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Tag: 2024 paris olympics

  • Olympic moment of the day: The love story between Rafael Nadal and Paris

    Olympic moment of the day: The love story between Rafael Nadal and Paris

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    Roland Garros, Paris (CNN) — It’s a love affair that began almost 20 years ago and the passion clearly hasn’t fizzled out at all.

    Paris and Rafael Nadal are a match made in heaven. And for a brief spell in the second set of the Olympic men’s singles tennis tournament’s most anticipated match between the Spaniard and his longtime rival Novak Djokovic, it seemed like it might be enough to spur the 14-time French Open champion to a comeback that seemed impossible just minutes before.

    What started out as the most highly-anticipated match of these Olympics quickly threatened to turn into a snoozer. Djokovic wildly outplayed Nadal in the opening set and the beginning of the second, looking unstoppable with a 6-1 first set and going up 4-0 in the second.

    The roars from Court Philippe-Chatrier in support of Nadal winners and the chants of “Rafa! Rafa!” had gone from a roar to a plea. Sweat poured from the King of Clay’s brow in between games and he looked no match for the Serb’s power and speed.

    But when Nadal took the fifth game of the second set, time seemed to suddenly roll back.

    When Djokovic sent the ball into the net, the crowd cheered. Djokovic double faulted in the next game to give Nadal a break point, the crowd roared. And as Nadal took the next two games, Roland Garros exploded in unison as it tried one more time to carry its favorite champion.

    “I always feel like playing at home when I play here,” Nadal said afterward. “It’s so special for me. I enjoyed the fans, and they gave me the advantage at the moment that things started to change a little bit, so I can’t thank enough all the people here who, you know, made me feel so special.”

    It’s a relationship developed over the years and covered in glory. Nadal’s performances on the red Parisian clay are the stuff of legend and he dominated the French Open like no other man in history.

    Over those 19 years of playing at this famous stadium, a relationship has been built between the Spaniard and the Paris crowds who pack the stands. On Monday, Djokovic was cheered.

    But Nadal? He was loved.

    “This, for me, is amazing to have and to have the feeling that I feel very, very well supported and loved. It’s the most important place of my career,” the 22-time grand slam champion said.

    In the end, it wasn’t enough. Djokovic took the final two games of the second set and continued his quest in search of his first gold medal: the one honor his extraordinary career lacks.

    Nadal will still be playing in the Paris Games, teaming with fellow Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz in the doubles competition.

    The Spanish legend is reluctant to say that he’s done playing at Roland Garros or playing against Djokovic. When asked about retirement after the match, he seemed frustrated with the question.

    “Every day? Every day you want me to retire, every day, guys,” Nadal said.

    “You know, I am trying to do my best every single day, you know? … I cannot live every single day with the feeling that it’s going to be or not going to be my last match,” Nadal said.

    “I come here, I try my best, I play my best, and when I decide to stop playing or when I decide to keep going, I will let you know. I don’t know, I just try my best every single day trying to enjoy a thing that I have been enjoying for so much time.

    “I have been suffering a lot of injuries the last two years, so if I feel that I am not competitive enough to keep going or physically I’m not enough ready to keep going, I will stop and I will let you know, you know?”

    A prolonged standing ovation for the Spaniard marked his exit from the court on Monday. It certainly seems that Paris isn’t ready for its romance with Nadal to fade away just yet.

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    CNN

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  • Watch Cal product Ryan Murphy swim to his seventh Olympic medal

    Watch Cal product Ryan Murphy swim to his seventh Olympic medal

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    Former Cal swimmer Ryan Murphy has added another medal to his Olympics collection.

    The three-time Olympian captured his seventh medal Monday with a third place finish in the men’s 100m backstroke in Paris.

    Murphy tapped the wall with a time of 52.39 seconds, .07 seconds behind silver medalist Jiayu Xu of China and .39 seconds behind gold medal winner Thomas Ceccon of Italy.

    Murphy took home three gold medals in Rio and a gold, silver and bronze in Tokyo.

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    Brendan Weber

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  • Live updates: Men’s gymnastics finals, Team USA women’s volleyball looks for gold repeat

    Live updates: Men’s gymnastics finals, Team USA women’s volleyball looks for gold repeat

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    What to Know

    Follow along below for the latest news and features from Paris as Day 3 of the 2024 Olympics unfolds

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    NBC staff

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  • Live updates: Men’s gymnastics finals, women’s volleyball looks for gold repeat

    Live updates: Men’s gymnastics finals, women’s volleyball looks for gold repeat

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    What to Know

    Follow along below for the latest news and features from Paris as Day 3 of the 2024 Olympics unfolds.

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    NBC staff

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  • Live updates: US women’s gymnastics team begins qualification at 2024 Olympics

    Live updates: US women’s gymnastics team begins qualification at 2024 Olympics

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    What to Know

    Follow along below for live updates from Day 2 of the 2024 Paris Olympics:

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    NBC staff

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  • Live updates: US women’s gymnastics team begins qualification at 2024 Olympics

    Live updates: US women’s gymnastics team begins qualification at 2024 Olympics

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    What to Know

    Follow along below for live updates from Day 2 of the 2024 Paris Olympics:

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    NBC staff

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  • Women’s gymnastics at the 2024 Olympics: Full schedule, how to watch, TV and streaming channels

    Women’s gymnastics at the 2024 Olympics: Full schedule, how to watch, TV and streaming channels

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    Simone Biles and the U.S. women’s gymnastics team take center stage Sunday with qualifying at Bercy Arena. Biles is looking to earn her fifth Olympic gold medal and seventh overall. She won two medals in Tokyo despite withdrawing from the all-around to focus on her mental health.

    Competition begins at 9:30 a.m. CEST (3:30 a.m. EST) with Subdivision 1. Biles and Co. are in Subdivision 2, beginning at 11:40 a.m. in Paris. They’ll start on the balance beam.

    Biles will anchor three of four events for the Americans on Sunday: balance beam, floor exercise and vault. She will go next-to-last on uneven bars. Reigning all-around champion Sunisa Lee and Tokyo silver medalist Jordan Chiles also will compete in all four events in qualifying. The top eight teams from qualifying advance to the team final on Tuesday.

    The top 24 individual qualifiers in the all-around will make the finals on Thursday. There’s a limit of two gymnasts per country.

    Biles skipped the Opening Ceremony on Friday to be able to rest and get ready for Sunday’s qualifying.

    When does women’s gymnastics start?

    Women’s gymnastics starts Sunday with qualifying competition on Sunday morning on the East Coast.

    What does the USA compete in women’s gymnastics?

    July 28 – Team Qualifying: Simone Biles and the USA women’s gymnastics team will first compete on Sunday, July 28 in team qualifying events begin at 3:30 a.m. ET. Biles is expected to compete in the 5:40 a.m. ET subdivision.

    The early events will be available on Peacock with the later events that morning available on NBC New York. The event will air again that evening in Primetime on NBC.

    July 30 – Women’s team final: The women’s team final begins at 12:15 p.m. on Tuesday, July 30. You can watch it on NBC and stream every apparatus on Peacock.

    Aug. 1 – Women’s all-around final: The women’s all-around final begins at 12:15 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 1.

    Aug. 3 – Women’s vault final: The women’s vault final begins at 10:20 a.m. on Saturday, Aug. 3 on NBC and Peacock.

    Aug. 4 – Women’s uneven bar final: The women’s uneven bars final begins at 9:00 a.m. on Sunday, Aug 4 on NBC and Peacock.

    Aug. 5 – Women’s balance beam finals: The women’s balance beam finals begins at 6:36 a.m. on Monday, Aug. 5.

    Aug. 5 – Women’s floor exercise finals: The women’s floor exercise final begins at 8:20 a.m. on Monday, Aug. 5.

    Where to watch women’s gymnastics

    Individual and team gymnastics events at the 2024 Olympics will air on NBC New York, USA Network and E!. Streaming will be available on PeacockNBCOlympics.comNBC.com, the NBC Olympics app and the NBC app.

    A new skill to be named after Biles?

    Biles is looking to add to the list of skills named after her in gymnastics’ Code of Points.

    The American superstar submitted an original skill on uneven bars to the International Gymnastics Federation on Friday. If Biles successfully completes it during women’s qualifying on Sunday, the skill will become the sixth to bear her name in the code.

    Biles already has two elements named after her on vault — including the Yurchenko double pike — and floor exercise, and one on balance beam. She is looking to become the only active gymnast to have an eponymous skill on all four events.

    The skill Biles submitted requires her to do a forward circle around the lower bar before turning a handstand into a 540-degree pirouette. USA Gymnastics teased the move on X on Friday.

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    NBC New York Staff and The Associated Press

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  • Live updates: Olympics kick off with USMNT, diving, rugby

    Live updates: Olympics kick off with USMNT, diving, rugby

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    What to Know

    With the Opening Ceremony in the books, the first official day of the 2024 Olympics is here. Follow along for live updates:

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    NBC Staff

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  • Live updates: Olympics kick off with USMNT, diving, rugby

    Live updates: Olympics kick off with USMNT, diving, rugby

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    What to Know

    With the Opening Ceremony in the books, the first official day of the 2024 Olympics is here. Follow along for live updates:

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    NBC Staff

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  • Olympics Opening Ceremony highlights being broadcast on Las Vegas Sphere

    Olympics Opening Ceremony highlights being broadcast on Las Vegas Sphere

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    The Las Vegas Sphere is getting in on the Olympic action.

    The eye-popping Vegas attraction is set to project highlights of the Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony across the Sphere’s exterior — officially called the Exosphere.

    Segments of the splashy ceremony will be simulcast between 8 and 11 p.m. during West Coast primetime coverage, NBCUniversal announced Friday.

    The collaboration is said to be the first time the sphere has broadcast for a global event.

    Expect to see history being made as Team USA and host nation France travel down the Seine in the Parade of Nations. The Sphere broadcast also promises to highlight the lighting of the Olympic Cauldron.

    What happens during the Olympics Opening Ceremony?

    The highlight of the Opening Ceremony is the Parade of Nations, where thousands of Olympians representing 206 countries make their grand entrance into the Games.

    This year, rather than marching into a stadium, they will arrive by boat on the Seine.

    Thousands of athletes will sail down the nearly four-mile route on boats. The parade route ends at the Trocadéro, located across the Seine from the Eiffel Tower, where the final elements of the Opening Ceremony will be held.

    Additional festivities include the raising of the host nation’s flag and singing of its anthem, live performances that incorporate the culture of the host nation and the lighting of the Olympic cauldron.  

    How can I watch 2024 Olympics coverage without cable?

    The Paris Opening Ceremony can also be streamed on PeacockNBCOlympics.com and the NBC Sports app, which is available on Google’s Google Play Store and Apple’s App Store.

    What channel is the Olympics Opening Ceremony on?

    NBC’s networks and streaming services has a comprehensive TV schedule featuring more than 5,000 hours of live coverage from the Paris Olympics.

    That includes NBCNBC SportsCNBCUSA NetworkOlympic ChannelGolf ChannelTelemundo DeportesNBCOlympics.com and Peacock.

    NBC will offer comprehensive coverage of the Opening Ceremony, which will air live on the network across all time zones as part of a full day of Olympic programming. Coverage begins at 12 p.m. ET/9 a.m. PT.

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • Bay Area family hosts watch party for Team USA men’s rugby team

    Bay Area family hosts watch party for Team USA men’s rugby team

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    The family of a Bay Area Olympic rugby player are beaming with joy after seeing their loved one play for Team USA.

    Naima Fuala’au of Hayward is one of two Bay Area players whose family woke up in the early morning to host a watch party. Mata Fualaau-Alefaio, Naima’s sister, said emotions were high.

    “It was a lot of mixed emotions; we were very emotional just seeing come out of the tunnel with the team…We’re just so thankful,” she said. “He’s determined to get this win as well as the rest of the squad, we’re excited for them, we know they can do it.”

    Team USA came away with a draw against the French Olympic, but ultimately lost to Fiji.

    The men’s rugby team faced Urugay Thursday morning.

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    Jocelyn Moran | NBC Bay Area

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  • Say “Ooh la la” as Krispy Kreme takes fans’ taste buds to Paris

    Say “Ooh la la” as Krispy Kreme takes fans’ taste buds to Paris

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    Just in time for the Paris Olympics, Krispy Kreme announces its new collection featuring three Parisian dessert-inspired doughnuts.

    Starting July 15, for a limited time at participating shops, the “Passport to Paris” collection will bring a taste of Paris to fans nationwide.

    The goal is to provide fans with the delicious flavors of Parisian desserts while they cheer on America’s best athletes.

    The ‘Passport to Paris’ collection includes:

    • Crème Brûlée Doughnut: An unglazed shell doughnut filled with crème brûlée KREME filling, dipped in crème brûlée caramel icing and topped with caramelized sugar crunch.
    • Double Chocolate Éclair Doughnut: An unglazed shell doughnut filled with chocolate custard KREME filling, dipped in chocolate icing and topped with chocolate crisp pearls.
    • Raspberry & Vanilla Crème Doughnut: An Original Glazed doughnut dipped in raspberry icing and cookie pieces and dolloped with vanilla KREME.

    Besides the special doughnut collection, fans can also enjoy a new Crème Brûlée Latte made fresh-to-order hot, iced or frozen.

    A signature latte blended with Crème Brûlée flavors, topped with whipped cream, and sprinkled with caramelized sugar crunch pieces. (Krispy Kreme)

    The limited-time beverage comes with Crème Brûlée flavors, topped with whipped cream and caramelized sugar crunch.

    “Most people can’t be in Paris to cheer on their country’s team. So, we’re giving you a ‘Passport to Paris’ in the form of delicious doughnuts with Parisian dessert flavors,” said Dave Skena, Global Chief Brand Officer for Krispy Kreme.

    The collection is available in-shop or via Krispy Kreme’s app and website.

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    Janete Weinstein

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  • Gretchen Walsh sets a world record and Katie Ledecky secures her 4th trip to Olympics at U.S. trials

    Gretchen Walsh sets a world record and Katie Ledecky secures her 4th trip to Olympics at U.S. trials

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    Gretchen Walsh set a world record in the women’s 100-meter butterfly Saturday night, posting a time of 55.18 seconds in a semifinal heat at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials.

    Walsh was more than a half-second under world-record pace at the turn and finished strong to eclipse the mark of 55.48 set by Sweden’s Sarah Sjöström at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

    She held her hand over her mouth as she looked at the scoreboard in disbelief, a “WR” beside her name.

    The 21-year-old Walsh, a native of Nashville, Tennessee, who competes for the University of Virginia, will return for the finals Sunday night looking to claim a spot on her first Olympic team.

    Already making the Paris squad is Katie Ledecky, who secured her fourth trip to the Olympics in the women’s 400-meter freestyle.

    Cheered on by a crowd of 20,689 at the home of the NFL‘s Indianapolis Colts, Ledecky touched the wall in 3 minutes, 58.35 seconds.

    Katie Ledecky made her fourth Olympic team after clinching a spot on Team USA in the women’s 400m freestyle.

    She improved on her time of 3:59.99 in the morning preliminaries and set herself up to make a run at another gold against a loaded field at the Paris Games. Australia’s Ariarne Titmus is the defending Olympic champion and world-record holder (3:55.38), with Canadian phenom Summer McIntosh also in the mix.

    The 27-year-old Ledecky is set to swim four events at the trials, all of them freestyle events ranging from 200 to 1,500 meters. She already has six individual gold medals — more than any female swimmer in Olympic history.

    The expected second spot on the Olympic team will go to Paige Madden, the runner-up behind Ledecky at 4:02.08.

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    Paul Newberry | Associated Press

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  • Unsafe levels of E. coli found in Paris’ Seine River less than 2 months before Olympics

    Unsafe levels of E. coli found in Paris’ Seine River less than 2 months before Olympics

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    Water in the Seine River had unsafe elevated levels of E. coli less than two months before swimming competitions are scheduled to take place in it during the Paris Olympics, according to test results published Friday.

    Contamination levels in the first eight days of June, after persistent heavy rain in Paris, showed bacteria such as E. coli and enterococci beyond limits judged safe for athletes.

    The report was published by monitoring group Eau de Paris one day after a senior International Olympic Committee executive said there were “no reasons to doubt” races will go ahead as scheduled in a historic downtown stretch of the Seine near the Eiffel Tower.

    The first Olympic event in the cleaned-up Seine is men’s triathlon, including a 1.5-kilometer (under 1 mile) swim, on the morning of July 30. The women’s triathlon is the next day and a mixed relay event is on Aug. 5.

    French President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday that the opening ceremony for the Paris Olympics planned on the River Seine could be shifted to the Stade de France if the security threat is deemed too high.

    Marathon swimming races over 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) for women and men are scheduled on Aug. 8 and 9, respectively, in waters that were historically polluted before a $1.5 billion investment ahead of the Olympics

    “We are confident that we will swim in the Seine this summer,” IOC official Christophe Dubi said Thursday at an online briefing after hearing an update Paris from city officials and Olympic organizers.

    Despite the IOC’s publicly expressed confidence, the final decision on approving the events safe for athletes should rest with the governing bodies of individual sports, World Aquatics and World Triathlon.

    The safety of the Seine water for the Olympics has been in doubt since some test events scheduled last August were cancelled, also after unseasonal heavy rains.

    According to European standards, the safe limit for E. coli is 900 colony-forming units per 100 milliliters. The World Triathlon Federation uses the same criteria to determine sufficient water quality for competitions.

    During the first eight days of June, test results showed that E. coli levels frequently exceeded these thresholds. Enterococci levels were better, mostly staying within safe limits. The tests indicated an improvement, from high contamination levels on June 1 to more acceptable levels by June 9, mainly due to improved weather.

    Rainwater infiltrates the sewer system, and to prevent street flooding, the excess water, carrying fecal bacteria, is diverted into the Seine. To address this, a massive reservoir capable of storing 50,000 cubic meters of water during heavy rainfall was inaugurated in May.

    Water quality of rivers in major cities can be impacted by many things, from runoff to dumping of chemicals, sometimes illegally, and boat traffic.

    Earlier this week, Paris’ mayor Anne Hidalgo doubled down on her promise to take a dip in the river before the start of the competition. On Tuesday, she confirmed that her swim was postponed until after the snap elections in France, which end on July 7.

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    Tom Nouvian | Associated Press

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  • Olympic swimmer Florent Manaudou becomes first torch carrier in France as relay heads to Paris

    Olympic swimmer Florent Manaudou becomes first torch carrier in France as relay heads to Paris

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    French Olympic swimmer Florent Manaudou became the first Olympic torch carrier in France after the Olympic flame arrived in Marseille’s Old Port Wednesday on a majestic three-mast ship from Greece for the welcoming ceremony at sunset in the city’s Old Port.

    The ship sailed into Marseille’s old port with the French national anthem, La Marseillaise, echoing from the embankment and a French Air force flyover with planes first drawing the five Olympic rings and then the red-blue-white colors of the nation’s flag.

    The ship docked on the pontoon that reflects an athletics track and Manaudou carried the torch to mainland France as tens of thousands cheered and thousands of others waved from balconies and windows overlooking the festivities.

    “We can be proud,” said President Emmanuel Macron, who attended the ceremony to welcome the torch.

    “The flame is on French soil,” Macron said. “The games are coming to France and are entering the lives of the French people.”

    The torch was lit in Greece last month before it was officially handed to France. It left Athens aboard a ship named Belem, which was first used in 1896, and spent twelve days at sea.

    Paris 2024 Olympics Organizing Committee President Tony Estanguet said the return of the Olympic Games to France was cause for a “fantastic celebration.”

    “As a former athlete, I know how important the start of a competition is. That is why we chose Marseille, because it’s definitely one of the cities most in love with sports,” added Estanguet, a former Olympic canoeing star with gold medals from the 2000, 2004 and 2012 Games.

    Safety of visitors and residents has been a top priority for authorities in Marseille, France’s second largest city with nearly a million inhabitants. About 8,000 police officers have been deployed around the harbor.

    Thousands of firefighters and bomb disposal squads have been positioned around the city along with maritime police and anti-drone teams patrolling the city’s waters and its airspace.

    “It’s a monumental day and we have been working hard for visitors and residents of Marseille to enjoy this historical moment,” said Yannick Ohanessian, the city’s deputy mayor.

    The torch relay will start on Thursday in Marseille, before heading to Paris through iconic places across the country, from the world-famous Mont Saint-Michel to D-Day landing beaches in Normandy and the Versailles Palace.

    Heavy police and military presence was seen patrolling Marseille’s city center Tuesday, as a military helicopter flew over the Old Port, where a range of barriers have been set up.

    French Interior Ministry spokesperson Camille Chaize said officials were prepared for security threats including terrorism.

    “We’re employing various measures, notably the elite National Gendarmerie Intervention Group unit, which will be present in the torch relay from beginning to end,” she said.

    The Olympic cauldron will be lit after the Games’ opening ceremony that will take place on the River Seine on July 26.

    The cauldron will be lit at a location in Paris that is being kept top-secret until the day itself. Among reported options are such iconic spots as the Eiffel Tower and the Tuileries Gardens outside the Louvre Museum.

    Barbara Surk contributed from Nice, France. AP journalists Jeffrey Schaeffer, Oleg Cetinic, Nicolas Garriga and Daniel Cole contributed to this story.

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    Sylvie Corbet and Barbara Surk | Associated Press

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  • Sha’Carri Richardson tells Cardi B she’s ‘locked in’ for Paris Olympics: ‘Every little detail counts’

    Sha’Carri Richardson tells Cardi B she’s ‘locked in’ for Paris Olympics: ‘Every little detail counts’

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    Track and field star Sha’Carri Richardson trains for the Paris Olympics five days a week like it is a 9 to 5 job, and Cardi B likes it like that.

    In a new NBC Sports video titled “When Sha’Carri met Cardi – Part 1,” the rising star for Team USA and the “WAP” singer sat down for a manicure and conversation about the upcoming 2024 Paris Olympics, where Richardson will compete for her first Olympic gold.

    “I literally train five days out the week,” Richardson told Cardi B. “Literally to the point where a 9 to 5 in corporate is like my 9 to 5 on the track working out.”

    “Down to even how much sleep I’m getting,” Richardson added. “Every little detail counts. It’s worth the hard work, it’s worth the sacrifices. In those moments, it shows that this is why I do what I do.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_PP_YW2U_E

    Cardi B responded that she is also “locked in” like Richardson, as she is at the point where she is “punishing” herself for not yet finishing her next album.

    Cardi B then told Richardson that the Olympics being hosted in Paris this year is a big plus for the event, as it is one of her favorite cities in the world.

    “When the Olympics is in like a lit city, it changes the mood, it changes the tone,” Cardi B said.

    Richardson agreed, saying, “I feel like the fun is going to be restored” to the Olympics.

    For Richardson, she is hoping for more than just a fun time, she is looking for a historic one.

    Not only has Richardson already won two gold medals at the 2023 world championships for the women’s 100m and 4 x 100m relay, she also broke the NCAA Division I record for the fastest time for the 100m women’s competition with 10.75 seconds.

    Richardson will hope to continue her athletic feats in Paris.

    And, Cardi B says she will be there to cheer the Dallas native on.

    “I will come just for you,” Cardi B told Richardson.

    “And shopping,” she added.

    With less than 100 days to go before the 2024 Paris Olympics, drone shots show venues that will host some events of the Games.

    The 2024 Paris Olympics will air exclusively on NBC’s family networks and stream on Peacock.

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    NBC Staff

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    What is breaking?

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

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

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

    How will it work?

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

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

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

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

    Who is on the U.S. Olympic breaking team?

    The U.S. will be represented by four breakers — two B-boys and two B-girls — who will compete in solo battles for the gold medal.

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

    From the Bronx to Paris

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

    This story first appeared on NBCNews.com. More from NBC News:

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    Rebecca Cohen | NBC News

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  • AMC and NBC announce 2024 Olympics will air live in movie theaters

    AMC and NBC announce 2024 Olympics will air live in movie theaters

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    The 2024 Paris Olympics will be played live on the big screen.

    NBCUniversal and AMC announced this past week that they will broadcast select daytime Paris Olympics coverage live at 160 AMC locations across the country, according to an NBCUniversal press release.

    “The Olympic Games always provide a wonderful, shared experience, and this summer communities across the country will have the opportunity to cheer for Team USA or their own hometown hero in local AMC Theatres,” said Gary Zenkel, the president of NBC Olympics, in the release. “The afternoon broadcasts on NBC will offer many of the most compelling live moments from Paris, and we believe these gatherings will fuel overall enthusiasm for the Games.”

    Fans can join crowds an AMC Theatres starting July 27, 2024, the day after the Opening Ceremony, and can continue to watch select daytime events at the movies until Aug. 11.

    Tickets will become available for purchase at AMC and Fandango this summer.

    In addition to AMC theaters, the entire Summer Olympics will air exclusively on NBC’s networks and streaming services —  NBCNBCSNCNBCUSA Networkthe Olympic Channelthe Golf ChannelTelemundo DeportesNBCOlympics.comPeacock.

    Also this past week, NBC announced that broadcaster Mike Tirico, former NFL quarterback Peyton Manning and Kelly Clarkson will host the Opening Ceremony in Paris July 26.

    Stay tuned for more Olympics coverage from this NBC station as the year goes on.

    The trio chatted with Access Hollywood about the monumental gig with guest correspondent Emily Orozco.

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    Brendan Brightman

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