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As the UK School Games
continues to grow, with this year’s event expanding to nine sports
after welcoming hockey, the event’s President Richard Caborn MP
will host a reception at the House of Commons.
The event is taking place
to thank those behind the success of the Games and to launch the
UK School Games Champion Ambassadors programme.
The Champion Ambassadors
programme will honour on an annual basis the outstanding performers
from the UK School Games – many of whom will be tipped as competitors
at future Olympic and Paralympic Games.
Each Champion Ambassador
will play an active role in contributing to the future development
of the UK School Games and raise its profile as patrons, while
meeting annually with Richard to provide an insight into the event
as part of the Athletes Commission.
From being the driving
force behind the concept of the UK School Games to his current
position of President of the multi-sport event for elite young
athletes of school-age , Richard has worked closely with organisers
the Youth Sport Trust.
In his role of President
of the UK School Games, Richard will continue to play an active
role in all future Games and will also chair an Athletes Commission
consisting of the Champion Ambassadors, the first of whom he will
introduce on Tuesday 13 May.
Richard said: “I am both
proud and delighted to be President of the UK School Games which
is fast becoming the pinnacle of the school sport competitive
calendar. The annual Games give
Britain 's best school-age athletes the opportunity to compete
against each other - and show the rest of the country how talented
they are.
“The UK School Games Champion
Ambassador programme recognises the performances of those outstanding
athletes across each sport who will become role models for their
peers, help champion this inspirational event and, we hope, go
on to win medals at major elite events.
“I will also be using
the UK School Games Champion Ambassador programme as a sounding
board for the development of the UK School Games for the future.”
£6million pounds from the
Department of Culture, Media and Sport has been awarded to the
Youth Sport Trust through Legacy Trust UK , to develop the UK
School Games in Bristol and Bath in 2008 and each year until 2011.
Andy Burnham MP, Secretary
of State for Culture Media and Sport, said: "What
better way to learn or be inspired than by mixing with young,
exceptional athletes who have achieved gold in an event you are
hoping to compete in.
“By sharing experiences
and a passion for sport, the Champion Ambassadors scheme will
give young people across the UK the skills and the confidence
they need to compete at their highest level."
Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson,
who visited the athletes’ village at last year’s UK School Games
in Coventry where she was a huge hit with youngsters of all ages
and sports, believes the Champion Ambassadors scheme will be a
massive success.
She said: “I think it’s
always great for athletes to have someone who has been there and
competed at the same event as them to look up to and act in a
mentor role.
“While it is important
for these athletes to have these ambassadors it is also a great
opportunity for some of these youngsters to have their talent
recognised and be given this responsibility.”
This year’s inaugural group
of UK School Games Champion Ambassadors are a combination of gold
medal winners from the 2006 Games in Glasgow along with those
selected for their potential performance status in relation to
London 2012. All 12 Champion Ambassadors represent the four
home countries and a range of sports including Paralympic events.
It is expected that each
ambassador will serve for between one and three years, with future
nominations being made by the National Governing Bodies and Home
Country Sports Councils, which will then be considered by the
panel and each year worthy Champion will be invited to become
an Ambassador.
Later this year, record
numbers of young athletes will compete at the 2008 UK School Games,
when it is staged at four venues around Bath and Bristol from
28 th to 31 st August.
The Games replicate a major
adult multi-sport competition with an opening and closing ceremony
plus an athlete’s village.
Alongside the new sport
of hockey, competition will take place in badminton, judo, volleyball,
athletics, fencing, gymnastics, swimming and table tennis, with
disability events in athletics, swimming and table tennis also
included.
The
12 2008 UK School Games Champion Ambassadors:
Athletics: Ashlee
Nelson (England West Midlands)
Athletics: Aled
Davies (Wales)
Athletics: Nathan
Woodward (England West Midlands)
Badminton: Tony
Stephenson (Northern Ireland)
Fencing: James
Honeybone (England)
Gymnastics: Reiss
Beckford (England)
Judo: Emma Imrie
(Scotland)
Swimming: Louisa
Farrer-Fisher (England South-West)
Swimming: Emma
Wilkins (England Midlands)
Table Tennis: Darius
Knight (England South East)
Table Tennis: Jack
Pegram (England South East)
Volleyball: Nathan
French (England Midlands)
- 2007 UK School Games gold medallist
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