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Thread: 2024 Paris Olympics

  1. #16
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    300,000 condoms

    Paris 2024 Olympics: Condoms for athletes, but no champagne - organisers hope Games can unite a world in conflict
    In the city of love - with pandemic-era Olympic restrictions over - Paris 2024 is encouraging amour among athletes again. Around 300,000 condoms will be available in the Olympic Village - enough for almost two each for every day of the Games.

    Rob Harris
    Sports correspondent @RobHarris
    Saturday 16 March 2024 05:08, UK

    Olympic chiefs hope a world divided by coronavirus and conflict can be united by cardboard and condoms.

    In the city of love - with pandemic-era Olympic restrictions over - Paris 2024 is encouraging amour among athletes again.

    After the keys were handed over, Sky News joined Games chiefs on inspections of the Olympic Village that will welcome 9,000 athletes in July.

    In the accommodation we were shown the surprising bed frame - cardboard. Sturdy enough, apparently, to support 250kg of Olympian - or Olympians.

    And we were told 300,000 condoms will be available in the Olympic Village - enough for almost two each for every day of the Games.

    Mixing among nations is very much encouraged again with the creation of a Village Club, after social distancing orders at the last summer Games in Tokyo in 2021 and an intimacy ban from the International Olympic Committee.


    A room prepared for athletes inside the Olympic and Paralympic Village
    "It is very important that the conviviality here is something big," Laurent Michaud, director of the village, told Sky News.

    "Working with the athletes commission, we wanted to create some places where the athletes would feel very enthusiastic and comfortable."

    But while a French staple is off the menu in the village there will be plenty to ensure athletes are well-nourished and refreshed.

    "No champagne in the village, of course, but they can have all the champagne they want also in Paris," said Mr Michaud, who previously ran Center Parcs in France.

    "We will have more than 350 metres of buffet with the world food... and I'm sure that the athletes will be very happy to have some French specialties made over here.

    "But the variety will first respond to the athletes' needs for their nutrition and their performance."

    The Olympic Village is the single costliest Olympic project at €2bn (£1.7bn) but largely funded by property investors.

    Around €650m of public funds have also been used for the project that regenerates this deprived area of Saint-Denis near the Stade de France.

    The size of 70 football pitches, the village is split by the River Seine with a bridge to link the accommodation blocks.

    For the IOC it is about avoiding white elephant projects of the past - ensuring host cities are not left with vast infrastructure built for the Olympics that has little lasting legacy.

    "It's about a responsible Games delivering less complex Games, which means less costly Games, and that's very important because we have to be cost conscious in today's world," IOC member Pierre-Olivier Beckers-Vieujant, the Paris 2024 Olympic coordination commission chair, told Sky News.

    "It's a project where 95% of the venues would be either existing or temporary. So in itself, Paris had to build a very limited number of venues and or infrastructure, all of them being needed by the region, like the various infrastructure of the village here."

    There are little signs yet across Paris the Games are coming - the most visible indicators are the additional CCTV cameras being installed.

    Changes to the law were required to allow AI video surveillance to be used to identify potential threats with the security concerns heightened amid the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and Russia's ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

    But organisers are still determined to take events into the heart of Paris.

    The opening ceremony will be staged down the River Seine with the athletes parading on a flotilla of boats, although the terror threat has curtailed ticket availability from viewing positions.


    How the opening ceremony could look. Pic: Paris 2024

    Pic: Paris 2024
    Urban sports will be at Place de la Concorde at the end of the Champs-Elysees, including the debut of breaking, BMX freestyle and skateboarding.

    And the city's most iconic venue - the Eiffel Tower - will be a stunning setting for beach volleyball.

    Olympic Games executive director Christophe Dubi told Sky News: "This incredible city backdrop comes with the challenge of having this concentration of people over what is in the end a pretty small footprint."

    But it is a welcome challenge after spectators were banned from Tokyo's venues in 2021 due to the pandemic and Rio 2016 struggled to attract large capacities.

    The crowds should be back in force for the first time since London 2012 and the most tickets outside of France have been sold to fans in Britain.

    "It has to be a celebration and it is a celebration - we've had many challenges in the past," Mr Dubi said.

    "In Rio we faced situations that were amazingly complex. But what you see is that with a bit of goodwill from everyone - starting with the organisers, but also as far as the Olympic community is concerned - meeting with the challenges and coming up with solutions... is in the greater interest that the Games represent.

    "What we all want is for unity, peace and a celebration of the best athletes. This is how this creative family works together.

    "Any challenge? We will win."
    330K condoms? Yeah, the city of LOVE
    Gene Ching
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  2. #17
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    Imax

    NBCU Extends Olympics Opening Ceremony Coverage to IMAX Screens
    The organizers will host a 4-mile flotilla along the River Seine July 26


    For the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympic Games in Paris, organizers plan a flotilla of athletes along the River Seine.NBCUniversal

    By Stephen Lepitak
    MARCH 25, 2024

    NBCUniversal plans to extend live coverage of the 2024 Paris Olympics opening ceremony across over 150 IMAX screens.
    On July 26, the organizers are planning a four-mile-long flotilla of almost 100 boats along the River Seine, carrying all of the athletes from over 200 countries. NBCU stated that this is the first time the Summer Olympic Games opening ceremony has not been held in a stadium.
    NBC’s coverage of the opening ceremony will be hosted by singer and presenter Kelly Clarkson, Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback and two-time Super Bowl champion Peyton Manning and NBC Olympics primetime host Mike Tirico.
    “We look forward to providing our opening ceremony coverage to audiences at IMAX locations across the country, sharing in this historic moment as the world regathers to witness the spectacular beginning of 16 days of athletic greatness against the backdrop of one of the most beautiful cities in the world,” said Gary Zenkel, president of NBC Olympics, in a statement.
    A trailer promoting its coverage will begin running in IMAX theaters nationwide March 29.
    Worldwide partners for this year’s games include Airbnb, Alibaba, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Coca-Cola, Deloitte, Omega, Panasonic, Procter & Gamble, Samsung and Visa.
    Peacock will act as the broadcaster’s primary platform covering Olympic Games Paris 2024, running from July 26 through Aug. 11, followed by the Paralympic Games, which will take place Aug. 28 through Sept. 8.
    NBCUniversal owns the U.S. media rights to the Olympic Games until 2032. It recently unveiled ways to bolster ad sales around the event, including through generative artificial intelligence, shoppable food delivery and, for the first time, a new programmatic offering.
    Spectators in Paris will be able to cheer on the flotilla from the banks of the Seine. It will finish in front of the Trocadéro, where the closing stages of the ceremony will take place.


    STEPHEN LEPITAK
    @stephenlepitak
    stephen.lepitak@adweek.com
    Stephen is Adweek's Europe bureau chief based in Glasgow.
    4 mile flotilla on IMAX might be with the watch...
    Gene Ching
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  3. #18
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    Hoo haa

    ‘My hoo haa is gonna be out’: Nike’s US Olympic outfits need ‘constant pube vigilance’ say frustrated athletes

    Michelle Del Rey
    Mon, 15 April 2024, 3:17 am GMT-7·2-min read

    Track and field stars are calling out Nike’s ultra-revealing athletic attire after the brand revealed its designs for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

    “Wait, my hoo haa is gonna be out,” wrote Tara Davis-Woodhall, a long jump athlete who participated in the 2020 Olympics, on social media.

    Queen Claye, an American hurdler who competed in the 2008 Olympics also chimed in.

    “Hi @europeanwaxcenter would you like to sponsor Team USA for the upcoming Olympic Games?! Please and thanks”.


    Sha’ Carri Richardson models Nike’s US Olympic track and field attire. (Nike)
    The heavily-critiqued design features a thin high-rise brazilian cut panty line that competitors say wasn’t created with performance in mind. The designs were revealed in Paris on Thursday and modeled by Athing Mu, a middle-distance runner and Sha’Carri Richardson, a sprinter.

    Lauren Fleshman, a national champion runner in 2006 and 2010, did not hold back when speaking about the outfit on social media.

    “I’m sorry, but show me one WNBA or NWSL team who would enthusiastically support this kit”, she wrote on Instagram.

    “This is for Olympic Track and Field. Professional athletes should be able to compete without dedicating brain space to constant pube vigilance or the mental gymnastics of having every vulnerable piece of your body on display.

    “If this outfit was truly beneficial to physical performance, men would wear it. This is not an elite athletic kit for track and field. This is a costume born of patriarchal forces that are no longer welcome or needed to get eyes on women’s sports.

    “I’m queer and I’m attracted to female bodies but I don’t expect or enjoy seeing female athletes or male athletes put in a position to battle self-consciousness at their place of work. This is not part of the job description.”

    In a statement to The Guardian, a spokesperson for the USA track and field team said, “Athlete options and choices were the driving force for USATF in the planning process with Nike”. Nike told Reuters that it would have tailors available for the team this year.

    Additionally, athletes will have unitard options with briefs and shorts. The line of outfits includes 50 apparel pieces and 12 competition styles.

    Some countries are opting for more conservative choices as the debate about revealing sports outfits heats up. In New Zealand, gymnastics athletes can now wear shorts or leggings over their leotards. At the Tokyo Olympics, Germany’s women’s gymnastics team wore full-length bodysuits.
    It's all about constant pube vigilance, amirite?
    Gene Ching
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  4. #19
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    Break-dancing

    PARIS 2024
    Break-dancing busts into the Olympics for the first time. Here’s what to expect in Paris.

    Two U.S. breakers have qualified for the Paris games — Sunny Choi (B-Girl Sunny) and Victor Montalvo (B-Boy Victor) — and two spots remain.

    Justine Goode / NBC News; Getty Images

    April 17, 2024, 2:00 AM PDT
    By Rebecca Cohen

    Get ready for plenty of how-did-they-do-that moments when the Paris Games introduce break-dancing as an official Olympic sport.

    Bodies will be contorted, gravity will seemingly be defied, and athletes will be showcasing “headspins,” “windmills” and “freeze” moves — and it will all be set to music.

    The sport, also known as breaking, made its successful debut at the 2018 Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where it topped 1 million viewers, according to NBC Olympics, far outpacing audiences for many other sports. The Olympics declared it an "outstanding success," and now both the organizers and the athletes hope to translate that magic to the biggest stage in sports.

    “This is a chance for us to grow and educate people on breaking,” Jeffrey Louis (B-Boy Jeffro), told NBC Olympics. Louis, the fifth-ranked B-boy in the world, is considered a favorite for one of the remaining spots on the U.S. Olympic team.

    Breaking joins other newer sports, including three that were added to the Olympic program for the first time at the 2020 Tokyo Games — surfing, skateboarding and sport climbing.

    Adding those sports to the official Olympics roster is an attempt by the International Olympic Committee to reach a younger audience, given that “all four are easy to take up and participants form communities that are very active on social media,” according to the Paris Olympics.

    The committee, known as the IOC, hopes millions of kids worldwide will be inspired to take up the sports themselves.

    “If we get it right, we can create something unstoppable,” Louis said. “We can’t let it pass us up again, because the first time breaking blew up, it fizzled out.”

    What is breaking?
    The dance-battle sport is “characterised by acrobatic movements, stylised footwork and the key role played by the DJ and the MC (master of ceremonies) during battles,” according to the Paris Olympics.

    Some of the moves will have audiences wondering where the halfpipe is as athletes twist and turn like they should have boards under their feet.

    The sport’s techniques include top rock (standing footwork) and down rock (moves on the floor), power moves (twists and spins) and the freeze, when breakers freeze in poses while using their heads or hands for support.

    How will it work?
    The breaking competition in Paris will be divided into two events — one for women and one for men — and they will take place Aug. 9 and 10 at La Concorde Urban Park.

    In total, 16 B-boys or 16 B-girls will “go face to face in spectacular solo battles,” according to the Paris Olympics.

    The competitors will show off their best moves as they try to keep up with the beat of the DJ's tracks, improvising to stay alive in the dance battle with a combination of "power moves," including windmills, the 6-step and freezes, according to the Paris Olympics.

    Judges will then vote, paving the way for the first breaking medalists in Olympic history.

    Who is on the U.S. Olympic breaking team?
    The U.S. will be represented by four breakers — two B-boys and two B-girls — who will compete in solo battles for the gold medal.

    So far, two U.S. breakers have qualified: Sunny Choi (B-Girl Sunny) and Victor Montalvo (B-Boy Victor).

    From the Bronx to Paris
    It has been a decades-long battle to get breaking to the main stage.

    The dance style, which has roots in hip-hop culture, originated at block parties in New York City in the 1970s, according to the Paris Olympics.

    Louis said the sport originated in a rec room in the Bronx, where “a legendary DJ named Kool Herc debuted a new technique that centered around percussive ‘breaks’ in songs. During these breaks, the crowd would start dancing, which became known as breaking, or breakdancing.”

    By the 1980s, it was hitting the mainstream with groups like the Rock Steady Crew, the Dynamic Rockers and the New York City Breakers, who innovated new — and more complex — moves.

    It gained wider visibility thanks in part to the 1983 movie "Flashdance." While the film included only a few short breaking scenes — featuring the Rock Steady Crew — USA Dance said it inspired people around the world to try breaking. But the end of the ’80s, it had fizzled.

    Breakers invited fellow dancers out of early retirement to jump-start the scene once again, according to USA Dance. International Battle of the Year, the first large-scale, formally judged breaking event, began in the ’90s, which helped with the sport’s revival and ushered in a new era of interest. Other international competitions also began in the decade, some of which remain active today.

    International resurgence
    Since then, "breaking has evolved into a global cultural art form with many elements of sport," according to USA Dance.

    The national organization says a number of breaking schools have opened across the U.S. in the last decade, providing spaces for a new, young generation of breakers to learn and hone the craft.

    The World DanceSport Federation now governs the sport internationally and is recognized by the IOC as such.

    Whitney Carter, director of internally managed sports at the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, helped form Breaking for Gold USA, a group dedicated to getting breakers in the country ready for the world's biggest games, NBC Olympics reported.

    "Now, the USA is a front-runner at the Olympics," Tyquan Hodac, USA Dance's breaking communications director, told NBC Olympics. "We’re the powerhouse. Every other country is looking up to us."
    I will watch this.
    Gene Ching
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  5. #20
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    Chinese Doping Scandal Emerges As Paris Games Loom | NPR News Now

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    Team Mongolia

    Team Mongolia can already take a victory lap for their Olympic uniforms
    The uniforms, by Mongolian couture brand Michel & Amazonka, have drawn praise for their striking designs and intricately embroidered vests and accessories.

    Team Mongolia's Olympics uniforms by Michel & Amazonka.Nima Khibkhenov / Michel & Amazonka

    July 16, 2024, 2:09 PM PDT
    By Kimmy Yam

    If it were up to the internet, Team Mongolia’s uniforms for the Paris Olympics would win gold in the competition for most drip.

    The uniforms, by Mongolian couture brand Michel & Amazonka, have a hold on people across social media. Fans have been praising the striking designs and intricately embroidered vests, dresses and accessories, that heavily feature cultural motifs and will be worn during the opening ceremony on July 26.

    TikToker Ryan Yip, whose video on the outfits drew more than 424,500 likes, lovingly deemed the aesthetic “sorcery.”

    “Tell me what motivated [Michel & Amazonka] and the whole of Mongolian Olympic team to pop off that hard,” Yip said.

    Another TikToker, who goes by Regularguy_sports, ranked Team Mongolia first in a list of top Olympic uniforms.

    “Mongolia looks like they are going for war,” he said. “They look like they are going to be taking people’s souls in the competition.”

    Michel & Amazonka, who unveiled the designs earlier this month in a stunning video on social media, have designed the country’s Olympic opening and closing ceremony outfits for the past two Olympic games. For the upcoming international event, the label came out with different outfits for male and female flag bearers and athletes that appear to be a take on the traditional Mongolian deel, a calf-length gown that typically has a high collar and long sleeves. The uniforms also incorporate the colors of the Mongolian flag as well as the Soyombo, the national symbol that’s also found on the country’s banner. To create the uniforms, the brand took detailed measurements of each athlete’s body, they said on social media. It took more than three months to complete the looks, with one set taking an average of 20 hours to finish.

    Michel Choigaalaa and Amazonka Choigaalaa, the sister duo behind the brand, previously told Forbes that they don’t need to travel far for inspiration. “Right now, you can find a lot of ideas here in Mongolia, from the tradition and culture, because it’s not very known in the world,” the sisters told the outlet. “People often know it from historical figures like Genghis Khan, and from ancient history. But in current times, you can find a lot of ideas from people’s clothes, the way we do cultural things, ceremonies and stuff like that.”

    Mongolia joins several other nations that have generated buzz for their Olympic swag. Team Haiti has gotten a lot of love on social media for their vibrant uniforms that incorporate Haitian painter Philippe Dodard’s artwork, created by designer Stella Jean. Team Nigeria, dressed by Los Angeles-based, Black-owned label Actively Black, has also drawn praise for their green-and-white sportswear.
    So cool! FTW!
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  7. #22
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    Colin Heathcock

    18-Year-Old Fencer Colin Heathcock Is Ready to Bring Home Gold for Team USA
    The first-time Olympian moved to France to pursue his career. Now, he'll be competing in Paris.
    Stephanie Apstein | 17 Hours Ago


    Fencer Colin Heathcock will compete in his first Olympics in Paris, in both the individual and team events in men's sabre. / Al Bello/Getty Images

    It’s the perfect story: American who moved to France to pursue fencing makes the Olympic team and gets to compete in essentially a home game this summer in Paris.

    Well, to everyone except Colin Heathcock himself. “I haven’t really thought anything about the Olympics location,” he admits. “Because I never really thought I would even make it, to be honest.”

    This wasn’t the plan for Heathcock, 18, who finds himself not only an Olympian but among the Americans’ best chances for a medal. But really, none of it has been. He started fencing at eight because his father, Virgil, noticed a poster for a class near their home in Palo Alto, Calif. Colin and his brother, Antonio, three years older, had already cycled through most other sports without finding a passion. The boys had moved around a bit, from Beijing—where Colin was born and where Virgil worked as a business consultant and the boys’ mother, Julie Yang, worked as an architect and engineer—to Palo Alto. Their parents worried that they were too closed off, that they lacked confidence. “We were kind of living in a shell,” Colin says.

    They started with foil; within six months, they were complaining it was all too slow. So their father suggested they try sabre, hoping that all the pouncing and slashing would capture their attention. He was right. Colin knew on that first day that he was home.

    “I feel like I can express myself a lot better with sabre,” he says now.

    They went back and forth from the U.S. to China, fencing in both countries. The brothers realized within two years that they had a chance to be elite athletes—Antonio is ranked No. 105 in the world—and they began to take the sport more seriously. By 13 Colin was competing internationally, representing Germany, where their father has dual citizenship. But the Heathcocks were still living in California, and every major event took place in Europe.

    “It was, like, 12-, 13-hour flights every time for one tournament,” Heathcock says.

    So when his parents heard that the renowned sabre coach Christian Bauer was opening his own academy in Orléans, France, they decided to move there. (Another point against the idea that he planned for this home Olympics: His French is “pretty bad,” he says, because everyone at his home club speaks English.) This was not exactly the life his parents had envisioned when they chose an activity to keep their boys busy. But, Heathcock says, “They were like, ‘Why not keep going if this is working?’”

    And it really, really was. Six weeks after his 14th birthday, Heathcock finished 10th at a junior world cup event for fencers up to 20 years old. COVID-19 wiped out his age-15 season; instead he watched the Tokyo Olympics and dreamed of fencing at the Los Angeles Games in 2028. At 16, he dominated the junior circuit so thoroughly—winning four of the five events he entered, including the world championships, and finishing third in the fifth—that he started competing on the senior level. He finished an outrageous 25th at a grand prix event in Padua, Italy, where the youngest person who beat him was 21.


    Heathcock helped the U.S. team finish third at the world championships last July. / ANDREAS SOLARO/AFP/Getty Images
    The U.S. had been recruiting the Heathcocks, and in 2022, they decided to switch their national team. The choice initially might have seemed like a risk: At the time, Germany was ranked ahead of the U.S. But Heathcock says he was sure.

    “We felt more at home fencing for the U.S. than in Germany,” he says, then smiles. “All speaking English, that was definitely one [reason]. And all the members of the team were really welcoming.”

    The change did not affect his results: He won his second consecutive junior world title in ’23—the first time he was really in the right age bracket for that event—and tied for 11th at a senior world cup event in Warsaw.

    Only then did he start thinking that maybe 2028 was too far away.

    At that 2023 world cup event in Warsaw, he fenced for the first time as part of the U.S. men’s senior saber team, which took bronze. They won the Pan American Championships and finished third at the world championships, the U.S.’s first men’s saber medal in the 93-year history of the event.

    “I was getting good results,” he says. “I’m like, O.K., why not? I can give it a shot. I’m already on the team. I just have to stay on it to go to the Olympics.”

    Heathcock made it hard to take him off it. The U.S. men’s sabre team medaled in each of its five world cup events in 2024, including three golds, and Heathcock took two individual first places as well. He was named to the Olympic team in March.

    Amid all this success, it’s easy to forget that Heathcock is still a kid. His teammates—Eli Dershwitz, 28, Filip Dolegiewicz, 23, and Mitchell Saron, 23—lament that they don’t understand the slang he uses. Heathcock is indignant: “Normally when they talk, I don’t understand what they’re saying,” he says. He worries that he plays too many video games. He says he can’t get an Olympics rings tattoo because his parents would be mad at him.

    But he’s taking it all in stride. He didn’t plan to be here. But now that he is, he plans to win.

    Published 17 Hours Ago

    STEPHANIE APSTEIN

    Stephanie Apstein is a senior writer covering baseball and Olympic sports for Sports Illustrated, where she started as an intern in 2011. She has covered 10 World Series and two Olympics, and is a frequent
    2024-Paris-Olympics
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  8. #23
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    When Chinese #kungfu meets #paris,our first show abroad,stay tuned

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    Imane Khelif

    Boxer who had gender test issue wins first Olympic fight in Paris when opponent quits after 46 seconds
    Angela Carini refused to shake Imane Khelif's hand after the decision was announced, and she cried in the ring before leaving
    By Greg Beacham | The Associated Press • Published 5 hours ago • Updated 3 hours ago

    Imane Khelif of Algeria won her opening Olympic boxing bout Thursday when opponent Angela Carini of Italy quit after just 46 seconds.

    Kheli was disqualified from the 2023 world championships after failing an unspecified gender eligibility test, and her presence at the Paris Olympics has become a divisive issue. There's no indication she identifies as transgender.

    Carini and Khelif had only a few punch exchanges before Carini abandoned the bout, an extremely unusual occurrence in Olympic boxing. Carini’s headgear apparently became dislodged twice before she quit.

    Carini refused to shake Khelif's hand after the decision was announced, and she cried in the ring before leaving.

    Afterward, a still-tearful Carini said she quit because of intense pain in her nose after the opening punches. Carini, who had a spot of blood on her trunks, said she wasn't making a political statement and was not refusing to fight Khelif.

    “I felt a severe pain in my nose, and with the maturity of a boxer, I said ‘enough,’ because I didn’t want to, I didn’t want to, I couldn’t finish the match," Carini said.


    PARIS, FRANCE - AUGUST 01: Angela Carini of Team Italy reacts after abandoning her Women's 66kg preliminary round match against Imane Khelif of Team Algeria in the first round on day six of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at North Paris Arena on August 01, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Richard Pelham/Getty Images)
    Khelif is an accomplished amateur who won a silver medal at the International Boxing Association's 2022 world championships. The same governing body disqualified her from last year's championships shortly before her gold-medal match because of what it claimed were elevated levels of testosterone.

    The 25-year-old entered the ring at the North Paris Arena to a chorus of cheers, but the crowd was confused by the bout's sudden end.

    Carini further said she is not qualified to decide whether Khelif should be allowed to compete, but she had no problem fighting her.

    “I am not here to judge or pass judgment,” Carini said. "If an athlete is this way, and in that sense it’s not right or it is right, it’s not up to me to decide. I just did my job as a boxer. I got into the ring and fought. I did it with my head held high and with a broken heart for not having finished the last kilometer.”

    Khelif is an accomplished amateur who won a silver medal at the International Boxing Association's 2022 world championships. The same governing body disqualified her from last year's championships shortly before her gold-medal match because of what it claimed were elevated levels of testosterone.

    The 25-year-old entered the ring at the North Paris Arena to a chorus of cheers, but the crowd was confused by the bout's sudden end. Khelif, who fights again Saturday, didn't speak to reporters.

    “I am heartbroken because I am a fighter," Carini said. “My father taught me to be a warrior. I have always stepped into the ring with honor and I have always (served) my country with loyalty. And this time I couldn’t do it because I couldn’t fight anymore, and so I ended the match.”

    Khelif and Lin Yu‑ting of Taiwan suddenly have received massive scrutiny for their presence in Paris after years of amateur competition. Lin won IBA world championships in 2018 and 2022, but the governing body stripped her of a bronze medal last year because it claimed she failed to meet unspecified eligibility requirements in a biochemical test.

    Lin begins her Paris run Friday, fighting Uzbekistan’s Sitora Turdibekova in her opening bout after receiving a first-round bye.

    The Algerian Olympic Committee issued a statement Wednesday condemning what it termed “lies” and “unethical targeting and maligning of our esteemed athlete, Imane Khelif, with baseless propaganda from certain foreign media outlets.”

    Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, who was visiting Italy athletes in the Olympic Village on Thursday, voiced criticism that Carini had to box Khelif, saying she had since 2021 opposed allowing athletes with “genetically male” characteristics to compete against women.

    “We have to pay attention, in an attempt to not discriminate, that we’re actually discriminating” against women’s rights, Meloni said.

    She said it was necessary to guarantee the rights of athletes so they are competing on an even playing field.

    “In these things what counts is your dedication, your head and character, but it also counts having a parity of arms,” Meloni said.

    Khelif and Lin are two-time Olympians who fought in the Tokyo Games with no controversy. Lin has been an elite-level amateur boxer for a decade and Khelif for six years. They were allowed to compete in Paris by the IOC task force, which has run the past two Olympic boxing tournaments.

    The IOC on Tuesday defended their right to compete. Olympic boxing reached gender parity for the first time this year, with 124 men and 124 women competing in Paris.

    “Everyone competing in the women’s category is complying with the competition eligibility rules,” IOC spokesperson Mark Adams said. ”They are women in their passports and it’s stated that this is the case, that they are female.”

    Lin is the top seed in the 57-kilogram category, although Olympic seeding is frequently unindicative of the top medal contenders in a division.

    Several sports have updated their gender rules over the past three years, including World Aquatics, World Athletics and the International Cycling Union. The track body also last year tightened rules on athletes with differences in sex development.

    The IOC said it made its eligibility decisions on boxers based on the gender-related rules that applied at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

    The IOC is in charge of boxing in Paris because the IBA has been banned from the past two Olympics because of years of governance problems, a lack of financial transparency and many perceived instances of corruption in judging and refereeing.

    The IOC has revoked the Olympic status of the IBA, which is controlled by president Umar Kremlev, who is Russian. He brought in Russian state-owned Gazprom as its primary sponsor and moved much of the IBA’s operations to Russia.

    The IBA has since lost more than three dozen members who have formed a new group called World Boxing, which hopes to be recognized by the IOC as the sport’s governing body ahead of the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

    The IBA has aggressively seized on the boxers’ presence in Paris to criticize the IOC. After the Court of Arbitration for Sport upheld the IOC’s ban earlier this year, the IBA appealed to the Swiss Federal Tribunal.

    The banned body issued a statement Wednesday in which it claimed both boxers did not have a “testosterone examination” last year but were “subject to a separate and recognized test” for their disqualification. The IBA said the test’s “specifics remain confidential,” refusing to explain it.

    Women’s boxers have been asked about Khelif and Lin repeatedly this week. Many have expressed concern, while others have urged more consideration of an obviously complicated issue.

    “I don’t agree with that being allowed, especially in combat sports as it can be incredibly dangerous,” Australia middleweight Caitlin Parker said. “But right now, my focus is on getting through each fight. It’s not like I haven’t sparred with guys before, but it can be dangerous for combat sports, and it should be seriously looked into. It is good that these things are coming out, and it’s being put under the spotlight to be looked into further.

    “Biologically and genetically, they are going to have more advantages. Combat sports can be dangerous. Fairness is what it’s all about. We all want fairness in sport.”
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  10. #25
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    Kenny Bednarek aka Kung Fu Kenny

    Feel Good Friday: Rice Lake’s ‘Kung-Fu Kenny’ getting support from back home
    alaina tomesh
    Tue, Aug 6, 2024, 7:10 AM MST·2 min read



    RICE LAKE, Wis. (WLAX/WEUX) – One Northwest Wisconsin town is looking forward to cheering on one of their own at the Paris games in just a few days. Though they’re thousands of miles away, the community is showing their support all around town. First News at Nine’s Alaina Tomesh visiting Rice Lake today to see just how proud everybody is of their hometown Olympian

    Rice Lake native Kenny Bednarek will make his second appearance at the Olympic Games on Sunday in the men’s 100-meter semifinal. Here in the States, Rice Lake is filled with signs for Kenny. Everywhere you go, businesses, houses, and schools are all cheering ‘Kung Fu Kenny’ on from afar; maybe even more than in 2021. Rice Lake Athletic Booster Club’s Nellie Scheurer thinks that there’s more support this year now that COVID is over, “Kenny has pointed out before, you know, it was during COVID, a couple of years ago, and so it was just a different atmosphere, so we’re really excited to bring the whole community together this time and cheer him on for the gold.”

    After winning silver in the men’s 200-meter race in Tokyo in 2021, he’s back again for two events in Paris the men’s 100-meter and the men’s 200-meter races. But Kenny doesn’t forget about his roots. A recent social media post by Bednarek praises community support and his pride in being from Rice Lake. “Kenny himself has really put Rice Lake on a national stage, and we’re just really proud of him and he’s obviously really proud to be from here so we want to draw attention to that.”

    Kenny’s high school track coach, Matt Tebo, says he is beyond proud to see Kenny qualify for another Olympic Games, “Just to have the opportunity to see him on the biggest stage against the best, and having the opportunity to see him compete in something that he’s worked really hard on over the years. And I think from high school to now, he’s gone through so many journeys and so much transformation, and put so much work in, it’s going to be amazing to see what he can do.”

    And that he played a small part in Kenny’s athletic career, “Having the opportunity to compete there again, I know he’s very thrilled to have that opportunity. Kenny’s going to let his feet do the talking, and we can tell people how great he is because he’ll be on the podium.”
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  11. #26
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    Lin Yu-ting

    Chinese Taipei fans hammer JK Rowling over ‘trans’ comments aimed at boxer
    Author, a vocal opponent to trans rights, calls Lin Yu-ting part of the ‘insanity’ of trans athletes competing in women’s sport
    Paris 2024 Olympic Games

    Lo Hoi-ying

    Published: 3:30pm, 2 Aug 2024



    Harry Potter author JK Rowling is facing the wrath of netizens in Taiwan after she challenged female Chinese Taipei boxer Lin Yu-ting’s eligibility to compete in the Paris Olympics.

    Rowling, a vocal opponent to trans rights, said Lin was part of the “insanity” of trans athletes competing in women’s sport.

    She shared an article on social media platform X about Lin and Algerian boxer Imane Khelif being authorised to compete in the Olympics despite failing gender eligibility tests last year.

    Despite the rumours, fans of both stars were quick to share images of them as young girls, dismissing the suggestion they are trans and that simply the two have a higher testosterone level.

    “Everyone in Taiwan hates JK Rowling now,” one X user wrote.

    “Lin started boxing to protect her mother who has been abused by her father since young, and ended up being a national player. I don’t know what kind of magic can save Rowling now,” one user on Threads wrote.

    “Does Rowling even know what she is saying? In the future I will be switching channels if Harry Potter comes up,” another added.

    Cheng Shih-Chung, director general of the self-ruled Sports Administration, said on Wednesday that Asia’s Olympic Council has conducted a thorough examination of Lin and confirmed she is fully eligible to compete.

    Cheng called the accusations discriminatory and a deliberate attempt to undermine Lin’s mental state by planting rumours in the media.

    The topic of trans rights at the Olympics has been hotly debated in recent days. Italy’s Angela Carini quit her bout with Khelif after only 46 seconds, and afterwards repeated the words: “It’s not right.”

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) defended its decision to allow both female boxers to compete, and dismissed the International Boxing Association’s decision to disqualify them last year for failing to meet gender eligibility tests.



    Lin, born in 1995, is a two-time world champion and assured supporters she was not affected by the noise as she had deleted all social media apps.

    Both Khelif and Lin competed at Tokyo Games as women.

    Taiwan, which legalised same sex marriage in 2019, has been lauded as a beacon for LGBTQ rights in Asia for its progressiveness and inclusivity.



    Lo Hoi-ying
    Hoi-ying became a reporter at the City desk in 2023 after finishing the Post's Graduate Trainee Programme. Originally from Singapore, she previously worked as a television news producer at Mediacorp and interned at the Shanghai-based Sixth Tone. She earned her master's degree in journalism from the University of Hong Kong and holds a bachelor's degree in communications from Nanyang Technological University.

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  12. #27
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    Hergie Bacyadan

    Trans boxer Hergie Bacyadan loses historic Olympic bout and still comes out a winner
    Two-time Olympic medalist Li Quan of China advances by unanimous decision over the Olympics' first trans-man athlete, Hergie Bacyadan.
    By Karleigh Webb
    |
    July 31, 2024, 3:10 pm PDT


    Philippines' Hergie Bacyadan (in blue) takes a punch from China's Li Qian in the women's 75kg preliminaries round of 16 boxing match during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the North Paris Arena, in Villepinte on July 31, 2024. | MOHD RASFAN/AFP via Getty Images
    The climb to the Paris Summer Olympics reached a summit for Philippines boxer Hergie Bacyadan.

    The first publicly out transgender man to compete in any Olympic Games climbed through the ropes at North Paris Arena, wearing the blue uniform and aiming to fight.

    He was seeded in the deep end of the draw. China’s Li Quan is the 75kg class top seed. She won bronze in Rio and silver in Tokyo. She’s won a world championship in 2018, and is defending Asian Games champion in the weight class.

    The difference in experience showed throughout the three-round bout. Bacyadan sought to be aggressive in the first round, but ran into Li’s defense and a jab that set the terms of the engagement. She scored often while Bacyadan struggled to find any openings to counter and hit back.

    That was the rhythm of the first two rounds of the fight. In the third round, Bacyadan tried to press the action and was able land some solid punches in the final minute, but Li’s skill and ring savvy carried the match.

    The final tally was a 5-0 decision for the Chinese fighter, a clean sweep of all three rounds, and advancement to the quarterfinals and another step closer to winning a first Olympic gold. Bacyadan boxed valiantly, but on this day the better fighter advanced.

    For Bacyadan, his first Olympics ends in a loss but also with a win for the future. The door to Olympic competition is now open for other transgender men.

    “It’s sad to think of losing, but I’m still very thankful that I got to the Olympics,” he wrote on Instagram. “It’s a big deal to me.”

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  13. #28
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    gold

    Algerian boxer Imane Khelif wins Olympic gold in face of political controversy
    Updated August 9, 20247:23 PM ET
    By Becky Sullivan, Fatima Al-Kassab


    Imane Khelif of Algeria (left) defeated Liu Yang of China to win Olympic gold in the women's 66-kilogram boxing event.
    Maja Hitij/Getty Images

    PARIS — The Algerian boxer Imane Khelif has won the Olympic gold medal, defiant amid the international political controversy that loomed over her every bout as she advanced through the women's boxing event in the 2024 Summer Games.

    Over three rounds Friday, the crowd at Roland-Garros Stadium in Paris chanted her name and cheered wildly with every blow that Khelif landed on her opponent, China's Yang Liu. The two took turns as the aggressor in the close match. As the bell rang to signal the end of each round, the two boxers respectfully tapped the other's glove.

    In the end, the judges agreed: Khelif had bested Yang to win the 66-kilogram weight class gold medal. And the thousands of Algeria fans who packed the stands cheered with delight as Khelif took her victory lap sitting astride the shoulders of a coach.

    After the bout Friday, Khelif said forcefully that she had indeed been qualified to compete. "I'm a woman like any other woman. I was born a woman. I lived a woman. I competed as a woman. There's no doubt about that," she said.

    The gold medal, she said, was a response to "all those who criticized me." She called her critics "the enemies of success" and said their attacks had given her victory a "special taste."


    Algeria's Imane Khelif celebrates winning the gold medal with her coaches Mohamed Chaoua and Mohamed Al-Shawa after the Boxing Women's 66kg final against Liu Yang of China on Friday.
    Richard Pelham/Getty Images
    Questions and controversy over the 25-year-old's eligibility to participate in the Olympics had persisted even as Olympic officials repeatedly defended her and a second boxer who had also been a target, Lin Yu-Ting of Taiwan, who will compete for the gold medal in her own weight class on Saturday.

    The controversy over the two women stems from a decision by the International Boxing Association to disqualify them after claiming they had each failed two gender eligibility tests in the past two years. The IBA, a Russia-linked organization that was banned last year from the Olympics over corruption concerns, has refused to produce proof of the results or describe how the tests were conducted. At times, its officials have given conflicting accounts of what the tests entailed.

    Khelif and Lin have both competed in women's boxing for years, including a fifth-place finish for Khelif at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. Olympic officials have dismissed the IBA claims and accused the organization of political motivations in conducting and publicizing the tests.

    The timing of Khelif's disqualification by the IBA, which came shortly after Khelif defeated a Russian boxer, has raised questions about the group's motivation. "They know me very well. They know what I'm capable of. They know how I've developed over the years. But now they are not recognized anymore. And they hate me. And I don't know why," Khelif said Friday.

    Earlier Friday, Thomas Bach, president of the International Olympic Committee rejected the suggestion that the two women were allowed to compete in the name of inclusion.


    Speaking Friday about the ongoing controversy, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach said, "This is not a question of inclusion. That never played a role in all this. Women must be allowed to take part in women's competitions, and the two are women."
    George Mattock/Getty Images
    "This is not a question of inclusion. That never played a role in all this," Bach said. "Women must be allowed to take part in women's competitions, and the two are women."

    Bach said the IOC would welcome an eligibility test that could be conducted in accordance with both science and human rights. "We do not like this uncertainty," he said.

    "But what is not possible," he continued, would be to disqualify competitors because "someone saying, 'This is not a woman,' just by looking at somebody or by falling prey to a defamation campaign by a not credible organization with highly political interests."

    Among the pro-Khelif crowd in the stands at Roland-Garros on Friday was Lilia Bellahsene, an Algerian-American woman who moved to France last year. She and her French-Algerian cousin found last-minute tickets to see Khelif, she said.

    "She is really, for me, a symbol of resilience and fight," Bellahsene said. "We want to show her some support. We want to tell her that she made us proud, not just as Algerians but as people."

    The support for Khelif extended outside the stadium; France is home to the largest population of Algerians outside of the north African country.

    Many bar TVs in Paris on Friday night were tuned to France's national women's basketball team as they played in a high-stakes semifinal against Belgium. But one bar in Paris' Belleville neighborhood, Bar Suzette, had an Algerian channel on instead; its French-Algerian owner Momo Benazouz wanted to see the boxing match.

    As Khelif stepped into the ring, viewers began to crowd in from nearby bars in order to catch a glimpse of their countrywoman. And once it became clear that she had won the bout, the place erupted with chants of "Imane, Imane."

    Zahia Elza Arrouf, who watched the match wrapped in an Algerian scarf, beamed and cheered as Khelif was awarded the gold medal. "She is a strong woman, a real woman, an Algerian woman," she said. "She has suffered a lot when they said she wasn't a woman. And now she's won gold. She is so courageous, and she gives all Algerian women, all Arab women courage."

    Her victory made her the first Arab or African woman to win a boxing gold. And it is only the second medal for Algeria in this year's Olympics. The other was also won by a woman — the gymnast Kaylia Nemour, who took gold in the uneven bars final.

    Correction
    Aug. 10, 2024
    A previous version of this story incorrectly said that Imane Khelif's match was on Saturday. In fact, it took place on Friday.
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  14. #29
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    Rachael 'Raygun' Gunn

    Viral Olympic breakdancer Raygun defends her performance
    The Australian breaking star went viral with her unique dance moves.

    ByGMA Team via GMA logo
    August 12, 2024, 9:27 AM


    When breaking, or breakdancing, made its debut at the 2024 Paris Olympics, the sport quickly had its breakout star, b-girl Raygun, a 36-year-old Australian college professor.

    Raygun, whose birth name is Rachael Gunn, went viral after her performance Friday in Paris, where she took on b-girls in their late teens and early 20s with unique dance moves that quickly became the focus of memes and jokes on social media.

    Gunn did not earn a medal in Paris, losing her three round-robin battles by a score of 54-0.

    The online criticisms of Gunn's performance led her to defend her skills, telling reporters that what she brought to her performance was "creativity."


    Australia's Rachael Gunn, known as B-Girl Raygun, competes in the brea...Show more
    Angelika Warmuth/Reuters
    "I was never going to beat these girls on what they do best -- their power moves," Gunn said, according to ESPN. "What I bring is creativity."

    "All of my moves are original," she continued. "Creativity is really important to me. I go out there, and I show my artistry. Sometimes it speaks to the judges, and sometimes it doesn't. I do my thing, and it represents art. That is what it is about."

    On social media, some users dubbed one move by Gunn "the kangaroo," while others compared her dance moves to when a child asks you to watch their performance.


    Australia's Rachael Gunn, known as B-Girl Raygun, competes in the brea...Show more
    Ezra Shaw/Getty Images
    "I'd like to personally thank Raygun for making millions of people worldwide think 'huh, maybe I can make the Olympics too,'" one user wrote on X, alongside a photo of Raygun's Olympic performance.

    The online critiques of Gunn's performance led Australia's Chef de Mission, Anna Meares, to issue public support Saturday for her performance.

    "I love Rachael, and I think that what has occurred on social media with trolls and keyboard warriors, and taking those comments and giving them airtime, has been really disappointing," Meares said at a news conference, according to ESPN. "Raygun is an absolutely loved member of this Olympic team. She has represented the Olympic team, the Olympic spirit with great enthusiasm. And I absolutely love her courage. I love her character, and I feel very disappointed for her, that she has come under the attack that she has."

    On Sunday, the head judge of the breaking competition in Paris defended Gunn, while the head of the World DanceSport Federation said officials are looking out for her "mental safety" after the online criticism.

    "Breaking is all about originality and bringing something new to the table and representing your country or region," head judge Martin Gilian said at a press conference, according to The Associated Press. "This is exactly what Raygun was doing. She got inspired by her surroundings, which in this case, for example, was a kangaroo."

    Sergey Nifontov, general secretary of the World DanceSport Federation, added of Gunn's mental health, according to the AP, "We offered (the) support of our safe-guarding officer. We are aware about what has happened, especially on social media, and definitely we should put the safety of the athlete, in this case, mental safety in first place. She has us as a federation supporting her."

    According to her Olympics biography, Gunn is a former jazz and ballroom dancer who entered the sport of breaking through her husband, Samuel, who had been breaking for the past decade.


    Australia's Rachael Gunn, known as B-Girl Raygun, competes in the brea...Show more
    Odd Andersen/AFP via Getty Images
    Gunn started breaking in her mid-20s and went on to become the top-ranked b-girl in Australia in 2020 and 2021.

    Last year, she won the QMS Oceania Championships in Sydney to earn Australia's first-ever spot in the b-girl competition at the Olympics, according to her bio.

    When not breaking, Gunn, who holds a Ph.D. in cultural studies, is a researcher and lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, where she studies the "the cultural politics of breaking," according to her university biography.


    Australia's Rachael Gunn, known as B-Girl Raygun, competes in the brea...Show more
    Defodi Images/DeFodi Images via Getty Images
    As both a breaker and a researcher, Gunn told the podcast "The [Female] Athlete Project" that her bag, "always has two main things, my knee pads and my laptop."

    Tom Cruise skydives into Paris Olympics closing ceremony in epic stunt
    While in Paris, Gunn shared a photo of herself on Instagram in Team Australia's uniform along with the caption, "Don't be afraid to be different, go out there and represent yourself, you never know where that's gonna take you."

    The Walt Disney Co. is the parent company of ABC News and ESPN.
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  15. #30
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    I just noticed that my posts here lean towards scandals...

    I didn't do that on purpose. These were just stories that I thought might stimulate some discussion (they didn't obvs).

    I've been away the last three weekends. I went from San Diego Comic-con to Reggae on the River to Outside Lands whilst the Olympics were showing so I only saw highlights except for some gymnastics, tkd & fencing finals. What I saw of the games looked awesome. There seemed to be an exemplary exhibition of sportsmanship in several cases. That's what the Olympics are really about.
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