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Paris and Los Angeles confirmed as hosts of 2024 and 2028 Olympic Games [Update Post #8]

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Los Angeles is set to announce it will host the 2028 Olympic Games, meaning Paris will stage the 2024 edition.

In June, the International Olympic Committee voted to name hosts for successive Games - with just Paris and Los Angeles bidding - but it was unclear which would host in which year.

Both cities had wanted to host the 2024 event.

But at a news conference scheduled for 01:00 BST on Tuesday, the LA bid will announce it has agreed to host in 2028.

A source close to the negotiations told BBC Sport that for LA to have accepted the 2028 Games there will have had to have been significant financial benefits that outweigh the benefit of hosting in 2024.

In June, Los Angeles bid chair Casey Wasserman appeared to concede to Paris when he said: "We have never been only about 2024."

However, a spokesman later told BBC Sport: "LA is the ideal host city for 2024 and is not conceding anything in the race for the 2024 Games."

Paris has said it has to go first as the site it has earmarked for the Olympic Village will not be available for redevelopment after 2024.

Budapest, Hamburg and Rome withdrew from the race for the 2024 Olympics.

http://www.bbc.com/sport/olympics/40783315
 
I think, LA will compete with Toronto at the last round. Toronto should win it because, LA already has 2 - if USOA is win it, they should prepare other Cities - Huston, NY, Boston, Miami, Dallas, Chicago or Philadelphia.

So far, it has been St. Luis, LA, LA & Atlanta - need something from North East. I think, next 4 Olympics will be Tokyo, Paris, Toronto & Africa (Cairo, Jo'burg, Lagos, Casablanca ....)
 
I think, LA will compete with Toronto at the last round. Toronto should win it because, LA already has 2 - if USOA is win it, they should prepare other Cities - Huston, NY, Boston, Miami, Dallas, Chicago or Philadelphia.

So far, it has been St. Luis, LA, LA & Atlanta - need something from North East. I think, next 4 Olympics will be Tokyo, Paris, Toronto & Africa (Cairo, Jo'burg, Lagos, Casablanca ....)

I just HOPE Toronto stay out of it. City is a mess!!
 
Olympic Games: Los Angeles announces intention to host in 2028

Los Angeles has announced its intention to host the 2028 Olympic Games, leaving Paris to stage the 2024 edition.

In June, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) voted to name hosts for successive Games - with just Paris and Los Angeles bidding - but it was unclear which would host in which year.

Both had wanted to host the 2024 event.

Los Angeles bid committee chairman Casey Wasserman said "both cities now stand together ready to serve the Olympic and Paralympic movements".

Meanwhile, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said "we're bringing the games back" in 2028, adding that "this deal was too good to pass up".

Los Angeles staged the Olympics twice - in 1932 and 1984.

A source close to the negotiations told BBC Sport that for LA to have accepted the 2028 Games there will have had to have been significant financial benefits that outweigh the benefit of hosting in 2024.

Speaking on BBC World Service, LA City council president Herb Wesson said: "Two years ago, no-one thought we were even in the game, now here we are at the table.

"We believe that in going for 2028 we might get some additional perks that would benefit the city but I think the most important thing is that it's a once-in-a-lifetime thing."

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said: "Paris and Los Angeles are two amazing global cities that are united in their support of the Olympic cause and we stand together now to help the Games thrive in 2024 and 2028.

"As today's announcement shows, dialogue between the IOC and the two cities is progressing well. We are confident that a 'win-win-win' agreement can be finalised ahead of the IOC session in Lima."

The IOC wanted LA and Paris to reach an agreement before the session in September and had they not, a vote to select the 2024 host would have been held.

IOC President Thomas Bach welcomed LA's decision, describing the bid as "strong and enthusiastic".

He added: "We are very confident that we can reach a tripartite agreement under the leadership of the IOC with LA and Paris in August, creating a win-win-win situation for all three partners.

"This agreement will be put forward to the IOC Session in Lima in September for ratification."

In June, Wasserman appeared to concede to Paris when he said: "We have never been only about 2024."

However, a spokesman later told BBC Sport: "LA is the ideal host city for 2024 and is not conceding anything in the race for the 2024 Games."

Paris has said it has to go first as the site it has earmarked for the Olympic Village will not be available for redevelopment after 2024.

Los Angeles had argued that it could host a low-cost Olympics given that it already has all the necessary infrastructure in place, while Paris would need to build several expensive structures.

The two cities were the only ones left in the race for 2024 after Budapest, Hamburg and Rome withdrew.

Analysis

Alex Capstick, BBC sports news correspondent

LA will describe this as a victory, that they've brought the Olympics back to the USA for the first time since 2002, when Salt Lake City hosted the Winter Games, and that the IOC has provided financial benefits for agreeing to wait until 2028.

But Paris is the real winner. The contest was for 2024 and the French capital has got what it wanted. It will mark the centenary of the last time it hosted the summer showpiece.

The IOC will also attempt to portray itself as a winner. In reality this was a disappointing bidding contest involving just two, albeit strong, candidates.

Boston, Hamburg, Rome and Budapest all withdrew, fearful of the costs associated with staging the Games and a lack of public support.

Attracting potential host cities is a priority. The organisation now has time to do just that.

http://www.bbc.com/sport/olympics/40783315
 
I think, LA will compete with Toronto at the last round. Toronto should win it because, LA already has 2 - if USOA is win it, they should prepare other Cities - Huston, NY, Boston, Miami, Dallas, Chicago or Philadelphia.

So far, it has been St. Luis, LA, LA & Atlanta - need something from North East. I think, next 4 Olympics will be Tokyo, Paris, Toronto & Africa (Cairo, Jo'burg, Lagos, Casablanca ....)

Toronto needs to do something about its traffic, that city can't run on 401 anymore.
 
Oh God I live near LA; the traffic here is horrendous, this is going to be a disaster for the locals.
 
Paris and Los Angeles confirmed as hosts of 2024 and 2028 Olympic Games

(CNN) After three failed attempts and 12 years after the demoralizing and disheartening loss to the London bid in 2005, Paris has finally been awarded the Olympic Games it has craved.

On Wednesday, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) confirmed that the French capital would host the 2024 Olympics, while Los Angeles was awarded the 2028 Games.

Both campaign teams summarized their bids in presentations at the 131st IOC Session in Lima, Peru, before the IOC voted to formally confirm the announcements.

As part of the Paris presentation Wednesday, French President Emmanuel Macron spoke to the IOC members via video link.

"This is a win-win-win situation for Paris, Los Angeles and the entire Olympic Movement," said IOC President Thomas Bach.

With the two teams -- the final contestants of an initial six-strong field -- having already agreed to split the 2024 and 2028 Games, there was none of the usual pre-announcement nerves and tension.

In unusual circumstances, the IOC announced two host cities at the same event, with Bach calling it a "golden opportunity" to award two Games simultaneously.

It sees the Games return to the US for the first time since the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and marks the third occasion in which Los Angeles has hosted (1932, 1984).

For Paris, however, the wait has been considerably longer. The city last held the Olympics in 1924, meaning 2024 will mark the 100-year anniversary of its previous hosting.

It also means Paris will become the second city to hold three separate Summer Games, after London and before Los Angeles.

Cost of staging Games

Paris and Los Angeles were the only competitors left for 2024 after rival cities pulled their bids because of worries over cost.

Hosting a modern Olympics practically guarantees massive debt and cost overruns. Researchers at Oxford's Saïd Business School estimate the cost overrun for the 2016 Summer Olympics, in Rio de Janeiro, was $1.6 billion.

Officials from Paris and Los Angeles had stressed that their cities already have more than 90% of the facilities they need to host, reducing the additional cost.

The Los Angeles planning committee estimates that the games will cost $5.3 billion.

Wednesday's confirmation came against the backdrop of a possible international corruption scheme surrounding Brazil's 2016 Olympic bid.

Earlier this month about 70 Federal Brazilian Police conducted raids in Rio de Janeiro as part of "Operation Unfair Play," which is being conducted in conjunction with French and US police.

They are looking into allegations of purchasing of votes by members of the Brazilian Olympic Committee (BOC) to ensure Rio would be picked as a host city by the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

http://edition.cnn.com/2017/09/13/s...olympic-bid-2024-los-angeles-20280309PMVODtop
 
Why? Would have resulted in a massive improvement in infrastructure. And the games are almost always hosted outside city limits

Last time we had the Pan-Am games a couple of years ago the entire city came to a grinding halt... Toronto is just too big and massive to afford massive influx of people and heightened traffic. LA has the same issue (infact even greater magnitude) so good luck to the residents of LA.
 
Last time we had the Pan-Am games a couple of years ago the entire city came to a grinding halt... Toronto is just too big and massive to afford massive influx of people and heightened traffic. LA has the same issue (infact even greater magnitude) so good luck to the residents of LA.

How is Toronto during the film festival?
 
How is Toronto during the film festival?

I live and work away from the downtown core... so I don't know what the traffic scene is in downtown because of the film festival, but I'm sure it is a mess because many of the streets have been shut due to the festival.
 
I live and work away from the downtown core... so I don't know what the traffic scene is in downtown because of the film festival, but I'm sure it is a mess because many of the streets have been shut due to the festival.

traffic is always messed here regardless of festival or not. 401 is officially now wreck zone.
Im glad that Toronto didnt got the olympic. Last thing city of Toronto need is Olympic.
 
Last thing any country needs is an Olympic games don't know how it works out for cities,Canada should host Winter Olympics which they are good for.
 

Paris 2024 Olympics: Russian and Belarusian athletes allowed to compete as neutrals​

Russian and Belarusian athletes who have qualified for the Paris 2024 Olympics will be allowed to participate as neutrals, the International Olympic Committee has confirmed.

The conditions of their inclusion include competing without flags, emblems or anthems of their country.

Athletes from those nations were banned following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Letting individuals take part was about "respecting human rights" the IOC said.

However, World Athletics said its position remains unchanged, with athletes, support personnel and officials from Russia and Belarus remaining excluded "from all World Athletics Series events".

"You may well see some neutral athletes from Russia and Belarus in Paris, it just won't be in athletics," World Athletics president Sebastian Coe said on Friday.

Speaking at the World Athletics Council Meeting in Monaco, Coe added: "We have a fixed position. I think it is right that International Federations should make judgements that they feel is in the best interest of their sport. That is what our council has done."

Ukraine had threatened to boycott the 2024 Games if the ban was not upheld but Ukraine's sports minister Vadym Huttsait told Reuters in July it could drop that threat if Russian and Belarusian athletes were made to compete under a neutral flag.

The IOC's decision comes after Olympic sports federations asked for Russian and Belarusian athletes to be allowed to compete as neutrals in Paris earlier this week.

"The executive board of the IOC has decided that individual neutral athletes (AINs) who have qualified through the existing qualification systems of the International Federations on the field of play will be declared eligible to compete at the Olympic Games Paris 2024 in accordance with the conditions outlined," the Olympic body said on Friday.

"AINs are athletes with a Russian or Belarusian passport. The strict eligibility conditions based on the recommendations issued by the IOC executive board on 28 March 2023 for international federations and international sports event organisers will be applied."

Paris 2024 organisers said they were "taking note" of the IOC's decision and reiterated that qualification for the Games "falls under the responsibility of the IOC and the International Federations".

"Paris 2024's responsibility is to host athletes who have qualified for the Games under the best possible conditions, regardless of their nationality," organisers said.

Source: BBC
 
Pakistan's Kishmala Talat has qualified for the Paris Olympics after securing a silver medal at Asian Shooting Championship. She is the first ever Pakistani female athlete to directly qualify for the Olympics.
 

Strike closes Eiffel Tower in blow to tourists ahead of Paris Olympics​


PARIS, Feb 19 (Reuters) - The Eiffel Tower, one of the most visited tourist sites in the world, closed on Monday as staff went on strike in protest against the way the Paris monument is managed financially, disappointing the crowds below.

The strike comes as Paris prepares to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, which begin on July 26 and will feature metal from the tower in the winners' medals.

Visitors stood outside the barriers of the tower grounds in front of a giant screen announcing the strike.

"It’s a real shame, really, because we come just for three days, and we’re not going to be able to get up,” Nelson Navarro, from Norfolk, England, said.

Vito Santos, from Canada, had planned to revisit the monument 15 years after his honeymoon and show if off to his children.

"It's disappointing... The plan was to come here really early to get a ticket as early as possible. However, it was a surprise for us, the strike is here, so we cannot make the tour,” he said.

Unions claim Paris City Hall, which owns 99% of the company that oversees the tower, Societe d'Exploitation de la Tour Eiffel (SETE), is underestimating the cost of maintenance and repairs to the monument planned ahead of the Olympics.

This in turn could result in lax maintenance work and put visitors at risk, they say.

This is the second time this year staff have gone on strike for the same reason.

The wrought-iron 324-metre (1,063 ft) high tower, built by Gustave Eiffel in the late 19th century, welcomes about six million visitors each year.

Source: Reuters
 

Paris Olympics: GB-based boxers Pat Brown, Chantelle Reid and Cindy Ngamba qualify for Games​

British boxers Pat Brown and Chantelle Reid secured a quota spot for the Paris 2024 Olympics on the final day of the world qualification tournament.

Team-mates Owain Harris-Allen and Kiaran MacDonald are set to fight in the evening session in Italy on Monday.

Meanwhile, Bolton-based Cindy Ngamba became the first ever boxer in the International Olympic Committee (IOC) refugee team to reach the Olympics.

The 25-year-old was born in Cameroon and moved to the UK aged 10.

Middleweight Ngamba is yet to be granted a visa and UK citizenship, and without a British passport she cannot represent Team GB at the Olympics, but earning one of 70 IOC refugee athlete scholarships kept alive her hope of fighting in France this summer.

She then claimed a stoppage victory over Kazakhstan's Valentina Khalzova in the women's 75kg quarter-finals - enough to book a place in Paris as four Olympic berths were available in that category.

"It's emotional," she said. "I want to thank God, the GB boxing team and the refugee team.

"If it wasn't for the refugee team I would have turned professional or gone on a different journey. They stuck with me and welcomed me like a big family."

Ngamba's training partner Reid claimed one of the other middleweight berths with victory over Uzbekistan's Aziza Zokirova, and having secured their spots, the four quarter-final winners were not required to box again.

Brown is also looking forward to Paris after beating Poland's Mateusz Bereznicki in the men's heavyweight quarter-finals.

"I've been dreaming of this since seven years of age and I first went to a boxing gym," he said. "It means the world to show kids in amateur boxing clubs that anything is possible."

Source: BBC
 

Russian and Belarusian athletes barred from opening ceremonies of Paris Olympics​

The International Olympic Committee on Tuesday barred athletes from Russia and Belarus from opening ceremonies in Paris as organizers target countries that are "responsible for the war" in Ukraine.

Athletes from those nations, though no teams, would be allowed to compete in individual events as “Individual Neutral Athletes,” or "AINs."

“AINs will not participate in the parade of delegations (teams) during the Opening Ceremony, since they are individual athletes,” according to an IOC statement.

But any Russian or Belarusian athletes associated with "military and national security agencies will not be eligible to be entered or to compete," the IOC said.

Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb 24, 2022, and Moscow's ally and Ukrainian neighbor, Belarus, has played a key support role in the aggression.

These athletes still might march in the closing ceremonies.

"The decision regarding the participation of AINs in the Closing Ceremony will be taken at a later stage, taking into consideration that it is not teams that enter the Closing Ceremony, but all athletes jointly together," the IOC said.

The Paris 2024 opening ceremony is set for Friday, July 26.

 
Adam Peaty laid down a marker as he qualified for the Paris Olympics by winning the 100m breaststroke title at the Aquatics GB Swimming Championships in London.

Peaty, 29, won in 57.94 seconds - the fastest time in the world this year.

It was also Peaty's quickest time since he won gold at the Tokyo Olympics.

The two-time reigning Olympic champion is continuing his comeback after taking time out to deal with depression and alcohol problems.

Source: BBC
 
Paris 2024: Russia seeking to undermine Games, says Emmanuel Macron

French President Emmanuel Macron giving a speech earlier this year where he shared his wishes to elite athletes ahead of the Games

Russia is running a disinformation campaign to undermine the Paris Olympics, according to French President Emmanuel Macron.

At the inauguration of a new Olympic swimming centre, reporters asked if he thought Russia was targeting the Games.

"Without a doubt," he said, "including in the field of information.

"Every day (Russia) is putting out stories saying that we are unable to do this or that, so (the Games) would be at risk."

The French government says Russia has recently stepped up propaganda attacks on France, using fake accounts on social media to spread rumours and disinformation.

It follows Mr Macron's switch to a more hard-line policy on the Ukraine war, to which he no longer refuses to rule out eventually sending French troops on the side of Kyiv.

France believes Russian intelligence was behind the daubing of Israeli Stars of David on Paris walls after the October 7 Hamas attacks, in what was interpreted as a bid to stir up divisions in France.

A network of Russian-created websites named Portal Kombat is accused of spreading made-up stories, such as claims that French mercenaries are already serving in Ukraine, or that Mr Macron cancelled a trip to Kyiv because of fears of an assassination attempt.

Reuters President Macron and other officials watch synchronised swimmers in a poolReuters
President Macron and other officials watch synchronised swimmers at the inauguration of the Olympic

After the Crocus City Hall terrorist attack near Moscow, the French and Russian defence ministers had a rare telephone exchange on Wednesday.

According to Mr Macron, this was because France had intelligence information that could help the Russians know more about the alleged attackers, from the Afghan section of the Islamic State group.

In his account of their conversation, French Defence Minister Sebastien Lecornu said he told his counterpart Sergei Shoigu that France was concerned about Russian claims that Kyiv was behind the Crocus City Hall attack - claims for which France said there was no evidence.

But in his account of the phone call, Mr Shoigu said: "The Kyiv regime does nothing without the approval of its western minders. We hope that in the case (of the Crocus City Hall attack) the French secret services are not involved."

Asked about Mr Shoigu's remarks on Thursday, Mr Macron said they were "bizarre and menacing … ridiculous."

French urged to watch out for Russian interference

The president confirmed for the first time that there are alternative plans for the Olympics opening ceremony in July, if the terrorist threat worsens.

Currently the 26 July ceremony is supposed to take place on boats in the river Seine, with more than 300,000 people watching from the quays. However experts have warned that the occasion is highly vulnerable to terrorist attack.

"We will be ready," Mr Macron said. "We are preparing several scenarios. If the threat were to evolve, if we considered that circumstances made it necessary, we have back-up scenarios."

Mr Macron also lent his support to the popular French-Malian singer Aya Nakamura, whose name has been mentioned as a possible performer at the opening ceremony. Critics on the hard-right of French politics say she would not be a good ambassador because the language of her songs is often crude and difficult to understand.

"She speaks to a good number of our fellow citizens and I believe she has every right to be at the opening or closing ceremonies of the Games," the president said.

French urged to watch out for Russian interference

Source: BBC
 

Indonesia’s Christie takes Asia badminton crown ahead of Paris Olympics​


Indonesia’s Jonatan Christie clinched his maiden Badminton Asia Championships crown, seeing off Li Shi Feng in two sets.

Christie defeated home favourite Li 21-15, 21-16 in the tournament finale in the Chinese city of Ningbo on Sunday.

Earlier, China’s Wang Zhi Yi swatted aside compatriot Chen Yu Fei 21-19, 21-7 to claim the women’s singles title.

Wang’s victory came after world number one, South Korean An Se-young, was dumped out in the quarterfinals on Friday by China’s He Bingjiao.

An, the top seed in Ningbo, will still be the favourite to win gold at this summer’s Paris Olympics, but she has been struggling with a knee injury.

The men’s doubles title was claimed on Sunday by Chinese pair Liang Wei Keng and Wang Chang, who dispatched Malaysian duo Goh Sze Fei and Nur Izzuddin 21-17, 15-21, 21-10.

South Korean partners Baek Ha-na and Lee So-hee took the women’s doubles title by beating China’s Zhang Shu Xian and Zheng Yu 23-21, 21-12.

The prestigious annual tournament was the final chance for Asian players to seal a spot at the Olympics.

 

Paris Olympics 2024: The controversial hijab ban at sport's biggest party​

Resting next to the Seine river, the Cite du Cinema is best known for film-making.

By July, though, its cavernous studio spaces will be refashioned into the heart of the athletes' village for the Paris Olympics.

Athletes from all countries and cultures will be found at the dining hall sitting across from one another sharing meals and stories. It is a multi-cultural melting pot, in which people of all different creeds and colours meet every four years.

Yet the dress code for the hosts is different from their guests.

In September the International Olympic Committee (IOC) made clear that athletes in Paris can represent themselves and their faith, as well as their country.

"For the Olympic Village, the IOC rules apply," an IOC spokesperson told Reuters.

"There are no restrictions on wearing the hijab or any other religious or cultural attire."

The French team, though, have been told something different.

"The ban on the hijab [a type of headscarf that covers the head and neck, but leaves the face clear] is the consequence of two discriminations: it is islamophobia, but also gender discrimination," says Veronica Noseda, who plays football for Les Degommeuses, a Parisian football club set up to fight discrimination.

Assile Toufaily, who moved to Lyon in 2021 having played football at international level for her native Lebanon, agrees.

"It's not really about the French society, it's the government," she says.

"There is a hate on Muslim people during these last few years in France and it's shown in sport."

This summer and the arrival of the Olympics in Paris will be the clearest sporting demonstration of a distinctive and divisive French concept.

Liberte, egalite, fraternite, which first appeared during the French Revolution, may be the most famous expression of what France aspires to. It appears at the front of the constitution, on coins, on stamps and on public buildings.

Less famous, and harder to translate, is another key tenet of the French republic: laicite.

Most often translated as secularism in English, laicite does not stipulate that France's people should drop any religious customs or symbols, but, instead, that state and public institutions should be expressly free of them.

It is an idea that is keenly contested in France, particularly in the wake of a raft of terrorist attacks over the past decade and a parallel resurgence in far-right politics.

French President Emmanuel Macron has found himself defining the term again and again.

"The problem isn't laicite," he said in a speech in October 2020.

"Laicite in the French Republic means the freedom to believe or not believe, the possibility of practising one's religion as long as law and order is ensured.

"Laicite means the neutrality of the state. In no way does it mean the removal of religion from society and the public arena. A united France is cemented by laicite."

A 2004 law attempted to add some clarity to the concept, banning "ostentatious" religious symbols from state schools, without naming specific examples.

While Sikh turbans, Jewish kippah and large Christian crucifixes have been interpreted as falling the wrong side of laicite, most of the debate has focused around head coverings among the largest Muslim population of any nation in Western Europe.

In September, French sports minister Amelie Oudea-Castera - a former professional tennis player who lost to Martina Hingis in the Wimbledon juniors semi-final in 1994 - confirmed that the French Olympic team, as an institution representing and funded by the French public, is bound by laicite.

"It means absolute neutrality in public services," she said. "The France team will not wear the headscarf."

Athletes from other nations will be free wear religious symbols in the Paris 2024 athletes' village as they wish. However members of the French team, if they are to abide by their nation's rules, can't.

The stance has been criticised by some international bodies.

"No-one should impose on a woman what she needs to wear or not wear," said a spokesperson for the United Nations Human Rights Office., external

"Prohibitions on the wearing of religious headscarves in public spaces violate Muslim women's rights," added human rights charity Amnesty International.

In France however, the ban carries considerable support.

"It is a complicated and very, very sensitive issue," says Sebastien Maillard, an associate fellow at think tank Chatham House who has reported on French politics and society for much of his career.

"When I moved from Paris to London, that was one of the main differences. In the United Kingdom religion is displayed quite comfortably, whereas in Paris it is often seen as something more provocative."

Maillard points to another, smaller, controversy involving Paris 2024's exclusion of religious symbols.

In March the Game's official poster - a stylised image of Paris' landmarks coming together to form a stadium - was unveiled.

The artist omitted the golden crucifix that stands on top of the Hotel des Invalides, sparking discussion as to how strictly the Games - which will the cost French taxpayers several billion euros - stick to the principles of laicite.

"The debate today more often focuses around a Muslim community, one that wants to be fully part of French society but also follow religion in its own way," says Maillard. "We have this debate over and over about how that fits.

"The French republic was partly founded on a rejection of Catholicism and it feels threatened whenever religion impinges on it. There is a strong fear, particularly among older generations, of religion exerting influence over society and the state."

The debate plays out in areas where those demographic differences are most pronounced - in education, but also sport.

During last year's period of Ramadan - a month-long fast observed between sunrise and sunset by Muslims - the French Football Federation (FFF) sent out an edict to referees not to pause matches to allow players to break their fast, saying these interruptions "do not respect the provisions of the statutes of the FFF".

This year, with Ramadan coinciding with an international break, the FFF confirmed that it would not alter the timing of meals and practices to accommodate Muslim players, effectively preventing them from fasting while in camp with France's age-grade and senior teams.

Lyon midfielder Mahamadou Diawara left France Under-19s' get-together, reportedly because of the restrictions., external

Another talented prospect in another sport, basketball player Diaba Konate, who has represented France at under-23 level, has left for the United States, saying the ban on her wearing the hijab has left her "heartbroken"., external

Even in low-level local matches, female Muslim players are usually banned from wearing a headscarf, on the basis that the leagues are organised and run by public bodies. Protective scrumcaps - a work-around solution some players have attempted - have also been deemed incompatible with the rules by some referees.

The application of laicite to sport's grassroots means that hijab-wearing athletes have usually compromised or dropped out before reaching the biggest stage.

But this summer will set their dilemma in the starkest terms: choosing between wearing a national team kit at Paris 2024 and an expression of a personal faith.

Elsewhere in sport, expectations have changed.

Morocco defender Nouhaila Benzina made history at last summer's Women's Football World Cup.

Following Fifa's 2014 rule change to allow the wearing of head coverings for religious reasons, she became the first person to wear a hijab at the World Cup when she took to the field against South Korea.

At Rio 2016, fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad made headlines when she became the first American to compete at the Olympics while wearing a headscarf. She was later one of the athletes used to launch a hijab made specifically for sport by a global American sports brand.

Another athlete to win a medal at those Games while wearing a head covering - Iran's taekwondo player Kimia Alizadeh - has since emigrated to Germany, where she criticised the Iranian government's policy of "compulsory hijab".

She competed at the Tokyo Games in 2021 under the flag of the Refugee team and without a religious head covering.

Iqra Ismail can speak only for herself, with a perspective from across the Channel in the United Kingdom, where laicite is a foreign concept.

She is a director of Hilltop FC, the Female Refugee Football Project Coordinator at QPR Community Trust and a Muslim who has loved sport since she was a child.

"Wearing the hijab is a part of my identity. When it comes to playing, it's not something that I'll leave outside the lines of the pitch," she says.

"Football is a human right - everyone should definitely have the right to participate in it."

Yasmin Abukar is the founder of Sisterhood FC, a women's Muslim football club in London.

"I was asking Muslim girls what made them stop playing football and the answers that they gave me were so sad to hear," Abukar says of the inspiration behind the club.

"Half of them stopped because they felt like they didn't belong. The other half felt like they didn't have access to football in a way that will cater to their religious requirements.

"I wouldn't know how I would feel as a young Muslim person being told by the government that I can't have the freedom of practising my religion.

"I'm very thankful that my parents didn't migrate to France."

Source: BBC
 

Paris Olympics 2024: Offering prize money at Games against 'Olympic spirit' says cycling boss​

World Athletics' decision to award prize money at the Paris Olympics goes against the Olympic spirit, says the head of cycling's governing body.

World Athletics will become the first federation to offer prize money at an Olympics this summer.

Gold medallists in athletics events will earn $50,000 (£39,400).

"The Olympic spirit is to share revenues and have more athletes compete worldwide," UCI president David Lappartient said.

"Not only [to] put all the money on the top athletes but spread the money.

"If we concentrate money on top athletes, a lot of opportunities will disappear for athletes all over the world."

Given the Olympics' origins as an amateur sports event, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) does not award prize money but distributes funding through international federations (IF) and national Olympic committees (NOC).

World Athletics' move, which will be extended to silver and bronze medallists for the 2028 Games, was widely praised by former athletes when it was announced by its president Lord Coe.

Asked at the time if prize money went against the Olympic spirit, Coe said: "I don't see that making life a little easier for the athletes, allowing them maybe to stay on in the sport a little bit longer, to give them the financial independence to train, and maybe in a more sophisticated way is anything other than sitting behind good firm Olympic principles."

But on Tuesday Lappartient said: "We really believe that this is not the Olympic spirit.

"The proposal was not discussed."

Source: BBC
 
Daley confirmed for fifth Olympics in Paris

Tom Daley will compete at a fifth Olympics in Paris this summer after he was confirmed in Team GB's diving team.

Daley, 29, took time away from the sport after winning gold at the last Olympics but will compete in the 10m synchronised platform event with Noah Williams.

The pair won silver at the World Championships in February following Daley's return last December.

“No one else in the world would take two years out and be as good as he is,” said Williams, 23.

It was widely believed Daley planned to retire from diving during his hiatus but he opted to return after son Robbie said he wanted to see his father compete at an Olympics.

His comeback began at the British National Diving Cup in December before he and Williams sealed Great Britain's spot in the 10m synchronised event in Paris with their world silver earlier this year.

They also won gold at a World Cup event in Berlin in March.



BBC
 
Olympic flame arrives in Marseille amid 'unprecedented security'

The Olympic torch has reached Marseille amid an "unprecedented level of security", 79 days before the opening ceremony of the Paris Games.

A three-masted ship brought the torch to the Mediterranean coastal city in southern France from Greece's ancient Olympia, where the flame was lit on 11 April.

The torch will be brought to shore after a six-hour parade, featuring more than 1,000 boats, in front of President Emmanuel Macron and an estimated crowd of 150,000 people.

Officials said 6,000 law enforcement officers, canine units and elite forces snipers will be on patrol.

"Life goes on in Marseille but in great security conditions," said interior minister Gerald Darmanin. "It's an unprecedented level of security."

France raised its security threat level last October after a teacher was killed in a knife attack, while there are concerns that wars in Ukraine and Gaza could increase the threat.

The president of the Paris 2024 organising committee Tony Estanguet, said Marseille was the "obvious choice” to host the boat parade given it is France's oldest city and was founded by Greeks.


BBC
 
Paris Olympics to start in nearly 2 months time, Can Pakistan fare better this time breaking the jinx of poor past performances
 
LA outskirts are beautiful but the city is a dump, this is a clear way for them to throw out their homeless people.
Very smart.
 

Paris Olympics Terror Attack Foiled​


A planned attack targeting soccer events at the Paris Olympics this summer was foiled by authorities in France, the country's Interior Ministry announced Friday.

A suspect was arrested and placed in pre-trial detention.

France has been subject to a string of planned attacks as Paris prepares to host the 2024 Olympic Games, an event which is expected to attract millions of visitors from around the world at a time of heightened geopolitical tension.

In light of the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, France's security alert has now been raised to the highest level.

Last month, a 16-year-old boy was arrested after he declared on social media that he planned to create an explosive belt and become a martyr and pledged his allegiance to the Islamic State, according to police.

Additionally, a 26-year-old man was arrested after allegedly planning a mass killing. The man planned to carry out violent action when the Paris 2024 Olympic Torch passed through the city of Bordeaux, according to France's interior minister, Gérald Darmanin.

The man was found to sympathize with the incel movement, a misogynistic online subculture. He was detained over a message that referenced the American mass shooter, Elliot Rodger.

The suspect, an 18-year-old Russian national of Chechen descent, was arrested on May 22 by the General Dictorate of Internal Security (GDSI). They were arrested on suspicion of planning an "Islamist inspired" attack at the Paris Olympics soccer events at Geoffery-Guichard Stadium in Saint Etienne in France, according to French news channel BFMTV.

A statement from the Interior Ministry said the attack was targeted at both spectators and members of the security forces.

The suspect was arrested in his home and was then indicted on Sunday, May 26 and subsequently placed in pre-trial detention, according to BFMTV. The suspect denied planning an attack, but admitted to conversations that took place on encrypted messaging platforms.

Darmanin congratulated the intelligence services for apprehending the suspect before he carried out the attack

"This is the first foiled attack against the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games and the 50th attack foiled by our intelligence services since 2017," he said in a statement.

The opening ceremony of the Olympic Games has been scaled back in light of security risks. Attendance capacity has been halved down from 600,000. France's President Emmanuel Macron has stated that more compromises can be made if it is deemed necessary by intelligence. In April, Macron told BFMTV that "if we think there are security risks, we'll have plan B, and even plan C."

The government has outlined extensive security perimeters and protocols to safeguard the games. Measures include increased surveillance, enhanced coordination between international security agencies, and the deployment of additional police and military personnel.

Football matches that are taking place as part of the Paris Olympics are scheduled to take place in cities across France.

 

Team GB announce Olympic boxing squad​

Team GB have named six boxers that will represent Great Britain at the 2024 Olympics in Paris.

Super-heavyweight Delicious Orie, heavyweight Pat Brown, light-middleweight Lewis Richardson, middleweight Chantelle Reid, welterweight Rosie Eccles and bantamweight Charley Davison are all included.

Colchester fighter Richardson was the last of the group to qualify, having only secured his place last week in Thailand.

Davison, 30, is the only fighter in the squad to have previous Olympic experience.

Davison was knocked out at the quarter-final stage in Tokyo three years ago but has moved weight from flyweight to bantamweight for Paris.

"Qualifying for a second time means a little bit more to me," she said. "I am a much more experienced boxer now and I know what to expect."

Orie, 27, won gold at the Commonwealth Games in 2022 and is one of the favourites of the group to secure a medal in Paris.

The Russian-born Briton qualified alongside Davison and Welshwoman Eccles at the 2023 European Games last June.

Eccles won gold alongside Orie at the Commonwealth Games.

The 27-year-old missed out on a place at Tokyo 2020 after contracting coronavirus three times before the qualifying process was cut short by the pandemic.

The boxing squad go into the Games with big expectations after the Tokyo team returned home with six medals, including two golds from Galal Yafai and Lauren Price.

"The GB boxers have always been an important and integral part of Team GB," Team GB chef de mission Mark England said.

"The six selected today bring real talent, character and personality to the team and we’re all looking forward to seeing how they perform at the Games."

Source: BBC
 

Peaty will head to Paris with peace and no pressure​


Olympic breaststroke champion Adam Peaty will be heading to Paris at peace with himself and under no pressure, and that could make him an even more dangerous opponent, he said on Wednesday.

The Briton is chasing a third successive 100m gold, the "three-Peaty" headlines at the ready, at 29 and after taking time out from competition for mental health reasons.

The world record holder, who took bronze at the world championships in Qatar in February, won the event at the British championships in April in 57.94 seconds, the fastest time of the year.

Asked, at a Team GB swim squad kitting out day in Birmingham how the 2024 Peaty differed from previous editions, he replied: "I guess more relaxed in my approach. A little bit more knowledgeable of self.

"When I look myself in the mirror I’m very peaceful.

"As soon as you stop running from yourself, I think that’s when you start living your true self and your true life. And in sport terms I think that’s when you’re most dangerous for everyone else because you’re just so at peace.

"I’m in a different place, I’m happy in my soul and that really relates to where you are physically and mentally as well."

Peaty, who would join U.S. great Michael Phelps as the only male swimmers to win gold in the same event at three Games, called himself an underdog.

"For me, going into these Games and especially these last 12 months, I’ve enjoyed being the person with the bow and arrow and not the one being fired at," he said.

"There’s no pressure really on me. Yes, I’m Olympic champion and people are going for that crown but...I haven’t really won anything since 2022 or 2021.

"I’m OK with that because I’ve been the underdog and I enjoy being an underdog, I enjoy fighting my way through the rounds," he added.

"It's shown me how to lose with grace. Because before I used to lose and I’d tear everything up. I’ve been like that since a kid. But now at 29 years old I think I can say I have learned how to lose."

Asked how he managed the balance between peace and competitive anger, Peaty smiled: "Peaceful down the first 50, anger on the last 50".

 
Afghanistan to send three women and three men to compete at Olympics

Afghanistan will send a team of three women and three men to the Paris Olympics as demanded by the International Olympic Committee following the return to power of the Taliban in August 2021, the IOC announced on Thursday.

The women will compete in athletics and cycling while their male counterparts will feature in athletics, swimming and judo.


France 24
 
World number three Aryna Sabalenka says she will not compete at this summer's Olympic Games in Paris in order to prioritise her health.


BBC
 
LA outskirts are beautiful but the city is a dump, this is a clear way for them to throw out their homeless people.
Very smart.
They will spend millions and move the homeless into motels for about a month.

Once all the tourists leave, the homeless will be back on streets doing amazing things there.
 
They will spend millions and move the homeless into motels for about a month.

Once all the tourists leave, the homeless will be back on streets doing amazing things there.
They have been making them take bus and sending it off to other states
 
Thompson-Herah will not defend 200m title in Paris

Jamaica's five-time Olympic champion Elaine Thompson-Herah will not defend her 200m title at this summer's Games in Paris.

The 31-year-old has opted not to race over the distance at the upcoming Jamaican trials but will still compete in the 100m.

Thompson-Herah appeared to sustain an injury during the 100m at the NYC Grand Prix earlier this month.

She is the second-fastest woman in history over 100m and became the first woman to win back-to-back Olympic sprint doubles when she retained her 100m and 200m titles at Tokyo 2020.

In November Thompson-Herah split with coach Shanikie Osbourne and appointed Reynaldo Walcott, who also coaches her Jamaica team-mate Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce.

The athletics events at the Paris Olympics take place from 1-11 August.


BBC
 
Sprinter Knighton cleared for Games after failed test

United States sprinter Erriyon Knighton has been cleared to compete at the Paris Olympics after avoiding a ban for a failed drug test.

The 20-year-old was provisionally suspended in April after testing positive for a metabolite of trenbolone in March.

But an independent arbitrator ruled that it was more likely than not Knighton digested the banned substance when he ate some contaminated meat.

Usada (United States Anti-Doping Agency) said, despite testing positive, there was no fault or negligence on the athlete's part.

Travis Tygart, the Usada chief executive, said "justice was served".

Trenbolone is a known livestock growth promoter that is used legally in beef cattle produced in, and exported to, the United States.

The decision comes before the US track and field Olympic trials begin on 21 June in Oregon.

Knighton became the youngest male since Jim Ryun in 1964 to make the US Olympic team when he qualified for the Tokyo Games in 2021 - going on to finish fourth in the 200m final at the age of 17.


BBC
 
Team GB pick Fitzpatrick and Fleetwood for Paris 2024

Matt Fitzpatrick and Tommy Fleetwood have been selected to represent Team GB at the Paris 2024 Olympics.

Fitzpatrick, the 2022 US Open champion, will compete at his first Olympic Games.

Fleetwood, who represented Team GB at Tokyo 2020, returns to Le Golf National where he won the Open de France in 2017 and was part of Europe's victorious Ryder Cup team in 2018.

Justin Rose won individual gold for GB in the men's event at Rio 2016, when golf returned to the Olympics after a 112-year absence.

Fleetwood, 33, began the 2024 season with victory in Dubai and recorded his best finish at Augusta National when he tied third at the Masters in April.

Following his maiden major in 2022, Fitzpatrick, 29, clinched his second PGA Tour title last year before joining Fleetwood at his third Ryder Cup as Europe beat the United States in Rome.

Team GB's Paris 2024 chef de mission Mark England said: “We are thrilled to have two golfers with such tremendous pedigree representing Team GB this summer.

"It is great to welcome Matt into the fold for what will be his first Olympic Games, and to have Tommy back with us after his time competing in Tokyo 2020. Of course, this course holds such special memories for Tommy, so we are certain he and Matt will both look forward to playing in Paris once again."

The women’s golf qualification period ends on Monday, 24 June, with selection to be confirmed shortly after that date.

Olympic golf consists of 72-hole individual stroke play for both men and women, with Fitzpatrick and Fleetwood contesting the men’s event from 1-4 August.


BBC
 
GB men's sevens fail to qualify for Paris Olympics

Great Britain have failed to reach the men's rugby sevens at the Olympic Games for the first time since it made its debut in 2016 after losing 14-5 to South Africa in the repechage final in Monaco.

The Blitzboks established a nine point lead at the break after tries from Quewin Nortje and Shilton van Wyk - and GB could not recover after the interval.

Defeat means South Africa claim the only qualification spot from the tournament as GB, who won silver at Rio 2016 and lost the bronze medal match to Argentina in Tokyo, miss out.

GB had topped their pool and beate Tonga in the quarter-final before overcoming Spain in the last four.

China won the women's competition to join GB and 10 other sides in Paris.

Chen Keyi scored two tries in their 24-7 win over Kenya in the final.

GB women's team have already secured their place at Paris and named their 12-player squad for the tournament earlier this week.

The Sevens programme at the Games will take place between 24-30 July at the Stade de France.


BBC
 
Last edited:
Richardson makes Olympics with fastest 100m of year

Sha'Carri Richardson has secured her place at this summer's Olympics in Paris by winning the women's 100m at the US trials.

The 24-year-old world champion claimed victory in 10.71 seconds, which is the fastest time in the world this year, to qualify for her first Games.

Richardson won the 100m at the US trials three years ago but did not compete at the Tokyo Games after testing positive for marijuana.

"I feel honoured," said Richardson. "I feel every chapter I've been through in my life designed and prepared me for this moment.

"I cannot wait to go to Paris and represent."

Slow out of the blocks, Richardson accelerated to take the lead about 50m in before surging to victory, with Melissa Jefferson second in 10.80 and Twanisha Terry third in 10.89. All three women are set to race for Team USA in Paris.

After crossing the finish line in a world-leading time, Richardson ran to hug her grandmother who watched on from the stands at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.

"In the past three years I've grown - just [a] better understanding of myself, a deeper respect and appreciation for my gift that I have in the sport, and as well as my responsibility to the people that believe and support me," said Richardson.

"I feel like all of those components have helped me grow."

Richardson won gold at the 2023 World Championships in Budapest with a championship record of 10.65 to claim her first major title.

She will be hoping to add Olympic gold to that victory, but she has not set a target time she wants to achieve in Paris.

"I don't put a time on myself, I just know that if I execute and run the race that I've trained [and] prepared for, that the time comes with it," she said.

Elsewhere, Ryan Crouser took victory in the men's shot put with a throw of 22.84m, while Jasmine Moore won the women's triple jump on her final attempt of 14.26m.


BBC
 
World 100m champion Lyles qualifies for Olympics

World champion Noah Lyles won the 100m at the US Olympic trials to qualify for this summer's Games in Paris.

Lyles, who missed out on the 100m at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics after finishing seventh at the trials, equalled his personal best of 9.83 seconds in Eugene, Oregon.

Kenny Bednarek, who was second in 9.87, and Tokyo 2020 silver medallist Fred Kerley, who was third in 9.88, also qualified.

Lyles' 200m bronze in Tokyo remains his only Olympic medal.


BBC
 
GB sprinter Hughes given Olympic trials exemption

British sprinter Zharnel Hughes has been granted a medical exemption from taking part in the UK Athletics Championships in Manchester later this month, British Athletics has said., external

The 28-year-old, Britain's fastest man ever over both 100m and 200m, is still expected to receive a discretionary place to represent Team GB at the Olympics in Paris this summer.

The UK Athletics Championships will double as the official track and field trial for selection for the Paris Olympic Games for all events other than the 10,000m.

Hughes is not able to take to the track though after picking up a hamstring injury during a meeting in Jamaica earlier this month.

"Zharnel Hughes has been granted a medical exemption from competing in this weekend’s UK Athletics Championship in Manchester as he continues to recover from a hamstring injury," British Athletics said.

The Anguillan-born sprinter broke a 30-year British 200m record in London last year with a time of 19.73 seconds and then went on to smash the British 100m record a month later at the World Athletics Championships in Budapest, claiming a bronze medal in the process.

However, he missed the recent European Athletics Championships in Rome due to the injury, which will now keep him out this weekend's Olympic trials.

Posting the news on social media, British Athletics seemed to leave the door open for Hughes to make the Olympic team though, saying: "We look forward to seeing Zharnel back on the track during a big summer of athletics."



BBC
 
Olympic champion Mu falls in US trials & will miss Paris

Reigning women's Olympic 800m champion Athing Mu will not defend her title at the 2024 Paris Games after falling in the US trials.

The 22-year-old tripped as she ran in the middle of the pack about 200m into the race in Eugene, Oregon and finished last.

Nia Akins won the race and will travel to Paris along with runner-up Allie Wilson and third-placed Juliette Whittaker.

Mu would have been expected to be a key adversary for Team GB's Keely Hodgkinson, who claimed silver behind the American in the 800m in Tokyo as a teenager.

In the men's 400m, Quincy Hall chased down 2022 world champion Michael Norman after the final turn to win in 44.14 seconds.

"I know I can run a lot faster than I did," Norman said.

"It was just a poorly executed race, I got a little too excited during the moment so I paid for it at the end."

Chris Bailey was third and will compete in Paris while 16-year-old Quincy Wilson finished sixth to put him in the mix for a call-up to the relay pool.

BBC
 

Porzingis out for Olympics after leg surgery​

Boston Celtics center Kristaps Porzingis will miss the Paris Olympics for Latvia after he undergoes surgery in the coming days to repair a torn retinaculum and dislocated posterior tibialis tendon, the team announced Tuesday.

"This injury always requires surgical repair," the team said in a statement. "Porzingis had hoped to delay surgery until after both the NBA Finals and Latvia's Olympic campaign, but the injury doesn't allow for consistent play at the level required for Olympic competition."

Latvia will host an Olympic qualifying tournament in July and will need to win out against a field comprising Brazil, Montenegro, Cameroon, Georgia, and the Philippines to reach the Paris Games.

The big man suffered the injury in Game 2 of the NBA Finals against the Dallas Mavericks. He missed Games 3 and 4 but returned in Game 5 as the Celtics beat the Mavericks to claim the NBA championship.

Porzingis said earlier in June that his recovery process after surgery will take a "few months."

Boston acquired him from the Washington Wizards last offseason. He averaged 20.1 points and 7.2 rebounds during the regular season but missed the majority of the playoffs due to a calf strain.

Source: The Score
 
United States striker Alex Morgan has been left out of Emma Hayes' 18-player squad for next month's Olympic Games in Paris.

Morgan, 34, has appeared at every Olympics for Team USA since Beijing 2008 and won gold at London 2012.

The two-time World Cup winner, who has hit 123 international goals, has not scored in her past eight games for San Diego Wave after recently recovering from an ankle injury.


BBC
 
Paris 2024 president Tony Estanguet is "confident" it will be possible to use the River Seine at the Olympics this summer, despite latest results showing it is still failing water quality tests

The Paris mayor's office released results of the most recent tests done, which showed the levels of E.Coli remain above the upper limits imposed by sports federations.

On 18 June, the level of E.Coli was 10 times the acceptable level and did not fall below the upper limit of 1,000 colony-forming units per 100 millilitres (cfu/ml) used by the World Triathlon Federation.

"Water quality remains degraded because of unfavourable hydrological conditions, little sunshine, below-average seasonal temperatures and upstream pollution," the mayor's office said in a statement.

The Olympics start on 26 July, with the men's and women's triathlon scheduled for 30 and 31 July respectively and the mixed event on 5 August.

The Seine is also set to host marathon swimming at the Olympics on 8 and 9 August and the Para-triathlon event at the Paralympics, which start on 28 August.

"We are still confident with the delivery of the competitions in the River Seine," said Estanguet.

"We knew from the beginning that the plan that we decided was really aligned with good conditions at the end of July. Now we are entering the final lap and the good zone."

Heavy rain in the days leading up to events could raise levels of bacteria in the water.

The Open Water Swimming World Cup and the swimming leg of the World Triathlon Para Cup - both test events for the 2024 Games - were called off in August because of water quality issues, although the World Triathlon test event went ahead later that month.

Organisers say about 1.4bn euro (£1.2bn) is being spent on a regeneration project to make the Seine safe to swim in, including a rainwater storage basin to try to reduce the risks of pollution.

The opening ceremony of the Olympics is set to be the first to be held outside a stadium, with more than 10,000 athletes expected to sail along a 6km stretch of the River Seine on some 160 barges.

However, French President Emmanuel Macron says it could be moved if the security risk is too high.

Meanwhile, with currents unusually strong, organisers cancelled the first full practice session for the ceremony on Monday.

Source: BBC
 
Asher-Smith reaches Olympics as young GB stars shine

Dina Asher-Smith confirmed her place at the Paris 2024 Olympics as she beat Daryll Neita to the British 200m title at the UK Athletics Championships.

Asher-Smith, 28, ran a championship record 22.18 seconds to finish ahead of Neita, who had already confirmed her inclusion in Team GB by winning 100m gold on Saturday.

On a thrilling final day of action in Manchester, several exciting young athletes shone under ominously dark clouds to ensure they will represent Team GB for the first time in Paris.


 

'I knew I would be back' - Biles qualifies for Paris​

Four-time Olympic champion Simone Biles said "I knew I would be back" after she qualified for the Paris Games.

American Biles, 27, secured her spot at the US Olympic trials on Sunday in Minneapolis with a two-day all-round score of 117.225.

Paris will be Biles' third Olympics after competing in the 2016 Rio and 2020 Tokyo events.

She had a disappointing Games in Tokyo, winning a silver and a bronze, as she suffered with the 'twisties', which gymnasts describe as a kind of mental block, and withdrew from some events to prioritise her mental health and safety.

Biles, who won four golds and a silver in Rio, took a break from the sport after the 2020 Olympics but returned to competition in 2023. Since then, she has won her sixth all-round world title, three other world golds and two national championships.

“I knew I wasn’t done after the performances in Tokyo," Biles said.

"I just had to get back in the gym, work hard and trust the process. I knew I would be back."

Biles' routine started with the Taylor Swift song 'Ready for It?' and the Grammy-winning singer posted on X: "Watched this so many times and still unready. She’s ready for it tho."

"I think my team talk to her team sometimes and I have met her a couple of times so it has been really sweet," added Biles.

Biles completes the US women's gymnastics team heading to the Olympics this summer alongside Jordan Chiles, Sunisa Lee, Jade Carey and Hezly Rivera.

Joscelyn Roberson and Leanne Wong have also been announced as travelling alternates.

The women's gymnastics events will take place from 28 July until 10 August.

Source: BBC
 

Quincy Wilson, 16, becomes youngest U.S. male track Olympian​

After turning heads at the recent U.S. Olympic trials in Eugene, Oregon, 16-year-old Quincy Wilson will have the opportunity to do the very same in Paris later this summer.

Wilson and his coach, Joe Lee, confirmed reports to ESPN on Monday that the young star had been added to the Team USA relay pool.

"When I got the call, I was like, I was ecstatic," Wilson told ESPN. "I started running around the house. It was just a moment for me because everybody dreams about going to the Olympics as a young kid."

Although failing to qualify for the 400 meters at the trials, the young sprinter will be part of the U.S. team that gets sent to Paris to run the 4x400 relay. A rising junior at Potomac, Maryland's Bullis School, Wilson will be the youngest American male track athlete to appear at an Olympics.

Source: ESPN
 
Kerr & Johnson-Thompson head GB Olympics athletics squad

World champions Josh Kerr and Katarina Johnson-Thompson will head Team GB's Olympic athletics medal hopes after being confirmed in the squad for Paris 2024.

As 2023 World Championship gold medallists, heptathlete Johnson-Thompson and 1500m runner Kerr were among the athletes under less pressure to perform at last week's UK Athletics Championships, which doubled as the Olympic trials.

They are joined in the squad by Keely Hodgkinson, who will target gold after three successive global 800m silvers, world 400m silver medallist Matthew Hudson-Smith and world indoor pole vault champion Molly Caudery.

Rising star Louie Hinchliffe, the British men's 100m champion who is coached by American legend Carl Lewis, is selected among the sprinters along with world bronze medallist Zharnel Hughes, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita.

Former world 1500m champion Jake Wightman is included in the 800m despite missing the trials through injury and 10,000m runner Eilish McColgan also makes the team following a battle to prove her fitness.

Several exciting emerging athletes will appear at their first Olympic Games, including 17-year-old Phoebe Gill after her sensational 800m win in Manchester and British 400m champions Charlie Dobson and Amber Anning.

However, discus thrower Jade Lally and shot putter Amelia Campbell are among those who have criticised the UK Athletics (UKA) selection policy after missing out.

The 11-day athletics programme at the Paris Olympics begins on 1 August.


BBC
 
Muir breaks British mark as world records fall in Paris

Laura Muir set a new British 1500m mark as rival Faith Kipyegon smashed the world record at the Paris Diamond League, while Yaroslava Mahuchikh broke a 37-year mark in the women's high jump.

Muir, 31, ran three minutes 53.79 seconds for third place to improve the national record she set in winning Olympic silver in Tokyo three years ago.

Kenyan Kipyegon clocked a sensational 3:49.04 to claim victory ahead of Australian Jessica Hull as the 30-year-old now eyes a third successive Olympic title in the French capital next month.

British champion Georgia Bell clocked a huge personal best of 3:56.54 for fifth as she builds towards her Games debut, while Katie Snowden was ninth in 3:58.13.


 
Giannis Antetokounmpo will play in the Olympics for the first time after helping Greece beat Croatia to qualify for Paris 2024.

The Milwaukee Bucks superstar hit 23 points as Greece sealed a 80-69 win in front of their home crowd in Piraeus.

Greece have not qualified for the Olympics since the 2008 Games in Beijing.


BBC
 
The five rings in the Olympic logo represent the five world regions that the athletes originally came from. The five intertwined rings represent the solidarity and unity of five areas of the world-Africa, America (North and South America), Asia, Europe, and Oceania (Australia).
 
Mateta confirmed in final France Olympics squad

Thierry Henry has named his final 18-man France squad to play in their home Olympic Games, with Crystal Palace striker Jean-Philippe Mateta the only Premier League inclusion.

Olympic squads are made up of under-23s players, with up to three overage players allowed.

Mateta, 27, scored 16 Premier League goals last season, but he has never won a senior France cap.

Clubs are not obliged to release players for the Olympics - with Real Madrid not allowing France senior team captain Kylian Mbappe to join Henry's squad for Paris 2024.

Mateta's former Palace team-mate Michael Olise, who has just joined Bayern Munich for £50m, is also included in the squad.

Chelsea defender Lesley Ugochukwu, 20, is on standby for the squad.

Arsenal legend Henry is France Under-21s manager - as well as taking charge of the Olympics team.

He named his provisional squad in early June and Mateta scored twice in a 4-1 warm-up win over Paraguay.

France's Olympics squad

Goalkeepers: Obed Nkambadio (Paris FC), Guillaume Restes (Toulouse)

Defenders: Loic Bade (Sevilla), Bradley Locko (Brest), Castello Lukeba (Leipzig), Soungoutou Magassa (Monaco), Kiliann Sildillia (Freiburg), Adrien Truffert (Rennes)

Midfielders: Maghnes Akliouche (Monaco), Joris Chotard (Montpellier), Desire Doue (Rennes), Manu Kone (Borussia Monchengladbach), Enzo Millot (Stuttgart)

Forwards: Arnaud Kalimuendo (Rennes), Alexandre Lacazette (Lyon), Jean-Philippe Mateta (Crystal Palace), Michael Olise (Bayern Munich), Rayan Cherki (Lyon)


BBC
 
Record 8.6 million tickets sold for Paris Olympics

The Paris Olympics already has one gold medal in the bag before it begins with 8.6 million tickets sold -- a record for any Games.

"It's a record held by the 1996 Atlanta Games of 8.3 million tickets, and we've already passed that total now some time ago," the 2024 Games organiser Tony Estanguet told AFP on Thursday.

"We are at 8.6 million tickets for the Olympics, and over one million for the Paralympics," he reported.

Paris organisers forecast that total rising to 10 million for the July 26-August 11 sporting extravaganza, and 3.4 million for the Paralympics staged between August 28 and September 8.

"The good news is that in this final stretch we are making available a number of tickets for lots of sports," Estanguet said.

"There are lots of really good options at different prices both for the Olympics, Paralympics, and opening and closing ceremonies."

He added: "We are proud to have already beaten the record, but we can still do even better."


 
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