Matthew
Crawcour -
18/01/2008
Darius Knight takes
on world's best in China
photo/ETTA
The two next summer
Olympic hosts China and
Great Britain today
announced their intention to
work together to give their
athletes and coaches a
shared experience of the
pressures of preparing for
and competing in a home
Games.
The ‘Tomorrow’s
Champions’ programme was
announced by the Prime
Minister, Gordon Brown,
during a visit to the
Chinese capital and site of
this summer’s Olympic and
Paralympic Games. He was
accompanied by Dame Kelly
Holmes, an ambassador for
the programme, which is
being run by UK Sport, the
UK’s high performance sports
agency.
‘Tomorrow’s Champions’ is
part of a wider Memorandum
of Understanding signed
between UK Sport and its
Chinese equivalent, the
General Administration for
Sport in China. It looks to
bring together some of the
UK’s brightest future
talents with their Chinese
counterparts for training
and sparring exchange
visits. Through the visits
the UK’s athletes and their
coaches can learn more about
the unique experience and
pressures that a home Games
brings, whilst their Chinese
counterparts will have an
early opportunity to learn
about the environment in
which they will compete in
2012.
Sue Campbell, UK Sport’s
Chair was with the Prime
Minister in Beijing and
together they saw Darius
Knight, Paul Drinkhall and
two more young British table
tennis players taking on
Chinese opposition. She
was quick to see the
opportunities that
‘Tomorrow’s Champions’ would
offer:
“It is entirely
appropriate that the Prime
Minister should drop in to
witness some of our
brightest table tennis
prospects sparring with
Chinese opponents in the
shadow of the Beijing
Olympic complex. For any
athlete the step up from
international competition to
competing at an Olympic
Games is intimidating
enough, but to have to do so
for the first time at a home
Games can be one of the
toughest challenges in
sport.
“Tomorrow’s Champions
aims to take some of the
pressure off, by helping our
athletes and coaches learn
from those for whom the
experience is freshest in
their minds. At the same
time we can add significant
value to those sports
already working with, or
wishing to develop,
meaningful training
relationships with their
opposite numbers in China.”
UK Sport and the People’s
Republic of China’s General
Administration of Sport
(GAS) have had a Memorandum
of Understanding (MOU) in
sport since 1998 to develop
sporting exchanges and
promote international
relations between the two
countries. But with the
recent renewal of the
arrangement and the
developing bond between the
next two summer Olympic
hosts, UK Sport is seeking
to ensure that the agreement
delivers as much of a
performance impact as
possible and ‘Tomorrow’s
Champions’ is an early
product of that approach.
The opportunity to be a
part of Tomorrow’s Champions
has been offered to the UK’s
Olympic and Paralympic
sports and a number
including table tennis,
judo, taekwondo, waterpolo,
diving and goalball have
already come forward.
UK Sport and their
counterparts in the Chinese
GAS will now work through
the detail of the scheme and
confirm which sports will be
involved in the scheme’s
launch later this year..
http://www.uksport.gov.uk/news/tomorrows_champions_launch_in_china