Praise of Christine Ohuruogu's gold medal has been tempered by the memory of her missed drugs test, says Lawrence
BEIJING A painful year behind them and the finish line in front of them, Sanya Richards of the United States and Christine Ohuruogu of Britain pushed forward Tuesday night with the Olympic gold medal in the 400 meters in the balance.
Follow the
A SELF-MADE millionaire is putting his luxury lifestyle up for sale - with a price tag of just £25.
Wayne Connell swapped British soil for the Spanish sun 12 years ago to set up his own tourist business, now valued at £4m.
The former entrepreneur is
Christine Ohuruogu has come storming through to win Olympic gold in the 400 metres.
The Londoner, who won a legal battle to run at the Games, was in fourth place with 100 metres to go but she timed her sprint finish perfectly.
Sanya Richards of the
Mistaken identity: Somehow the Chinese press mistook Dwain Chambers (left) for Usain Bolt (right)
Photo: Getty Images
On the day which later saw saw Bolt break his own world record, a full colour
picture of Chambers looking pumped up and ready for
THE most incredible thing about Saturday’s Olympic 100m final was not the sight of the athletes as they tore down the track or the sound of the crowd as the finish line approached; it was the
silence before the start.
As the world’s eight fastest
Reoord breaker: Usain Bolt breaks world record on way to gold medal triumph in men's 100m.
Photo: Getty
Trinidad and Tobago's Richard Thompson took the silver in 9.89 seconds with America's
Walter Dix (9.91sec) winning bronze.
Bolt had sent a
KELLY Sotherton is famed for her frank assessments of herself and others.
But the girl who dismissed a close rival as a “drugs cheat” and once said she would rather Paris stage the 2012 Olympics than London, was not feeling so chatty yesterday.
She
KELLY Sotherton is famed for her searingly honest assessments of herself and others.
But the girl who dismissed a close rival as a ‘drugs cheat’ and once said she’d rather Paris stage the 2012 Olympics than London, wasn’t feeling so chatty yesterday.
THERE can't be many people in Beijing wearing as many hats as Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson, a veteran of five Paralympics who, for the first time since the Los Angeles Olympic Games in 1984, is not here as a competitor.
She has no regrets on that sc
ore –