then dipped to despair and frustration before rising to joy.

Early in 2009, Reed had announced at a press event next to the Tower of London that he would definitely be seeking a second Olympic gold, and had spoken in confident tones about what he and his mate from Molesey might be able to accomplish at the coming home Games.

Two years – and successive defeats going into double figures – later, Reed and Triggs Hodge spoke about having "a mountain to climb" in London after enduring yet another demoralising defeat by the Kiwi pair at the world championships.

In the event, Gröbler switched the party from one mountain to another, and roped the increasingly despondent pair up with their old team mate from Beijing, Tom James, and Alex Gregory, who could be viewed either as the newcomer in the boat, or the only remaining inhabitant remaining from the crew which had won the world title in 2011.

Before the British trials, where everything was about to be thrown into the pot as far as the men's four was concerned, Gregory has spoken with cautious optimism about his hopes of getting a place in the newly-minted "flagship" crew that would receive Gröbler's particular personal attention for the home Games.

"He has got a huge history of success with his methods, he's proved his coaching ability over so many years now, and I want to be coached by him in an Olympic year," Gregory said.

"It is also a boat with a glorious history for Britain – the coxless four has taken three successive Olympic golds, so to be in the crew that earned a fourth gold would be really exciting, and to do that on a home course would be even more incredible."

Gregory had narrowly missed out on Olympic selection in 2008 but went to Beijing as a reserve and watched all the action from the stands.

He described that experience as "a turning point" in his rowing career.

"In many ways it was a frustrating experience, and it came after a long run of injuries and disappointments for me," he said. "But sitting on the sidelines and watching the guys I had trained and raced with collecting their medals made me feel even more committed to the sport.

"When I used to be asked about my ambition, I always used to say it was to win an Olympic gold medal. That's what you say, isn't it? But I know now what the Games feel like, and I have experienced that atmosphere and emotion.

"When Mark Hunter won the lightweight double scull gold with Zac Purchase, I was sitting right behind his brother and his dad and I saw how much it meant to them. They had tears streaming down their faces and they were hugging each other – I can feel myself welling up right now just thinking about it.

"That made me realise what it would mean to my family and friends if I could win an Olympic gold."

And so to see Gregory win his own gold was a rich experience. As he afterwards admitted with a rueful smile, he had suffered feelings of extreme nervousness ahead of the final, rooted in the conviction that if three gold medallists and a "newcomer" failed to retain the fours title, the difference would be perceived as the "newcomer".

As for Triggs Hodge and Reed, they had a golden feeling after four years in which it seemed increasingly likely they would reach this point with only grim smiles on their faces.

"I can only feel happy right now," said Reed. "Andy and I have had a tough Olympiad – it was a silver Olympiad, to be honest – and we had many trials and dark times."

To witness such sporting confirmations feels like a rare privilege.

By Mike Rowbottom

Source: www.insidethegames.biz