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Olympics: Athletes gamble on Macau to bring Olympic gold
Wed, Jul 30, 2008
Reuters

MACAU - A MAJORITY of visitors heading to the Asian gambling hub of Macau hope to hit the jackpot but not all of them are relying on gaming tables or slot machines to bring them luck.

Currently scattered among the thousands of punters that regularly flock to Macau are hundreds of Olympic athletes, who have descended on the former Portuguese colony to fine-tune their preparations for Beijing.

More than 300 delegates from the British team are there, along with the United States men's basketball squad and competitors from Brazil, Mozambique and Argentina.

Most teams chose Macau because it is close to Beijing, about three hours by air, and offers similar weather conditions to the Chinese capital.

Some training venues are just a stone's throw from some of the gleaming new Las-Vegas style mega-casinos which have piled into the enclave in recent years, catapulting it past Las Vegas as the world's largest gaming centre.

Thick smog
Macau is mostly hot and humid and often blanketed by thick smog, exactly what competitors are expecting in Beijing.

'We actually started looking for a base to prepare our athletes for Beijing way back in 2003,' British Olympic Association (BOA) chief press officer Graham Newsom said.

'We looked at a number of countries in Asia and about six cities in China but we realised that Macau was the best one for us.'

'The conditions are similar to Beijing so our athletes can come here to acclimatise and only have a short flight to Beijing. They can leave here in the morning and be in the (athletes') village by tea time.'

'But just as important for us was that Macau has great sporting facilities after recently hosting events such as the 2005 East Asian Games.'

Cashed up through national lottery funding, the BOA have spared no expense in transforming Macau into a little part of Britain.

They have booked out an entire five-star resort at Coloane Island, overlooking the South China Sea, and built on 150 acres and featuring a championship golf course.

Although the plush surrounds ensure this is no boot camp, the athletes are still being made to work hard and sweat it out in the searing humidity.

The women's hockey team were given a shock introduction into what awaits them when they played a warm-up match in nearby Hong Kong, with midfielder Sarah Thomas likening the experience to 'having your head in the oven'.

 

 
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