WA man goes for gold in Paris Paralympics 2024

The bicycle is a perfect synthesis between the human body and machine — they need each other to go faster. Travis Gaertner and his bike go faster than almost everyone in the world.

“You just try to make the bike as an extension of your body. It feels like you’re going out there and your body is complete,” said Gaertner. “It’s just a feeling of freedom.”

Gaertner has his eyes on the prize: a medal at the 2024 Paris Paralympic Games.

“Roughly speaking, for the time trial and the road race, which are two big events, I’m probably about sixth in the world, if you think about my success over the past couple years,” said Gaertner. “So I’m within striking distance of a podium, and that’s what I’m focused on.”

That goal is really not so far from reach.

“Naturally, a lot of us want to hit the easy button in life. And I’ve never really had that button,” said Gaertner.

Travis Gaertner (File / FOX 13)

That is not just from balancing daily five-hour training routines, family time, and a corporate consulting career. Part of not having that ‘easy button,’ was always out of his hands.

“I’ve always liked to be mobile and fast, especially being born without my legs, I had to figure out from Day 1 how to adapt so I could enjoy life that way. So I could be out there moving around with the kids and enjoying life,” said Gaertner.

Gaertner was born with no left leg and half of his right.

“When people see me in my wheelchair without legs, they ask ‘How can I help this person fix this situation?’ And I’ve had to sit back and say to them, ‘No, there’s nothing to fix here. This is the way the Lord designed me, and he did that with a purpose and for a reason, so there’s no healing I desire, and he’s given me a lot of gifts in life, and I’m just there trying to fulfill the best I can with those gifts.’”

He’s already turned those gifts into gold twice.

Gaertner won the Paralympic wheelchair basketball event for team Canada in 2000 and 2004 in Sydney, then Athens. But he’s called the U.S. home for decades, and switched gears to hand cycling, an individual sport, after becoming a father. And he’s chasing more gold in Paris.

“A third medal 24 years later would just feel like proving to the world you don’t have to listen to what people say you can and can’t do,” said Gaertner.

When doubters speak, Gaertner chooses to be a terrible listener. When people see him training, on his 50–70 mile long rides, they often see him on lightly trafficked roads on the outskirts of Enumclaw, going 27 miles an hour, inches from the ground.

Travis Gaertner (File / FOX 13)

He has to tune that noise out, too.

“You get very mixed reactions. Some folks will thumbs up, phones out, ‘Let’s videotape this guy, cheer for this guy.’ Others will say, ‘That is a death trap what are you doing?’ Because you’re so low to the ground it’s hard to see safety precautions that I take, but when people first see that, they think that I’m crazy,” said Gaertner.

If only they knew the man close to the ground had a chance to win three different Paralympic gold medals for team USA in Paris this week. With three races in four days, Gaertner refuses to hold anything back.

“I’m thinking I’m going to go out on the first race and be a little silly, I’m going to send it right off the bat, and I’m just going to tell myself halfway through ‘Just keep going.’ It’s going to be a bigger risk than I’ve ever taken before to close that gap from third, second or first. I’m just going to push as hard as I possibly can and see what happens,” said Gaertner.

As the Paralympics grow in popularity, his purpose has evolved beyond bringing home medals.

“We’re on that stage and that’s really important, because a lot of times, you see someone who is disabled, and you don’t understand what they really can do. I can get up on a ladder and renovate my house and that’s what I do,” said Gaertner. “It’s an education to the public about what we can and can’t do.”

Gaertner organized an online fundraiser to support his 2024 Paralympic dreams, which has raised nearly $50,000.

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Colin Kaepernick wants to play flag football at 2028 Olympics – NBC 6 South Florida

Colin Kaepernick still wants to play football in the NFL…and in the Olympics?

The former San Francisco 49ers quarterback, who last played in the NFL in 2016, was asked about the possibility of playing flag football at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

“Hopefully we’ll be out there,” Kaepernick told Sky Sports. “We’re gonna work on some things, see if we can make it in there. But we’d love to be out there.”

The non-contact sport, in which a stop is made by ripping off one of the flags attached to a belt on a ball carrier’s waist, will make its Olympic debut in 2028. Some NFL players have already expressed interest in playing, and the league reportedly is encouraging active players to compete.

The 36-year-old Kaepernick has not played in the NFL since parting ways with the 49ers in 2016 after he began kneeling during the playing of the national anthem in protest of racial injustice.

“We’re still training, still pushing,” he told Sky Sports. “So, hopefully. We just gotta get one of these team owners to open up.”

Kaepernick, drafted by San Francisco in the second round of the 2011 draft, spent his entire six-year NFL career with the 49ers. He led the 49ers to Super Bowl XLVII, where they lost to the Baltimore Ravens by a score of 34-31. 

Kaepernick has a 28-30 career record in the regular season with 12,271 passing yards, 72 passing touchdowns, 30 interceptions, a 59.8 completion percentage and 13 rushing touchdowns.

The 49ers, in Kaepernick’s final season with the team in 2016, went just 1-10 in his starts.

He has been unable to garner much interest around the league since, despite some high-profile workouts and open auditions.

He met with the Seattle Seahawks in 2017 and worked out for the Las Vegas Raiders in 2022, but both teams declined to sign him. Kaepernick wrote a letter to the New York Jets last season requesting to join the practice squad after their recently-acquired quarterback Aaron Rodgers suffered a season-ending Achilles injury on the team’s first offensive possession.

“I mean, it’s something I’ve trained my whole life for,” Kaepernick told Sky Sports when asked what it would mean to return to the NFL. “So, to be able to step back on the field, I think that would be a major moment, a major accomplishment for me. Also, I think it’s something that I can bring a lot to a team and help them win a championship.” 


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Five circles in Olympics colors: blue, gold, black, green, red.

Brittney Griner grateful to bring home Olympic gold for U.S.

Brittney Griner composed herself in the restroom. All she needed was a moment before she was ready to celebrate.

Then the opening notes of “The Star-Spangled Banner” played. Tears streamed down Griner’s face as she stood on top of the medal stand with her third Olympic gold medal around her neck.

2024 Paris Summer Olympic Games

“This gold medal is going to hold a special place amongst the two others I was fortunate to win,” Griner said.

In her first international tournament since returning from a nearly 10-month detention in Russia, Griner helped the United States to a historic eighth consecutive Olympic gold medal. After being released through a prisoner swap, receiving letters from fans worldwide and getting the opportunity to return to basketball, Griner had a feeling her eyes would start to water a little bit on the podium if the United States won. But the depth of emotion she felt as she wiped tears from her eyes after the anthem seemed to surprise even her.

“My country fought for me to get back and I was able to bring home gold for my country,” Griner said. “There’s just no greater feeling being here on the highest stage that you can be on.”

American Brittney Griner wipes a tear after hearing the national anthem

American Brittney Griner wipes a tear after hearing the national anthem following the United States’ Olympic gold-medal win at Bercy Arena Sunday.

(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

Griner averaged 7.3 points and 4.3 rebounds off the bench during the Olympics. She scored four points in the final that came down to the final shot as the United States survived for a one-point victory over France. No matter how much she played throughout the tournament, Griner was energetic and engaged with her teammates, encouraging them on the sideline in timeouts and hyping them up on the court.

“When you think of someone that’s a warrior, that’s a trooper, that’s going to be there no matter what and is going to be consistent and a true professional, it’s BG,” Olympic most valuable player A’ja Wilson said. “She showed that tonight. She shows that always.”

Griner has made her reintegration to everyday life look seamless. She returned in December 2022 and appeared at major events, including the Met Gala and the Super Bowl. She was back on the court for the beginning of the 2023 WNBA season and played in 31 games while averaging 17.5 points and 6.3 rebounds. She published a book detailing her experience in the penal colony where she worked making military uniforms.

But U.S. head coach Cheryl Reeve knew she needed to keep checking on Griner. Griner was supposed to participate in the team’s Olympic qualifier games in Belgium in February, but she “maybe just needed a little more time,” Reeve said.

“More than what she thought.”

Boarding the international flight was a big moment for Griner, longtime teammate Diana Taurasi said. The first train ride, Griner said, was difficult. The last train she rode overseas was a prison train.

“When you see BG around the team, her outward [looks like] she’s OK,” Reeve said. “You know that inside, there’s a lot going on there, but she always presents as her very best version of herself despite all that she’s been through. And she is thankful to be here.

Reeve repeated it for emphasis: “She is so thankful to be here.”

Griner credits therapy for helping her get back onto the court. She praised her teammates for support throughout the Olympics in France, which began in Lille, a city near the northern French border near Belgium, and ended in Paris where the team played three knockout rounds.

After surviving the toughest test of them all — a physical France team fueled by its home crowd — Griner hugged her wife, Cherelle. She plans to celebrate the win by taking a photo of the couple’s newborn son with the gold medal. Then Griner will get back to work.

The Phoenix Mercury return from the WNBA Olympic break with back-to-back games on Aug. 16-17.


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The American Olympics tennis team with NBA legend LeBron James during the Opening Ceremony.

Taylor Fritz, Tommy Paul, LeBron James & an Olympics memory for a lifetime | ATP Tour

Player Features

Fritz, Paul, LeBron James & an Olympics memory for a lifetime

Americans competing in the U.S. for first time since Olympics this week in Cincinnati

August 12, 2024

AFP/Getty Images

The American Olympics tennis team with NBA legend LeBron James during the Opening Ceremony.
By ATP Staff

LeBron James is one of the most recognisable people on the planet. If you looked closely at the basketball legend on television during the Opening Ceremony of the Paris Olympics, there were nearby faces familiar to tennis fans, including Taylor Fritz and Tommy Paul.

With WTA star Coco Gauff a co-flagbearer for the United States alongside James, the rest of the tennis team was invited to the front of the American boat, giving them time with James and the rest of the basketball team.

“It was really cool. It was awesome that Coco was a flagbearer, and it was awesome for all of us as well, because of the fact that we did kind of get to experience the opening ceremonies a little bit differently than all the other Americans, because we were up front with the basketball players,” Fritz told ATPTour.com at the Cincinnati Open, where he is the 11th seed. “We were just right in the front, on the boat in the opening ceremonies. It was one of the coolest experiences.”

You May Also Like: Scouting Report: Sinner, Alcaraz, Zverev headline Cincinnati

James, who helped lead the United States to a gold medal in men’s basketball, took a photo with the entire American tennis contingent.

“It was cool. We were just riding the Coco Gauff train. We were only up there because of her, so it was cool seeing her have her moment,” Paul said. “Obviously unreal to be a flagbearer at the Olympics, so that was really cool.”

The ATP tennis players who attended the Opening Ceremony — Fritz, Paul, Christopher Eubanks and Marcos Giron — also rode to the ceremony on the same bus as their country’s basketball team, which was a who’s who of the best players in the world.

“Being on the bus with the U.S. basketball team was really cool, too,” Paul, the 10th seed in Cincinnati, said. “We didn’t talk too much to them. I talked to Jrue Holiday a little bit, and Derrick White, but Bron, we kind of just got a picture with. I think he was talking to Coco most of the time.”



The Official App Of Tennis | Download ATP WTA Live App

Fritz reached the third round in singles and Paul advanced to the quarter-finals, but they did not come home empty handed. The Americans earned bronze in men’s doubles, joining silver medalists Austin Krajicek and Rajeev Ram as tennis medalists from the United States.

With memories for a lifetime in hand, they will turn their attention to their first tournament in the United States since the Olympics, the Cincinnati Open.

Fritz said: “I think before the event even started, before we were able to medal, just that alone made me happy with my decision to go.”


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Paris Bids Adieu as LA Prepares for 2028 Olympics – Advocacy

The 2024 Paris Olympic Games concluded with a spectacular closing ceremony yesterday, marking the end of more than two weeks of memorable events that showcased athletic excellence. As the world bids farewell to Paris, attention now turns to Los Angeles, set to host the Summer Games in 2028.

The LA28 Games will mark Los Angeles’ third time hosting the Olympic Games, previously hosted in 1984 and 1932, and first time hosting the Paralympic Games.

“California is excited to welcome athletes and visitors from around the world for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games,” said California Governor Gavin Newsom. “Los Angeles is home to a wealth of diverse communities that make our state stronger and help shape the innovation that drives our growth and success. The Games are the perfect venue to showcase our rich cultures, state-of-the-art stadiums, world-class travel and tourism attractions and incredible public spaces, while creating a host of new opportunities for Angelenos. We look forward to bringing the global sporting community together in one of the most diverse, innovative, climate-smart and beautiful places on the planet.”

The 2028 Games will feature more than 50 Olympic and Paralympic sports, and more than 800 events across sunny Southern California. More than 80 venues have been confirmed, with events taking place in Carson, Long Beach and City of Los Angeles.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who received the official Olympic flag during yesterday’s Paris Olympics closing ceremony, said a top priority for the LA28 Games is to ensure that the Olympic preparations benefit Angelenos for decades to come.

“We want to make sure that we’re helping small local businesses, that we’re creating local jobs and making lasting environmental and transportation improvements throughout Los Angeles,” Bass said. “We are so excited to create the opportunity for Angelenos that lasts for decades, for their children and grandchildren to remember that the 2028 Olympics served as a catalyst for their family’s success, and that’s exactly what we plan to do.”

Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games Legacy

The 1984 LA Olympic Games made significant contributions to the evolution of the Olympic Games, demonstrating how effective management, commercial partnerships, and planning could shape the future of the event.

Its financial model became a template for future editions of the Games. Unlike many previous Games, the 1984 LA Olympics were financially successful, generating more than $233 million.

The 1984 Games were also the first time that extensive sponsorships by major corporations were used, leading to significant revenue and setting a precedent for future Olympics.

The Games were notable for their innovative use of television and media coverage, with a high level of production quality that helped push the visibility of the Olympics worldwide.

The Games also marked a turning point for women in sports.

Two exclusively female disciplines—synchronized swimming and rhythmic gymnastics—made their Olympic debuts in Los Angeles 1984, while women competed for the first time in the 3,000m and 400m hurdles, shooting and road cycling.

Furthermore, the inaugural women’s Olympic marathon was a breakthrough moment for female distance running, serving as a springboard to elevate the sport – especially in the United States. It led to the development of a new industry in women’s running apparel and female-only running events.

The increased emphasis on women’s participation led to a record number of female athletes taking part in the 1984 Olympic Summer Games, with 23% of the total participants being female.

As Southern California gears up to host this grand event, the world eagerly awaits to see how Los Angeles will once again shape the future of the Olympics, continuing the tradition of excellence and groundbreaking achievements that began over 40 years ago.

The 2028 Olympic Games opening ceremony is set for July 14, 2028, and the Paralympic Games opening ceremony is scheduled for August 15, 2028.


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How will the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles differ from Paris? – NBC Los Angeles

The Olympics will always have Paris. Next up for the Summer Games: Los Angeles 2028.

The baton was handed from one third-time Olympic host city to another at the closing ceremony Sunday in Paris, and much will be different in four years’ time.

New sports will make their Olympic debuts, picked by organizers in LA who also are bringing back others that left the program more than 100 years ago.

While Paris had the Seine River, LA has the Pacific Ocean and its beaches.

Paris’ unmatched historic buildings gave the city a cinematic look. LA’s streets are a living history of film and television.

Here’s a look at some things that will be different about the next Summer Games.

Which sports will be new at the Los Angeles Olympics?

Flag football, squash and obstacle racing. Yes, “American Ninja Warrior”-style obstacle racing, to replace the horses and pep up modern pentathlon.

Sports that get invited into the Olympics typically are played across the world. In the modern Olympics, however, they also must be wanted by the host city.

Flag football is a good fit for Los Angeles organizers, who last year told IOC members before they voted that it represents “the future and the tip of the spear for American football’s international growth.”

The star-studded Closing Ceremony featured lots of music and stunts from a Hollywood icon.

Squash will join tennis and badminton as racket sports at the Games. Could padel or pickleball one day follow?

Squash lost out in several previous campaigns and, like flag football, now goes Games to Games with no guarantee of staying for the 2032 Brisbane Olympics.

Modern pentathlon has been an Olympics staple since 1912 but often has seemed close to being ousted. Equestrian is being replaced as one of the five disciplines as requested by the IOC after a horse was abused in Tokyo three years ago.

In comes obstacle racing in LA, aiming to make the sport more accessible and relatable.

Gone for a century, back in LA

Lacrosse last was played at the Olympics in 1908, cricket not since 1900.

Both return in 2028 with eager support from Los Angeles organizers and in viewer-friendly short formats; Lacrosse in a six-a-side version, cricket in the aggressive, hard-hitting T20 version that does not require five days per match.

Lacrosse pays respect to the Indigenous roots of the sport: “It is truly authentic to the land we are on,” LA 2028 chairman Casey Wasserman said Saturday.

Cricket has been coveted to connect especially with the more than 1.6 billion people in India and Pakistan.

“They are going to be paying attention to the Olympics like they never have,” Wasserman said. Cricket surely will be kept in 2032 by Brisbane, which is home to one of the sport’s most storied venues.

Some coaches would deserve a medal at the Paris Games because of how they celebrated with their athletes. Here are some frenzied and memorable moments.

Baseball and softball have perhaps the most unusual modern Olympics story: out after the 2008 Beijing Games, back in at Tokyo in 2021, out in Paris, back in LA. Well, Oklahoma City, in softball’s case.

Home to women’s softball in 2028 is Devon Park that stages the Women’s College World Series each year, about 1,300 miles (2,100 kilometers) from the Pacific Ocean.

Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred has said he’s open to allowing Major League Baseball players to participate in the LA Games, but significant challenges remain. Insurance policies for players like Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge, whose contracts are worth hundreds of millions of dollars, may be the biggest sticking point.

Early opening, early closing

The next Summer Games start two weeks earlier than this one, with an opening ceremony on Friday, July 14.

There’s no river in LA to match Paris’ athlete parade on boats on the Seine, though it will use two stadiums instead of one: both SoFi Stadium and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum will be in play.

That plan means flipping the schedule of the modern Summer Games.

Track and field is at the Coliseum — as it was in 1932 and 1984 — and now moves up a week, replacing swimming as the front-loaded anchor sport. That is because So-Fi must be converted into a spectacular temporary venue for swimming with seats for 38,000 fans. Races will move back into the second full week of action.

The July 30 end date in Los Angeles is the first time a northern hemisphere Summer Games will finish so early since the 1924 Olympics closed July 27 in Paris.

Parisians who left the city to avoid the floods of tourists reflect on their decision and share advice with the hosts of the 2028 Olympics: Los Angeles residents.

How will the Los Angeles Olympics look?

The Paris Olympics often looked incredible on screen. Los Angeles practically invented the look of modern cinema and television and is a creative hub of music and fashion.

The message here to LA is consistently: Don’t try to copy Paris.

“Paris is the most beautiful city in the world,” Wasserman said Saturday. “The 2028 Games will be authentically Los Angeles.”

The IOC’s head of Olympic broadcasting, Yiannis Exarchos, said LA “cannot redo a city (Paris) with a history of 500 years. LA speaks about the future, about new frontiers, about technology.”

Road events such as marathons and cycling can show “where a big part of the mythology of the 20th century has been created, because of Hollywood,” Exarchos said in an interview.

“This is where I am more intrigued. I find interesting to see how we can recreate the television geography of LA.”


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Sifan Hassan wins women’s marathon at Paris Olympics

PARIS (AP) — Nobody will ever accuse Sifan Hassan of taking the easy route at the Olympics.

Heading into the last 150 meters of her 10-day Olympics odyssey that spanned three events and 38 miles (62 kilometers), the Netherlands’ runner traded elbows with Tigst Assefa of Ethiopia, and then sprinted by her to win the last track event of the Paris Games.

Hassan added gold to the bronze medals she won in the 5,000 and 10,000 meters.

“I feel like I am dreaming. At the end, I thought, ‘This is just a 100-meter sprint. Come on, Sifan. One more. Just feel it,’” Hassan said. “Every step I challenged myself, and now I am so grateful.”

Hassan raised her hands and yelled as she crossed the line, before wrapping the Dutch flag around her head. Then, taking in the enormity of her win, Hassan plunged her head in her hands and appeared to weep with joy.

The finish had everything: suspense, speed, grit and feistiness, all against the stunning backdrop of a golden dome glittering under the morning sun.

Hassan, an Ethiopia native, finished in an Olympic record time of 2 hours, 22 minutes, 55 seconds. Assefa won silver, three seconds behind, and Kenya’s Hellen Obiri took the bronze.

The Ethiopian team lodged a protest to have Hassan disqualified for obstruction, but it was rejected by the Jury of Appeal. It looked as if Assefa was blocking Hassan before they traded elbows.

Hassan did not attend the post-race news conference, where Assefa said she would have won if Hassan hadn’t impeded her.

“I didn’t expect at that moment it would happen. Maybe at that moment, if she didn’t push me I would have the gold,” Assefa said through a translator. “But anyway, I’m so happy for her that she gets the gold medal.”

Assefa declined to specify if she asked for the protest or if it was the Ethiopian team on its own.

“I can’t say anything, but she is a good athlete,” Assefa replied.

By simply completing the marathon, the 31-year-old Hassan ran more than 38 miles. She now has six Olympic medals. In Tokyo, Hassan won the 5,000 and 10,000 and finished third in the 1,500.

“She has shown the world that she can do everything,” Obiri said. “People say it’s impossible, but she’s done it. So I say ‘Big up’ for her.”

Obiri had tried to up the pace earlier, knowing she couldn’t take Hassan in a sprint.

“She is so strong,” Obiri said. “No way we could break her.”

Breaking from tradition, the women’s marathon was held on the final day of the Olympics instead of the men’s race.

Hassan used the same tactic in the hilly, 26.2-mile course as she does on the oval. She lingered behind the leaders for the bulk of the race before launching a late-race kick that will go down as one of the best the sport has seen.

As Hassan gathered to make her last pass, Assefa tried to block her path. Hassan moved to the inside around a bend.

Assefa tried to squeeze her against the barrier separating the course from the cheering fans. The runners traded elbows, then Hassan took off to victory.

Hassan’s legend started building three years ago at the Tokyo Games when she was tripped up in a heat of the 1,500 but scrambled to her feet to win the race. She then went on to claim the bronze.

She wasn’t as dominant over the past two years, in part because she was storing up for this feat.

After the 5,000 meters last Monday and the 10,000 meters on Friday, Hassan had roughly 35 hours to recover for the marathon.

She entered the Games looking to match Emil Zatopek’s performance from 1952, when the Czech runner swept the 5,000, 10,000 and the marathon at the Helsinki Games.

Hassan fell short, but she left a lasting impression.

“She’s inspired so many people,” said Obiri, a two-time Olympic silver medalist in the 5,000 meters.

Sharon Lokedi of Kenya was fourth on Sunday, and defending champion Peres Jepchirchir, her compatriot, placed 15th.

After 21 miles (almost 34 kilometers), Jepchirchir started falling back. That’s when Hassan and Obiri joined Amane Beriso Shankule and Lokedi at the front.

Shankule dropped off the pace near the end, making it a four-way race for gold, which became three when Lokedi fell back on the approach to the finish opposite the gold-domed Invalides monument, site of French emperor Napoleon’s tomb.

The marathon route traced the footsteps of an historic march that took place during the French Revolution.

The Women’s March on Versailles in 1789 was organized by women in the marketplace of Paris as they protested the high price of bread, leading to their trek from Paris to Versailles.

Starting out from Hôtel de Ville (City Hall), the somewhat hilly route passed through the parks and forests. Runners took in landmarks such as Opéra Garnier and the Louvre museum.

About halfway through, they passed near the regal grounds of the Palace of Versailles — once the home of French royalty — before doubling back toward Paris.

___

AP National Writer Eddie Pells contributed.

___

AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games




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Victor Wembanyama, France reach gold medal game at Paris Olympics

PARIS — Bolstered by an electric home crowd, Victor Wembanyama and France are headed to the gold medal game for the second consecutive Olympics after beating Germany 73-69 in the first of two semifinals Thursday.

France was led by a 17-point effort from Guerschon Yabusele while Isaia Cordinier chipped in 16, none more important than two free throws with seven seconds to play to seal the win

The silver medalists in the Tokyo Games, France now faces the United States for gold after the the Americans survived upset-minded Serbia, 95-91 in Thursday’s other semifinal.

Blood stained the neckline of Wembanyama’s jersey after the game, courtesy of a fresh cut on the left side of his neck. He did plenty of sweating during the game and was holding back tears when it was all over.

Blood, sweat and tears. How fitting.

“In our national anthem, we talk about blood,” Wembanyama said. “We’re willing to spill blood on the court. So, it’s no big deal. If it allows us to win gold, I’m offering. Take all of it.”

Wembanyama — already the NBA Rookie of the Year and a No. 1 draft pick — now has a new accolade — an Olympic medalist. The only question is whether it’ll be gold or silver, something that will be determined Saturday night. The French lost to the U.S. in the final at the Tokyo Games three years ago.

Wembanyama was just a kid then, a 17-year-old who was in the early days of becoming known as an NBA prospect. He’s a bigger kid now, a 7-foot-4 20-year-old who is already considered a national hero — not to mention one in San Antonio, where he’s been tasked with leading the Spurs back to prominence.

“Of course, it’s part of a dream come true,” Wembanyama said. “We can be part of a goal that we set for ourselves months back. We can write history, even more. A once-in-a-lifetime dream.”

His final numbers Thursday, with Spurs coach Gregg Popovich and team president RC Buford looking on: 11 points, seven rebounds on just 4 of 17 shooting. The numbers didn’t look great, but his impact went well beyond what was on the stat sheet.

Midway through the third quarter, Germany guard Dennis Schroder got by Wembanyama on his way to the rim. All Wembanyama had to do was basically turn around at that point; he stuck out his right arm and stopped Schroder’s shot from getting even the tiniest bit airborne.

In the fourth, he got Schroder again — this time, blocking a 3-point try. That led to a 3-pointer by France’s Frank Ntilikina at the other end, the hosts took a 10-point lead and Wembanyama pumped his fist in celebration. When Germany was chipping away late, Wembanyama made an unreal bounce pass through the lane with the shot clock running down to set up Yabusele for a pair of free throws that pushed the lead back to 69-60 with 4:00 left.

Wembanyama’s free throw with 10.9 seconds remaining made it 71-68, Germany never got another shot to tie or take the lead and that was that. France celebrated wildly afterward, for good reason.

“The fans, they made it hard for me not to cry,” Wembanyama said. “I thank them.”

The French will be only the third team to play for Olympic men’s basketball gold on home soil. The U.S. did it at Los Angeles in 1984 and at Atlanta in 1996, winning both times.

The U.S. (with the golds in 1984 and 1996) and the Soviet Union at Moscow in 1980 (bronze) were, until now, the only teams to win a medal of any color in men’s basketball at home; France will join that list Saturday by claiming either gold or silver.

In recent times, most Olympic hosts didn’t even come close to the medals: Japan finished 11th at Tokyo three years ago, Brazil was ninth at Rio de Janeiro in 2016, Britain was ninth at London in 2012, China was eighth at Beijing in 2008, Spain was ninth at Barcelona in 1992 and South Korea was ninth at Seoul in 1988. (The exceptions in those years were the U.S. win in 1996, Australia finishing fourth at Sydney in 2000 and Greece placing fifth at Athens in 2004.)

Of course, those teams didn’t have Wembanyama, who now has a chance to win gold.

“This jersey brings to us a different energy that we can’t find nowhere else,” he said. “It’s something that we all feel as patriots. We love our jersey. We love our country.”

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.


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Tara Davis-Woodhall, of the United States, celebrates after competing in the women's long jump...

USA’s Tara Davis-Woodhall wins gold in women’s long jump

(Gray News) – Tara Davis-Woodhall of the United States won gold in the women’s long jump event Thursday at the Paris Olympics.

Davis-Woodhall won her first Olympic title, and first Olympic medal of any kind, with a jump of 7.10 meters.

Tara Davis-Woodhall, of the United States, celebrates after competing in the women’s long jump final at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Thursday, Aug. 8, 2024, in Saint-Denis, France.(Bernat Armangue | AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

Her fellow teammate, Jasmine Moore, won bronze with a jump of 6.96 meters. Malaika Mihambo of Germany came in second with a jump of 6.98 meters.

According to the Associated Press, Davis-Woodhall is the fourth American woman to win an Olympic gold in women’s long jump.

Tara Davis-Woodhall, of the United States, celebrates after winning the women's long jump...
Tara Davis-Woodhall, of the United States, celebrates after winning the women’s long jump final at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Thursday, Aug. 8, 2024, in Saint-Denis, France.(Petr David Josek | AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

With her gold medal already secured, Davis-Woodhall made sand angels in the pit during her final jump. Afterward, she ran to hug her husband, Paralympian Hunter Woodhall, in the stands.

This is Davis-Woodhall’s second Olympics, having debuted in the Tokyo Olympics.

Considered “America’s Cowgirl” online, she donned her signature cowgirl hat before ringing the bell.


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Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem beats Neeraj Chopra to win Olympic gold in javelin | Paris Olympics 2024 News

Nadeem bags gold with an Olympic record-breaking throw of 92.97m to end Pakistan’s 32-year medal drought at the Games.

Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem has made history by clinching the country’s first-ever track and field medal at the Olympics as he claimed gold in the men’s javelin final in Paris.

The 27-year-old dethroned defending champion Neeraj Chopra of India and broke the Olympic record at the Stade de France on Thursday.

Nadeem threw his arms up in celebration after breaking the Olympic record on his second throw that landed at a stunning 92.97 metres – the best in the world this year.

Chopra, comfortably ahead in qualifiers and favourite to win, looked off his best form. His best of 89.45 metres was also his only valid attempt as he fouled on his five other attempts.

Grenada’s Anderson Peters won bronze with 88.54 metres, a redemptive moment for the two-time world champion after he failed to make it to the final at the Tokyo Games three years ago.

However, the night belonged to the humble man from Mian Channu, a small town in the eastern Punjab province, who came back from a knee injury early this year and made history for his country despite the dilapidated athletics facilities in the cricket-mad nation.

Of Pakistan’s eight previous Olympic medals, six came in men’s hockey and one each in men’s wrestling and boxing.

Nadeem’s achievement also marked the first medal by Pakistan for eight Olympics, with the last medal coming in 1992 as the men’s hockey team won bronze in Barcelona, Spain.

Pakistan ‘so proud’ of Nadeem

Two months before the Olympics, Al Jazeera’s Abid Hussain spent a day with Arshad Nadeem as he prepared for the Games.

Back then, in June, Nadeem told us he felt “strong and fit” for the world event, adding he was “quite hopeful of a strong performance in Paris”.

The world record throw remains with Czechia’s Jan Zelezny, who reached a remarkable 98.48, but the new Olympic record, along with the end of a long wait for his country, drew reaction from far and wide from Nadeem’s compatriots.

Pakistan men’s cricketer Fakhar Zaman said the country was “beaming with pride” in a post on X, while Nadeem’s mentor and former coach, Rasheed Ahmad Saqi, was overwhelmed with emotions after his ward won the gold medal.

“This is God’s miracle and a gift for the entire nation on our independence day next week. I’m just so proud of Arshad,” he told Al Jazeera moments after the gold medal was confirmed.

Saqi claims he was confident that Nadeem would win a medal and had predicted it would be a gold.

“I had this belief that he will break some record. I was certain he will break his own record or Olympic record and that’s what he did.”

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also congratulated Arshad Nadeem on making history for the country.

He posted on X: “You’ve made the whole nation proud.”

Supporters and family members of Pakistani athlete Arshad Nadeem celebrate after his win in the men's javelin throw final of the athletics event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, at Mian Channu in Khanewal District on August 9, 2024. - Pakistan's Arshad Nadeem won the Olympic men's javelin title in Paris on August 8, his country's first individual gold at a Summer Games. (Photo by Shahid Saeed MIRZA / AFP)
Supporters and family members of Pakistani athlete Arshad Nadeem celebrate after his win in the men’s javelin throw final in Mian Channu, [Shahid Saeed Mirza/AFP]
Family members offer sweets to Razya Parveen (L), the mother of Pakistani athlete Arshad Nadeem after his win in the men's javelin throw final of the athletics event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, at Mian Channu in Khanewal District on August 9, 2024. - Pakistan's Arshad Nadeem won the Olympic men's javelin title in Paris on August 8, his country's first individual gold at a Summer Games. (Photo by Shahid Saeed MIRZA / AFP)
Family members offer sweets to Razya Parveen (left), the mother of Pakistani athlete Arshad Nadeem after his win in the men’s javelin throw final in Mian Channu, Pakistan [Shahid Saeed Mirza/AFP]




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