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Follow Your Bay Area Athletes at 2012 Summer Olympics

UC-Berkeley is sending 45 Bears to London; other competitors come from Stanford and Santa Clara universities. Plus, two high school-aged athletes from Silicon Valley compete.

 

Olympic fever was running high Friday with the 2012 Summer Games kicking off with the opening ceremony in London—and local residents are gearing up for Bay Area gold at the dozens of sporting events.

Several Bay Area colleges are known for their athletic prowess and this year is no exception. 

Many athletes from the Bay Area will be representing Team USA, and others born abroad and living here will represent their home countries.

The University of California at Berkeley, known for its Cal Golden Bears, has sent 45 Bears to the Summer Games.

Athletic officials tallied 38 Berkeley athletes, five coaches, one chief medical officer and one event manager in London for the 19 days of competition, making the Cal campus the most-represented American public university at the games.

Nineteen of those athletes will be in the water, such as Olympian swimmer Natalie Coughlin, and water polo Olympic medalist Heather Petri. Other sports the Bears will represent include basketball, rowing, soccer and track and field.

From the Peninsula, 27 Stanford students and alumni are in London this summer taking on competitors in sports ranging from gymnastics, synchronized swimming, diving, rowing and more.

Table tennis athlete Lily Zhang, 16, of Palo Alto makes her Olympic debut both in singles and team events.

From Fremont, Ariel Hsing, also 16 and a student a Valley Christian School in San Jose, will be competing in table tennis singles and team events.  Timothy Wang, 20, originally from Houston, moved to the South Bay just to train with the coaches at the India Culture Center in Milpitas two years ago.

Walnut Creek synchronized swimmer Mariya Koroleva, a Stanford communication major, will compete this year with her partner Mary Killman in a duet, despite the larger national team's miss at attending the 2012 Olympics.

Saratogans well remember that beach vollyball Olympian Kerri Walsh was born in Saratoga, long before she set foot on a sand court.

Stanford undergrad Kristina Vaculik will be chalking her hands during the gymnastics events, but will be at the Games with Canada. Another Cardinal with Bay Area roots in Santa Rosa is Silas Stafford, competing in men's pair rowing.

The lesser-known sport of fencing will push a San Francisco teen into the spotlight at his first Olympic appearance.

Alexander Massialas, 18-year-old son of three-time Olympian Greg Massialas who coaches at Halberstadt Fencers' Club in San Francisco's Mission District, will compete for Team USA in the foil event. The young Massialas will be an incoming freshman at Stanford University in the fall.

The West Coast Conference, which represents athletic teams Santa Clara University and Saint Mary's College in Moraga, proudly listed five connections to the Olympic Games, including several men on the U.S. basketball team; a women's rowing coach and a men's volley team manager from Saint Mary's.

Marti Malloy, competing in the 57-kilo weight class in judo, is from San Jose State University, and hails originally the state of Washington. Read about her performance needed on July 31.

Santa Clara University alumna Brandi Chastain from US Women's soccer fame will serve as a women's soccer commentator at the games.

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Joan J. Strong May 22, 2013 at 11:21 am
Corrections: 1. Straw man attack: nobody is blaming BCS for district-wide growth. Nobody. 2. BCSRead More does not get "half the funding" of LASD. BCS gets about 6500 and LASD gets about 9500. The BCS program for typical children costs about twice as much as the comparable LASD program. BCS is simple an expensive hybrid public/private school, nothing more. 3. Mr. Roode pointed out that there are about 100 or so special ed. students at LASD (I cannot verify this but it seems very low). LASD calls out an annual expense of $7.5 million for special ed. meaning each of these students cost LASD $75,000, not $1,000 as he implied. 4. The law and the courts have ALREADY compelled LASD to give reasonably equivalent facilities and they have. BCS has a lower student/teacher ratio meaning that they have more classrooms for the same number of kids. This is not, legally speaking, LASD's problem. 5. Mr. Roode has yet to explain how the Covington campus could be 16 acres. Further, he continues to spread the fallacy that campuses ACREAGE is even remotely relevant to its student capacity. Campuses are limited by their location and traffic, not how many acres of grass there is in the back. 6. Were it not for BCS, we would have passed a bond in the last election, as the polling shows. BCS litigation has ripped our community apart and has left it with a mountain to climb when it comes to operating in a normal fashion.
L.A. Chung (Editor) May 22, 2013 at 10:37 am
@David R. I think Homestead uses EarthCare Recycling, based on its April 6 E-Waste collection dayRead More publicity (http://bit.ly/10mIV14) : www.earthcarerecycling.com "Recycle FREE your old electronic equipment - working or not! Anything with a plug or PC board inside. Also accepted are non-household batteries, VHS tapes and other media, and scrap metal. Visit www.earthcarerecycling.com for a list of accepted items. "
David R. May 21, 2013 at 10:26 pm
What kind of bins are there? Do you take used CDROMs? How about VHS tapes? Cables and wire?
David R. May 20, 2013 at 01:18 pm
I saw a public report that said most of the discussion related to carpooling and so forth, sinceRead More Blach is separated so much from the rest of the school. You know, things like dropping off both kids at Egan, and then a group of kids headed for Blach share a ride or vice versa. I don't see how any nonparents can really help with that.