We're one year removed from the London 2012 Olympics. The greatest sporting event ever held in the country produced memories that will last a lifetime, but just what impact has the staging of the Games had on the UK?
Women in sport
Jess Ennis-Hill was the face of London 2012, and her stock has risen since her gold medal effort, but
a recent Sky Sports News report revealed that she was the exception rather than the rule with fewer women on the list of top 10 Olympic sponsorship earners now than there were before the 2012 Games. She's one of just three women - and the only one still competing - in the top ten Olympic sponsorship earners based on income related exclusively to the Games. The other two women have both retired - Victoria Pendleton and Rebecca Adlington came eighth and ninth respectively.
However, there may be better news for both the profile of women's sport and the participation levels - and the
Women's Sports Trust is looking to build on the Olympic effect by getting more women involved in sport and a higher profile for female sports all round. Gold medal winner
Anna Watkins dropped into the Sky Sports News studio and told us as she backed them to boost female sport in the UK.
Brownlees on Triathlon
Jonny and Alistair Brownlee say the sport of triathlon is booming a year on from the London Olympics. Alistair won gold in last year's Games, with brother Jonny taking bronze, and the Yorkshiremen
say they can see the impact the Olympics has had on their sport when they train. We caught up with the pair as they prepared to stage their own event - The Brownlee Tri - a shortened form of a regular triathlon, at Fountains Abbey near Ripon in Yorkshire.