Torch of XXII Winter Olympics crosses finish line in Sochi

The last bearer of the 22nd Winter Olympics Torch, volunteer Igor Biryukov, crossed the finish line in Sochi earlier this Friday in what brings to an end the 2014 Olympic Torch Relay. The Olympic Cauldron is due to be lit at the city Fisht Olympic Stadium as part of the opening ceremony for the Games tonight.

In September 2011, the IOC granted the status of special authorized news agency of the Olympics (a national host agency and a national photo pool) to the RIA Novosti Group, which comprises the R-Sport sports news agency. In March 2013, RIA Novosti was granted the status of a national host agency for the forthcoming Sochi Paralympics.

XXII Olympic Winter Games to open in Sochi today

The XXII Olympic Winter Games will open in Sochi on Friday, February 7. The opening ceremony will begin at Sochi’s Fisht Stadium at 20:14 Moscow time (16:14 GMT). The Olympic flag with five rings symbolising the unity of athletes around the world will be hoisted and the Olympic flame will be lit. The Olympic Relay that started on October 6, 2013 in Moscow passed from Kaliningrad to Vladivostok through the capitals of all 83 Russian regions and 2,900 towns during a 123-day race. Fourteen thousand people carried the torch over a distance of more than 65,000 km. The Olympic torch was taken to the North Pole, to the bottom of Lake Baikal, to the International Space Station (ISS) and to Mount Elbrus.

The organizers keep the details of the opening ceremony secret and have disclosed only a tiny bit of information to President Vladimir Putin who inspected the Olympic facilities many times.

The biggest intrigue is who will actually lit the flame in the stadium cauldron. Some say these may be one of the outstanding Soviet athletes such as Irina Rodnina, Vladislav Tretyak or Vyacheslav Fetisov.

By tradition, all Olympic teams will march around the stadium in the beginning. The Russian flag will be carried by bobsledder Alexander Zubkov.

The first to step on the stadium grounds with the national flag of Greece will be cross-country skier Panagiota Tsakiri, to be followed by other teams in French alphabetical order.

A total of 88 teams will compete in the Sochi Olympics, a record number in the history of Winter Olympic Games, with such “non-winter” countries making their debut as East Timor, Dominica, Zimbabwe, Malta, Paraguay, Togo, and Tonga.

Three thousand athletes and 3,000 members of delegations from 88 countries will participate in the Olympic Games to be held from February 7 to February 23, and 700 athletes and 700 members of delegations from more than 40 countries will participate in the Paralympic Games to take place from March 7 to March 16.

 

More than 40 world leaders and heads of international organizations Voice of Russia, TASS, R-Sport

will be among the spectators at the Olympics opening ceremony on February 7. Overall, over 60 heads of state and government will attend the Olympic and Paralympic events.

Ninety-eight sets of medals will be awarded at the Sochi Olympics in 15 sports. The Olympic Winter Games programme includes seven sports and 15 disciplines: biathlon, bobsleigh (skeleton and bobsleigh proper), curling, skating (speed skating, figure skating and short track), skiing (downhill skiing, Nordic combined, cross-country skiing, ski jumping, snowboarding, and freestyle), luge, and ice hockey.

Sochi was elected at the IOC session in Guatemala on July 4, 2007. Eleven new sports facilities were constructed in Sochi in preparation for the event. The events are organised within two clusters, a mountain cluster and a coastal cluster located 48 kilometres apart, each of which has its own Olympic Village. The central facility of the coastal cluster is the Olympic Park, which accommodates the Olympic Stadium, the Bolshoi (large) Ice Palace, the Maly (small) Ice Palace, the Olympic Curling Centre, The Olympic Skating Centre (for figure skating and short track speed skating), and the Olympic Oval for speed skating. The mountain cluster includes biathlon and skiing facilities, a bobsleigh and luge centre, a set of ski jumping ramps, a snowboarding park and freestyle centre. Following the Olympic Games, the sports facilities will be used to develop tourism, and Sochi will become a year-round resort city. For Russia these are the second Olympics (after the XXII Summer Olympic Games held in Moscow in 1980), but the first Winter Olympics.

The closing ceremony will be held on February 23.

Putin to open Winter Olympics in Sochi, meet foreign leaders

President Vladimir Putin will open the Olympic Winter Games in Sochi on Friday, February 7. The ceremony will begin at Sochi’s Fisht Stadium, at 20:14 Moscow time. Putin will address the athletes and guests and then declare the Games open.

The Olympic flame will be lit during the ceremony, but it won’t be done by Putin. “I am not a representative of winter sports,” the head of state said earlier, adding that there were many internationally known athletes who deserved to carry out this mission.

Before the opening ceremony, Putin will give an official reception for world leaders attending the Games. More than 40 heads of state and government are expected to arrive in Sochi for the occasion. Overall, about 60 foreign leaders plan to attend the Olympic and Paralympic events in Sochi.

Putin spoke at the 126th session of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) this week, where he had an opportunity to meet its members. On February 5, he visited the coastal Olympic Village, took part in the welcoming ceremony for the delegation of the Russian Olympic Committee and attended the flag hoisting ceremony. He also talked with athletes and took a tour of the Olympic Village.

 

The opening ceremony will begin at Sochi’s Fisht Stadium at 20:14 Moscow time. The Olympic flag with five rings symbolising the unity of athletes around the world will be hoisted and the Olympic flame will be lit.

The Olympic Relay that started on October 6, 2013 in Moscow passed from Kaliningrad to Vladivostok through the capitals of all 83 Russian regions and 2,900 towns during a 123-day race. Fourteen thousand people carried the torch over a distance of more than 65,000 km. The Olympic torch was taken to the North Pole, to the bottom of Lake Baikal, to the International Space Station (ISS) and to Mount Elbrus.

The organisers keep the details of the opening ceremony secret and have disclosed only a tiny bit of information to President Vladimir Putin who inspected the Olympic facilities many times.

The biggest intrigue is who will actually lit the flame in the stadium cauldron. Some say these may be one of the outstanding Soviet athletes such as Irina Rodnina, Vladislav Tretyak or Vyacheslav Fetisov.

By tradition, all Olympic teams will march around the stadium in the beginning. The Russian flag will be carried by bobsledder Alexander Zubkov.

The first to step on the stadium grounds with the national flag of Greece will be cross-country skier Panagiota Tsakiri, to be followed by other teams in French alphabetical order.

A total of 88 teams will compete in the Sochi Olympics, a record number in the history of Winter Olympic Games, with such “non-winter” countries making their debut as East Timor, Dominica, Zimbabwe, Malta, Paraguay, Togo, and Tonga.

Three thousand athletes and 3,000 members of delegations from 88 countries will participate in the Olympic Games to be held from February 7 to February 23, and 700 athletes and 700 members of delegations from more than 40 countries will participate in the Paralympic Games to take place from March 7 to March 16.

More than 40 world leaders and heads of international organsiations will be among the spectators at the Olympics opening ceremony on February 7. Overall, over 60 heads of state and government will attend the Olympic and Paralympic events.

Ninety-eight sets of medals will be awarded at the Sochi Olympics in 15 sports. The Olympic Winter Games programme includes seven sports and 15 disciplines: biathlon, bobsleigh (skeleton and bobsleigh proper), curling, skating (speed skating, figure skating and short track), skiing (downhill skiing, Nordic combined, cross-country skiing, ski jumping, snowboarding, and freestyle), luge, and ice hockey.

Sochi was elected at the IOC session in Guatemala on July 4, 2007. Eleven new sports facilities were constructed in Sochi in preparation for the event. The events are organised within two clusters, a mountain cluster and a coastal cluster located 48 kilometres apart, each of which has its own Olympic Village. The central facility of the coastal cluster is the Olympic Park, which accommodates the Olympic Stadium, the Bolshoi (large) Ice Palace, the Maly (small) Ice Palace, the Olympic Curling Centre, The Olympic Skating Centre (for figure skating and short track speed skating), and the Olympic Oval for speed skating. The mountain cluster includes biathlon and skiing facilities, a bobsleigh and luge centre, a set of ski jumping ramps, a snowboarding park and freestyle center. Following the Olympic Games, the sports facilities will be used to develop tourism, and Sochi will become a year-round resort city. For Russia these are the second Olympics (after the XXII Summer Olympic Games held in Moscow in 1980), but the first Winter Olympics, according to Voice of Russia, TASS, R-Sport.

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