Monday, August 22, 2016

From facing death to a gold medal. A story of Chris Mears.

After winning gold medal in this year Olympics in the men’s 3-metre synchronised springboard, we have discovered more information regarding Chris Mears (23) dark days.



Credit: www.deejay.it

“From escaping the near death and coming this far…. I pretty proud of what I have accomplished” - Mears stated. With only 15 years old he suffered a ruptured spleen while he was training in Sydney for the Youth Olympic Festival.

After losing two liters of blood and his organs starting to shut down he was giving a 5% chance of survival. Upon admission to the hospital doctors told it was likely he would never dive again.


Credit: www.itv.com

Few days he was on life support. When he finally started feeling better, he was discharged from the hospital but remained in Australia until fit to fly. One morning his family found him on the hotel room floor having a seizure which led to a three-day come.

Even doctors said that he would never dive again, he returned to the Olympics, and won a gold medal.


Jack Laugher and Chris Mears (left) celebrate and Joe Clarke with his gold. Credit: Reuters/PA

Kazuki Yazawa - a buddhist priest, who’s competing at 2016 Olympics in Rio.

This one is an interesting story about a canoeist from Japan - Kazuki Yazawa (27), whose every morning begins with prays. And not, as many of you have thought, hitting the gym as would any other Olympic athlete first thing in the morning. 



Buddhist priest Kazuki Yazawa competes during the kayak (K1) men’s heats of the Canoe Slalom at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Credit: KYODO


His day begins in Buddhist temple. He has a full-time job as a priest, while cannoing he enjoys in his free time. 

Yazawa during his interviews admits his decision to become a priest  was not purely spiritual decision. Dreams of endorsement deals and a bit of fame never came true, after his return from the 2012 Olympic games in London. Even though he reached 9 place and set a Japanese record. In order to support himself he decided to secure  a full-time job. 




In 2013 Yazawa has decided to take a 2-year brake from training and focus on his new calling. It wasn’t until he won the Japanese Canoe Slalom National Tournament in 2015 that he turned back to the sport. 

Despite the full-time job, he increased his training days in order to show results in Rio 2016. 


He believes that his faith helped him in preparing for the Olympics, strengthening his focus and positive vibes. 




Credit: asahi.com

Sunday, August 21, 2016

Serbia: Women basketball and volleyball teams won Olympic bronze and silver

Serbia defeated France, 70-63, and won the bronze medal in women's basketball at the 2016 Olympics.


Credit: REUTERS/ Jim Young

This is the first Olympic medal in women's basketball for Serbia as an independent country, and it comes in the country's first appearance. After a miraculous run to the bronze medal game, the team finished it off with one last win.

Read more

Just in one day  three medals went to Serbia's Olympic score.

For women basketball (bronze), volleyball (silver) and men water polo gold medals made Rio 2016 the most successful story for Serbian sport ever.


Credit: AP/Jeff Roberson

Volleyball National Team Coach Zoran Terzic


Early on Sunday European time, Serbian women's squad lost to China 1-3 (25-19, 17-25, 22-25, 23-25) in the final of the volleyball competition, winning silver for their country.

This brought the total number of medals won in the Rio Olympics by Serbian athletes to seven: two golds, three silvers, two bronzes.

Read more

Serbia water polo team: THE BEST on the PLANET

ONE TIME SUPPORT: After Serbia won gold at Rio Olympics against Croatia Belgrade solute the best water polo team in the world.




Golden boys after the spectacular victory



Serbia beats Croatia 11-7 and won its first gold in water polo



How world reported on this water polo symphony as Andrija Prlainovic named the match for Olympic gold:

Serbia beats Croatia for the water polo gold but it was more than a game

LA Times headlines a golden Rio match. 

Nathan Fenno started a report from the scene: 

Their countries, Croatia and Serbia, share a 150-mile border and a bloody history. They battled in the early 1990s as part of the conflagration ignited by the breakup of the former Yugoslavia. They traded claims of genocide. Their sporting events against each other became about much more than who won or lost and regularly led to unseemly chants, riots, even diplomatic incidents.

On Saturday, they shared a pool in the water polo final at the Rio Games.

"We don't have any enemies when we play against them," Serbia's Gojko Pijetlovic said after his country muscled its way to an 11-7 victory for the gold medal. "We don't hate anybody. We just play water polo. We play everyone the same."



Then he added: "It's our national spirit. We don't like to lose."

The spirit echoed through the stadium even though empty seats outnumbered the occupied ones and Brazilians dressed in yellow and green dominated the crowd. A few hundred Serbian supporters in the upper bowl waved their country's red, blue and white flag while a handful of hyperactive ringleaders urged on sing-song chants of "Serbia!"

This didn't resemble some of the troubled previous meetings between the neighbors that date back to soccer brawls before Yugoslavia's demise. Violence erupted between Croatian and Serbian supporters during the European water polo championship in 2003 — and led to a window-smashing attack on the Croatian embassy in Belgrade. Fans of the countries clashed in 2007 at the Australian Open tennis tournament, then collided later that year during a water polo match in Melbourne. Riot police became a familiar presence at games.

The usual handful of men wearing the maroon beret of Brazil's National Public Security Force wandered through the stadium's concourse Saturday with pistols strapped to their right legs. A bored-looking soldier stared blankly at the wall near dozens of parked baby strollers. There wasn't anything for them to do.



In the pool, however, everything looked different...wrote Nathan Fenno from LA Times


ONE TIME SUPPORT all over Serbia:




BBC reported:

Serbia won their second Olympic gold in Rio as their men's water polo team beat London 2012 champions Croatia.

The world champions won the final 11-7 to take the title, after winning bronze at the past two Olympics.

Croatia's assistant coach was told to leave the arena midway through the second half after protesting to officials against a decision.

Italy, who were silver medallists in London four years ago, secured bronze with a 12-10 victory over Montenegro.



Joshua Schneyer (REUTERS) reported from the scene:

Serbia's world champion men’s water polo team defeated arch rivals Croatia 11-7 to win their first Olympic gold medal in the sport and dethrone the title holders on Saturday.

The Serbian victory came as the country's athletes round out an impressive Games in Rio and also prepare to compete for gold in women's volleyball and men's basketball.

In a water polo final marked by rough and aggressive play in front of both goals, Serbia showed superior firepower and defense.


Credit: Damir Sagolj (REUTERS)

Serbia's Dusan Mandic scored four times, while goalkeeper Branislav Mitrovic's impressive blocks kept Croatia out. Two goals came from Filip Filipovic, age 29 and a veteran of two past Serbian Olympic teams which each won bronze. Filipovic was elected the most valuable player of the tournament.

A Serbia team that has swept up world and regional titles since 2012 finally proved its dominance on the most prestigious stage. Filipovic said his team, known for both stellar defense and great shooting, was probably the best ever assembled in the sport.


Swimming world magazine Dan D’Addona reported:

After winning the European and world championships, Serbia’s men’s water polo team finally etched itself into Olympic history, winning the country’s first gold medal on Saturday at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games.


Credit: Printskrin Youtube/RedStarFamily

Serbia defeated the defending Olympic champion Croatia team 11-7 to cap a stunning two weeks of water polo in Brazil. The Serbian players draped the flag over the goal and celebrated history in what is arguably the biggest sport in the country.

Read more

BUT, above all the headlines and reports one thing matter the most:

THEY ARE THE BEST TEAM ON THE PLANET


Saturday, August 20, 2016

Another story to remember: Michael Phelps and Joseph Schooling


Credit: singaporeseen

Schooling was born in Singapore and first met Phelps when the US Olympic swim team visited Singapore in 2008.



The American helped inspire the young Singaporean to move to the United States for extensive training at 14, first going to Bolles School in Jacksonville, Florida before attending the University of Texas.

The swimming star's mother, May, and father, Colin, negotiated their son's long-term deferment from National Service in 2013, according to Yahoo! Sports.

In 2013, May predicted her son would be a success in Rio, but could never have predicted Friday's result.

Read more



Moments from Rio that we will remember also

Ethiopian swimmer Robel Kiros Habte, who possesses a figure that some have noted isn't quite as athletic as some of the other swimmers, has won the adoration of fans despite posting very slow times.


Credit: REUTERS/Dominic Ebenbichler

Robel Kiros Habte was dubbed 'Robel the Whale' for his portly physique after he competed in the Men's 100 meter Freestyle heats


He said: 'Every day you wake up in Ethiopia, you run. Not swimming. But I didn't want to run, I wanted to be a swimmer. It didn't matter where I finished'



Credit: NBC Olympics

Habte's entry for Rio was secured on a special invitation from FINA extended to athletes from under-represented countries


His quick rise to prominence has raised comparisons to Equatorial Guinea's Eric Moussambani, the crowd favourite of the Sydney 2000 Olympics known as 'Eric the Eel'.





Eric Moussambani at his famous Sidney Olympics-

HIS LIFE STORY








Usain Bolt spectacular 'triple-triple' at Rio Olympic Games



Usain Bolt secures spectacular 'triple-triple' after Jamaica win 4x100m relay at Rio Olympic Games





'There you go, I'm the greatest' 


said Bolt, who has won gold in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay at the last three Games.

The fastest man in the world!



Olympics  Record 


Beijing 2008

100 gold
200 gold
4x100 gold

London 2012

100 gold
200 gold
4x100 gold

Rio2016  

100 gold 
200 gold 
4x100 gold

'I'm going to stay up late and have fun," Bolt told BBC Sport.


'I never knew this would happen when I started out. My team came through for me tonight. As long as we got the baton round, it was never in doubt.



'It's a brilliant feeling. It's been a long road. I'm happy, but I'm relieved. It's great to be in the history books as one of the greatest. I'm proud of myself.'









'My fans you guys never doubted me a min and for that I belong to you guys forever', Usain Bolt! 



Credit: twitter.com/usainbolt


Usain Bolt ended his Olympic career by claiming an unprecedented 'triple triple' and his ninth gold as Jamaica won the 4x100m relay final in Rio.

Bolt, 29, had won the 100m and 200m in Rio and is the only man to win all three sprint events at three Games. (BBC)


'Anything is possible I don't think limits' 

Usain Bolt






Friday, August 19, 2016

Rio Basketball: Serbia knockout Australia


Serbia-Australia: 87:61



Credit: Foxsports


Serbia knockout the Boomers. 


Australia will play for bronze! Serbia are through to the gold medal game.



Credit: Stringer/AFP/Getty Images


Australia have gone down by 26 points and Serbia are through to face the USA in the gold medal game.

Read more




Sad, but expected story from Rio: Isinbaeva has retired from pole vault


As expected, after banning from Olympics competition a first lady of pole vault, Elena Isinbaeva retires from professional sport.



Tom Bennet (Eurosport) reported from the scene that 'the news comes a day after the two-time Olympic gold medalist was voted on to the IOC athletes’ commission, despite being suspended from competition due to Russia’s athletics ban.'

He reminded that Isinbaeva was a 'vocal critic of the decision to ban Russian athletes from the Rio Games, claiming that it denied her a final chance at Olympic glory even though she was an athlete with no individual history of doping.'

But, wasn't this truth?

Without any doping history, with a perfectly clean sport career, Isinbaeva was banned to compete under the 'zero tolerance' IOC decision.

That 'zero tolerance' policy we saw at Rio, watching a numerous athletes with a doping history competing for medals.

Then-what is it about?! And, is there any sport fan that can't figure out complete picture?!

The most devastating fact was that so little objective reactions came out from sport community.

That isn't not only sad, but disappointing and senseless.

Still, let us remind how this unprecedented event took place and how world champion in women's pole vault reacted


And, this could happen to anyone, anywhere if 'someone' decide by a stroke of a pen to destroy ones career!

The court ruling, Bennet continues, was a “funeral for athletics” according to Isinbayeva, who also insinuated that Russia had been scapegoated for the incident and said on her election to the IOC commission that she will “never forgive IOC for Rio ban”.

Read more

Isinbaeva is a record holder in pole vault. What will happen if this year Rio's pole vault gold winner jumps beneath this-will then this gold matter at all?


Her current world record is 5.06 m outdoors, set in Zurich in August 2009.



Volleyball: Serbian women knock out U.S. favorite




Credit: Reuters Ricardo Moraes

As Anthony Boadle (Reuters) reported from the scene (Rio De Janeiro):

'The Serbian women's volleyball team eliminated the world's top-ranked team the United States on Thursday in a shock upset after the undefeated Americans lost their top player to a leg injury.

Serbia, competing for Olympic medals for the first time, will face China who are playing for their third gold after overcoming the Netherlands in four sets.

The Serbians were riding high after sending Russia home two days earlier and defeated the U.S. 20-25 25-17 25-21 16-25 15-13 in a five-set clash that could have gone either way.

Credit: Reuters  Ricardo Moraes


The U.S. team won the first set but Serbia, driven on by their formidable spiker Brankica Mihajlovic, took control after America's top-scoring middle blocker Foluke Akinradewo went off with a left knee injury sustained in the opening set.
"We put ourselves in a position to win the match but Serbia made some great plays down the stretch," U.S. coach Karch Kiraly told reporters. "This loss is deeply disappointing. It cuts deep."



The U.S. were favorites to take their first gold medal in women's volleyball. They won the World








Credit: Reuters Ives Herman


Championship in 2014 and took silver in the last two Olympics, losing both finals to Brazil, who were eliminated by China on Tuesday.


Credit: Reuters Ives Herman

Read more


Serbia to face (too) old rivals Croatia in men's waterpolo final



Filip Filipovic


Serbian team beated Italy 10-8 and Croatia defeated Montenegro 12-8 to set up gold medal match


Andrija Prlainovic
Credit: nbcolympics

Against the Italy it was Andrija Prlainovic who set Serbia on their way to victory, scoring after a minute of play from outside five metres.



Credit: Rio2016

Goals from Filip Filipovic, Stefan Mitrovic, Prlainovic, Nikic, Nikola Jaksic and Dusan Mandic takes Serbia to Rio finals.

Serbia Olympic Team so far
























Credit: Rio2016

Medals: 4

1 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze



Davor Stefanek  won gold medal at Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Greco-Roman wrestling.




Tijana Bogdanovic won silver medal in Women's Taekwondo (Rio 2016)



Credit: TANJUG














Credit: Kurir   

Marko Tomicevic & Milenko Zoric


won silver in Canoeing double (1000m)

Ivana Spanovic

won bronze in Women's long jump


Credit: Blic sport

We witnessed the history

THIS WAS A MOMENT IN TIME!
A MOMENT THAT WE WONT FORGET!



'I came out here and I get the job done'


Usain Bolt-The Fastest Man in the World



Bolt & De Grasse semifinal-another moment to remember from Rio



Credit: VOAZimbabwe

BOLT WINS THIRD SUCCESSIVE 200 METRES GOLD


Credit: AP

USAIN BOLT (JAMAICA) WON THE MEN'S 200M GOLD FOR THE THIRD SUCCESSIVE SUMMER GAMES, CROSSING THE LINE IN 19.78 SECONDS AT THE RIO OLYMPIC STADIUM.

Read more



Credit: Telegraph

BOLT for BBC:


'It's something that you work so hard for, so that when the moment comes, winning is just relief. Obviously so much could have gone wrong. So to win today, the feeling is one of relief.

I wasn't happy with the time and my body did not respond to be down the straight. But I'm getting older, so I am pleased to get the gold medal.

That is the key thing.

I didn't feel any extra pressure because I don't pay attention to the media before races.

I just focus on what I need to do. 


Medals so far



Credit: Rio2016

First five countries:


1. USA 100 - 35 gold, 33 silver, 32 bronze

2. Great Britain 56 - 22 gold, 21 silver, 13 bronze

3. China 58 - 20 gold, 16 silver, 22 bronze

4. Germany 32 -13 gold, 8 silver, 11 bronze

5. Russia 44 -12 gold, 15 silver, 17 bronze.

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Then: how come 'zero tolerance' has a doubled standards


Sport community must fight this once for all


AN old truth, a (very) bad marriage between politics, business, industry and sport makes this the most important part of our social life looks like a rotten tomato.

Rio showed that. At least preparation for managing this world wide sport event. Though the rest expected athletes must say it right, the contrary had happened. A full respects to some rare and devoted sports fun.

One of them is certainly a rare moment to catch among media hysteric mess Joseph Romanos, Sports Columnist's Opinion.

Due to his objectivity, and a real commitment to defend a basic of democracy, such as presumption of innocence we convene his opinion in complete:



The Olympic ban on Russian athletes means the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has thrown the concept of "innocent until proven guilty" out the window.

The IOC has upheld the International Athletics Federation's ban on Russian track and field athletes competing at the forthcoming Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

The ban was imposed because the Russians have apparently been running a state-sponsored drugs programme, and some of their athletes have cheated their way to gold medals and world titles.

The problem is that in imposing a blanket ban, the IOC is destroying the Olympic hopes of dozens of Russian athletes who have never failed a drugs test and may very well be entirely innocent.

They are being labelled cheats simply because of the country they represent. That hardly seems just, or in keeping with the Olympic ideal of fair play.
I'm all for hammering drug cheats. In fact, I wish they could be banned for life, instead of the incremental punishments they receive. But sometimes the drugs monitors, primarily the World Anti Doping Agency (Wada), are too rabid.
Tennis star Maria Sharapova is a case in point. She has been suspended for two years after returning a positive test for meldonium during the Australian Open in January.

It was not surprising Sharapova tested positive. She'd been taking meldonium for 10 years, when it was legal. Its status was changed in January. Obviously a lot of athletes never knew - 300 were caught taking the drug in a couple of months.
Common sense would indicate meldonium's changed status was not well enough flagged. But common sense has nothing to do with the issue of drugs in sport. Now Sharapova is being placed by some people on the same pedestal as notorious drugs cheats like Ben Johnson and Lance Armstrong. It's ridiculous.

On 15 July, the world anti-doping agency Wada will release the results of another investigation of Russian sport. It seems likely the finger will then be pointed at swimming and weightlifting.

It is entirely possible the entire Russian team will then be banned from the Olympics, not just track and field athletes. Former Wada boss Dick Pound has described that as "the nuclear option". He appears almost eager for that nuclear button to be pushed.

Never mind that even more innocent Russian athletes would be punished.

I'm wondering about the focus on Russia, too. The Kenyans have terrible doping problems at the moment. A string of their top athletes have returned positive tests. The same with the Jamaicans sprinters.

But if you ban Jamaica and Kenya, you would exclude marquee sprint star Usain Bolt and all those brilliant Kenyan distance runners. The Olympic sponsors and television companies that have paid millions of dollars for Olympic rights would not be best pleased.

When the IOC recently retested urine samples from the 2008 Beijing Olympics, it found a further 31 athletes from 12 countries had cheated. Yet nearly all the talk is about the Russians.

The IOC released a statement this week saying it had a "zero tolerance" attitude towards drug cheats.

That's good to know. It was not the case in the 1970s and 1980s, when East Germany was allowed to get away with state-sponsored cheating. Or in the 1990s, when the same thing happened with Chinese athletes and swimmers.

And lest people get the impression drug cheating is a problem mainly in Eastern Europe or in Communist regimes, take a few minutes to read the list of American athletes who have doped. It's not just the big names, like Armstrong and Marion Jones - there have been literally hundreds of American drugs cheats.
If the IOC really wants to make sure no drugs cheats compete in Rio, the answer is simple: ban every country!

Failing that, surely it should limit itself to excluding just the athletes who have been proved guilty. To ban the innocent ones too, just because of the country they represent, is a step too far.

* Joseph Romanos is a long-time sports journalist and broadcaster, and the author of nearly 50 books.

Then HOW COME THIS WAS A RARE AND SO LONELY VOICE OF SENSE BEFORE OG has started this year in Rio?!

AND, THIS FRIGHTENS THE MOST!

What went wrong and what mustn't happen again...in sport

This OG in Rio, had a bad taste introduction in strongest sport event on the Planet-Olympics!

Russian athletes were banned to compete due to the curious circumstances of a doping scandal in Russia.

Well, doping definitely must be banned from sports! But, does anyone believe in this could be possible.

Even more, International Olympic Committee take stance as 'zero tolerance' in Olympic.

That's Ok too.

But, let us count all those that compete in Rio with a tough doping history:

Tyson Gay


Credit: wikipedia

The American sprinter tested positive for a banned substance in May 2013. Gay admitted doping, but blamed it on an unspecified third party.

He was stripped of his silver medal from the London 2012 Games and banned until June 2014, but is chasing Olympic glory this summer.

Justin Gatlin


Credit: Track Extraz

The 2004 Athens gold medalist has twice served bans after testing positive for a banned substance.

In 2001 he was suspended for two years, later reduced to one year on appeal, while in 2006, he incurred a four-year ban.

Gatlin returned to the track in 2010, and in June 2012 recorded a time of 9.80s - the fastest-ever time for a man over the age of 30.


Marin Cilic


Credit: Wikipedia

The Croatian tennis star was banned in 2013 after traces of Nikethamide were found in a urine test.

Cilic argued someone from his team bought Coramine glucose tablets at a pharmacy and as a result an independent tribunal found that he did not intend to enhance his performance.

The suspension ran until February 2014 and he returned to the game to claim the US Open title the same year.






Yelyzaveta Bryzgina



The Ukrainian sprinter served a two-year doping ban for steroid abuse from 2013 to 2015, but has since returned to action and will compete in Rio.

Credit: www.iaaf.org 







Sun Yang


In May 2014 Yang tested positive for the banned stimulant Trimetazidine and was banned for just three months by the Chinese Swimming Association.

He will defend his 400m and 1500m freestyle titles in Rio.

Credit: www.youtube.com 






Michael Phelps



The legendary American swimmer was photographed smoking marijuana in 2009 and subsequently banned for three months.

He came out of retirement in 2014 and has since qualified to compete in Rio.
Credit: youtube




Yohan Blake


The Jamaican sprinter was once touted as the biggest threat to Usain Bolt, but a positive test ahead of the 2009 World Championships halted his progress.

He served a three-month ban and will compete in Rio, but is unlikely to threaten the big guns in Brazil.
Credit: wikipedia






Yelena Gadzhievna Isinbayeva - greatest female pole-vaulter of all time.




Credit: Rio2016


A First lady of the pole vault, Yelena Isinbayeva


A 'Supermom' as called, the 33 year old Russian has not competed since the 2013 world athletics championships, when she won her ninth senior global title, and has since given birth to her daughter Eva in June 2014.

Read more






She came to Rio to win Olympic gold (again) unfortunately this time she won't compete.

Why?

Because Isinbayeva was excluded from competing in Rio following the ruling by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) to ban the entire Russian track and field team from the Games. The decision came after Canadian law professor Richard McLaren's report which supported allegations of a state-backed doping program in Russia, made by the former head of Moscow's anti-doping laboratory, Grigory Rodchenkov.

Isinbayeva subsequently became the figurehead of Russia’s bid to overturn the ban, but on July 21 the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) turned down an appeal from the Russian Olympic Committee and 68 Russian track and field athletes were banned from competing.

Isinbayeva, who won Olympic gold in 2004 and defended her title in 2008, has flown to Brazil as a candidate for a position on the International Olympic Committee’s athletes’ commission. New commission members will be chosen after the conclusion of the Games on August 21.







Yelena Gadzhievna Isinbayeva is a Russian pole vaulter. She is a two-time Olympic gold medalist, a three-time World Champion, the current world record holder in the event, who is widely considered the greatest female pole-vaulter of all time.

With clean athletes' career, without any history of a doping scandals, Isinbayeva actually was a victim of a strange and yet unexplained ban for Russian athletics.

In her latest interview for Sports.ru  she explained all:

Yelena Isinbayeva (YI): The flight was ok, although I slept most of it. What do I want the most? Hmmm… I would like to win a gold medal, but it’s impossible. 
Reporter (R): Do you agree with the decision to ban you from the Olympics? 
YI: No, I will never consent to their decision and I will never forget. It’s not fair.
R: Your score hasn’t yet been beaten. How come? 
YI: I assume you have the answer :)
R: Do you feel sad about what has happened?
YI: Of course there’s a great sadness. But I am here as a candidate for the athletes’ commission of the IOC. I’ll have to get over it. 
R: When exactly the election is going to be?
YI: As far as I know - august 18, I think
R: What are your chance?
YI: Everyone’s got a chance.
R: Could you confirm the information that you are quitting sport? 
YI: august 19, I’ll be giving press-conference. So there will be news.

What will I say to those who will take first place? 

YI: They will be second by default.




Monday, August 15, 2016

Dmitry Kokarev, Russian swimmer, that were left behind but never forgotten

Meet Dmitry and get in touch with his life story


Photo credit: Xinhua


Dmitry Kokarev (25) russian swimmer. At the age of one the doctors came with a diagnosis - infantile cerebral paralysis. Kid since his early years started swimming. And at the age of 14 he joined Russian Paralympic team. After just one year he amazed the world for winning three gold medals.



An eleven-times champion, he along with the whole Russian Paralympic team was banned for competing and entering the Olympics in Rio 2016 because of the doping scandal regarding Russian Team.

A kid, who from the start of his life had limited opportunities, was doing what he could do best, no matter of his physical condition had been banned from the Paralympics of 2016.

Dmitry in his interviews said, that he’s not discouraged: “After the suspension of our team, we have started to train even more intensively. On the contrary - it made us more angry, started training much harder.”

Read more

Story of Yusra Mardini, Syrian Christian, swimming heroine at Rio



Today we are going to tell about a girl who started a new life in Germany, but a had a very long journey….

“All the people on the boat were praying. It was quite hard to think that you are a swimmer and you might end up dying in the water.”

Yusra Mardini (18) had to leave Damascus because her house was destroyed in the Syrian Civil War. Mardini and her sister reached Lebanon, and then Turkey, where they arranged to be smuggled into Greece by boat, along with other 18 passengers (migrants).

Although the boat (actually its more of a tiny vessel) itself was meant for six or seven people tops.

“After 15 minutes the motor stopped” - said Mardini. All these people were at risk of capsizing. Out of 20 people only Mardini, her sister and one other woman knew how to swim. So they pushed the boat for 3 hours straight until they reached the shore. Not letting 18 people to die.



And now she is competing in the Olympics in Rio 2016 with having only 18 years old, and having such a heavy “background”.

“I want to show everyone that after the pain, after the storm, come calm days.”

Read more