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"We have felt the pressure ever since the games were announced," said gymnast Louis Smith, who won a bronze medal four years ago. "Ever since we've been doing well and we won that medal in Beijing and the results have been happening, the pressure has been building."
A few hours before the opening ceremony Friday, Moynihan sat in an office high above Olympic Park, his work for the most part done. While athletes scurried back and forth, he talked about how a country that for the better part of a century was a doormat at the Olympics has used an 80 million pound (about $126 million) annual distribution from the national lottery in recent years to steadily build its sports federations and compete at the highest levels.
These games will bring even more sports into the British conciousness, he believes, and spur even more young people to seek their own Olympic dream. He's confident of the preparation, if not the actual results.
"The great beauty about sport is that the athlete is out there on his own," Moynihan said. "I know we have all done the best job we can, but you can have the best prepared team possible and you never know what will happen."
Earlier in the day, Big Ben rang out 40 times in celebration of these games. People around London joined in by ringing bells of all types.
For many, the Olympics are an inconvenience and a drain on national resources. But with the actual competition at hand there's also a surge in patriotic pride, as witnessed by the bashing Friday of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney for suggesting the games might not go exactly as planned.
Britain will rally around its winners. They, not the Olympic organizers, will determine the legacy of these games.
Now it's up to Cavendish to start things off with the ride of his life.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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