From long jump to rowing: Britons take part in national sports day
Hundreds of thousands of people across the UK have been taking part in sports events after clubs and sports centres opened their doors for free to celebrate Team GB’s Olympic success.
About 2,600 free sporting events were being held, involving up to 60 Olympians, while ITV switched off all seven of its channels for an hour at 9.30am to encourage people to get involved.
The national sports day, called I Am Team GB, aimed to rally the British public to get active, and follows a mixed legacy from London 2012, when sports participation slumped despite GB climbing the medal table.
The Olympian Greg Rutherford opened his back garden, complete with long jump, to young people in Woburn Sands, near Milton Keynes. “It’s an interesting concept, come to my back garden and jump into the pit that I train on for the world championships, Olympics and everything else,” he said.
The long jump has a 52 metre runway and a 9 metre pit for children from the local athletics club to try out.
“For me, it’s just very important for kids to be getting involved. We live in a day and age now where there’s so many different distractions; there’s so many different things youngsters can do. When I was growing up, we didn’t have a computer in the house until I was 13 or 14. Nowadays kids learn to walk and they can play on an iPad. When I was younger I was getting out climbing trees and being active.”
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