Monday, October 6, 2008
New Sports Policy - The Pursuit of Excellence
The Democratic Alliance last Thursday (2 Oct 2008) launched a new sports policy entitled ‘The Pursuit of Excellence’, which advocates the creation of a South African Sports Academy which, on the back of a series of poor performances such as at the Olympics and failure to qualify for the next African Cup of Nations, would be designed to bring talent to where it would be nurtured and honed.
“Our policy advocates for the establishment of the academy, a centre of sporting excellence, designed to identify, recruit and train a new generation of athletes and coaches, with the express purpose of improving South Africa’s performance in international sports; and to redress the imbalance between the amount we spend on hosting international competitions and that dedicated to the development of our sporting talent,” said party sport and recreation spokesperson, Donald Lee.
He said the DA understood the potential role that sport could play in our democracy and the defining role it played in shaping and influencing our identity, both as individuals and as a country.
“We also understand the role that sport has to play in more practical terms - as a means to enrich and fulfil the day-to-day lives of our people, to uplift and empower and, in the case of those with the ability and talent to achieve success at the highest level, as a diverse profession with the potential to open up a myriad possibilities.”
“At the heart of the policy is the principle of excellence, which should define every element of the Academy’s structure and purpose, and the practical creation of opportunities for those people who do not have the means to fulfil their sporting potential on their own,” Lee said.
He said the policy was designed to overcome the factors which were undermining South Africa’s ability to compete credibly at international levels.
“ Firstly, sport has become politicised and its administration subject to sustained interference and, secondly, following from this, a relentless drive for transformation and an ever-increasing hostility towards the pursuit of excellence has damaged our sporting institutions and resulted in a failure to produce a new and diverse generation of sports professionals able to compete on the world stage.”
The Academy would be housed at a national centre of excellence, would be funded primarily by the state and, as building and maintenance of infrastructure was the responsibility of municipalities, the current backlogs would have to be overcome and an amount should be ring-fenced as a separate and appropriate allocation that must be spent on sporting infrastructure.
Lee explained that the Academy would be tasked with developing a national programme of action across as many sporting codes as possible; identifying and recruiting South Africa’s sporting potential and pursuing a programme of excellence in developing that talent and thus placing South Africa on a par with the super-powers of world sport.
He said the Academy would operate independent of the state, but would report to Parliament on its finances and, ultimately, fall under the department of sport and recreation. It would form a partnership with leading sporting schools, across a range of sporting codes and establish a bursary scheme.
“Local and international coaching staff would be recruited, which would comprise the best expertise in any particular area, and its programmes would be benchmarked against international best practice.”
“The Academy would boast the best facilities and equipment and would offer both fulltime and part time training programmes,” he said.
Lee added that, in order for the model to be successfully adopted, the willing participation of schools and private sporting bodies was required. In addition, it would require a change in attitude on the part of government and a belief that excellence should be championed, promoted and supported, not just financially but individually, down to the very athletes themselves and the institutions that managed them.
“A South African Sports Academy must embody that attitude; it cannot be tainted by compromise or half-measure and, for that to happen, there needs to be a collective commitment to strive towards being the best, in everything we do.”
“If we do that,” he concluded, “there is no record South Africa cannot break; no medal we cannot win; and no competition we cannot dominate. Our potential is all around us; harnessing it is our greatest challenge.”
Read the full policy http://www.da.org.za/wp-content/uploads/sports_policy.pdf
2008 - Swimmer and Coach of the year awards
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA Oct 05 2008 07:55
World short-course championship 200m gold medallist Suzaan van Biljon held off strong challenges from fellow breaststroke star Cameron van der Burgh and freestyle sensation Melissa Corfe to be named as swimmer of the year, at the Telkom Annual Aquatics Awards function held at Vodaworld in Midrand, on Saturday. Pretoria-based Van Biljon won gold for SA in the 200m breaststroke at the Fina World Short-Course Championships held in Manchester in April this year. She also collected the bronze medal in the 100m breaststroke at the same event. Van der Burgh's biggest performance was in winning bronze in the 100m breaststroke at the world short-course event in Manchester, as well as a double haul of gold in the 50m and 100m breaststroke at the All-Africa Games held in Algeria last year. At the All-Africa Games, Corfe, who hails from Durban, won the 100m, 200m and 400m freestyle events and took home silver in the 100m and 200m backstroke. She was also part of the SA relay team wins in the 4 x 100m freestyle, 4 x 200m freestyle and 4 x 100m medley relay events. Swimming SA's awards committee took into account performances set between the period of May 1 2007 to April 30 2008.
Natalie du Toit was announced as swimming SA's personality of the year. This category was decided by public voting on the internet. Soweto Aquatics, were named as the development club of the year, while Julie Adams received the award for the learn to swim instructor of the year, with Neville Phillips winning the administrator of the year category. Nondlaleni Dlamini received the volunteer of the year honours, with Corfe's coach Graham Hill, named as coach of the year in the junior athletes section. Fellow Durban-based coach Alisdair Hatfield held off a strong challenge from the likes of national men's water polo coach Vladimir Trninic and swim coaches in Igor Omeltchenko, Dean Price and Hill to claim the coach of the year award. Somerset West-based swim star Jessica Pengelly (17), was named as the most promising athlete of the year, with SA and Western Province water polo captain Duncan Woods announced as the water polo player of the year. Jenna Dreyer received the diver of the year award, with Shannon Crowder awarded the synchronised swimmer of the year honours. Another Durbanite, Chad Ho, was a popular choice as open-water swimmer of the year with Shireen Shapiro collecting the disabled swimmer of the year award.
The 4 x 200 metres freestyle relay team of Sebastien Rousseau, Jasper Venter, Jean Basson and Darian Townsend, received the honour of best performance of the year, while media awards were made to David Isaacson (print journalist of the year), Billy Senaume (radio journalist of the year) and Thabiso Sithole (television journalist of the year). Gideon Sam, Archie Markgraaff and Lois Bassett received lifetime achievement awards for their contribution to aquatics. - Sapa
Source: Mail & Guardian OnlineWeb Address: http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-10-05-suzaan-van-biljon-named-swimmer-of-the-year
Sunday, October 5, 2008
How many medals? The winner is......... USSR

However, things are not always what they seem. It is always useful to do analysis past the obvious...
How many medals would the former USSR have won?
If the former Soviet Union did not break up, it would have dominated the medal count in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
As of 2008, there are 15 countries that were once part of the former Soviet Union. The USSR was an Olympics powerhouse frequently winning more medals than any other country.
In the 2008 Olympics in Beijing:
- United States won the overall medal count with 110 total medals
- China, however, won significantly more gold medals (51 vs. 36 for the U.S.)
- Russia came in a distant third with 72 total medals.
If the USSR did not shatter into 15 different countries in the early 1990s, their medal count in Beijing would be staggering. As you can see in the chart below, the countries that made up the former Soviet Union won an amazing 171 medals. They did not win more gold medals than China, but their total medal haul was nearly 50% more than the next-place finisher — the United States!
Food for thought!
Maybe South Africa should split up into provinces for the Olympic Games.
Gary
:-)