London enters final straight before Games

With just days to go before the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games, London says it's ready to welcome the world, in spite of ongoing concerns about security and transport gridlock

SCRIPT:

After 63 days on the road, the Olympic flame has finally made its way to the capital -- meaning the long wait is nearly over.

Seven years in the making, and at a cost of £9.3 billion, the venues are complete -- and London is starting to get into the party spirit -- with mascots on the streets and flags and banners lining the roads…

And with 10,490 athletes set to arrive, and 302 gold medals to be won, even the biggest names are ready for the challenge.

SOUNDBITE 1 Michael Phelps (man) US Olympic Swimmer, 8 time Gold Medal Winner in Beijing (English, 19 secs):
"Obviously we always want to swim faster I mean that 's the plan, that's the goal, once you make the team you go to training and try to find some of the things you did wrong at trials or that you didn't do perfect so that has been really what I have been working on."

Hopes are high too for Britan's Team GB, who will look to capitalise on home support to get among the medals.

The mood has been tempered however, by concerns over security, after private company G4S failed to provide enough guards, and organisers were forced to call in an extra 3,500 troops to plug the gap.

SOUNDBITE 2 David Winnick (man), Labour MP and Nick Buckles (man), Chief executive of G4S (English, 13 sec):
"Mr. Buckles, it's a humiliating shambles isn't it?"

"It's not where we want to be, that is certain."

"It's a humiliating shambles for the company, yes or no?"

"I cannot disagree with you."

With road restrictions yet to be imposed, London must wait and see whether fears of gridlock can be averted.

But sport will very soon be making the headlines and with some of the world's biggest stars already immortalised in wax -- all that remains is for them to get do it for real.


SHOTLIST:

LONDON, JULY 20, 2012 (SOURCE: AFPTV)

- VAR army helicopter arriving at Tower of London with Olympic Torch

LONDON, JUNE, 2012 (SOURCE: LOCOG)

- VAR Olympic park from the air

LONDON, JULY 18, 2012 (SOURCE: AFPTV)

- MS boy posing with Olympic mascot
- VAR flags in street

LONDON, JULY 16, 2012 (SOURCE: AFPTV)

- VAR Dutch beach volleyball team arriving at Heathrow airport

VICHY, FRANCE, JULY 21, 2012 (SOURCE: AFPTV)

- VAR Michael Phelps, US swimmer and winner of 8 gold medals at 2008 Olympics, training
- SOUNDBITE Michael Phelps (man) US Olympic Swimmer, 8 time Gold Medal Winner in Beijing

LONDON, FEBRUARY 22, 2011 (SOURCE: AFPTV)

- VAR British cycling team training

LONDON, JUNE 2012 (SOURCE: AFPTV)

- VAR carrying out exercises preparing for Olympics

LONDON, JULY 18, 2012 (SOURCE: PA)

- SOUNDBITE 2 David Winnick (man), Labour MP and Nick Buckles (man), Chief executive of G4S

LONDON, JUNE 2012 (SOURCE: AFPTV)

- VAR taxi driving
- VAR taxis in traffic

LONDON, JULY 23, 2012 (SOURCE: AFPTV)

- VAR waxwork of Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt in Madame Tussauds

\\\
-----------------------------------------------------

AFP TEXT STORY:

Olympics: London braced for world's greatest show
by Dave James

LONDON, July 23, 2012 (AFP) - Seven years in the making, costing £9.3 billion ($14.5 billion) and featuring 10,490 athletes, the London Olympics opens Friday with 302 gold medals to be won and hard-fought reputations at stake.
The Olympic Stadium and Aquatics Centre in London's East End will host Beijing super-heroes Usain Bolt and Michael Phelps, who tore up the history books in 2008.
On the other side of the city, Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams will be the headline acts as Wimbledon welcomes the heavyweight tennis talent.
In between, Horse Guards Parade, within walking distance of Downing Street and the Houses of Parliament, hosts beach volleyball and Wembley Stadium will stage the football final.
Even Lord's, the home of cricket, gets involved, opening its doors to the world's best archers.
On the track, Bolt, a triple gold-medallist in Beijing in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay, faces a mouthwatering showdown with Jamaican team-mate Yohan Blake in the 100m final on August 5.
Bolt holds the world record of 9.58sec but Blake is the world champion and the in-form sprinter this season, getting the better of his senior partner in the Jamaican trials last month.
In the pool, Phelps, whose eight golds in Beijing took his medal tally to 14, needs five more to surpass the all-time record of 18 set by Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina between 1956 and 1964.
"Obviously, we always want to do our best and swim the fastest, they are the main objectives," said Phelps, who will compete in seven events.
Like Bolt, the 27-year-old Phelps also faces a national rival in the shape of Ryan Lochte, a triple Olympic champion, who can put a huge hole in his rival's dreams when the two clash in the 200m and 400m medleys.
Elsewhere in the pool, eyes will also be on precocious Missy Franklin, just 17 and also racing seven events, and Australian sensation James Magnussen.
Dubbed 'The Missile', Magnussen is the 100m freestyle world champion and earlier this year swam that event's fastest ever time without the aid of the now-banned, drag-reducing 'super suits'.
Other athletics stars include Russian polevault queen Yelena Isinbayeva, Kenya's David Rudisha in the 800m and Ethiopia's Kenenisa Bekele, the 5,000m and 10,000m champion in Beijing.
South Africa's Oscar Pistorius, known as 'Blade Runner' because he runs with carbon fibre prosthetic running blades, will make history as the first double amputee athlete to compete at an Olympics.
At the velodrome, Bradley Wiggins, fresh from his historic Tour de France triumph, will fire up home hopes.
Zara Phillips, the grand-daughter of Queen Elizabeth, adds a little royal lustre to the equestrian at Greenwich.
Federer, having won a record-equalling seventh Wimbledon title, returns to the All England Club in south-west London looking to add singles gold to the doubles he won with Swiss compatriot Stanislas Wawrinka four years ago.
His rivals will be Djokovic and Andy Murray but there will be no defending champion Rafael Nadal, who pulled out to rest his ongoing knee problems.
The United States will be comfortable favourites in the men's basketball with a Dream Team boasting LeBron James and Kobe Bryant but not the injured Dwyane Wade or Derrick Rose.
The build-up to the Games has been relatively trouble-free, although organisers had to summon 3,500 troops for the showpiece after private security firm G4S admitted they couldn't provide a full contingent of guards.
Amid gripes about security and transport, colourful London mayor Boris Johnson hit out at critics of the Olympics, saying the city was about to stage the greatest show on Earth.
"Oh come off it, everybody -- enough whimpering," Johnson wrote in The Sun newspaper.
"Cut out the whingeing. And as for you whingers, put a sock in it -- fast."
However, one subject the British enjoy discussing -- the weather -- continues to be at the forefront.
After a wet and chilly summer, temperatures are expected to reach the high twenties by the time the Games officially get underway with Friday's opening ceremony.
Before that, the first action will take place in Wales on Wednesday when the Great Britain women's football team tackle New Zealand at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium.