London Youth Games

London Youth Games

Official logo

Official logo
Founded
1977
Sports
31
Events
80
Competitors
125,000+
Reigning champions
Wandsworth

The London Youth Games is an annual multi-sport event held in London, England. The London Youth Games offer competitive opportunities for young participants aged 7 to 18 across 30 sports.[1][2] The London Youth Games are contested between the 32 London boroughs (as well as the City of London) and take place at venues around the capital all year round, with the focal point being a finals weekend at the National Sports Centre in Crystal Palace. The finals weekend traditionally takes place on the first weekend in July and they are free and open to all young people living in or going to school in London.[3] Over 125,000 young Londoners take part in the London Youth Games, making it the largest annual youth sports event in Europe.[1][2][4][5]

The London Youth Games are delivered by London's local authorities, several NGBs and over 2,000 volunteers each year.[6] A small team of full-time staff help to co-ordinate the LYG volunteering programme ' GamesForce ' which, together with volunteering agencies, help recruit, train and provide opportunities in media, events, sports, officiating and team leadership for persons aged 16 and above at the London Youth Games.[7][8][9]

The London Youth Games is funded by Balfour Beatty, Sport England National Lottery, and Thames Water among others.[10] The London Youth Games are organised and managed by the London Youth Games Foundation, which is a registered charity (1048705).[11][12] Representatives from the London boroughs and a number of independent trustees make up the Board of trustees.[6][13]

History

1977-1984

The London Youth Games is launched as one of two major sporting events to mark the Silver Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II. The first Games were held that same year at the National Sports Centre at Crystal Palace, where it has remained since.[14]

After a year away, the Games returned in 1979 and continued to grow through the early 1980s with the introduction of more sports and a rise in the number of competitors.

1985-1989

RS Feva at the London Youth Games Regatta

London Youth Games Ltd is created in 1985 to cater for the growth and complexity of the organisation dedicated to running the London Youth Games and other London sports events for young people.

The 1986 London Youth Games sees the introduction of a water sports regatta at the Royal Albert and Victoria Docks. To celebrate its 10th anniversary, the 1987 London Youth Games features in cycling's Milk Race and the cross-country championships are introduced to the Games programme.[14]

1990-2000

In 1994, BAA Heathrow becomes first title sponsor of the London Youth Games which are renamed ' The London Heathrow Youth Games '. The Mini Games event for Londoners under the age of 11 is introduced. The Indoor Cricket Cup is set up in 1996. A then record 20,000 children take part in the 1998 London Youth Games.

The regatta is revamped in 1999 with the introduction of separate competitions in canoeing, sailing and rowing. Events for disabled athletes, swimming, football and girls rugby union are introduced.

A four-day national Youth Games final of the winning teams from all 43 Area Youth Games in the UK takes place in Southampton in August 2000. London sends two squads to represent them at 'The BAA Millennium Youth Games' in the 12 sports competitions.[14]

2001-2005

Zoe Smith weightlifting at the London Youth Games

The London Youth Games reach their 25th anniversary in 2001 with GB Olympic diver Tony Ally among its promoters.

The Queen, accompanied by her husband Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh, visit the London Youth Games Mini Games at Crystal Palace on 4 July as part of her Golden Jubilee Tour in 2002. She watches a relay race and presents winners medals.

London Youth Games establishes its own website. A festival stage with a big screen, 95.8 Capital FM and the Royal Navy entertain crowds at the 2003 London Youth Games finals weekend.

The 2004 London Youth Games are launched by former boxing champion Michael Watson and showcase the London 2012 bid during the launch and at the finals weekend. London Youth Games competitor Amber Charles (Newham, girls basketball), then 14, is chosen as a youth ambassador for the bid. Participants greet the Athens Olympic Flame as it arrives in the UK on its world tour.

BAA Heathrow's sponsorship of the Games ends in 2005 and a new public sector funding secured the London Youth Games' future with long-term funding from Sport England London and the Greater London Authority.[14]

Boris Johnson lights the flame at the 2010 London Youth Games Opening Ceremony

2006-2010

Balfour Beatty announces a six-year association with the London Youth Games in 2006. They sign as a title sponsor until 2013 and the London Youth Games are renamed ' The Balfour Beatty London Youth Games '.

British long-distance runner Mo Farah light the games torch at the opening ceremony of the 2007 London Youth Games.

The London Youth Games celebrate the 500,000th competitor in its history in 2009. The London Youth Games also gets its first patron with former competitor, Chicago Bulls and GB basketball captain Luol Deng and the London Youth Games Hall of Fame is launched with six former participants inducted.[15]

In 2010, the London Youth Games hit a record 50,000 competitors and became the largest annual youth sports event in Europe. Olympic 400m runner Christine Ohuruogu was the 2010 London Youth Games patron. Six more alumni were inducted into the Hall of Fame.[14][16] Foxy was introduced as the official London Youth Games mascot.

2011-present

2011 was another record year for the London Youth Games, as over 71,000 youngsters compete across 30 sports, with Richmond taking home the Jubilee Trophy. England women's footballer Rachel Yankey was the patron of that year's Games, and was also inducted into the 2011 Hall of Fame along with skier Chemmy Alcott, Paralympic swimmer Elaine Barrett, triathlete Tim Don, high jumper Dalton Grant, and squash player Paul Johnson.[17]

2012 saw the London Youth Games introduce a whole new raft of school competitions in line with the national School Games pathway and hosted the inaugural finals at Crystal Palace in March. Hounslow were the victors and took home the Schools Shield. Games alumni Zoe Smith and David Weir were joint patrons for a record-breaking year at the London Youth Games. In Olympic and Paralympic year, Croydon were crowned winners of the Jubilee Trophy for the first time in 18 years. It was announced later in the year that participation figures for the 2012 Balfour Beatty London Youth Games were 104,463 - a record in the history of the event.

The London Youth Games was well represented at both the 2012 Olympics and 2012 Paralympics with 44 competitors in total. LYG alumni contributed 14 medals to Team GB including gold medals for Mo Farah, David Weir, Bradley Wiggins, Joanna Rowsell and Naomi Riches.

Olympic Judo star and former Greenwich competitor Gemma Gibbons is Patron for the 2013 Games. Wandsworth won the Balfour Beatty London Youth Games School Games and are now the holders of the Schools Shield. The Games Finals will take place on July 6 and 7 at Crystal Palace National Sports Centre.

Sports

The London Youth Games consists of 80 competitions in 30 different sports.[1][18] The following sports are included in the London Youth Games programme:

Previous Sports

Karate, Skiing, Showjumping, Darts

The Jubilee Trophy

The Jubilee Trophy is presented to the borough with the best overall performance at the London Youth Games.[19]

In each competition, every position carries a points total. At the culmination of finals weekend, each borough's best 28 points totals are added together to give their final score. Penalties of up to 50 points can occur if a borough team does not attend or is disqualified from a competition they have entered. The borough with the highest overall score wins.[20][21]

The Jubilee Trophy

Previous Winners

Year Jubilee trophy Other trophies (only shown where awarded)
1977 Havering -
1978 no games held -
1979 Havering -
1980 Havering -
1981 Havering -
1982 Waltham Forest -
1983 Havering -
1984 Havering -
1985 Croydon -
1986 Bromley -
1987 Waltham Forest Inner London borough trophy - Southwark
1988 Bromley Inner London borough trophy - Southwark
1989 Enfield Inner London borough trophy - Islington
1990 Redbridge Inner London borough trophy - Islington
1991 Bromley Inner London borough trophy - Islington
1992 Redbridge Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth
1993 Redbridge Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth
1994 Croydon Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth
1995 Havering Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth
1996 Redbridge Inner London borough trophy - Lewisham
1997 Havering Inner London borough trophy - Greenwich
1998 Havering Inner London borough trophy - Greenwich
1999 Havering Inner London borough trophy - Southwark
2000 Havering Inner London borough trophy - Greenwich
2001 Havering Inner London borough trophy - Southwark
2002 Havering Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth
2003 Bexley Inner London borough trophy - Southwark
2004 Havering Disability trophy - Southwark

Inner London borough trophy - Southwark

Most improved borough - Greenwich

Rick Grice Fair Play trophy - Bexley

2005 Redbridge Disability trophy - Lewisham

Inner London borough trophy - Southwark

Most improved borough - Barnet

2006 Havering Disability trophy - Lewisham

Inner London borough trophy - Lewisham

Most improved borough - Hounslow

Rick Grice Fair Play trophy - Merton

2007 Bromley Disability trophy - Lewisham

Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth

Most improved borough - Tower Hamlets

2008 Bromley Disability trophy - Lewisham

Inner London borough trophy - Lewisham

Most improved borough - Kensington & Chelsea

2009 Havering Disability trophy - Wandsworth

Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth

Most improved borough - Richmond

Rick Grice Fair Play trophy - Westminster

Thames Water Regatta - Richmond

2010 Bromley Disability trophy - Croydon

Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth

Most improved borough - Southwark

Rick Grice Fair Play trophy - Barking & Dagenham

Thames Water Regatta - Richmond

2011 Richmond Disability trophy - Lewisham

Most improved borough - Lewisham

Thames Water Regatta - Richmond

2012 Croydon Disability trophy - Croydon

Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth

Most improved borough - Sutton

Schools Shield - Hounslow

Thames Water Regatta - Kensington & Chelsea

2013 Wandsworth Disability trophy - Croydon

Inner London borough trophy - Wandsworth

Most improved borough - Haringey

Schools Shield - Wandsworth

Thames Water Regatta - Richmond

Jubilee Trophy wins by borough

Wins Country Years
16 Havering 1977, 1979–81, 1983, 1984, 1995, 1997-2002, 2004, 2006, 2009
6 Bromley 1986, 1988, 1991, 2007, 2008, 2010
5 Redbridge 1990, 1992, 1993, 1996, 2005
3 Croydon 1985, 1994, 2012
2 Waltham Forest 1982, 1987
1 Enfield 1989
Bexley 2003
Richmond 2011
Wandsworth 2013
Havering celebrate winning the Jubilee Trophy in 2009

Event Winners

Athletics

Year Borough
2003 Bromley
2004 Bromley
2005 Bromley
2006 Bromley
2007 Lewisham
Year Male Female
2008 Waltham Forest Barking and Dagenham
2009 Havering Bromley
2010 Enfield Bromley
2011 Enfield Bromley
2012 Southwark Bromley
2013 Tower Hamlets Bromley
2014 Southwark Bromley
2015 Wandsworth Havering

Angling

Year Borough
2003 Croydon
2004 Hillingdon
2005 Sutton
2006 Croydon
2007 Waltham Forest
2008 Croydon
2009 Enfield
2010 Enfield
2011 Croydon
2012 Enfield
2013 Croydon
2014 Croydon
2015 Greenwich

Archery

Year Borough
2003 Ealing
2004 Redbridge
2005 Redbridge
2006 Redbridge
2007 Redbridge
2008 Redbridge
2009 Kingston
2010 Redbridge
2011 Richmond
2012 Redbridge
2013 Redbridge
2014 Hillingdon
2015 Archery

Badminton

Year Borough
2003 Bromley
2004 Harrow
2005 Bromley
2006 Bromley
2007 Redbridge
2008 Haringey
2009 Redbridge
2010 Harrow
2011 Merton
2012 Redbridge
2013 Redbridge
2014 Redbridge
2015 Sutton

Basketball

Year Male Female
2003 Hackney Haringey
2004 Hackney Haringey
2005 Hackney Haringey
2006 Hackney Haringey
2007 Barnet Haringey
2008 Haringey Haringey
2009 Haringey Haringey
2010 Hounslow Haringey
2011 Lewisham Southwark
2012 Lambeth Southwark
2013 Haringey Southwark
2014 Barking & Dagenham Newham
2015 Harrow Southwark

Boccia

Year Borough
2005 Croydon
2006 Southwark
2007 Waltham Forest
2008 Wandsworth
2009 Merton
2010 Croydon
2011 Lewisham
2012 Enfield
2013 Lewisham
2014 Lewisham
2015 Croydon

Canoeing

Year Borough
2003 Islington
2004 Islington
2005 Islington
2006 TBC
2007 Westminster

Cricket

Year Male Female
2003 Richmond Harrow
2004 Redbridge Ealing
2005 TBC TBC
2006 Harrow Redbridge
2007 Ealing Bromley
2008 Harrow Merton
2009 Tower Hamlets Redbridge
2010 Redbridge Bexley
2011 Harrow Barnet
2012 Redbridge Hammersmith & Fulham
2013 Harrow Hammersmith & Fulham
2014 Redbridge Wandsworth
2015 Harrow Bromley
2015 Hillingdon Bromley

Cycling (Road)

Year Borough
2003 Hillingdon
2004 Hillingdon
2005 Redbridge
2006 Redbridge
2007 Redbridge
2008 Hillingdon
2009 Hackney
2010 Hackney
2011 Richmond
2012 Richmond
2013 Richmond
2014 Richmond
2015 Hackney

Cycling (BMX)

Year Borough
2013 Hounslow
2014 Southwark
2015 Hackney

Diving

Year Borough
2003 Havering
2004 Havering
2005 Havering
2006 Havering
2007 Havering
2008 Havering
2009 Bromley
2010 Bromley
2011 Bromley
2012 Croydon
2013 Croydon
2014 Croydon
2015 Bromley

Fencing

Year Borough
2003 Havering
2004 Enfield
2005 Bromley
2006 Kensington & Chelsea
2007 Newham
2008 Newham
2009 = Barnet

Enfield

Newham

2010 Newham
2011 Newham
2012 Newham
2013 Enfield

Newham

2014 Ealing
2015 Kensington and Chelsea

Football

Year Male Female
2003 Lewisham Waltham Forest
2004 Newham Wandsworth
2005 Brent Southwark
2006 Redbridge Southwark
2007 Greenwich Hillingdon
2008 Newham Lewisham
2009 Brent Lambeth
2010 Southwark Haringey
2011 Lewisham Bexley
2012 Enfield Tower Hamlets
2013 Lewisham Bromley
2014 Lewisham Waltham Forest
2015 Bexley Wandsworth

Gymnastics (Floor & Vault/Artistic)

Year Male Female
2003 Camden Bexley
2004 Southwark (F & V) Hillingdon (F & V)
2005 Southwark Hillingdon
2006 Southwark (F & V)

Harrow (Artistic)

Hillingdon (F & V)

Bexley (Artistic)

2007 Southwark (F & V)

Harrow (artistic)

Sutton (F & V)

Bexley (Artistic)

2008 Bexley (F & V)

Harrow (artistic)

Sutton (F & V)

Bexley (artistic)

2009 Southwark (F & V)

Harrow (Artistic)

Kensington & Chelsea (F & V)

Bexley (Artistic)

2010 Southwark (F & V)

Kingston (Artistic)

Sutton (F & V)

Bexley (Artistic)

2011 Croydon (F & V)

Kingston (Artistic)

Lewisham (F & V)

Bexley (Artistic)

2012 Southwark (F & V) Sutton (F & V)

Hockey

Year Male Female
2003 Bromley Havering
2004 Kingston Bromley
2005 Bromley Southwark
2006 Bromley Havering
2007 Bromley Southwark
2008 Bromley Southwark
2009 Bromley Richmond
2010 Havering Richmond
2011 Kingston Wandsworth
2012 Redbridge Wandsworth
2013 Haringey Wandsworth
2014 Wandsworth Wandsworth
2015 Southwark Harrow

Judo

Year Male Female
2003 Brent Brent
2004 Brent Brent
2005 Brent Redbridge
2006 Hammersmith and Fulham Redbridge
2007 Bromley Barking & Dagenham
2008 Sutton Southwark
2009 Richmond Sutton
2010 Wandsworth Sutton
2011 Wandsworth Sutton
2012 Wandsworth Greenwich
2013 Wandsworth Sutton
2014 Wandsworth Greenwich
2015 Wandsworth Sutton
2016 Wandsworth

Karate

Year Male Female
2008 Havering Havering
2009 Redbridge Havering

Kayak Sprint

Year Borough
2009 Richmond
2010 Richmond
2011 Richmond
2012 Kensington & Chelsea
2013 Richmond
2014 Richmond
2015 Richmond

Kayak Slalom

Year Borough
2008 Kensington & Chelsea
2009 Islington
2010 Kensington & Chelsea
2011 Kensington & Chelsea
2012 Tower Hamlets
2013 Kensington & Chelsea
2014 Kensington & Chelsea
2015 Richmond

Netball

Year Borough
2003 Havering
2004 Havering
2005 Barking & Dagenham
2006 Redbridge
2007 Barking & Dagenham
2008 Redbridge
2009 Redbridge
2010 Redbridge
2011 Havering
2012 Havering
2013 Redbridge
2014 Redbridge
2015 Redbridge

ParaGames Athletics

Year Male Female
2003 Croydon Croydon
2004 Haringey Bexley
2005 Lewisham Bexley
2006 Lewisham Croydon
2007 Lewisham Bexley
2008 Enfield Barking & Dagenham
2009 Croydon Enfield
2010 Croydon Croydon
2011 Croydon Croydon
2012 Croydon Croydon
2013 Croydon Croydon
2014 Croydon Croydon
2015 Lewisham Newham

ParaGames Football

Year Male Female
2003 Lambeth Bromley
2004 Greenwich Greenwich
2005 Newham Lewisham
2006 Newham Hammersmith & Fulham
2007 Lewisham Bexley
2008 Newham N/A
2009 Lambeth Bromley
2010 Southwark Bromley
2011 Newham Bexley
2012 Lambeth Bromley
2013 Hammersmith & Fulham Bromley
2014 Greenwich Ealing
2015= Wandsworth

Hackney

Kingston

Lewisham

City of London

Wandsworth

Bromley

Ealing

Tower Hamlets

Hammersmith & Fulham

ParaGames Swimming

Year Male Female
2003 Croydon Bexley
2004 Sutton Sutton
2005 Croydon Lewisham
2006 Lewisham Croydon
2007 Sutton Lewisham
2008 Sutton Lewisham
2009 Sutton Sutton
2010 Enfield Croydon
2011 Sutton Sutton
2012 Sutton Croydon
2013 Croydon Croydon
2014 Croydon Croydon
2015 Croydon Croydon

Swimming

Year Male Female
2003 Bromley Bromley
2004 Richmond Bromley
2005 Lewisham Bromley
2006 Lewisham Lewisham
2007 Havering Bromley
2008 Sutton Bromley
2009 Hillingdon Bromley
2010 Croydon Hillingdon
2011 Croydon Hillingdon
2012 Ealing Hillingdon
2013 Croydon Hillingdon
2014 Bromley Croydon
2015 Bromley Richmond

Table Tennis

Year Male Female
2003 Kingston Kingston
2004 Enfield Kingston
2005 Wandsworth Enfield
2006 Wandsworth Enfield
2007 Ealing Brent
2008 Tower Hamlets Brent
2009 Ealing Tower Hamlets
2010 Ealing Tower Hamlets
2011 Enfield Westminster
2012 Wandsworth Enfield
2013 Southwark Hackney
2014 Sutton Hackney
2015 Croydon Brent

Tennis (Team)

Year Borough
2003 Havering
2004 Bromley
2005 Croydon
2006 Redbridge
2007 Sutton
2008 Sutton
2009 Bromley
2010 Bromley
2011 Havering
2012 Havering
2013 Bromley
2014 Croydon
2015 Wandsworth

Trampolining

Year Borough
2003 Waltham Forest
2004 Enfield
2005 Enfield
2006 Kingston
2007 Bromley
2008 Havering
2009 Bromley
2010 Bromley
2011 Kingston
2012 Bromley
2013 Havering
2014 Hillingdon
2015 Hillingdon

Triathlon/Aquathon

Year Borough
2003 Waltham Forest
2004 TBC
2005 Enfield
2006 Havering
2007 Havering
2008 Havering
2009 Havering
2010 Havering
2011 Richmond
2012 Enfield
2013 Bromley
2014 Enfield
2015 Enfield

Volleyball

Year Male Female
2003 Havering Havering
2004 Wandsworth Havering
2005 Wandsworth Havering
2006 Wandsworth Wandsworth
2007 Redbridge Wandsworth
2008 Redbridge Wandsworth
2009 Wandsworth Havering
2010 Wandsworth Croydon
2011 Wandsworth Wandsworth
2012 Croydon Wandsworth
2013 Wandsworth Wandsworth
2014 Wandsworth Wandsworth
2015 Wandsworth Wandsworth

Weightlifting

Year Borough
2001 Ealing
2002 Hounslow
2003 Enfield

Hounslow

2004 Enfield

Hounslow

2005 Enfield
2006 Bexley
2007 Bexley
2008 Bexley
2009 Bexley
2010 Bexley

Hackney

2011 Hackney
2012 Hackney
2013 Hillingdon

Ealing

2014 Hillingdon
2015 Ealing

Hillingdon

Alumni

The London Youth Games has been a stepping stone in the careers of many of Great Britain's finest Olympic and Paralympic athletes.[5][19][22][23][24] Below is a list of athletes from each sport who are former participants at the London Youth Games.[25][26]

Christine Ohuruogu at the 2010 London Youth Games

Athletics

Jackie Agyepong,[27] Dina Asher-Smith, Steve Backley, Julia Bleasdale, Abdul Buhari, Linford Christie, Tasha Danvers, Monique Davis, Tyrone Edgar,[28] Mo Farah, Jo Fenn,[29] Rikki Fifton, Dalton Grant,[30] John Herbert, JJ Jegede, Jade Johnson, Jeanette Kwakye, Joice Maduaka, Christine Ohuruogu, Tosin Oke, Samson Oni, Scott Overall, Abi Oyepitan, Asha Philip, John Regis, Laura Turner, David Weir, Benedict Whitby, Conrad Williams, Nadia Williams

Badminton

Aamir Ghaffar,[31] Rajiv Ouseph

Basketball

Ogo Adegboye, Matthew Bryan-Amaning, Arek Deng,[32] Ajou Deng, Luol Deng, Temi Fagbenle, Rosalee Mason,[33] Pops Mensah-Bonsu, Azania Stewart, Andrew Sullivan

Cricket

Rory Hamilton-Brown,[34] Susie Rowe

Cycling

Erick Rowsell, Jo Rowsell, Bradley Wiggins

Rio Ferdinand receives his London Youth Games Hall of Fame award in 2010

Diving

Tony Ally, Blake Aldridge,[35] Peter Waterfield

Fencing

James-Andrew Davis, Richard Kruse, Soji Aiyenuro, Curtis Miller

Football

Chris Bart-Williams, Siobhan Chamberlain, Ashley Cole, Rio Ferdinand, Dickson Etuhu, Gavin Hoyte, Jordon Ibe, Justin Hoyte, Ledley King, Eartha Pond, Claire Rafferty, Lianne Sanderson,[27] Alex Scott, Danny Shittu, Raheem Sterling, Casey Stoney, Fara Williams, Rachel Yankey

Gymnastics

Chris Bower

Hockey

Darren Cheesman,[36] Dan Shingles

Judo

Victoria Dunn, Gemma Gibbons, Karina Bryant, Winston Gordon,[37] Michelle Holt, Ashley McKenzie

Kayak / Canoe

Leanne Brown, Lizzie Broughton,[38] Richard Hounslow, Lucy Ormorod

Mark Hunter at the 2010 London Youth Games Regatta

Karate

Rachel Newey

Netball

Kadeem Corbin, Sasha Corbin, Amanda Newton

Rugby

Maggie Alphonsi, Helen Clayton, Louise Horgan,[39] Katy Storie, Topsy Ojo

Rowing

Tom Aggar, Ryan Chamberlain,[40] Mark Hunter, Naomi Riches[41]

Skiing

Chemmy Alcott,[42] Aaron Tipping

Squash

Paul Johnson, Dominique Lloyd-Walter, Alison Waters[43]

Chemmy Alcott at the 2010 London Youth Games

Swimming

Elaine Barrett, Ellen Gandy,[44] Dervis Konuralp, Zara Long, Amy Marren, Craig Moate

Table Tennis

Darius Knight

Tennis

Anne Keothavong[45]

Triathlon

Tim Don, Stuart Hayes,[46] Jodie Swallow

Volleyball

Dami Bakare,[47] Peter Bakare,[48] Lucy Boulton, Natasha Brewer, Lizzie Reid, Darius Setsoafia, Yasser Slitti, Nikki Strachan

Weightlifting

Joanne Calvino, Darren Holloway, Jack Oliver, Zoe Smith,[49] Emily Godley, Mercy Brown

Other

Brendano Lee (international male super model and actor),[50] Warren Russell (member of boy dance band Diversity), Charlene White (ITV newsreader and journalist), James Keothavong (Wimbledon Umpire)

Hall of Fame

Mo Farah at the 2010 Hall of Fame

The London Youth Games Hall of Fame was established in 2009. It is made up of former competitors who have progressed from the London Youth Games to the world stage.

Former 100m champion Linford Christie (Hammersmith and Fulham), 400m champion Christine Ohuruogu (Newham), javelin thrower Steve Backley (Bexley), Chicago Bulls and GB basketball captain Luol Deng (Croydon), rower Mark Hunter (Havering) and Paralympic swimmer Dervis Konuralp (Greenwich) were the first Hall of Fame inductees in 2009.[15][23]

They were followed in 2010 by 400m hurdler Tasha Danvers (Lambeth and Croydon), long-distance runner Mo Farah (Hounslow), England footballer Rio Ferdinand (Southwark), netball player Amanda Newton (Newham), Paralympic athlete David Weir (Sutton) and cyclist Bradley Wiggins (Camden).[5][16][24]

The third group of inductees in 2011 were skier Chemmy Alcott (Richmond), Paralympic swimmer Elaine Barrett (Hackney), triathlete Tim Don (Hounslow), high jumper Dalton Grant (Hackney), squash player Paul Johnson (Greenwich), and footballer Rachel Yankey (Brent).

In 2012 the inductees were cyclist Joanna Rowsell (Sutton), Paralympic rower Naomi Riches (Harrow), judo star and 2013 Patron Gemma Gibbons (Greenwich), canoeist Richard Hounslow (Harrow), England rugby star Maggie Alphonsi (Enfield) and world champion track star John Regis (Lewisham).

London 2012 judo bronze medallist Karina Bryant (Kingston), England and Arsenal footballer Alex Scott (Tower Hamlets), fencer Richard Kruse (Barnet), Olympic silver medallist diver Peter Waterfield (Waltham Forest) and were all inducted in 2013, as well as Darren Hall (Waltham Forest), who is considered among many as the best ever British badminton player.

Between them, the current 32 members have amassed 46 Olympic or Paralympic medals, 123 World Championship medals, 1 Tour de France, 6 Premier League medals, 1 European Champions League medal and over 1000 international appearances for their country.[51]

Hall of Fame and Awards Evening

The annual Hall of Fame and Awards Evening not only sees former London Youth Games competitors inducted into the Hall of Fame, it recognises and presents special awards to individuals and organisations who make a major contribution to the success of the London Youth Games.[15][16][24][52]

The 2012 Hall of Fame and Awards evening took place on Tuesday 9 October at Lords Cricket Ground.[53]

Below is a list of previous award winners at the evening:[52]

Award winners at the 2010 Hall of Fame

The Jubilee Cup

YearWinnerYearWinner
2010 GamesForce Team Leaders 2011 Eddie Land (Bexley) 2012 Jackie Valin (Wandsworth)

Community Partner of the Year

YearWinnerYearWinner
2010 England Basketball 2011 Tennis Foundation 2012 British Cycling & Access Sport

Coach of the Year

YearWinnerYearWinner
2010 Keir Apperly (Hackney cycling) 2011 Richard Sheridan (Lambeth sailing) 2012 Mark Betts (Brent)

GamesForce Volunteer of the Year (Age 16-25)

YearWinnerYearWinner
2010 Jack Montoya (Hammersmith & Fulham) 2011 Helen Tang (Tower Hamlets) 2012 Roseanne Blaze (Greenwich)

Volunteer of the Year (Age 25+)

YearWinnerYearWinner
2010 Lindsay Sartori (Bexley) 2011 George Brown (Newham) 2012 Craigie-Lee Paterson (Tower Hamlets)

Rick Grice Spirit of the Games Award

YearWinner
2011 Waltham Forest rowing 2012 CJ White & Sophie Hammond (Redbridge)

References

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  4. "Coe launches London Youth Games". London 2012.org. 8 June 2006. Retrieved 16 May 2011
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  18. "Sports". London Youth Games. Retrieved 16 May 2011
  19. 1 2 "Boris Johnson lights flame at London Youth Games". Greater London Authority. 1 July 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2011
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  22. "Ohuruogu plays down medal chances". Sporting Life. 2007. Retrieved 16 May 2011
  23. 1 2 "Balfour Beatty London Youth Games". Balfour Beatty. Retrieved 16 May 2011
  24. 1 2 3 "Sports stars celebrate the London Youth Games". DCMS. 13 September 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2011
  25. LYG Alumni. Spreadsheet, May 2011
  26. 1 2 "2009 Balfour Beatty London Youth Games". (Video). YouTube: londonyouthgames. 15 October 2009. Retrieved 17 May 2011
  27. "Tyrone Edgar 2010 Video Blog 1". (Video). United Kingdom Athletics (UKA). 21 July 2010. Retrieved 17 May 2011
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