Independence and celebrations: Let the Glasgow Games begin

By David Lord / Expert

There was a poignant undercurrent in Glasgow this morning at the opening ceremony of the 20th Commonwealth Games.

If the September 18 independence referendum is carried, Scotland will no longer be included in Team GB for the Olympics, and will no longer be funded by the National Lottery.

As champion cyclist Sir Chris Hoy, one of Scotland’s favourite sons, predicted in May last year, it will take a long time for Scotland to reestablish itself on its own.

All that’s in store, this morning the opening ceremoney took a slow pace until singing legend Rod Stewart and Susan Boyle, winner of “Britain Has Talent” in 2009 took to the stage, still singing like a thrush.

Another Scottish legend, comedian Billy Connolly, was serious when he saluted Nelson Mandela. and right through the ceremony UNICEF ambassadors popped up with the likes of Sachin Tendulkar, hurdler Colin Jackson, and Sir Chris.

The theme was “Children First”, with all ambassadors making a plea to the 1.5 billion television viewers to donate. and stop 18,000 kids suffering from curable diseases in Commonwealth countries dying a day.

It was a solid sell, and hopefully the Commonwealth responded.

The march past of athletes was in region order and not the usual alphabetical list of the 71 countues competing this time.

Asia led off, followed by Oceania led by Australia with champion cyclist Anna Meares the flag-bearer, while New Zealand’s bearer was the legendary shot putter Valeie Evans.

The best story out of Oceania was Niue, a tiny island 2500 kilometres north-east of New Zeland with a total population of 1611 – 11 of them are competing in Glasgow.

The best story out of the Americas came from St Helena, with its oldest inhabitant a 182 year-old giant tortoise Jonathan, celebrated by being on the reverse side of their five cent coin.

On the other side, it must have been tough going for the president of the Commonwealth Games Federation Sir Imran from Malaysia following the air crash that claimed 298 lives just over a week ago.

The Malaysian team wore black armbands in their march past, and a minute’s silence was observed before the Queen officialy opened the Games.

But the lead-in to that was a lighter moment, when Sir Imran and Sir Chris couldn’t open the Queen’s baton that held a message from the Queen inserted in the stem when the baton left Buckingham Palace 288 days ago, and travelled the width and breadth of the Commonwealth for over 100,000 miles and held aloft by 10,000 volunteers

After what seemed an eternity, they eventually extracted the message and handed it to a bemused Queen.

So four hours after it all began, the Queen officially declared the Games open.

Let the Games begin.

The Crowd Says:

2014-07-24T16:47:56+00:00

DaniE

Guest


The Scottie dogs and Prince Imran (who seems to be a genial Hercule Poirot of Malaysia) were the highlights of this opening ceremony for me. Thankfully only two hours - then one nights sleep - then the sport begins!!!

2014-07-24T13:42:44+00:00

Nick

Guest


And of course Scots will no longer be able to latch onto athletes from the rest of the UK as they've been happy to do. I'm not a Londoner but I should imagine they support Hoy and Murray as fellow Brits. In my experience wherever you are in the UK you tend to support your fellow British and Irish - including those from the Irish Republic - sportsmen outside of football, of course, and to some extent rugby. Hoy in particular has emphasised that he's proud of being both Scottish and British. Of course, the nationalist extremists have accused him of being an "anti-Scottish bigot" for his warnings of the risks to Scottish sport of independence.

2014-07-24T10:37:51+00:00

Glenn Innes

Guest


Scotland will not vote for independence in fact it will not even be close, about 60-40 against will be the final score.Scotland would be an economic basket case without tax transfers from England so pragmatism will trump emotion and they will stay in the Union.

2014-07-24T04:16:04+00:00

Football United

Guest


Scottish Sport will be fine in the event of independence, or at least it couldn't get any worse. The pro rugby set up there is already a mess, they will continue to have a strong representation in Golf and the only negative to Scottish Football would be that it is harder for the old firm to join the English System. It's also great for it's athletes in the likes of Cycling, Tennis or other Olympic sport as they can finally compete as Scotland and the Londoners can no longer latch onto Scottish Athletes like Hoy or Andy Murray.

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