The Tower of London, used by British monarchs for over 600 years to hoard crowns and jewels, took delivery of its newest treasure on Monday when 4,700 gold, silver and bronze Olympic medals were handed over for safekeeping.
Flanked by the Yeomen Warders of the Tower in their traditional tunics and to the fanfare of trumpets, Sebastian Coe, chairman of the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games (LOCOG), received two heavy-looking, shiny gold medals on a cushion.
Coe, sheltering under an umbrella on a drizzly London evening with Jan du Plessis, chairman of Rio Tinto, the provider of metal for the medals, disappeared into the vaults of the imposing Jewel House at the medieval fortress on the River Thames.
Photo: AFP / LONDON 2012
“It’s such an obvious place for us to bring our medals. Where else in the world would you want to take them for safekeeping?” twice Olympic gold medalist Coe said, speaking above the cheering of 150 school children bravely waving flags in the rain.
The Tower, used over the centuries as a royal palace, place of execution and a prison for traitors, still holds Britain’s crown jewels, and sits just up-river from where a giant set of interlocking Olympic rings can be found newly hanging from Tower Bridge.
For the next 22 days the medals will stay locked up until the first are presented on July 28, in one of the women’s shooting events, followed by 804 further victory ceremonies.
A LOCOG spokesman said they would be gradually transferred from the Tower to the Olympic sites as needed.
“We’ve delivered almost eight tonnes of metal, gold, silver and copper, from our mines in Salt Lake City, through to the deserts of Mongolia, and these are raw materials that have been transformed into these beautiful, gleaming Olympic medals,” Du Plessis said.
Rio Tinto is one of the Olympic sponsors to have been criticized by “green” groups, who argue that its environmental record means it should not be involved in the Games. However, Coe shrugged off concerns about the company.
“Rio Tinto is a great partner. From mine to medal, we’re completely satisfied. We’re delighted and I think the medals look stunning,” he said.
The medals, crafted at the Royal Mint in southern Wales, feature the Greek goddess of victory, Nike, on the front, a design dictated by tradition, and show the Thames weaving through the London Games logo on the back.
Coe said he was talking to David Beckham, England’s most-capped outfield soccer player, who helped bring the Olympic flame from Greece, about a possible role at the Games after he was omitted from the British Olympic soccer squad.
“David has been one of our longest supporters. He was with us when we set out on the journey, he was there when we hit many of our milestones along the way, of course he’s going to play a role,” Coe said.
Brazil has four teams, more than any other country, in the expanded Club World Cup that kicked off yesterday in the US, but for SE Palmeiras, the competition holds a special meaning: winning it would provide some redemption. Under coach Abel Ferreira since 2020, Palmeiras lifted two Copa Libertadores titles, plus Brazilian league, cup and state championships. Even before Ferreira, it boasted another South American crown and 11 league titles. The only major trophy missing is a world champions’ title. Other Brazilian clubs like Fluminense FC and Botafogo FR, also in the tournament, have never won it either, but the problem for Palmeiras
Paris Saint-Germain’s Lee Kang-in has pleaded with South Korea fans to get behind the team at the 2026 FIFA World Cup after more boos were aimed at coach Hong Myung-bo despite leading them to qualification. South Korea reached next year’s finals in North America without losing a game, but that does not tell the whole story. The country’s soccer association has been in the firing line, having scrambled about to find a successor after sacking the unpopular Jurgen Klinsmann in February last year. They eventually settled on Hong, the decorated former skipper who had an unsuccessful stint as coach in 2013-2014, during which
Lionel Messi drew vast crowds and showed flashes of his brilliance when his Inter Miami side were held to a goalless draw by African giants Al-Ahly as the revamped FIFA Club World Cup got off to a festive start on Saturday. Fans showed up en masse for the Group A clash at the Hard Rock Stadium, home to the NFL’s Miami Dolphins, but Messi could not fully deliver, his best chance coming through a last-second attempt that was deflected onto the crossbar. Inter Miami next face FC Porto on Thursday in Atlanta, while Al-Ahly, who benefited from raucous, massive support, are to
Ferrari’s F1 fortunes might be flagging, but the Italian team start this weekend’s 24 Hours of Le Mans as favorites, targeting a third consecutive triumph in motorsport’s fabled endurance classic. Roger Federer is acting as celebrity starter with the tennis icon getting the 93rd edition of the jewel in four-wheeled endurance racing’s crown under way tomorrow. Twenty-four hours later, through daylight, darkness and dawn, the 21 elite hypercars are to battle it out over 300 laps (more than 4,000km) in front of a sold-out 320,000 crowd burning the midnight oil with copious quantities of coffee and beer. Ferrari made a triumphant return after