Fashion photos of Rasmus Mogensen with fencing touch.
www.rasmusmogensen.com
Fashion photos of Rasmus Mogensen with fencing touch.
www.rasmusmogensen.com

June 1, 2009
Photo: Getty Images

The ITF has published Journey to Beijing: Tennis celebrates the Olympics on the heels of the sport’s participation in its sixth Olympics (since returning to the roster in 1988). Over 40 of the world’s leading tennis players took part in the ITF project to help promote the 2008 Beijing Olympic Tennis Event.
The 140-page publication features a series of specially commissioned photographs of the game’s top names dressed as athletes from other summer or winter Olympic sports. The players also give an insight into the part the Olympics has played in their lives, with a series of exclusive interviews looking at their childhood memories, previous Olympic appearances and ambitions for this summer’s Games.
Among the 44 players represented in the book are Roger Federer as a fencer.

Thirteen athletes show off their game and put a new spin on summer sportswear.
Four US saber fencers out of these thirteen athletes: Sergey Isayenko, Daryl Homer, Tim Morehouse & Sean Buckley.
Found at esquire.
To celebrate the 2008 Olympics, Lane Crawford, the Chinese luxury retailer, commissioned 12 fashion designers to each design a uniform for their favorite sport. Alexander McQueen chose fencing!

Lancia is the official sponsor of the Italian Women’s Foil Team with Margherita Granbassi as a media vehicle.

Olympic fencers Tim Morehouse and Jason Rogers were in the NY Post of April 20 today! In the article titled “Date Knights-Forget Finance Types, Meet The New Mr. Right.” Tim and Jason pose with other eligible bachelors. According to the article, it’s time to “Take this opportunity- aka, a dip in the Dow-to kick the suit to the curb and date outside the box. Find a hot guy with a really cool job.” We couldn’t agree more…
“We’re nice guys,” Morehouse says. “When we meet people, we want to make a good impression and show that we’re good people, nice people, hard-working people. I think it’s part of the Olympic creed — sportsmanship and being nice.”
