People profiles

Simon Timson

UK Sport director of performance


We’ve got 79 really good shots at winning medals in Rio,” says UK Sport director of performance Simon Timson. “It will be a challenge to convert all of them, but I think we can confidently say that we would be disappointed with anything less than 48 medals.”

Forty-eight is the magic number for Timson and UK Sport, which is aiming to beat the Beijing 2008 Olympics medal haul of 47 to produce the best-ever away Games for Team GB in Brazil this year.

Following four years of work “refining and refining” medal target ranges based on information and data – as well as detailed conversations with performance directors in individual sports – the quango has come up with a goal of achieving between 47 and 79 medals over 21 sports.

While gaining 48 medals would be a significant achievement, getting closer to the top echelons of the range could be a watershed moment for British sport. If Team GB wins 66 medals or more, it will surpass the 65 won during the London 2012 Games, making Britain the first nation to achieve more podium finishes after hosting the Games.

Timson is cautiously optimistic that the level could be attainable, highlighting a “real strength in depth in the high performance systems” which could deliver the marginal gains needed to push those not expected to win medals onto the podium.

“At least 20 of our athletes are expected to finish fourth, which is the second-highest number behind the US and significantly more than our closest rivals,” he explains. “There’s a fingernail difference between bronze and no medal in a number of sports and I think that will see us convert a number of those fourth places into medals in Rio.”

Great expectations
The landscape looks even brighter for the Paralympic athletes travelling to Rio this summer, with a London-bettering 121 medals expected over the course of the Games.

Expectations are high and rightly so, after £350m has been plough into Olympic sport over the past four years. Timson will also be keen for the team to do well, considering the Games will be his swansong as UK Sport’s performance chief as he gets ready for a move to the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) in November. However, Timson insists he is feeling “no pressure personally” and that he won’t be thinking about tennis until the Olympics and Paralympics are over.

He adds: “It’s the athletes that have been training and striving to make the Games and succeed at the Games. They’ve worked their socks off for at least the last four years and we should be celebrating them –  all we can expect of them is to deliver their best on the day and try to fulfil their true potential.”

Sustainable platform
Timson arrived at UK Sport from the England and Wales Cricket Board in 2013, less than a year after the success of London 2012, and has endeavoured to keep that momentum going looking at Rio and beyond.

He tells Sports Management that he is proud of helping to “put high performance sport in the UK on a sustainable platform for the long-term future”, explaining his three areas of focus to achieve this.

“The first thing is we continued to make long-term investment decisions over eight years and done a lot of work to educate sports and coaches about attracting and nurturing talent,” he says. “Secondly, we now make more evidence and fact-based decisions – rather than make assumptions – and thirdly we don’t allow our investment processes to be emotionally hijacked by what does or doesn’t happen at the Games.”

While cycling, athletics and rowing have been earmarked as potential big winners for Team GB in Rio – with maximum targets of 10, nine and eight medals respectively – Timson believes the system will allow other sports to flourish in the run-up to Tokyo 2020.

In January Timson told Sports Management that he expects a renaissance of swimming and gymnastics in four years time, and he now adds shooting to the list.

“We should be focusing on ensuring an ever stronger and sustainable platform for the sports we currently invest in. I think sports like shooting have a particularly exciting future because of what they’ve done in the eight-year pathway in terms of attracting talent to its programme and nurturing it,” says Timson.

Retaining momentum
Despite such an encouraging landscape in elite British sport, Timson has identified challenges for his successor in maintaining and growing the success.

“Athletes are our greatest asset and we can never take them for granted,” he says. “We need to ensure we don’t only have daily training regimes that provide world-class facilities, but ones that provide world-class environments. High performance sport is very demanding, but that doesn’t mean the environments can’t be highly supportive, fun and enjoyable.

“We also have to try and maintain the investment, because if we cannot continue to support a broad range of sports with world-class coaching, science, medicine, technology and equipment then others will. Our system has been the envy of the world for the last eight years and copycat systems are springing up all over the world – in Australia, Canada and New Zealand – so it’s going to get harder to succeed and we’ve got to respond to that.”

Gallery
Click on an image to open the image gallery
company profile
Company profile: DJW
DJW offer a way to interpret your story through the use of technology. We can provide Audio Visual consultancy to assist in the planning stage, follow up with AV system design, supply and installation, and provide a bespoke control system to suit your operational needs.
Try cladmag for free!
Sign up with CLAD to receive our regular ezine, instant news alerts, free digital subscriptions to CLADweek, CLADmag and CLADbook and to request a free sample of the next issue of CLADmag.
sign up
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
To advertise in our catalogue gallery: call +44(0)1462 431385
features
"In Indigenous culture, it’s more important to understand where you come from than what you do for a living"

The Vancouver Art Gallery architect tells us about his mission to bring together Western knowledge and Indigenous ways of knowing

The project reimagines neglected land as a new green urban district
"Culture is the beating heart of this project"

Designed to restore neglected land and renew the identity of Iraq’s capital city, Baghdad Sustainable Forests promises a new way of living surrounded by nature. Gensler’s Ian Mulcahay tells us why he thinks the project could become a model for the repair and enhancement of urban centres

cladkit product news
Effe introduces sauna and hammam collection Baluar by Patricia Urquiola
The system uses heat-treated lime wood cladding, available in either a dark or light tone
Helen Andrews
Sauna specialist Effe (formerly Effegibi) has introduced its new sauna and hammam collection, Baluar, designed by architect and designer Patricia ...
New Balera collection embeds lighting in 
tiled feature walls
Studiotamat has teamed up with Ariana de Luca to create the Balera range
Magali Robathan
The new Balera Collection sees design studio Studiotamat team up with ceramic artist Arianna De Luca and lighting designer Ninefifty ...
TouchWood Play designs new kids’ club for Dubai’s Zuhha Island
The new club aims to connect children with nature
Magali Robathan
Bespoke play environment design and manufacturer TouchWood Play has announced that it is responsible for the creation of a new Kids’ ...
cladkit product news
Porada launch retro-inspired coffee table
Porada's new Enook Brillo coffee table
Magali Robathan
Maurizio Marconato and Terry Zappa have created the Enook Brillo coffee table for Italian design studio Porada – a retro-inspired design ...
Lucas Zito aims to show 3D printed lamps can be timeless design objects
Lucas Zito’s practice specialises in the design of lights through 3D printing
Magali Robathan
A collection of lighting from Paris-based designer Lucas Zito aims to reframe the idea of 3D printed objects as cheap ...
Snow’s holistic cool-down: Embracing inclusivity in post-sauna rituals
Megan Whitby
In the world of wellness, the age-old tradition of sauna bathing is synonymous with relaxation, detoxification and rejuvenation. But, a ...
cladkit product news
OpenSeed launches private multisensory Iris Meditation Pod
The Iris Pod features vibro-acoustic technology, aromatherapy, light therapy, music, guided meditations and soundscapes
Helen Andrews
OpenSeed has launched its multisensory Iris Meditation Pod, designed in collaboration with Fuseproject – a design and innovation company founded ...
Heatherwick Studio and lighting brand Tala collaborate to create sleep light called Wake
Wake is crafted from hand-spun ceramic and pressed glass, behind which a gentle light emanates to improve sleep routines and wellbeing
Helen Andrews
Design firm Heatherwick Studio and British lighting brand Tala have teamed up to create a sleep light called Wake. The ...
LivinGlobe introduces redesigned adaptable Vidarium
LivinGlobe can install ultra short throw projections or premium LED panels, as well as the surround sound system and video server
Helen Andrews
Founded more than 10 years ago, LivinGlobe was one of the first companies in the immersive wellness space with its ...