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King and Sir Chris Hoy kick off Glasgow Commonwealth Games countdown

King and Sir Chris Hoy kick off Glasgow Commonwealth Games countdown

Independent10-03-2025
The King has been joined by cycling hero Sir Chris Hoy to officially start the countdown to the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games.
Charles handed a wooden baton to the six-time Olympic champion to launch the King's Baton Relay at Buckingham Palace on Monday, with 500 days to go before the sporting event begins.
Glasgow was announced as the Games host for the second time last year after the original host, the Australian state of Victoria, was forced to withdraw.
The Games were previously held in the Scottish city in 2014.
Charles shared a laugh with Scotland's First Minister John Swinney as he greeted guests in the palace's Marble Hall.
They included the first four baton bearers for the Games: Sir Chris, Scottish Paralympic and Commonwealth wheelchair racer Sammi Kinghorn, Royal Commonwealth Society volunteer Keiran Healy, and Gabriella Wood, an Olympic and Commonwealth judo athlete from Trinidad and Tobago.
British Paralympian Kadeena Cox and judo competitor Sarah Adlington then presented Charles with the baton and his message for the Commonwealth Games, with the latter tied in a red ribbon.
Charles placed the message into the baton, where it will remain until it is opened and read out at the opening ceremony.
Sir Chris, who won Commonwealth gold medals in 2002 and 2006, was handed the baton by Charles before walking through the palace's Quadrangle with a guard of honour provided by pipers wearing kilts.
Ms Kinghorn, Mr Healy and Ms Wood were each then handed the baton in turn before it left the palace grounds. The King's Baton Relay will begin in Trinidad and Tobago.
Speaking about the event afterwards, Sir Chris told the PA news agency: 'It's pretty special – I wanted to slow it down and not rush it too much.
'It's a very kind of private and intimate ceremony, almost – there's not thousands of people here, but it feels very special to be part of it and wonderful that we are in this 500 days to go with such a fantastic celebration.'
Sir Chris said Glasgow hosting the Games for a second time was 'fantastic for Scotland', adding: 'I think it's showing that Scotland can and does put on world class events in sport, and it only inspires us.'
The baton is comprised of three interlocking pieces of sustainability sourced ash, a Scottish hardwood, and was inspired by the three Commonwealth Games values of humanity, equality and destiny.
For the first time, each of the 74 nations and territories participating in the Games will have their own uniquely designed batons with a different word from the King's message engraved on them.
Mr Swinney told PA: 'There's a lot of enthusiasm, a lot of warmth towards the Commonwealth Games.
'Of course, what we've had to do this time, we've stepped in very late in the preparations, when the Games were not going to be held in Australia, and we've provided the replacement venue, so the Games will be different.
'They'll give a different size and a different scale, but the reimagining of the Games is part of, I suppose, what Glasgow has been really good at. Glasgow has been a centre of invention in all of its history.'
The First Minister added: 'The baton is emblematic of the whole message of sustainability that lies at the heart of so much of our agenda in Scotland, about making sure that we address the climate challenge, that we ensure we act in a sustainable fashion.'
Charles attended the annual Commonwealth Day Service of Celebration at Westminster Abbey earlier on Monday alongside the Queen, the Prince and Princess of Wales, the Princess Royal and the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester.
The King and Camilla will also attend a Commonwealth Day Reception at Marlborough House on Monday evening, where the inaugural Commonwealth Peace Prize will be awarded.
The Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games will take place from July 23 to August 2 next year.
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"Some people like it. I fully get that. Some people are against it. That's football. It will always split opinion, won't it? We talk about football in the old days. We talk about football now, modern football. We're always going to get that debate about it. I go back to when I was a referee. "On the field, you make a mistake. It's a clear mistake that influences a result. You drive home. You watch whatever television programme is on that evening, the following day, whatever is written in the media, whatever follows, and it continues for so long. "There's no worse feeling as a match referee than knowing that you've made that mistake. Now, the guys don't go out to make mistakes. There's no reason for them to want to be perfect when they're out there. We make mistakes. If we make that mistake and we have a chance, an opportunity to make that right, then that's got to be good for the game. It's got to be good for the integrity of the game. "It's got to be the way forward. I do think that it has improved the game. I really wish it were there in many situations in my career where I've driven home and I've just thought, why didn't I give that penalty? Why did I give that penalty when I should have done that? It's there for that reason. "But the big decisions, we'll still always have subjective decisions that split a room. We'll always have decisions that split a room. We always get that. That's just football. "I think when you look at UEFA in general, 46 out of 53 nations have got it [VAR]. So that speaks for itself straight away. And the other countries, you may well get an odd outlying country that is like, 'We don't want it'. "But again, I'd just reiterate that if the referee gives a penalty when a ball hits a player in the face, it changes the whole game. We seem to forget about these big, big decisions that have influenced games and results over a number of years. Personally, I know they haunt me. Decisions that I've made over the years. I could tell you all the mistakes." Atkinson himself refereed at the 2012 European Championships. Nick Walsh, one of the SFA's flagship whistlers, spent time at the under-21 version of the tournament this summer. "I think that's fantastic for Scottish match officials and for Scottish football, I think it's brilliant that they went there," said a proud Atkinson. "They stayed at the tournament; they refereed in the semi-finals of a major tournament. It's brilliant for us. We can't do anything about the past. We can't change that now. We can't change what history has been. We can change the future of what's coming next. "The targets are always the next competitions, the next tournaments that are coming. It's got to be. We've got to be doing that. That's what we thrive on. Certainly, for myself and Willie [Collum] and the team, it is identifying that and supporting that talent as well, supporting these guys to get there. "I reiterate the success of Nick in the summer. Nick and his team were all really proud of that. We should shout about that as well. To get a semi-final in a major tournament is something to be proud of." Walsh, his team, and countless other match officials in Scotland are used to their decisions being scrutinised every week throughout the season. Indeed, Atkinson thinks refs north of the border are lambasted much more than their English counterparts. "It is pretty high pressure in England, but we get the feeling that here it's even more intense and even more critical on referees," he said. 'It's certainly on a par with what it is down in England. Definitely the expectation, but I think you'll find that in just about every country as well. I think each country is so passionate. It's like that. The expectations are there. "I must say, since I've been up here, I'm really impressed with how the guys, how the match officials have taken on board a lot of the stuff. I come up bringing experience from the Premier League and implementing it here with these guys. They have really taken on board a lot of it. "I think you'll find that from certainly the communication side of it, the way that the guys speak on the field of play. You can listen to things from the start of the season to where we are at the end of the season. The comms are far better. "I'm delighted with that. I'm really pleased with that. I think we can continue to do that. I think we can still get better at it. But pressure-wise, that's part of the game. We all want more all the time. Every season, we want more. We want the guys to get better. Teams want to get better. We want the match officials to be better. That's football. That's the nature of it."

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