Video: With 100 days to go, what do the Olympics mean to you?

London 2012 is set to hit and even surpass all of its revenue targets, chief executive Paul Deighton has said.

There will not be a significant surplus left over from running the Games but London 2012, which was quick off the mark to secure sponsors after being named as host in 2005, is in positive mood with 100 days to go to the start of the Games.

And the Olympics are also set to bring millions of pounds into Yorkshire’s economy, with Sheffield alone estimating around £19m has already been generated, largely through the number of teams basing training camps in the city.

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Leeds, Bradford and York are also hosting training camps meaning Yorkshire will have the largest number of camps of any county north of the Watford Gap.

Commenting on London 2012’s revenue position, Mr Deighton said: “We have always tried to push up revenues and keep costs down with every penny and try to bring them as closely balanced as possible.

“I am very, very confident we will hit the revenue target given the tickets we have left and the merchandise sales, we can be absolutely sure of that.

“But at this stage in the project there are always more strains on the cost side of the operation than on the revenue side.”

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London 2012 must raise £2bn from the private sector to stage the Games.

London has now exceeded its sponsorship revenue target and is expected to raise more than £700m.

Mr Deighton said that the necessary expenditure on the remaining preparations, including fitting out all the venues for the Games and constructing a number of temporary arenas, would swallow up most, if not all, of the income.

London 2012 has sold seven million Olympic and Paralympic tickets to the public and has another four million to go. The remaining ticket sales alone should easily cover the £200m gap to reach the revenue target, while income from sponsors has already exceeded expectations and merchandise sales should add to that.

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More than £1bn of sales is expected from the London 2012 merchandising programme, contributing more than £80m to the staging of the Games.

By Games time an estimated 10,000 merchandise items will be on sale in the UK.

The bulk of the test events, which are trialling everything from the venues, field of play, communications procedures, security and staffing, have nearly been completed.

The Government and London 2012 organisers Locog have been keen to stress to both the public and the IOC that the £9.3bn Olympic project is in good hands.

See our free 28-page Olympic supplement in today’s paper.