Team GB celebrates Olympic Day by inspiring the nation to get active with 'Get Set'

Compartir
Compartir articulo

This year Team GB will be celebrating Olympic Day on 23 June over five days by encouraging the nation to get active and by promoting the Olympic Values of friendship, excellence and respect. Watch teaser here.

As the United Kingdom continues to operate under the Government’s lockdown guidelines, Team GB will be providing families and schoolteachers with a range of Get Set and Travel to Tokyo resources to inspire young people to maintain healthy, active lifestyles. The activity will kick off on Monday 22 June and will be available via Team GB’s social media accounts on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

Get Set is the British Olympic Association (BOA) and British Paralympic Association’s youth engagement programme. It was initially created as the official London 2012 education programme to deliver against Lord Coe’s vision to use the Games to inspire a generation of young people. Travel to Tokyo, part of the Get Set initiative, aims to encourage children and their families to try new activities in the run up to the Tokyo 2020 and Paralympic Games, which have been delayed until 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

A host of Team GB Olympians and Tokyo 2020 hopefuls, including Travel to Tokyo ambassadors Laviai Nielson (athletics) and Anthony Ogogo (former boxer), have devised bespoke workouts for parents and schoolteachers to try at home or in the classroom, as well as a series of fun fitness challenges.

Team GB’s Olympic Day celebrations also coincide with National Schools Sports Week, which takes place each year to celebrate the role of physical education and school sport in enhancing young peoples’ wellbeing. Get Set will be supporting this with its ‘Have a Sports Day at Home’ initiative, acknowledging that many children will miss out on their annual school sports day as a result of lockdown.

After building an at-home obstacle course for her toddler near the start of lockdown, former alpine ski racer Chemmy Alcott will be creating a brand new obstacle course for people to try at home as part of their own sports days.

Elsewhere, Team GB will join the wider Olympic Movement in their Olympic Day celebrations by supporting the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) #StayActive campaign. Inspired by the energy and positivity of Olympians around the globe during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the IOC will create the world’s largest 24 hour digital-first Olympic workout. Taekwondo’s Lutalo Muhammad, who won silver at Rio 2016, joins Olympians from all four corners of the globe in a home video workout which can be viewed here.

In amongst the workouts, fitness challenges and at-home sports days, Team GB will share a selection of learning resources on the Olympic Values which can be used in the classroom, on the playground or at home.

Olympic bronze medallist and Travel to Tokyo ambassador, Anthony Ogogo commented: "While the nation continues to operate under these unique circumstances it is so important that we find ways to remain fit, healthy and motivated. The Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games may have been postponed by a year, but we can still take inspiration from everything that the Olympics stands for by promoting healthy wellbeing and the Olympic Values to young people and demonstrate how these can be weaved into everyday life."

For more information on Get Set and Travel to Tokyo visit https://www.getset.co.uk/

For the IOC’s #StayActive campaign and details of their plans for Olympic Day on 23 June visit https://www.olympic.org/olympic-day

Team GB teaser video on YouTube - click here.

Team GB teaser video embed code: iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Am-xo4OUSUw" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen>/iframe>

25 Years at #1: Your best source of news about the Olympics is www.aroundtherings.com, for subscribers only

Recent Articles

Sustainable Olympic Games: the legacy of the clean Seine and the global inspiration for the mega-events to come

Paris 2024 not only pledged to clean up the iconic river in the French capital, but it also claims to have reduced its carbon footprint to 50 percent with decisions such as not building new stadiums. Georgina Grenón, the Argentinian in charge of the environmental area in the Organizing Committee, told details of how they work on the objective.
Sustainable Olympic Games: the legacy of the clean Seine and the global inspiration for the mega-events to come

Failures in the investigation: The United States reached a million-dollar settlement with 139 of Larry Nassar’s victims

The Department of Justice reported that it will pay them $138.7 million and pointed to the FBI's actions after the first complaints: “They should have been taken seriously from the start.”
Failures in the investigation: The United States reached a million-dollar settlement with 139 of Larry Nassar’s victims

The Beach-Handball in Paris 2024 may have its big chance

Most of the sports that started their Olympic dream in exhibition mode were left alone in that. Others, such as tennis, came back to stay. The reasons why this specialty deserves to have a space similar to that of rugby, in 3x3 and beach volleyball.
The Beach-Handball in Paris 2024 may have its big chance

Novak Djokovic received the Laureus Athlete of the Year Award for the fifth time

The Serbian tennis player, who won the 24th Grand Slam in 2023, repeated the distinction he had received in 2012, 2015, 2016 and 2019. The Spanish soccer player Aitana Bonmatí won among the women and the American gymnast Simone Biles was also awarded as the comeback of the year.
Novak Djokovic received the Laureus Athlete of the Year Award for the fifth time

Garbiñe Muguruza says goodbye to tennis

The former number 1 in the world and winner of two Grand Slam titles announced her retirement from tennis after twelve years of professional career.
Garbiñe Muguruza says goodbye to tennis