On August 12, 2012, London bade a flamboyant and madcap farewell to the
Olympic Games with a romp through British pop and fashion, bringing the
curtain down on more than two weeks of action that ended with USA
topping the sporting world with 46 gold medals.
During a special eight-minute segment, the stadium was bathed in the
colours and sounds of Brazil, as the Olympics looked ahead to 2016 when
Rio de Janeiro is the host city.
The Olympic flag was handed to Eduardo Paes, Rio’s Mayor, before
International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge described the
London Games as “happy and glorious” and declared them closed—the words
taken from Britain’s national anthem to the queen.
The main stadium was the setting for some of the most spectacular
moments of the Games, including Jamaican sprint king Usain Bolt
defending the 100, 200 and 4x100 metres titles he won in Beijing, the
latter in a world-beating time.
British supporters will also cherish memories of the venue, where
Somali-born runner Mo Farah won the 5,000 and 10,000 double to deafening
roars and was celebrated as a symbol of the capital’s
multi-culturalism.
The hosts won 29 golds to take third place in the rankings, their
best result for 104 years, helping lift a nation beset by severe
spending cuts and worried about social stability a year after violent
riots swept parts of the capital.
Many will remember London 2012 for the record-breaking exploits of
American swimmer Michael Phelps, who took his life-time medal haul to 22
including 18 golds, making him the most decorated Olympian in history.
His tally helped the United States to the top of the Olympic table with
46 golds to second-placed China’s 38, reversing the order of the Beijing
Games in 2008.
Opening Ceremony
On July 27, 2012, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth declared the London
Olympics open after playing a cameo role in a dizzying ceremony designed
to highlight the grandeur and eccentricities of the nation that
invented modern sport.
Children’s voices, intertwining from the four corners of her United
Kingdom, ushered in an exuberant historical pageant of meadows,
smokestacks and digital wizardry before an audience of 60,000 in the
Olympic Stadium, and a probable billion television viewers around the
globe.
Many of them gasped at the sight of the 86-year-old queen, marking
her Diamond Jubilee this year, putting aside royal reserve in a video
where she stepped onto a helicopter with James Bond actor Daniel Craig
to be carried aloft from Buckingham Palace.
A film clip showed doubles of her and Bond skydiving towards the
stadium and, moments later, she made her entrance in person.
More than 10,000 athletes from 204 countries competed in 26 sports
over 17 days of competition in the only city to have staged the modern
Games three times.
Most of them were there for the traditional alphabetical parade of
the national teams, not least the athletes from Egypt, Tunisia, Libya
and Yemen competing in their first Olympics since their peoples
overthrew autocrats in Arab Spring revolutions.
Brunei and Qatar were led in by their countries’ first ever female
Olympians and so, along with Saudi Arabia, ended their status as the
only countries to exclude women from their teams.
At the end of a three-hour extravaganza, David Beckham, the English
soccer icon who had helped convince the IOC to grant London the Games,
stepped off a speedboat carrying the Olympic flame at the end of a torch
relay that inspired many ordinary people around Britain.
Past Olympic heroes including Muhammad Ali, who lit the cauldron at
the 1996 Atlanta Games, and British rower Steve Redgrave, the only
person to win gold at five successive games, welcomed the flame into the
stadium.
Yet it was not a celebrity but seven teenage athletes who lit a
spectacular arrangement of over 200 copper ‘petals’ representing the
participating countries, which rose up in the centre of the stadium to
converge into a single cauldron.
India’s Performance
India’s tally of two silver and 4 bronze medals was its best tally
in Olympics. 81 athletes from India had competed in 13 sports.
Sushil Kumar became the
first Indian to get back-to-back Olympic medals. He won silver medal in
66kg Freestyle Wrestling. He had won a bronze medal in the Beijing
Olympics.
Subedar Vijay Kumar Sharma of 16 Dogra Regiment bagged silver medal in 25m rapid fire pistol event.
Yogeshwar Dutt, 2010 CWG gold winner, won India its fourth Bronze medal in 60kg freestyle Wrestling.
Five-time world champion MC Mary Kom
won a bronze medal in women’s boxing (51 kg) event. Rajiv Gandhi Khel
Ratna (2009), Arjuna Award (2003) and Padamshree (2006) awardee, Mary
Kom is the first Indian women boxer to qualify for Olympics. The
29-year-old boxer from Manipur came back from a two-year sabbatical
after the birth of her twins to clinch her fourth successive world title
in 2008, a feat that got her the sobriquet ‘Magnificent Mary’.
Ace marksman Gagan Narang
opened India’s account in London Olympics by clinching a bronze medal in
the men's 10 meter air. The burly Indian, who narrowly missed the final
in Beijing, raised his gun above his head as his many compatriots in
the crowd cheered loudly at the country's first medal of the Games.
Beijing Games gold medalist Abhinav Bindra, however, could not defend his title and crashed out of the event.
Saina Nehwal won women’s
singles bronze in badminton when her opponent Wang Xin of China broke
down with a knee injury after taking the opening game. Nehwal, ranked
fifth in the world, became only the second Indian woman to win a medal
in an individual Olympic sport.
22-year-old Irfan from Kerala did not win any medal but produced the
best effort by an Indian in an Olympic walking event, finishing 10th in
the 20km race, with a national record to boot.
In Hockey, India finished last in their group. This was the first
time in Olympic history that India lost all their group matches.
History of India in Olympics
The first authentic Indian team took part at the 1920 Antwerp
Olympic Games in athletics and wrestling. A National Olympic Committee
was finally formed in 1927.
India's greatest successes at the Olympics have come in men’s
hockey. They won every men’s title from 1928 to 1956. In 1960 they
reached the final but lost to Pakistan to end the sequence. India were
an ever present on the men’s hockey medal podium until 1976 and their
last gold medal success in this sport came at the Moscow 1980 Olympic
Games.
Indian shooters have challenged for medals in the new millennium.
Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore won silver in the men’s double trap in Athens
2004. Shooter Abinav Bindra became India’s first individual gold
medalist when he won the 10m air rifle at the Beijing 2008 Olympic
Games.
At the 1900 Olympic Games in Paris, Norman Pritchard had won silver
medals in the men’s 200m and the now discontinued 200m hurdles. He was
the first medal winner born in India but confusion surrounds his
nationality as India was then under British rule.
Mascot
Wenlock was the
official mascot of the Games. The mascot was created and designed by
iris, a London-based creative agency. Wenlock is an animation depicting
two drops of steel from a steelworks in Bolton. It was named after the
Shropshire town of Much Wenlock, which held a forerunner of the current
Olympic Games.