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It takes more than gold to make a hero

Many of London

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It takes more than gold to make a hero

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  1. When fencer Ruben Limardo set off for the London Olympics, he little imagined that he would be \rcheered through the streets of the Venezuelan capital Caracas on top of a truck on his return, \rand honoured by the president.

  2. Nor could Shin A-lam have known that a tearful, lonely hour sobbing over the loss of her bout \rwould make her known to millions and put fencing on the map in South Korea.

  3. Limardo's gold, in individual epee, was Venezuela's first for 44 years. President Hugo Chavez \rgave him a replica of the sword used by South American independence hero Simon Bolivar.

  4. Limardo also charmed London and beyond by wearing his medal on the capital's Underground system, \rposing for photos with passengers and teaching them Venezuelan sports chants. The U.S. news and \rgossip site Gawker said a picture posted online was \"the best Olympics photo yet\".

  5. South Korea felt a surge of sympathy for Shin, who sat in tears in a pool of light after losing \rher semi-final, refusing to leave the piste because to step off would have meant accepting the \rjudges' ruling.

  6. Tweets and Facebook postings took her side but fencing itself had stepped out of the shadows in \rSouth Korea, and media reported that suddenly everyone wanted to learn the sport.

  7. South Korea's Yang Hak-seon took over the sports pages not only for winning South Korea's first \rgymnastics gold, with a vault that he invented, but also because it emerged that he had used his \rtraining money to support his family, so poor that they had for a while lived in a greenhouse on \ra farm. His reward? 100 million won from his federation, and ramen noodles for life from a \rsponsor.

  8. Far greater fame and riches are already assured for some of the Olympics' biggest names. \rAmerican gymnast Gabby Douglas became her country's Olympic sweetheart overnight with her \rindividual all-round gold and her winning smile. Her face was appearing on cornflake packets \rwithin hours of her victory and experts put her earnings potential at between $5 million and $10 \rmillion over the next four years.

  9. \"The gold medal alone doesn't get you to first base in marketing - it's the persona that goes \rwith it,\" said Lynn Lashbrook, a sports agent in Portland, Oregon. \"I can't think of another \rperson in this category: female, young, articulate, great smile, this is unique.\"

  10. U.S. swimmer Missy Franklin, at 17 a year older than Douglas, made headlines for choosing a very different path. Likeable, telegenic and winner of four golds in London, she has turned her back on endorsements so that she can keep having fun as an amateur in U.S. college swimming.

  11. China's Olympians would once have been feted at home as standard-bearers for communism, but can \rnowadays look forward to material rewards as well as national adulation.

  12. Lin Dan has become \"Super-Dan\" in the Chinese media for successfully defending his badminton \rtitle. At the same time, he boosted the share price of the team's sponsor, the sporting goods \rfirm founded by 1984 gymnastics triple gold medallist Li Ning, by 12 percent overnight.

  13. Compatriot Sun Yang, winner of two swimming golds, is similarly attractive to Chinese sponsors \rand sports fans alike. The number of his followers on Sina Weibo, China's popular Twitter-like \rmicroblog, has jumped by 2.5 million since the start of the Olympics - dwarfing even Usain \rBolt's following.

  14. Four wrestlers and weightlifters will have to make do with adulation and more prosaic rewards \rfor bringing golden glory to Iran in sports in which the nation has traditionally excelled. The \rgovernment has promised each of them 90 gold coins and civil service jobs, but has outlawed \rendorsements as un-Islamic since former Olympic weightlifting champion Hossein Rezazadeh \rappeared in a commercial that aired on a banned satellite channel.

  15. Winning gold in a sport that your country thinks of as its own is often a way to glory. The \ryoung, handsome Aron Szilagyi is already being touted at home as the heir to a great lineage of \rHungarian fencers.

  16. Failure does not have to mean criticism back home. The image that has gripped Italy is the \rshocked, vulnerable face of former champion Federica Pellegrini, known for appearing naked on \rthe cover of Vanity Fair magazine with her fellow swimmer boyfriend, slumped in the water after \rfailing to take a medal in her signature 200m freestyle.

  17. Sport-crazy Australia finally has its heroes after hurdler Sally Pearson and track cyclist Anna \rMeares won the country's first individual golds of 2012 but it had already been inclined to \rforgive its great swimming hope, James Magnussen, who failed by 0.01 seconds to land the gold \rthat he had loudly promised.

  18. \"Even the fact you failed, it has got you the immediate attention,\" said marketing expert Andrew \rHughes at the Australian National University. \"He [James Magnussen] is still very marketable, \rbecause he has got a natural, fresh appeal to him which makes people notice.\"

  19. France likes its heroes to be intellectual, and has found the perfect one in Yannick Agnel, the \rswimmer who grabbed gold from the United States on the last leg of the 4x100m freestyle relay, \rthen added an individual sprint gold. Agnel reads poetry in his spare time, is learning Russian \rfor fun and speaks like an intellectual. \"Being an Olympic champion is my dream...but being a \rwriter must be nice too,\" he told Paris Match magazine.\r

  20. For many countries with less history of Olympic success, any medal is a cause for national \rcelebration. In Afghanistan, people put aside war worries momentarily to crowd into cafes \rnormally closed for Ramadan fasting and cheer on taekwondo fighter Rohullah Nikpah, who four \ryears ago won the country's first Olympic medal, a bronze.

  21. Five-times world boxing champion Mary Kom led the front page of the Times of India for securing \ra bronze that guaranteed her country its biggest medal haul. Online, many expressed hope that \rshe could help to boost the integration of her poor, neglected home region of Manipur with the \rrest of India.

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