London 2012: Did hosting the Games change sport in the capital? – BBC

When in 2005 the UK won the right to host the 2012 Olympics and Paralympics in London, the bid was as much based on the impact of holding the Games as upon the event itself.
Numerous legacy promises were made but key among those was increasing the number of people playing sport and turning the UK into "a world-leading sporting nation", highlighted by 2012's motto, "Inspire a Generation".
In the run-up to the Games, the government heralded "our best chance in a generation to encourage people to be more physically active", and in 2008 set a target to have at least two million more people in England being more active by 2012.
That target disappeared from later legacy documents but the ambition to increase participation in sport across the country remained.
Yet five years after the Games, it was found there had been virtually no increase in participation in England after 2012, in spite of £1bn of investment in sports.
Various studies have questioned whether hosting major sporting events like the Olympics do automatically lead to people being more active, as 2012's organisers had hoped.
Indeed, the proportion of the population taking part in sport has even decreased in recent times.
Statistics from Sport England show that over the past five years the percentage of people classed as active (with activity levels of at least 150 minutes a week) has fallen, while the number classed as inactive (activity levels of less than 30 minutes a week) increased.
The pandemic has clearly affected the number of people participating in sport in recent years. Yet while the amount being active has begun to rise again, the most recent survey showed it was still lower than pre-pandemic levels even when lockdown restrictions had been removed.
This trend was the same in London, with Sport England describing the situation across the country as "concerning".
It was initially a better story when looking at the number of disabled people participating in sports.
In a review of the Games legacies in 2016, the government claimed more than 200,000 more disabled people were playing sport regularly compared to when London won the bid 11 years earlier.
Since then, Sport England data shows the number of disabled people classified as being active has remained relatively steady.
However, the numbers taking part in activities has remained significantly below that of those without disabilities, and disabled adults have been found to be almost twice as likely as non-disabled people to be physically inactive. Furthermore, according to charity Activity Alliance 77% of disabled people would like to be more active.
A more obvious place where a legacy can be found is in elite sports at later Olympics and Paralympics Games, where huge investments were also made.
Team GB improved their medal haul at Rio 2016, making them the first country in history to increase their tally following a home games.
ParalympicsGB has also had continued success, at Tokyo 2020 reaching the podium in more sports than any other nation at a single games.
Yet such success has not been without controversy.
In recent years, allegations of bullying and abuse emerged in some sports, such as cycling and gymnastics, with some suggesting UK Sport's "no compromise" pursuit of medals in its funding approach being partly to blame.
Those involved in some Olympic events have also questioned whether such methods, which led to funding being cut or withdrawn from sports where medals were considered unlikely, meant they missed out on the chance to grow and develop participation in them.
For example, the London Olympics was the only time that Britain entered a squad for women's water polo. The team ended the Games in 8th place and the following year UK Sport ended its financial support.
Peggy Etiebet, assistant coach for Britain's women's water polo team, believes had some funding remained "we could have done so much more", as "we started it out and it just kind of withered away unfortunately".
"The OIympics is great but what we're looking at is getting girls in the water and girls exercising, and that is a dream that drags up girls' sports at grass roots level," she said.
In 2020, UK Sport announced it would adopt a new "progressive approach" to its funding model, with money not being focussed purely on medal potential but on producing success over a wider range of sports.
Water polo has been one of those to gain from the move, receiving £375,000 over the next four years as part of the National Squads Support Fund, although players still have to raise their own money to train and compete.
A more concrete legacy of the Olympics and Paralympics was the appearance of brand new sports facilities in east London, like the Lee Valley Velopark and the London Aquatics Centre.
These were created for elite stars to perform at their pinnacle but are subsidised so they are now affordable for the local community, as was promised.
At the heart of the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park is the athletics stadium, now called the London Stadium, which became the base for so many memories from the Games, from Danny Boyle's joyful Olympics opening ceremony to the golden success of Super Saturday.
The bid document initially promised that following the event the London Stadium would be converted into a 25,000-seat multi-purpose venue "with athletics at its core".
However, it was later decided to reconfigure it, at a large cost to the taxpayer, into a multi-use venue centred around football in order to keep it viable as a stadium, unlike what had happened with some facilities in other Olympic and Paralympic cities.
West Ham United controversially moved in in 2016, paying a rent described as "ludicrously generous" by some, and while events like concerts and a monster truck jam have recently featured at the arena, track events have been a rare sight in Stratford in recent years.
In 2020, the Anniversary Games was cancelled as a result of the pandemic, while the 2021 edition was moved to Gateshead due in part to the £3m reconfiguration costs of turning the stadium into an athletics facility.
Furthermore, UK Athletics is considering ending its 50-year agreement to base itself at the stadium, with a relocation to Birmingham's revamped Alexander Stadium seen as a possible option, meaning London could no longer be the home of British track and field.
This is despite the fact that the former home of British athletics continues to rot in south London; prior to the Games, much was made of the fact that Crystal Palace's standing as a sports arena would not be affected by athletics' move north of the Thames to Stratford.
But the Crystal Palace National Sports Centre (NSC) has been closed since March 2020, while the crumbling stands of the famous stadium that once hosted the likes of Usain Bolt remain in need of repair.
Earlier this year John Powell, chair of the Crystal Palace Sports Partnership, said "it would be a significant embarrassment if London was left without a stadium".
"There's probably more athletics talent coming out of London than anywhere else in the country.
"You've got the foundations there, it just needs investment and the will to make it work. Currently, we are seeing the decline of one of the most iconic sports venues in Europe," he said.
The venue is owned by the mayor of London, and Sadiq Khan's office last year announced money for a "comprehensive renovation" would be allocated in order to secure the future of the NSC "for decades to come".
Still, the questions swirling around the future of an athletics stadium do not seem to worry Mr Khan, who last week revealed his office was "working on a plan" to bring the Olympics and Paralympics back to London as early as 2036, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.
For him, the sporting facilities created for 2012 would be key to any new bid.
"What we're doing, actually, is working on a plan to have the greenest Games ever, because the great thing about London is you don't need to expend carbon in building new stadiums, new places to cycling, new places to do swimming, because we've got all the kit."
So could the Olympic and Paralympic flame burn again in the capital?
"Watch this space," he said.
Follow BBC London on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hellobbclondon@bbc.co.uk
London 2012 legacy – what can we learn 10 years on?
Olympic Park legacy: Does the future look golden?
Residents 'betrayed' over Olympics housing pledge
London 2012: Olympic legacy or Olympic lethargy?
British Athletics
UK Sport
Sport England
Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park
Archie Battersbee’s family ‘being given time to come to terms with ruling’
Potter reveals Brownlee support as she starts Scotland's medal rush
Weekend of festivals to go ahead despite noise and crime fears
Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss should not attack green issues
Fuming London driver 'will park in Herts' if ULEZ expansion goes ahead
Wood Green shooting victim named
Xi and Biden exchange warnings on Taiwan
Russia and Ukraine trade blame over prison blast
China signals it could miss economic growth target
Thai cave rescue: 'At first it was difficult' Video
The secret mission to save LGBT Afghans
Ukraine's shadow army
False claims of 'deepfake' President Biden go viral
New Beyoncé album a dance-floor hit with critics
Return of the tigers brings joy and fear
Could naming heatwaves save lives?
Africa's top shots: Boat racing and record breakers
Why employers want 'soft skills'
The isle that France and Spain share
This curious geographic transaction has been going on for more than 350 years
The surprising benefits of pruney skin
Why do our fingers shrivel in water?
The young workers who 'want it all'
The youngest in the labour market have a slew of demands
© 2022 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.

source

Leave a Comment