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21
Annual Review
2010/11
Keble
Olympians
1908 London
Norman Hallows (1905)
Running - men’s 1,500 metres:
Bronze Medal (set a new games
record in second semi-final)
1952 Helsinki
Alan Dick (1950)
Running - men’s 400 metres and
men’s 4 x 400m relay
1960 Rome
Donald Shaw (1957)
Rowing - men’s eight
1972 Munich (Kiel)
Kenneth Tomlins (1954)
Yachting - two person keelboat for
Hong Kong
1976 Montreal
Laslo Antal (1957)
Pistol Shooting - mixed free pistol 50
metres. 1988 Seoul: Medical Officer
to the British marksmen
1992 Barcelona
Bruce Robertson (1992)
Rowing - men’s eight for Canada:
Gold Medal
2000 Sydney
and 2004 Athens
Ed Coode (1997)
Rowing - coxless four; Athens: Gold
Medal
2000 Sydney
Nick Porzig (2002)
Rowing - men’s eight for Australia:
Silver Medal
Training for
London 2012
Matthew Brown (2000)
Rowing - men’s double
scull for USA
Hatti Dean (2000)
Athletics -
women’s 3,000m
steeplechase
Frank Cottrell-Boyce (1979)
Freelance screenwriter and novelist
Frank became involved with London 2012 when Danny Boyle (Director of Slumdog
Millionaire) invited him for a coffee, and he discovered that he was not going to be
asked to write a screen-play, as he thought, but to join the team devising the opening
ceremony for the Olympics. They have been working on it for over a year and all
details are under wraps.
Jennifer O’Neill (1993)
Editor of She Kicks Magazine and website
Jennifer O’Neill will be commentating, giving expert in-put, and summarizing the
women’s football competition at the Olympics on BBC Radio, mainly 5 Live. At the
same time she will cover the sport for her own website and magazine,
She Kicks
which has been promoting the sport for over a decade.
Mark Richards (1978)
English Institute of Sport
Mark Richards is Head of Information Systems at EIS. Sport at the highest level
relies increasingly on the analysis of performance data, never more important than
at the Olympics and Paralympics. Mark and his team provide a secure information
systems environment for sensitive data whilst ensuring that the sports science and
medical staff have the effective technological tools for GB athletes wherever they
compete and train.
Dalton Odendaal (1994)
The London Organising Committee of the Olympic
Games, British Olympic Association
After being a sports Law partner at Harbottle
& Lewis, Dalton was hired as ‘Head of Legal:
Commercial’ for LOCOG (The London Organising
Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic
Games) in 2007 to be responsible for the legal
aspects of the commercial programme, covering
sponsorship, merchandise, hospitality, ticketing
and broadcasting. This has involved heading the
commercial negotiations for LOCOG with the TOP
(The Olympic Partner Programme) partners which
are eleven leading commercial brands. He says
seeking sponsorship in an extreme economic
climate has been very challenging but is proud of
£700 million raised, particularly the broadcasting deal with Channel 4 advertising the
Paralympics. He has also recently been appointed Director of Business Development
at the British Olympic Association. The BOA is responsible for taking Team GB to the
Games, and Dalton is tasked with securing sponsors for the team before and after
the London Games.
and