Commonwealth Games:
Ten to watch
Usain Bolt and a host of other marquee names may have said 'thanks,
but no thanks' to the Commonwealth Games, but the October 3-14 event is
not entirely lacking in star quality. Here is AFP's 10 to watch:
Rebecca Adlington
(Swimming)
- Ended a two decade British Olympic drought in 2008 when she
captured Beijing gold in the 400m and 800m. The unassuming 21-year-old
is desperate to recapture that form after a disastrous European
championships where bronze was the best she could muster.
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Sania Mirza (Tennis)
- Cue packed stands and tight security as the poster girl of Indian
tennis prepares to be the Games most photographed woman. Part of an
Asian golden couple (her other half is Pakistan cricket star Shoaib
Malik), Mirza should medal in a weak-looking tournament.
Caster Semenya
(Athletics)
- Stunned track and field with a come-from-nowhere performance at the
world championships in Berlin in 2009 where she stormed to the 800m
gold. It all fell apart after an embarrassing and very public debate
over her gender. Has been cleared to run as a female and the Games will
be the South African's first major event since her return.
Nicol David (Squash)
Undisputed queen of squash, the Malaysian world number one combines
grace, movement and pinpoint accuracy which has taken her to five World
Opens.
The 27-year-old became the first Asian woman to top the world
rankings and went on to earn the prestigious title of 'Datuk' and become
the first recipient of her country's Order of Merit.
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Emily Seebohm (Swimming)
Australia was stunned by the withdrawal of golden girl and Olympic
champion Stephanie Rice, but 18-year-old Seebohm is poised to snatch the
headlines after winning six medals at the Pan Pacifics. The teenager,
who beat US world record holder Ariana Kukors in the 200m individual
medley at the Pan Pacs, will swim eight events in New Delhi.
Steve Hooker (Athletics)
Olympic polevault champion Hooker is captain of the Australian track
and field team with a crucial role to play in a squad missing
experienced Jana Rawlinson, John Steffensen and and Craig Mottram.
Australia won 14 track and field golds in Melbourne in 2006.
Brimin Kipruto (Athletics)
With 800m world record holder David Rushida opting to skip the Games,
Kenya's track and field hopes still burn bright. Olympic 3,000m
steeplechase champion Brimin Kipruto, the 2007 world champion, will be
looking to complete a golden career treble. He set the world leading
time of 8:01.62 in Lausanne in July.
Samaresh Jung (Shooting)
India's top pistol shooter was named the athlete of the Commonwealth
Games in 2006 after bagging five gold medals, one silver and a bronze.
Earned the nickname of "Goldfinger", but is gloomy over medal prospects
after team found themselves without a coach since 2008.
Hosea Gear (Rugby Sevens)
Flying former All Blacks winger is key to New Zealand's hopes of a
fourth successive gold medal. Suffering from a hamstring injury recently
but keen to emulate brother Rico who was part of the gold medal-winning
squad in 1998 in Kuala Lumpur.
Shuja-ud-din Malik (Weightlifting)
Secured Pakistan's only gold medal of the 2006 Commonwealth Games in
Melbourne, when he took the 85kg title. He had been one kilo behind
after the snatch. AFP
[Injured workers given compensation]
The labourers injured when a footbridge collapsed near the main
Commonwealth Games venue have been paid compensation, the state
government said on Wednesday - but a court ordered it to pay more.
New Delhi chief minister Sheila Dixshit told reporters that 50,000
rupees (1,100 dollars) had been given to those who were slightly hurt
and 100,000 rupees had been awarded to those with more serious injuries.
"I visited the hospital, met the labourers. Nobody seems to be
critical," said Dixshit, adding that they were recuperating well and
"out of danger".
Fresh pressure
Some 27 labourers were injured, five of them seriously, when the
bridge linking a car park with the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in New Delhi
came down on Tuesday, heaping fresh pressure on the embattled organisers
of the October 3-14 Games. AFP
[India lifts doping suspension on seven athletes]
India's anti-doping agency on Wednesday lifted the provisional
suspension of seven Indian athletes selected for next month's
Commonwealth Games in New Delhi. The suspension was lifted after the
World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) re-classified methylhexaneamine, for
which the athletes tested positive. "The provisional suspension has been
lifted," National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) chief Rahul Bhatnagar told
the Press Trust of India.
"WADA had indicated that the NADA panel can take a lenient view on
the athletes in view of its decision to shift the drug to the
'specified' category from next year," he said. Four wrestlers, a
shot-putter and two swimmers who were all part of India's Games squad
tested positive for methylhexaneamine, a stimulant used widely as a
nasal decongestant.
These included two female swimmers, Richa Mishra and Jyotsna Pansare;
three male wrestlers, Rajiv Tomar, Sumit Kumar and Mausam Khatri; female
wrestler Gursharanpreet Kaur, and male shot-putter Saurav Vij. AFP |