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Olympics' glory proves doomsayers wrong

Worst fears fail to materialize at successful event
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Workers start dismantling the finishing point of the Olympic marathon course in the Mall near Buckingham Palace in London on Monday following the closing ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics.

For skeptics, the Olympics were deliciously doomed: London's transport network would surely fail, Britain's athletes would flop, rain would prevail and terrorists would strike. But then the sun came out after months of sodden skies, vehicles moved briskly, there were no attacks and British athletes reeled in a shocking 65 medals.

On Monday, as international athletes and visitors poured out of London and the city's eight million residents resumed their normal lives, British officials hailed the 2012 Olympics as an unqualified success. Even the naysayers predicting doom and gloom had to eat their words.

"I was moaning like everyone else before the Games, thinking the roads would be packed and nothing would work," said London shopkeeper Yvette Tracton, 28. "But it's been brilliant."

Celebrations kicked off around the country as athletes returned home to cheering crowds. Leeds gave a special reception to three medallists, including triathlon gold-and bronzewinning brothers Alistair and Jonathan Brownlee.

"It's been a fantastic week in London, but to come home to Leeds is better than anything else," Alistair said. Jonathan described the thousands on hand for their heroes welcome as "absolutely incredible," saying he hadn't realized how much their success galvanized supporters back home.

Some 116,000 people were leaving Monday from Heathrow airport, London's busiest hub, compared with 95,000 for a typical August day. Gatwick Airport was handling 70,000 departing passengers, 15 per cent more than usual. Airports had come under scrutiny in the months leading up to the Olympics for lacking the staff to deal with backlogs of people and luggage, but Monday's crowds moved through without a hitch.

The exodus included housands of athletes and rime Minister David ameron, who was heading n vacation to the Mediteranean.

Heathrow built a temporary Olympics terminal with 31 check-in desks to accommodate departing athletes and support staff. The terminal was decorated like a park, and some staff wore bearskin hats in the style of Buckingham Palace guards.

"I have to say to Britain, you guys did a great job," said passenger Tumua Anae, a 23-year-old Californian who won gold with the U.S. water polo team.

London's quirky mayor, Boris Johnson, gloated to reporters, saying London had defied the skeptics.

About 300,000 foreigners and 5.5 million day-trippers flocked to the city for the Games. Hotel occupancy was at 84 per cent - double what Beijing and Sydney saw during their Olympics.

Johnson said the city's public transport had coped just fine. Use of London's subway - the Tube - was up 30 per cent but had few major problems. London's overground commuter train saw double the normal crowds, and the city's bike rental scheme broke a record with 46,000 bikes rented on a single day.

Traffic actually became heavier Monday as motorists who had stayed away to avoid Olympic crowds returned to the streets. Taxi drivers breathed a sigh of relief after having complained of fewer customers and being barred from using special Olympic road lanes.

Security officials, too, could cheer the lack of any major incident during the games.

Britain has been a prime target of Islamic terror groups because of its support for the U.S.-led operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Dozens of plots, including the 2006 attempt to blow up trans-Atlantic airliners, have been hatched within Britain's sizable Muslim population.

Upping the fear factor was an Olympic security contractor's admission just

weeks before the games that it would have a shortfall of guards. In the end, the military had to provide 3,500 last-minute personnel, and contractor G4S expects to lose as much as 50 million pounds ($78 million).

But while police made 250 arrests, there were no attacks - something officials attributed to years of planning and boosted intelligence resources.

"I'm very proud that we didn't have anything serious to deal with, but that was because of a lot of hard work done by a lot of people," said Olympics security co-ordinator Chris Allison.

In central London, workers using forklifts, cherrypickers and small cranes began clearing a temporary 15,000-seat arena - and scooping up 5,000 tonnes of sand - from the site of the beach volleyball competi-

tion in Horseguards Parade, a storied square in the heart of London's Westminster political district.

A total of 17 Olympic venues around the country will eventually be dismantled, but some will remain for the upcoming Paralympics, which run from Aug. 29 to Sept. 9.

The Olympic Park, visited by more than five million people during the Games, will be closed to the public until the Paralympics, and many venues will see changes to make them more accessible to the disabled.

Carmelina Moscato, a member of the bronzemedal 91原创 soccer team, said participating in the Games was like "being in dreamland."

"I could not have asked for more," she said.