Jordan Chiles, of the United States, competes during the women's artistic gymnastics individual floor finals Monday at Bercy Arena at the 2024 Summer Olympics. Chiles won bronze after a last-minute inquiry found the judges had underscored her by a tenth of a point. On Saturday, an appeals court vacated the inquiry, saying it had come four seconds too late.

U.S. gymnast Jordan Chiles may have to return Olympic bronze medal after ruling : NPR

Jordan Chiles, of the United States, competes during the women’s artistic gymnastics individual floor finals Monday at Bercy Arena at the 2024 Summer Olympics. Chiles won bronze after a last-minute inquiry found the judges had underscored her by a tenth of a point. On Saturday, an appeals court vacated the inquiry, saying it had come four seconds too late.

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NPR is in Paris for the 2024 Summer Olympics. For more of our coverage from the Games head to our latest updates.

PARIS — An independent arbitration court vacated a last-minute inquiry in the Olympic gymnastics floor exercise final that boosted the score of U.S. gymnast Jordan Chiles, and the sport’s governing body officially moved a Romanian athlete into third place — a series of events Saturday that put Chiles’ bronze medal in question.

Judges in last Monday’s final in Paris had originally given Chiles a score of 13.666, which put her in fifth place behind two Romanian gymnasts, Ana Barbosu and Sabrina Maneca-Voinea, both of whom had scored 13.7.

Because Chiles had been the last to perform her floor routine, Barbosu, who held a tiebreaker over Maneca-Voinea, began to celebrate when the initial score came through, thinking she had won the bronze instead.

But Chiles’ coaches believed the judges had underscored her, and they filed an inquiry shortly after the initial score came through. The judges agreed and revised her score up by a tenth of a point to 13.766, moving her into third place over Barbosu. Chiles was awarded the bronze medal.

The next day, the Romanian gymnastics organization filed a protest with the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique, which oversees Olympic gymnastics, seeking to have the inquiry overturned.

In a decision Saturday, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) said that Chiles’ inquiry had indeed been filed too late. Gymnastics rules require that inquiries be filed within one minute; Chiles’ inquiry was filed after one minute and four seconds, the court said. With the inquiry vacated, her score was reverted to 13.666.

Soon after, FIG officially updated the results of Monday’s competition, moving Barbosu into third and Chiles to fifth.

It is unclear what will happen to the bronze medal awarded to Chiles.

U.S.'s Jordan Chiles holds up her medals after the gymnastics finals on Monday. Her bronze, on the left, which she won during the floor exercise might be taken away.

U.S.’s Jordan Chiles holds up her medals after the gymnastics finals on Monday. Her bronze, on the left, which she won during the floor exercise might be taken away.

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The Romanian protest had also asked that all three athletes be ranked together in 3rd place by FIG, in order to share the bronze — a request that FIG apparently denied.

In a joint statement, USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee said they were “devastated” by the CAS ruling.

“The inquiry into the Difficulty Value of Jordan Chiles’ floor exercise routine was filed in good faith and, we believed, in accordance with FIG rules to ensure accurate scoring,” the statement said.

In a post on her Instagram, Chiles said she was broken-hearted. “I am taking this time and removing myself from social media for my mental health,” she wrote.

“Throughout the appeal process, Jordan has been subject to consistent, utterly baseless and extremely hurtful attacks on social media,” the USA Gymnastics and USOPC statement said. No athlete should be subject to such treatment. We condemn the attacks and those who engage, support or instigate them.”


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USA's Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone easily won gold in the women's 400m hurdles at the Paris Olympics on Thursday. She also broke her own world record at Stade de France.

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone smashes her world record in 400m hurdles, wins Olympic gold : NPR

USA’s Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone easily won gold in the women’s 400m hurdles at the Paris Olympics on Thursday. She also broke her own world record at Stade de France.

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NPR is in Paris for the 2024 Summer Olympics. For more of our coverage from the Games head to our latest updates.

SAINT-DENIS, France — After crossing the finish line, Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone — the defending gold medalist in the 400-meter hurdles — dashed across the purple track, wrapped herself in the American flag and donned a tiara, showing the world that she still reigns.

McLaughlin-Levrone broke her own world record in the event on her way to gold on Thursday, finishing a very comfortable 1.5 seconds ahead of the competition.

She cleared the 10 hurdles in 50.37 seconds, shaving an incredible 0.28 seconds off her world record time that she only just set in June at the national Olympic track trials. Along the way, she demolished the Olympic record 51.46 (hers again).

Fellow American Anna Cockrell earned silver with a personal best of 51.87 seconds, trimming her best time by nearly a second. Dutch hurdler Femke Bol, who was McLaughlin-Levrone’s top challenger going into the race, finished with bronze — for the second Summer Games in a row.

The 25-year-old started her Olympics journey in Rio de Janeiro eight years ago and in Tokyo earned a gold medal in 400-meter hurdles — when she also set the previous Olympic record — and another in the 4×400-meter relay.

The race on Thursday night was her sixth time setting a world record in the event. Before McLaughlin-Levrone came on the scene, it took hurdlers years to take fractions of a second off records.

Back in June at the trials, she said it was her goal to dip under 50 seconds at some point.

Of her performance at the Paris Olympics, she said, “Overall it was a pretty good race. There are a few things that I feel I could have cleaned up. But when you’re in the moment you’re not really thinking about all of that.”

“When I crossed that line I was grateful,” she said after the race, but added: “I was hoping it was a little faster.”

USA's Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone crosses the finish one-and-a-half seconds ahead of her teammate and silver medalist Anna Cockrell in the women's 400m hurdles final. McLaughlin-Levrone eclipsed her own world record during the gold medal run at the Paris Olympics on Thursday.

USA’s Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone crosses the finish 1.5 seconds ahead of her teammate and silver medalist Anna Cockrell in the women’s 400m hurdles final. McLaughlin-Levrone eclipsed her own world record during the gold medal run at the Paris Olympics on Thursday.

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The U.S.'s Mallory Swanson fights for the ball during the women's semifinal soccer match between the United States and Germany at the 2024 Summer Olympics on Tuesday at Lyon Stadium in Decines, France.

U.S. women’s soccer team goes for gold after downing Germany : NPR

The U.S. women’s soccer team defeated Germany 1-0 to advance to its first gold medal match at the Olympics since 2012. The U.S. team’s Mallory Swanson fights for the ball during the semifinal match on Tuesday at Lyon Stadium in Decines, France.

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NPR is in Paris for the 2024 Summer Olympics. For more of our coverage from the games head to our latest updates.

PARIS — It took some extra time. But the U.S. women’s national soccer team is back in business and will play for gold at the Olympics.

The U.S. defeated fourth-ranked Germany 1-0 in a semifinal rematch in Lyon. It was scoreless after 90 tense minutes of regulation. But in the 95th minute of extra time, Sophia Smith put the Americans on the board with a sweet shot that darted beyond the reach of the charging German goalkeeper.

Germany was hobbled by the absence of two attackers: captain Alexandra Popp, who was sick, and forward Lea Schüller, who was injured.

The U.S. is the most decorated team in Olympic history. It’s won the most gold and most medals in the history of the Games (four gold, a silver and a bronze). But the U.S. missed the medal round in 2016 at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics and had to settle for bronze at the Tokyo Games in 2021.

At the Paris Olympics, the fifth-ranked U.S. sailed through the group stage with victories over Zambia, Germany and Australia. In the quarterfinals, the U.S. had a tougher time against Japan. The two sides didn’t score in regulation and it was Trinity Rodman’s spectacular extra time goal that gave the Americans a 1-0 victory.

Against Germany, a team the U.S. beat 4-1 last week, the semifinal was a lot closer.

At halftime it was 0-0, but it was a first half dominated by the Americans. While the Germans surprisingly didn’t register a single shot, Rose Lavelle, Lindsey Horan, Tierna Davidson and Sophia Smith all had shots on goal.

It wasn’t until the 62nd minute that the U.S. had its best chance to score. Forward Mallory Swanson zipped by the German goalkeeper and pushed the shot into the side netting as two defenders converged on her. Swanson, who assisted Smith’s game-winning strike, has scored three goals in four matches in this tournament.

The U.S. entered these Olympics with a new coach, a younger roster and a new attitude. Coach Emma Hayes took over in May and still hasn’t lost a game (8W-0L-1D). Six of the victories have been by shutout.

The U.S. will play for the gold medal on Saturday in Paris against either Brazil or Spain.


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Israelis prepare for Iran attack : NPR

Israelis are steeling themselves for an attack from Iran and Hezbollah. Iran has vowed retaliation against Israel after the assassination of a Hamas leader in Tehran last week.



AILSA CHANG, HOST:

Iran has vowed retaliation against Israel after the assassination of a Hamas leader in Tehran last week. The senior commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said today that Israel can expect a, quote, “crushing response.” Israel is bracing for that response. NPR’s three correspondents there are spread out around the area, including Kat Lonsdorf, who joins us now from Jerusalem. Hi, Kat.

KAT LONSDORF, BYLINE: Hey, Ailsa.

CHANG: OK. So what is it like in Jerusalem right now? Like, what are you hearing from people?

LONSDORF: Well, I mean, it’s pretty much business as usual here. You know, the hotel we’re staying at, which is in central Jerusalem – it’s pretty full. People are in the restaurants. And today the pool was packed, although I will say that the maintenance staff here were hanging up signs in all the hallways pointing to the nearest shelter, so it wasn’t exactly an ordinary day. We took a walk around the neighborhood, and people were out having coffee, getting dinner, including Hani Zakin, who was out shopping with her young son.

HANI ZAKIN: (Speaking Hebrew).

LONSDORF: She told me, you know, “what needs to happen will happen. And it’s a very, very bad situation, but we have to go on living.” She says she was here in Jerusalem back in April, when Iran sent hundreds of missiles and drones at Israel in retaliation for a strike on its consulate in Damascus. Israel shot most of those down, many of them over here in Jerusalem. And there wasn’t really much damage at all. She says that gave her a sense of security, especially going into this uncertain time. But she also acknowledged that, here in Jerusalem, it’s generally more calm, unlike in the north, for example, where there are a lot of sirens and rockets every day.

CHANG: Yeah. Let’s talk about that. I mean, we have teams spread out throughout Israel.

LONSDORF: Yeah.

CHANG: What is the sense outside of Jerusalem?

LONSDORF: Well, like Hani Zakin pointed out, in the north, it’s different. That area has been bombarded constantly with rockets from Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, and Israel has been fighting back. You know, our colleague Hadeel Al-Shalchi is in Haifa in the north, and the streets there are pretty empty, she says. She talked with the municipality there, where they’re preparing for the worst, stockpiling shelters with food, water, generators. She said that people there were a little worried but also generally calm. They said that they’re pretty used to this. You know, there’s the same sense that whatever will be will be, and there’s not much we can do about it.

CHANG: Well, what do we know about how the Israeli government is preparing at this point?

LONSDORF: Yeah. So today Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened Israel’s security chiefs to discuss the situation. He’s been having nearly daily security meetings for the past week. The Israeli military has said time and time again for months now that they are fully prepared for any situation, and while the intention is not to escalate the conflict, they are prepared for that as well. And more broadly, the U.S. is moving fighter jets and warships to this region as backup. Remember; the U.S. helped Israel shoot down many of those missiles and drones that Iran launched back in April, and many of those were in Jordanian airspace, which is a strong U.S. ally. So today President Biden spoke on the phone to Jordanian King Abdullah, and they both urged the importance of de-escalation and calm.

CHANG: Well, all the rhetoric around the Iranian retaliation makes it seem imminent. Is there any idea of what to expect?

LONSDORF: Well, we have some clues. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told his counterparts at the G-7 yesterday that the attack could start as early as today, which is one of the reasons we’re all bracing over here. And Israeli intelligence officials have told NPR they expect the attack will focus mainly on military targets in Israel. And while they say it may be similar to the attack in April, which lasted a few hours, they are expecting this one to be longer.

CHANG: That is NPR’s Kat Lonsdorf in Jerusalem. Thank you so much, Kat.

LONSDORF: Thank you.

Copyright © 2024 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.


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Riot police clashed with anti-immigration protesters outside of a Holiday Inn Express, which is used to house asylum seekers, in Rotherham, United Kingdom, on Sunday.

Far-right, anti-immigration riots persist across the U.K. after stabbing spree : NPR

Riot police clashed with anti-immigration protesters outside of a Holiday Inn Express, which is used to house asylum seekers, in Rotherham, United Kingdom, on Sunday.

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Over the past few days, the U.K. has been battered by widespread riots led by hundreds of far-right protesters.

The violent rallies began on Tuesday night following a deadly stabbing spree that killed three young girls and wounded several others at a children’s dance and yoga class in northwest England.

The attack has triggered Islamophobic and anti-immigration sentiments in the U.K., leading to hundreds of arrests, dozens of officers injured, and multiple buildings damaged — including a mosque and a hotel known to have housed asylum seekers.

The riots entered its sixth day on Sunday and showed no signs of waning. Here’s what to know:

What triggered the riots

The riots come after a stabbing rampage on July 29 at a Taylor Swift-themed dance and yoga class in Southport, England.

Three girls — Bebe King, 6; Elsie Dot Stancombe, 7; and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, 9 — were killed and 10 more were injured, including eight children and two adults. Police arrested a 17-year-old male at the scene but initially withheld his name because the suspect was under 18.

That’s when false rumors began to spread online, claiming that an asylum-seeker was behind the attack. (The suspect, publicly named by police Thursday as Axel Rudakubana, was born in Wales.)

On Tuesday night, rioters stormed the streets in Southport, targeting a local mosque. In a statement, Southport Mosque said members of its congregation locked themselves inside while individuals hurled petrol bombs and bricks at the building. According to Merseyside Police, 53 officers sustained injuries in clashes with protesters.

Which towns and cities have been affected

Beyond Southport, demonstrations flared up across England, including Manchester, Hartlepool, Liverpool, Bristol and London, as well as Northern Ireland’s capital, Belfast, over the following days.

On Sunday, some 700 rioters surrounded a Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham — which is known to house asylum seekers. Windows were broken and a flaming trash bin was thrown at the building, according to South Yorkshire Police.

Rioters threw bricks, glass bottles and wooden planks at police officers as well as sprayed them with fire extinguishers during the riot in Rotherham, according to local police.

Rioters threw bricks, glass bottles and wooden planks at police officers as well as sprayed them with fire extinguishers during the riot in Rotherham, according to local police.

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In Belfast, a cafe, supermarket and several cars were inflamed following protests on Saturday night, The Irish Times reported.

“People attacked this place, racism against Islam and Muslims, especially the Muslim community,” the supermarket manager told the newspaper.

In Whitehall, near the gates of Downing Street, 111 people were arrested on Wednesday night. Five officers were injured by bottles and other objects that were thrown at them, while some were physically attacked, according to the Metropolitan Police Service.

Protestors held a banner reading

Protestors held a banner reading “Enough is Enough – Stops The Boats” during a demonstration near the entrance to 10 Downing Street in Whitehall on July 31.

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How the U.K. is responding to the protests

On Sunday, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the riots “far-right thuggery,” adding that the riots will not be tolerated.

“This is not protest,” Starmer said on X. “It is organized, violent, thuggery and it has no place on our streets or online.”

Britain’s home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said on X that police forces have her full support in handing down “the strongest possible penalties” on rioters, including prison time and travel bans.

Amid the turmoil, there have also been examples of solidarity and generosity across the U.K.

In Southport, where the riots began, Merseyside Police said residents helped clean up the streets and handed out free food a day after the protest.

Food and snacks are offered to police officers by local residents as they stand on a police line while far-right activists hold a demonstration in Middlesbrough, England on Sunday.

Food and snacks are offered to police officers by local residents as they stand on a police line while far-right activists hold a demonstration in Middlesbrough, England on Sunday.

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And over the past week, several landmarks in England — including Downing Street — lit up in a pink hue to show their ongoing support for the families and Southport community after the stabbing attack.




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American sprinter Noah Lyles celebrates after winning the gold medal in in the men's 100-meters final at the Paris Olympics on Sunday in Saint-Denis.

Noah Lyles wins 1st Olympic gold in 100m for Team USA : NPR

American sprinter Noah Lyles celebrates after winning the gold medal in in the men’s 100-meters final at the Paris Olympics on Sunday in Saint-Denis, France.

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NPR is in Paris for the 2024 Summer Olympics. For more of our coverage from the games head to our latest updates.

SAINT-DENIS, France — Noah Lyles has been claiming to be “the fastest man alive” since becoming the reigning world champion in the 100-meter race last year.

After Sunday night’s race, the American can now claim that title without contest.

Lyles ran 9.79 seconds, a personal best, in the Sunday night competition at Stade de France, to claim his first Olympic gold.

Ahead of start time, Lyles, known for his dramatics and showmanship, came onto the track with arms raised to whip up the crowd, finishing his pre-race show by darting up and down about a quarter of the 100-meter distance he was about to run.

Once the shot fired, the American got a classically sluggish start but accelerated enough to beat Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson, who — before tonight — was the fastest man this year. He also posted 9.79, prompting a nail-biting few moments as everyone in the stadium waited for the photo finish results to develop.

Lyles crosses the finish line ahead of Jamaica's Kishane Thompson in the men's 100m final on Sunday night at Stade de France in Saint-Denis, north of Paris.

Lyles crosses the finish line ahead of Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson in the men’s 100m final on Sunday night at Stade de France in Saint-Denis, north of Paris.

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Andrej Isakovic/AFP via Getty Images

Computers show Lyles leaned forward to cross the line five-thousandths of a second faster than Thompson.

Before the final results posted, Lyles told reporters he thought it was Thompson who finished first, not him.

“I was like, oh man I’m really gonna have to swallow my pride, which I don’t have a problem doing. Respect deserves respect, and everybody in the field to be honest came out knowing that they could win this race.”

Fred Kerley of the U.S. came in third place .02 seconds later to win bronze.

Lyles’ victory in the 100m is the first U.S. gold in the Olympic event since Justin Gatlin won in 2004.

As for Thompson, he’ll be the first Jamaican to make it to the podium since Usain Bolt’s Olympic reign ended with the Rio de Janeiro Games in 2016.

“This is the closest medal,” Thompson said after the race. “I couldn’t see him, but I thought he was seeing me. He said, ‘Hey Kishane I thought you got it,’ and I said, ‘I am not sure.’ “

In the semifinal, fellow Jamaican Oblique Seville ran a personal best 9.81, finishing ahead of Lyles by .02 after the American had another rough start.

Lyles’ celebrity rose after last month’s release of the Netflix docuseries Sprint, which follows several of the fastest runners currently at the Paris Games in their quest for Olympic gold.

Lyles is the reigning world champion in the 100m and the 200m. It’s also why the showman already liked to call himself the “fastest man alive.” He also won the bronze in the 200-meter race at the Tokyo Olympics three years ago.

Ultimately, Lyles is chasing Bolt’s world record in both. Bolt’s 100-meter record is 9.58 seconds.

Lyles is not known for his start out of the blocks. In fact, an official timing analysis of the final showed that for the first 40 meters of Sunday’s gold-medal race, he was in last place.

It’s why the 200-meter is his better event. He’ll have a chance to prove that on Thursday night.

If he does win, Lyles would be the first male sprinter to achieve the Olympic sprint double since Bolt did it at Rio in 2016.

At a post-race press conference, Lyles was asked to look in to the future.

He said sprinting greats should be seen at the same level as basketball superstars — and have their own big sponsorships. He says that he even wants to have his own sneaker line.


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Algeria's Kaylia Nemour won gold in the women's gymnastics uneven bars final Sunday at the Paris Olympics. It was the first ever medal for an African country in gymnastics at an Olympics. China's Qiu Qiyuan took silver and USA's Suni Lee won bronze.

Algeria’s Kaylia Nemour uneven bars gold. Suni Lee the bronze. : NPR

Algeria’s Kaylia Nemour won gold in the women’s gymnastics uneven bars final Sunday at the Paris Olympics. It was the first ever gymnastics medal for an African country at an Olympics. China’s Qiu Qiyuan took silver and USA’s Suni Lee won bronze.

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NPR is in Paris for the 2024 Summer Olympics. For more of our coverage from the games head to our latest updates.

PARIS — The U.S. gymnast Suni Lee has won the bronze medal in the Olympic uneven bars final, her third medal of the 2024 Games and a remarkable cap to her return to gymnastics after a sudden onset of kidney disease last year had threatened to end her career.

In Sunday’s competition at Bercy Arena in Paris, Lee finished behind the talented 17-year-old Kaylia Nemour of Algeria, whose score of 15.7 won her the gold. Qiu Qiyuan, also 17, of China scored 15.5 to win silver.

For Nemour who was born and raised in France, the gold is extra meaningful. She began representing Algeria last year after the French Gymnastics Federation did not clear her to resume competition following knee surgery in 2021. This title is a first for Algeria and any African gymnast at the Olympic Games.

Uneven bars are Lee’s strongest event. Her score of 14.8 was her second-highest score on the bars in this Olympics, just behind her tally in the individual all-around event, in which she also won bronze.

The 21-year-old Lee performed last. After seeing her competitors’ high scores, she chose not to add difficulty to the routines she’d performed last week, which could have given her a chance at a gold or silver. After landing her routine, she said she was thrilled.

“It feels amazing to have it over with, honestly. I was so nervous watching everyone,” Lee said afterward. “I got to watch everyone and it put the pressure on me a little bit. But I’m really happy that it did, because I feel like I did everything that I came to do.”

After winning a surprise gold medal in the individual all-around at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, Lee had set her focus on returning to the Olympics here in Paris.

But those plans seemed to be derailed early last year, when two serious kidney conditions forced her to retire early from her college gymnastics career. The illness caused rapid weight gain and swelling so intense that she found it difficult to bend her joints or grip the uneven bars. Her doctors were, at first, stumped about the cause. At times, she believed she would never compete again.

The USA's Sunisa Lee celebrates winning the bronze medal at the end of the women's uneven bars final Sunday. It was her third medal of the Games and sixth Olympic medal overall.

The USA’s Sunisa Lee celebrates winning the bronze medal at the end of the women’s uneven bars final Sunday. It was her third medal of the Games and sixth Olympic medal overall.

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Lionel Bonaventure/AFP via Getty Images

“I’m so, so glad that I never gave up, because there were so many times where I thought about quitting and walking away from the sport because I didn’t think that I would ever get to this point,” she said in June after qualifying for the U.S. Olympic team.

Sunday’s bronze is Lee’s third and final medal of the 2024 Games after she won bronze in the individual all-around final and helped the U.S. win a gold in the team event.

“She had everything to lose coming back. There was nothing really for her to prove — except for to herself,” her coach Jess Graba said Sunday.


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The U.S. gymnast Stephen Nedoroscik won the bronze medal in Saturday's pommel horse final at the Olympic Games in Paris.

Stephen Nedoroscik, the ‘Pommel Horse Guy’ who charmed the internet, wins bronze : NPR

The U.S. gymnast Stephen Nedoroscik won the bronze medal in Saturday’s pommel horse final at the Olympic Games in Paris.

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NPR is in Paris for the 2024 Summer Olympics. For more of our coverage from the Games, head to our latest updates.

PARIS — For Stephen Nedoroscik, it’s official: Solving his Rubik’s cube in under 10 seconds the morning before he competes in the Olympic Games has now gone two-for-two as an omen of a medal to come. 

You may know Nedoroscik as simply “Pommel Horse Guy,” if you are one of the many Americans he dazzled with his Clark Kent-style take-off-the-glasses-and-save-the-day heroics in the men’s gymnastics team finals earlier this week, in which his pommel horse routine clinched a historic medal for the U.S. 

On the morning of the team final, he’d solved a Rubik’s cube in under ten seconds, declaring it a “good omen” in a post to his Instagram. 

On Saturday, Nedoroscik did it again. “Good omen pt. 2,” he wrote — then seven hours later, he won the bronze medal in the Olympic Games pommel horse final in Paris. 

The Rubik’s cube is a way of meditating and filling time on long competition days, he said. He used to worry that a quick solve was a foreboding sign, a warning that a poor performance would soon follow. “In the past, I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is going to end up being the best thing I do today.’ So it would kind of freak me out,” he said. 

That changed this week. “But after I solved it under 10 seconds before team finals, solving it again under 10 seconds today, I was like, ‘All right, we got this,'” he said, laughing at a press conference afterward. 

On Saturday, at Paris’s Bercy Arena, Nedoroscik was one of eight men competing for the gold in this niche apparatus that is so often a weakness for other strong all-around gymnasts. 

Before he began, he removed the glasses that endeared him to so many, and he hooked them over the rim of the chalk bowl. Then came his routine, some 40 seconds of mesmerizing swings of his legs in circles around the horse, with one-handed twirls on the handles and walks up and down the apparatus.

During the qualification round last weekend, Nedoroscik had tied for highest score, lifting hopes of a gold medal in the final.

But some competitors performed more challenging routines on Saturday, including Ireland’s Rhys McClenaghan, who won the event at last year’s World Championships and again took the gold on Saturday, with a score of 15.533. Nariman Kurbanov of Kazakhstan won silver.

Nedoroscik's bronze on Saturday was his second medal of these Olympics after helping the U.S. men's gymnastics team win bronze during the team all-around final earlier in the week.

Nedoroscik’s bronze on Saturday was his second medal of these Olympics after helping the U.S. men’s gymnastics team win bronze during the team all-around final earlier in the week.

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Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images

In the end, Nedoroscik’s score of 15.3 won him bronze. Nedoroscik was the only American male gymnast to qualify for an apparatus final.

In the lineup of eight, Nedoroscik went fifth, after McClenaghan. Nedoroscik chose not to watch any competitors or look at any scores before his turn. 

Instead, he said, he decided to perform his usual routine, no matter the circumstances, rather than switch to a more difficult routine. “I played around with upgrades yesterday, and it just didn’t feel like it was going that well,” Nedoroscik said, adding that he has been dealing with stress injuries. 

That meant his chances of eclipsing McClenaghan’s high score were slim. 

“I really didn’t know what he scored, and I didn’t know what I had to get,” Nedoroscik said. “But landing on the ground and seeing his absolutely huge score, I was like, ‘I don’t think I’ve done enough, but wow, that is amazing for Rhys.'”

Afterward, McClenaghan pulled Nedoroscik in for a hug. “I was nervous watching you, because you can do any routine,” McClenaghan said at the press conference, turning to face Nedoroscik. “He can do huge difficulty and pull it off when it matters.” 

Nedoroscik, a pommel horse specialist, was selected to the U.S. men’s gymnastics team to bolster what officials viewed as a relative weakness for the rest of the squad.

The attention he’s drawn over the past week for his performances has been both fun and distracting, he said. 

“I’ve just been consistently on top of the world for the past week now,” Nedoroscik said. “I literally had to go and turn off my notifications yesterday because I needed to be able to lock in for this competition.” 

In the team final, the U.S. had been assigned to the pommel horse for its very last rotation. And Nedoroscik went last — meaning it was his routine that clinched the bronze for the U.S., the first team medal the country had won in 16 years.

But until then, he had to wait as his teammates performed on the other five events; in its broadcast, NBC even included a countdown timer, showing the hour-and-then-some that Nedoroscik had sit on the sidelines.

When he landed his routine, his teammates burst into joyous cheers and lifted him onto their shoulders. “It was just the greatest moment of my life, I think, and I am so happy to have been there,” Nedoroscik said.


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The NFL logo is displayed on the field in Charlotte, N.C., on Nov. 4, 2018. The judge who presided in a class-action lawsuit filed by “Sunday Ticket” subscribers against the NFL said Thursday that the jury did not follow his instructions in determining damages.

U.S. judge overturns $4.7 billion ‘Sunday Ticket’ judgment against the NFL : NPR

The NFL logo is displayed on the field in Charlotte, N.C., on Nov. 4, 2018. The judge who presided in a class-action lawsuit filed by “Sunday Ticket” subscribers against the NFL said Thursday that the jury did not follow his instructions in determining damages.

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LOS ANGELES — A federal judge overturned a jury’s $4.7 billion verdict in the class-action lawsuit filed by “Sunday Ticket” subscribers against the NFL and has granted judgment to the NFL.

U.S. District Judge Philip Gutierrez ruled Thursday that the testimony of two witnesses for the subscribers had flawed methodologies and should have been excluded.

“Without the testimonies of Dr. (Daniel) Rascher and Dr. (John) Zona, no reasonable jury could have found class-wide injury or damages,” Gutierrez wrote at the end of his 16-page ruling.

On June 27 the jury awarded $4.7 billion in damages to residential and commercial subscribers after it ruled the NFL violated antitrust laws in distributing out-of-market Sunday afternoon games on a premium subscription service.

The lawsuit covered 2.4 million residential subscribers and 48,000 businesses in the United States who paid for the package on DirecTV of out-of-market games from the 2011 through 2022 seasons.

“We are grateful for today’s ruling in the Sunday Ticket class action lawsuit,” the NFL said in a statement. “We believe that the NFL’s media distribution model provides our fans with an array of options to follow the game they love, including local broadcasts of every single game on free over-the-air television. We thank Judge Gutierrez for his time and attention to this case and look forward to an exciting 2024 NFL season.”

Calls and emails to the attorneys representing “Sunday Ticket” subscribers were not returned.

The jury of five men and three women found the NFL liable for $4,610,331,671.74 in damages to the residential class (home subscribers) and $96,928,272.90 in damages to the commercial class (business subscribers).

Because damages can be tripled under federal antitrust laws, the NFL could have been liable for $14,121,779,833.92.

Gutierrez did say in his decision that if he did not rule for the NFL as a matter of law, he would have vacated the jury’s damages verdict and conditionally grant a new trial “based on the jury’s irrational damages award.”

Rascher’s models were variations of a college football model. Rascher, an economist at the University of San Francisco, said during his testimony that “they figured it out in college sports, (so) they would certainly figure it out at the NFL.”

Gutierrez said Rascher’s testimony “was not the product of sound economic methodology” and that he needed to explain how out-of-market telecasts would have been available on cable and satellite without an additional subscription.

Gutierrez also found flaws in Zona’s “multiple distributor” models because it predicted consumers would have paid more if another service besides DirecTV offered “Sunday Ticket” and there was an unsupported assumption that another distributor — either cable, satellite or streaming — would have been available.

“Without knowing what “direct-to-consumer” meant, it is impossible to determine if it would have been economically rational for consumers to purchase ”Sunday Ticket” from an alternative distributor at a higher price,” Gutierrez said. “And, that definition was necessary for determining whether a viable alternative distributor even existed during the class period. Without that information, the Court cannot determine whether the but-for worlds without exclusivity were modeled reliably.

The jury’s amount also did not conform to Rascher’s model ($7.01 billion) by Daniel Rascher, or the model ($3.48 billion) by Zona, who was an expert witness in the case.

Instead, the jury used the 2021 list price of $293.96 and subtracted $102.74, the average price actually paid by residential Sunday Ticket subscribers. The jury then used $191.26, which it considered as the “overcharge,” and multiplied that by the number of subscribers to come up with the damages amount.

Gutierrez said the jury did not follow his instructions and “instead relied on inputs not tied to the record to create its own ‘overcharge.’”

It is not the first time the NFL has won a judgment as matter of law in this case, which has been going on since 2015.

In 2017, U.S. District Judge Beverly Reid O’Connell dismissed the lawsuit and ruled for the NFL because she said “Sunday Ticket” did not reduce output of NFL games and that even though DirecTV might have charged inflated prices, that did not “on its own, constitute harm to competition” because it had to negotiate with the NFL to carry the package.

Two years later, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated the case.

It is likely the plaintiffs will again appeal to the 9th Circuit.


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Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich stands in a glass cage in a courtroom in Yekaterinburg, Russia, Wed., June 26, 2024.

Evan Gershkovich and Paul Whelan freed in Russia prisoner swap : NPR

Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich stands in a glass cage in a courtroom in Yekaterinburg, Russia, June 26.

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In one of the largest prisoner swaps between the United States, its allies and Russia since the end of the Cold War, Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan are among more than a dozen prisoners released by Russia in exchange for Russian prisoners held by the United States and countries throughout Europe, U.S. officials said Thursday.

In all, under the deal, 16 political prisoners, journalists and others, including five Germans, are being exchanged for eight Russians jailed in the U.S., Germany, Norway, Slovenia and Poland. Among the Russians is Vadim Krasikov, a convicted Russian state assassin in German custody, as well as three other Russians in U.S. custody.

President Biden said the swap deal was “a feat of diplomacy” and thanked allies who worked with the United States on the deal. “This is a powerful example of why it’s vital to have friends in this world whom you can trust and depend on,” he said in a statement.

“Not since the Cold War has there been a similar number of individuals exchanged in this way,” said U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan, adding the exchange was the “culmination of many rounds of complex painstaking negotiations over many, many months.” Later on Thursday, Sullivan said President Biden would seek to build on the success to try to free Marc Fogel, a U.S. citizen still held in Russia, and other Americans held in Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Those returning to the U.S. from Russia include Gershkovich, Whelan, Russian-American journalist Alsu Kurmasheva, who works for U.S.-funded Radio Free Europe, and Russian journalist and dissident Vladimir Kara-Murza, a U.S. permanent resident.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken expressed appreciation to the Turkish government for “providing a location for the safe return of these individuals to the United States and Germany.”

The Turkish government said in a statement that it had played a key role and “conducted the most extensive prisoner exchange operation of recent times in Ankara,” involving not only Whelan and Gershkovich, but also Rico Krieger, whom it identified as a German mercenary imprisoned in Belarus; Russian dissident Ilya Yashin; and Vadim Krasikov, whom it identified as a colonel in the FSB, Russia’s internal security service.

The statement said the operation was conducted by MIT, the Turkish intelligence service.

Gershkovich was arrested in Moscow in March 2023 and became the first U.S. journalist since the Cold War to be charged with espionage. Last month, a Russian court sentenced him to 16 years in prison, after he was accused by the Russian prosecutor of working with the CIA to collect information on a Russian arms company. Gershkovich, his employer and the U.S. government strenuously denied the allegations, and the U.S. considered Gershkovich wrongfully detained.

In a statement, Wall Street Journal editor in chief Emma Tucker said, “We can finally say, in unison, ‘Welcome home, Evan.’”

Whelan, a Marine Corps veteran who holds U.S., British, Irish and Canadian citizenship, was arrested in Russia in December 2018 on charges of espionage he strongly denied. On June 15, 2020, a Moscow court sentenced Whelan to 16 years in prison.

In a statement on Thursday, his family said: “Paul was held hostage for 2,043 days. His case was that of an American in peril, held by the Russian Federation as part of their blighted initiative to use humans as pawns to extract concessions … While Paul was wrongfully imprisoned in Russia, he lost his home. He lost his job. We are unsure how someone overcomes these losses and rejoins society after being a hostage. We are grateful for everyone’s efforts to help Paul while he was away. We hope you will continue to help him by providing Paul the space and privacy he needs as he rebuilds his life. It is Paul’s story to tell and he will tell it when he is able.”

Britain’s Foreign Secretary David Lammy welcomed the release of Whelan and Kara-Murza, both of whom are British nationals. Mr Kara-Murza is a dedicated opponent of Putin’s regime,” Lammy said in a statement. “He should never have been in prison in the first place: the Russian authorities imprisoned him in life-threatening conditions because he courageously told the truth about the war in Ukraine.”

Stephen Capus, the president and CEO of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Alsu Kurmasheva’s employer, said in a statement: “Alsu was targeted because she was an American journalist who was simply trying to take care of a family member inside Russia. She did nothing wrong and certainly did not deserve the unjust treatment and forced separation from her loving family members and colleagues. Alsu’s release makes us even more determined to secure the freedom of three other RFE/RL journalists, cruelly imprisoned in Belarus and Russian-occupied Crimea. We will not rest until all our unjustly detained journalists are home safe. Journalism is not a crime.”

Vice President Kamala Harris was involved in some of the behind-the-scenes international diplomatic talks to reach the hostage release deal, a White House official told NPR. Harris met with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in February on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference to try to advance negotiations, the official said. Harris raised the issue of Vadim Krasikov, who had been convicted in Germany — a prisoner viewed as critical to making a swap for American prisoners. Also in Munich, Harris met with Slovenia’s Prime Minister Robert Golob and raised the issue of two Russian nationals being held in a Slovenian prison.

President Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan said that the president spoke to the freed prisoners while they were on the tarmac in Ankara, where they were waiting on Thursday to board their flight back. He said both Biden and Vice President Harris would be present at Joint Base Andrews Thursday night, when a plane is due to land with Whelan, Gershkovich and Kurmasheva.

NPR’s Deepa Shivaram contributed to this report.

This is a breaking news story and will be updated.


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