London Olympics 2012 live stream

Jul 9
06:02

2012

Jack Chen

Jack Chen

  • Share this article on Facebook
  • Share this article on Twitter
  • Share this article on Linkedin

2012 London Olympics Live Stream Online HD video. Watch London Olympics 2012 Live Stream on PC, iPad, iPhone, Android.

mediaimage

2012 London Olympics Live Stream Online HD video.

 

Watch London Olympics 2012 Live Stream on PC,London Olympics 2012 live stream Articles iPad, iPhone, Android.

 

The 2012 Summer Olympic Games, also known as London 2012 as per the official logo, are scheduled to take place in London, United Kingdom from 27 July to 12 August 2012.

 

2012 London Olympics live stream.

 

London Olympics live stream. There are currently 144 different nations that have qualified for the 2012 Summer games. The eyes of the world will be on London for the Opening Ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games.

 

2012 Olympics live stream. Some big victories over the powerhouse Hungarians have the veteran American unit thinking gold. It will look to deliver at the London Olympics under the inflatable roof of the temporary Water Polo Arena.

 

Excluding the 1904 Games, when the Americans had the only three teams participating in water polo, the U.S. has never captured gold, but is coming off a silver medal showing in Beijing for its third second-place finish and sixth overall medal in 104 years.

 

The silver medal came as a bit of a surprise given that the Americans were seeded ninth heading into the games, but they went 4-1 in the preliminary round before knocking off Serbia in the semifinals of the medal round following a quarterfinals bye.

 

The Americans couldn't extend the run in the championship match, falling 14-10 to Hungary, which won its third straight Olympic gold in men's polo. The Central European country won its ninth gold all-time in men's water polo and 15th medal overall.

The relay made a royal stop-over at Her Majesty’s estate, which has been the private home of generations of British monarchs since 1862.

 

It was helped on its 127-mile journey between Peterborough and Norwich by Olympians, twin brothers and even a pet bunny in an Olympic-inspired outfit being pushed in a pushchair.

 

Over-55s international squash player Paul Tudor, 58, from Lincolnshire, carried the flame through the Norwich Gates towards the house.

 

On the steps the torch was passed to rugby player and referee Rachel Forrest, 26, from King’s Lynn, who carried it back out of the estate.

Following his win on the weekend in the Canadian Olympic Track and Field Trials at Foothills Athletic Club in Calgary, Armstrong was gracious enough to answer my questions.

 

You threw 21.29m at the Olympic Trials on the weekend. What will it take for you to be on the podium at the 2012 Olympic Games in London?

 

I'd like to throw over 22 m (Armstrong has the Canadian record of 22.21m set at the 2011 Canadian Track and Field Championships in Calgary). That is always the goal. I can definitely do that. I've got three weeks now to just go after it and get some really good training in.

The women's world record holder had surgery in 2009 in an effort to resolve her foot problem. However, the issue has flared up again.

 

"Training has gone really well through May and June," she said. "Up until now, I've been really pleased with how things are going.

 

"My old osteoarthritic foot has just decided to flare up this week which has given me a bit of a panic, but I'm trying to stay calm and stay on top of that.

 

"I've been getting treatment all the time on it and I am going straight away from here to get more treatment on it now."

Radcliffe, who was speaking at the launch of Priority Sports, a partnership between Nike and O2, has battled for form and fitness in the build-up to London 2012.

 

Last September, she ran her first marathon since the birth of her second child in 2009, hitting the Olympic qualifying mark with a time of two hours 23 minutes and 46 seconds.

Australian shooting champion Russell Mark says his country's decision to ban athletes from using strong sleeping pills in the lead up to the London Games will cost medals.

 

AOC president John Coates said Australian athletes will be banned from using insomnia treatments after champion swimmer Grant Hackett revealed he became dependent on sleeping pills during his career.

 

Mark said he had used sleeping pills for 20 years to ensure he overcame jetlag in the lead up to competitions.

 

'If John Coates tells me I can only use my sleeping pills for three nights while I'm in London, it will have an effect on my performance,' he added.

'I'm going to fly over to England on the July 16. I'm going to land there at 5.30am on July 17. At 9am the next day, I'm actually officially training. If I don't get a good night's sleep it's not worth me going.'

 

Following a bid headed by former Olympic champion Sebastian Coe and the then Mayor of London Ken Livingstone, London was selected as the host city on 6 July 2005 during the 117th IOC Session in Singapore, defeating Moscow, New York City, Madrid and Paris. London will become the first city to officially host the modern Olympic Games three times, having previously done so in 1908 and in 1948.