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Tag: fencing

  • Prep begins in DC months ahead of Inauguration Day – WTOP News

    Prep begins in DC months ahead of Inauguration Day – WTOP News

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    The election is three weeks away, but Inauguration Day preparations are already being made in the nation’s capital. Large black riot fences and concrete barriers surround parts of Lafayette park as well as the sidewalks near the White House.

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    Inauguration Day prep begins in DC months ahead of time

    The election is three weeks away, but Inauguration Day preparations are already being made in the nation’s capital. Large black riot fences and concrete barriers currently surround parts of Lafayette Park, as well as the sidewalks near the White House.

    Construction crews in Lafayette Park are putting up Inauguration Day Parade stands and security barriers for the ushering in of the new president, which stands at nearly 100 days away on Jan. 20.

    The National Park Service said the closures and riot fencing that’s all too familiar in D.C. are to ensure the safety of workers and visitors, and make it easier for building materials to be delivered and heavy machinery to be stored during the monthslong process.

    Still, tourists eager for a photo in front of the White House are pushed a little further back behind the Andrew Jackson statue in Lafayette Park.

    The northern part of Lafayette Park will remain open for visitors and political demonstrations.

    The fencing is expected to be in place until February 2025.

    Work for the presidential inauguration typically begins in November, but this year, preparation began early “to accommodate additional time needed for a safer and more secure environment for construction activities,” according to an NPS release.

    In addition to building the construction zone near the White House, D.C.’s Department of Transportation is repaving a major portion of the inauguration parade route on Pennsylvania Avenue.

    Riot fences and concrete barriers go up around parts of Lafayette Park.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Construction crews in Lafayette Park are putting up Inauguration Day parade stands and security barriers for the ushering in of the new president.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Construction crews in Lafayette Park are putting up Inauguration Day parade stands and security barriers for the ushering in of the new president.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Construction crews in Lafayette Park are putting up Inauguration Day parade stands and security barriers for the ushering in of the new president.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

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  • As US wins Olympic gold in fencing, Coloradans get to try it out for free in Denver

    As US wins Olympic gold in fencing, Coloradans get to try it out for free in Denver

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    DENVER — It may be a busy travel day for some, but for others who had a bit of time to spare stopped to check out the sights and sounds coming from a tent outside of Union Station. When approaching closer, the clatter of swords and shrieks of excitement came from those of all ages who were attempting to learn the sport of fencing.

    “We’re just trying to get the public to know about fencing, especially since it’s the Olympics,” Shana Saint-Phard said. “We really want to get everybody to engage with the community of fencing, while we’re also fencing in the Olympics right now, cause it’s going on right now, so we wanted our community to also be engaged.”

    Maggy Wolanske

    For some like Saint-Phard, when she discovered fencing, she immediately was mesmerized.

    “I started fencing when I was in second grade. Denver Fencing Center came to my elementary school, and they gave a bunch of second graders swords, and I guess I was good at it. They gave me a card, and I started training from then.”

    As excitement spreads across our country for the Olympic Games, USA Fencing and USA Parafencing launched Fencing Across America to help share the sport with those of all ages. A group from the Denver Fencing Center were eager and ready to share their passion for fencing with others. Among them was Jataya Taylor, who is heading in a couple weeks to the Paralympic Games.

    Fencing Across America Sign.jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    “A lot of people fail to realize the fencing is for everyone,” Taylor explained. “You might think, ‘Oh, that’s not something my culture does’ and I’m here to tell you anyone and everyone can do it no matter where you live. A lot of times it can be expensive, just like other sports, we have foundations that can help you with the cost of doing it.”

    Trying something new may be challenging but Taylor was out interacting with those walking by Union Station, encouraging them to suit up and try fencing for the first time.

    “A lot of people get afraid of trying new things, and they’re afraid to fail, they’re afraid to look silly,” Taylor said. “I like to tell the kids, especially when they get frustrated because they keep losing: ‘You don’t lose unless you learn something’ and I tell people who are afraid to try something new, ‘Don’t be afraid to try something new, because you never know when you’re going to miss something exciting’ and when they’re afraid to try and they try.”

    Jataya instructing two boys.jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    Not only is Taylor welcoming and encouraging to these strangers, but she also takes the time to share her story with those wanting to listen.

    “I love working with kids in general, I also have cartoons on my prosthetic, so kids aren’t as afraid of it,” Taylor said. “Anytime they show interest and wanting to touch things, and their parents are like, ‘Oh my gosh,’ I’m like, ‘No,’ because we’re changing from, don’t stare to ask questions, and so it’s a privilege to get a chance to educate and share my prosthetic or my disability with the kids in the community.”

    jataya interacts with two boys.jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    When it comes to the recognition of the sport, Saint-Phard explained a lack of awareness which is why she is passionate about sharing this sport with others and cheering on Team USA in the Olympics.

    “I think the recognition of the Olympics, a lot of people don’t know about the sport generally. Sometimes when I say, ‘Oh, I do fencing,’ they’re like, ‘Oh, the yard work, like you build fences?’ and I’m like, ‘…Not quite.’ So for me, fencing in the Olympics really brings representation for each kind of sport.”

    Fencing in action.jpg

    Maggy Wolanske

    As the day went on, smiles and cheers were shared connecting more people to the sport of fencing and instilling an appreciation for the athletes competing in the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

    “I feel great. I feel like I want to do it again and I think it’s a very good challenge and if you’re smart and intelligent, I think it is the best sport to actually get in because you need both mental and physical (strength),” said Delontae Patterson.

    Fencing Across America will be happening out front of Union Station on Saturday and Sunday from 2 p.m. till 7 p.m. The event is free and open to all ages.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos

    At Denver7, we’re committed to making a difference in our community. We’re standing up for what’s right by listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the featured videos in the playlist above.

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    Maggy Wolanske

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  • Hong Kong trolls Italy with pineapple pizza after controversial fencing win

    Hong Kong trolls Italy with pineapple pizza after controversial fencing win

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    Hong Kong fencer Cheung Ka-long’s victory over Italy’s Filippo Macchi at the Paris Olympics has sparked an exchange of insults on social media, with Cheung’s supporters celebrating his win with posts about pineapple pizzas—widely considered a culinary blunder in Italian cooking.

    Cheung made Hong Kong history on Tuesday by beating Macchi 15-14 in the men’s foil. That triumph made Cheung, who had won in the Tokyo Games in 2021, the first Hong Konger to bag two gold medals.

    The bout required three stoppages for video reviews to determine the deciding point as the fencing machine registered scores from both fencers at about the same time. The final point was eventually awarded to Cheung, sparking protests from the Italian side.

    The Italian Fencing Federation said in a statement that it would file a complaint to the International Olympic Committee and the International Fencing Federation about what it called “unacceptable” refereeing.

    “Never seen anything like this. Filippo Macchi is the real winner and he was denied a gold he deserved,” Italian Fencing Federation President Paolo Azzi said.

    Italy’s Olympic Committee President Giovanni Malagò suggested the selection of referees was problematic, saying “the two judges were from Taipei and Korea in a final between Italy and Hong Kong.”

    Macchi’s supporters also left comments on Cheung’s Instagram account to express their grievances. One comment alleged that Cheung’s championship was “robbed” and Macchi should be the final winner.

    In a mockery response, Hong Kongers replied with comments on Instagram about their love for pineapple pizza to defend Cheung and said they would have a lot of pineapple pizzas to celebrate the win.

    Pizza Hut in Hong Kong and neighboring gambling city Macao also offered free pineapple toppings on any pizzas when dining at its branches on Tuesday and Wednesday to celebrate the victory.

    But Macchi eventually earned respect from some Hong Kongers after he posted on his Instagram to say that he knows both referees and he did not want to point a finger at them for his loss. He added their decisions have to be respected.

    Cheung’s win also marked the first time Hong Kong has secured two gold medals in the same Olympics. Vivian Kong Man Wai last weekend won the individual epee for the semi-autonomous Chinese city.

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  • Ukrainian fencer Olga Kharlan wins her country’s first medal of the Paris Olympics

    Ukrainian fencer Olga Kharlan wins her country’s first medal of the Paris Olympics

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    PARIS (AP) — A handshake could have cost Olga Kharlan her place at the Olympics. Instead, she won Ukraine’s first medal of the Paris Games to give a country at war something to celebrate.

    Kharlan overturned a six-point deficit to beat South Korea’s Choi Sebin 15-14 for the women’s saber fencing bronze medal Monday in a comeback that energized the crowd.

    She counted to five on a hand decorated with nail varnish in Ukrainian yellow and blue, a five-time Olympian winning her fifth career medal.

    Kharlan’s latest medal is nothing like the others.

    “I brought a medal to my country, and it’s the first one, and it’s going to be a good start for all our athletes who are here because it’s really tough to compete when in your country is a war,” she said. “Every medal, it’s like gold. I don’t care (that) it’s bronze. It’s gold.”

    Kharlan was disqualified from last year’s world championships — a key Olympic qualifier — for refusing to shake the hand of a Russian opponent after winning their bout.

    It was an incident that highlighted the tension over whether to allow Russian athletes to keep competing following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

    Amid a mounting backlash, the International Olympic Committee stepped in to hand Kharlan a “unique exception” — a guaranteed spot at the Games. Fencing’s governing body rescinded a two-month ban it had imposed along with the disqualification and made handshakes optional soon after.

    “I can say that I wouldn’t change anything,” Kharlan said about whether she had thought her Olympic dream was over. “What I went through, it represents my country, what it goes through, and I wouldn’t change anything. This is my story.”

    Loud crowd gets a gold

    The vocal — even rowdy — French crowd has been a revelation in the usually genteel world of fencing.

    The vast and spectacular Grand Palais echoed to cheers, boos and the French national anthem over the first three days of Olympic fencing. Sometimes the crowd stomps until the tall metal stands rattle.

    What they hadn’t seen until Monday was a French gold.

    They got it as two French fencers, Sara Balzer and Manon Apithy-Brunet, advanced to face each other in the women’s saber final. Apithy-Brunet won her third Olympic medal and first gold 15-12 in a celebration of French fencing as every touch for either fencer was greeted with cheers and warm applause.

    Until then, French fencers had contested two finals and lost both, with Auriane Mallo-Breton second in women’s epee Saturday and Yannick Borel the runner-up in men’s epee a day later.

    Gold for Hong Kong, historic bronze for U.S.

    Hong Kong had won just two Olympic gold medals before the Paris Games began. It has doubled that tally inside of three days, thanks to its fencers.

    Cheung Ka Long beat Italy’s Filippo Macchi 15-14 in a dramatic final with three stoppages on 14-14 for video reviews before Cheung was finally awarded the point he needed to defend the gold medal he won in Tokyo three years ago.

    It was the second gold medal in Paris for Hong Kong after Vivian Kong Man Wai won the women’s epee Saturday.

    American fencer Nick Itkin won the bronze bout 15-12 against Kazuki Iimura to add that medal to the team bronze he won in Tokyo. “It’s a blur. It’s so fast, but it’s a moment of relief,” he said.

    After Lee Kiefer and Lauren Scruggs won gold and silver in women’s foil Sunday, Itkin’s medal made it the first time that the U.S. has won individual medals in men’s and women’s fencing events at the same Olympics.

    ___

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

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  • Controversy surrounds French ban on hijab as 2024 Paris Olympics get underway

    Controversy surrounds French ban on hijab as 2024 Paris Olympics get underway

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    French Olympic sprinter Sounkamba Sylla took to social media days before the 2024 Olympic Games began, saying she would not be allowed to participate in the opening ceremony because of her hijab.

    “You are selected for the Olympics, organized in your country, but you can’t participate in the opening ceremony because you wear a headscarf,” Sylla wrote on her private Instagram, according to The Associated Press.

    The criticism was the latest in an ongoing controversy over France’s rule prohibiting female Muslim athletes from wearing the hijab, or headscarves, during the Olympics. The athletes, while competing for France, are considering civil servants and must adhere to principles of secularism, according to the country’s rules.

    French Sports Minister Amélie Oudéa-Castéra later said she’d be allowed to participate in the opening ceremony and the Games by covering her hair in a way that did not appear religious.

    An overview of the Trocadero venue with the Eiffel Tower in the background, in Paris, during the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, July 26, 2024.

    Francois-Xavier Marit/Pool Photo via AP

    Bans on hijab in French sports

    Bans on wearing hijab in French sports have applied at all levels, including amateur and youth levels, even outside the Olympics, according to Amnesty International.

    There isn’t a national law or policy banning hijabs in sports, but individual sports federations have their own regulations prohibiting the headscarf. Football (soccer), basketball and volleyball are some of the team sports banning them, Anna Blus, a women’s rights and gender justice researcher at Amnesty International, told ABC News.

    A ban against wearing the hijab in football was instituted in 2006. In basketball, it began in 2022 and in volleyball in 2023.

    “We have documented over the years — (for) around 20 years — measures are being introduced constantly to limit Muslim women’s rights,” Blus said of France.

    “There’s definitely been an increase in these types of measures in different areas of life over the past 20 years,” Blus said.

    Ibtihaj Muhammad, from United States, waits for match against Olena Kravatska from Ukraine, in the women's saber individual fencing event at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

    Ibtihaj Muhammad, from United States, waits for match against Olena Kravatska from Ukraine, in the women’s saber individual fencing event at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

    AP Photo/Vincent Thian, File

    In 2023, France’s highest administrative court sided with the French Football Federation allowing its hijab ban in the sport.

    “The reasoning it gave was very, very problematic, because it said that these types of bans like the one in the Football Federation, were legitimate — the justification could be to avoid clashes or confrontation,” Blus said.

    “It’s suggesting that clashes or confrontations might occur if someone wears a hijab, and that in order to protect that athlete, she can be banned, and she should be banned from wearing it. It’s extremely problematic,” Blus said.

    Basket Pour Toutes, a collective that says it is fighting against discrimination in basketball, said the argument the ban seeks to maintain public order “tends to stigmatize a part of the population which is already the subject of numerous prejudices,” the group said on its website.

    Basket Pour Toutes, which translate to “Basketball for all” in English, also said “secularism is not above fundamental freedoms.”

    “The (French Federation of Basketball) maintains that the ban on equipment with religious connotations is based on the principle of neutrality which itself derives from the principle of secularism. But this duty of neutrality only applies to public service agents and not to its users,” Basket Pour Toutes wrote.

    Since the court decision came out, the Hijabeuses — a collective of female athletes who wear the hijab and had brought the complaint against the Football Federation — have made an application to the European Court of Human rights, which has jurisdiction over France.

    Egypt's Dina Meshref in action at the 2020 Summer Olympics, Saturday, July 24, 2021, in Tokyo, Japan.

    Egypt’s Dina Meshref in action at the 2020 Summer Olympics, Saturday, July 24, 2021, in Tokyo, Japan.

    AP Photo/Kyusung Gong

    Their application is still pending and could likely take a couple of years, Blus said.

    “Litigation is only one kind of tool that can be used and it takes many years sometimes,” Blus said. “I think there is much more that we can do as human rights organizations and as campaigners to stand against these types of discriminatory measures.”

    Human rights groups criticize bans

    Human rights groups have called on the International Olympic Committee to publicly ask sporting authorities in France to overturn bans on wearing the hijab in the Olympic Games and at all levels of sport, saying prohibitions are in place across at least six sports.

    “The country’s discrimination against women and girls wearing the hijab is particularly concerning given the IOC’s celebration of Paris 2024 as the first ‘Gender Equal Olympics,’” the groups — including Human Rights Watch, Basket Pour Toutes and the World Players Association — wrote in a joint letter to the IOC.

    “Women and girls in France who wear the hijab have been and are being prevented from playing multiple sports including football, basketball, judo, boxing, volleyball and badminton — even at youth and amateur levels. The hijab bans in sports have resulted in many Muslim athletes being discriminated against, invisibilised, excluded and humiliated, causing trauma and social isolation — some have left or are considering leaving the country to seek playing opportunities elsewhere,” the letter said.

    Gold medalist Feryal Abdelaziz of Egypt poses during the medal ceremony for women's kumite +61kg karate at the 2020 Summer Olympics, Saturday, Aug. 7, 2021, in Tokyo, Japan.

    Gold medalist Feryal Abdelaziz of Egypt poses during the medal ceremony for women’s kumite +61kg karate at the 2020 Summer Olympics, Saturday, Aug. 7, 2021, in Tokyo, Japan.

    AP Photo/Vincent Thian

    Other athletes, including Diaba Konate, a French basketball player who played for Idaho State and University of California, Irvine up until this past April, have also criticized the ban. Konate said she was kept from being able to play for the French National Team again. She’s not on the French team playing in the Olympics.

    “I love basketball, my family, and my faith,” Konate said in an open letter. “It would break my heart to give up any one of those, and yet that is what the current French Federation of Basketball guidelines are forcing me to do.”

    Blus said activism among Muslim athletes and activists in France is growing in a very difficult environment.

    “It’s really important that big international organizations, such as ours, express their solidarity with Muslim women, because they have very often — really particularly in France, but also in other countries — (been) subject to negative stereotypes, demonization, homogenization of what it might mean to them to wear hijab,” Blus said.

    “It’s really a matter of feminist solidarity and of women’s rights and human rights,” Blus said.

    Copyright © 2024 ABC News Internet Ventures.

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  • She started fencing in 2022. Now she’s going to the Paralympics

    She started fencing in 2022. Now she’s going to the Paralympics

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    In 2020, Denver Fencing Center founder Nathan Anderson had a breakthrough.

    He’d won a $20,000 grant to turn his gym, right across the street from Ruby Hill Park, into a national hub for wheelchair swordplay.

    It was enough to buy all the gear he needed to train athletes worthy of elite competition. All that was left was to find someone who’d go the distance.

    When he spoke to us about it back then, he said he dreamt of taking someone to the 2024 Paralympics in Paris. But he wasn’t sure that was in the cards. Four years wasn’t long to whip his new program into that kind of shape.

    As Anderson tried to convince some rising athletes to move here and help him secure a medal, he also ramped up local outreach, inviting groups of people recovering from limb loss and from hospitals to come see what the sport was like.

    That’s how Jataya Taylor — usually just “J” — ended up in his gym. She’d never seen adaptive fencing when she visited with a group from the local Veterans Affairs hospital in February of 2022. Something about it clicked immediately.

    “I had no clue and they brought me here and I fell in love,” she remembered.

    Jataya Taylor wears a mask during practice at the Denver Fencing Center, across the street from Ruby Hill. June 27, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    She started training in August of that year, then competing.

    Less than two years later, she got some astounding news: She would represent her country in Paris. USA Fencing publicly announced her qualification last week.

    For Anderson, it was a sign that his gym was on its way to achieving his larger mission. For Taylor, it was confirmation that the home she found there was exactly where she belonged.

    Taylor had no reason to think she’d become an elite athlete for a long time.

    She has roots in Rapid City, but spent most of her life in Florida. As a kid, she was athletic and made waves on her high school basketball team.

    But her sights were set elsewhere. When she finished school, she joined the Marines.

    “In the long run, I honestly didn’t see myself here,” she said before a recent practice. “Maybe excelling in the military and climbing the ranks.”

    Things didn’t go the way Taylor expected. Early on, before she was ever deployed, she was seriously injured in a training accident. Her left leg would never fully heal, and her life would change forever.

    “For years I was just plain upset. My career was supposed to be the military. That was supposed to be my life, and all of a sudden it was gone,” she told us. “No one ever tells us that when you get hurt, there’s a chance you’re not going to get better.”

    We see a woman from behind as she holds onto two railings and lifts her body over three steps, from a wheelchair and into another room. Her fencing jacket reads "TAYLOR USA."
    Jataya Taylor lifts herself toward the locker area inside the Denver Fencing Center, across the street from Ruby Hill, during another night of practice. June 27, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    She could still walk on her leg, but it was hard, and it could hurt. She said she spent 12 years “fighting” her body before she asked doctors to do something rash.

    “I told them to cut off my leg or I would,” she said. “They looked at me like I’m crazy.”

    “By the time it came to the amputation, I looked at it as it was like a cancer and it was causing so many problems with the rest of my body, metastasizing, that it just needed to be gone,” she added. “And once it was gone, then I could walk. I could do other things. And my mental health improved, a lot.”

    Freeing herself from that chronic physical pain helped her move past the loss she felt about her derailed life. Fencing became a symbol of what she could achieve if she embraced that change.

    “That is one of the biggest things that has changed in my life. I can’t remember who wrote the quote, but it goes something like: We spend so much time looking at the door that’s shut in front of us, we don’t see all the doors that opened around us,” she said. “When something happens, it’s not the end of the world. Don’t give up.”

    A woman with short hair kneels on the floor as she takes off a fencing vest, in a room lined with lockers.
    Jataya Taylor preps for a sparring match at the Denver Fencing Center, across the street from Ruby Hill. June 27, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    She fell in love with the sport, but it was the people that kept her going.

    While traditional fencers rely on their feet to dodge their opponents and lunge for points, adaptive fencing takes place between people strapped into immobile wheelchairs.

    It’s worth noting that not everyone who fences in adaptive competitions has a disability related to walking. Some might have cognitive conditions.

    The chair helps level things between everyone. The rigs can tilt if athletes rock them hard enough, but there’s little room for error once the ref declares, “En garde!” It’s a sport about anticipation and precision, and that’s the part Taylor fell for.

    “I am strong and fast, but after a while, I realized that’s not the only component that you have to have,” she told us. “That is probably what really brought me in. At first it was really zen … in basketball, if you foul me, I’m going to be mad and play harder and put it in your face. Here I have to play smarter, not harder.”

    Two people in fencing vests and masks, who are also sitting in wheelchairs, mutually stab each other in the chest. Their foils bend with the force of their jabs.
    Jataya Taylor (right) spars with Kevin Averch inside the Denver Fencing Center, across the street from Ruby Hill. June 27, 2024.
    Molly Cruse/CPR News

    But once she entered this world, it was the people that made her stay. As she began to travel and compete, she found she suddenly had friends everywhere.

    “That was the biggest thing for me, because it’s such a loving and open community. We are a family, we’re just spread all over the map,” she said. “We might be in our one-minute break, sitting in there laughing, and then ding, ding, ding! Time starts. Bam, bam, bam, bam, bam! I’m going to get you, I’m going to stab you! Then we’re done. High five. Bow.

    “It’s a way to get exercise, still use your mind and make friends that you get to stab.”

    She has to pay for her own travel to get to a lot of those competitions, so she was grateful when Anderson offered her a job at the gym. These days, she says the warehouse on Navajo Street has become “the center of my universe.”

    Anderson said he’s proud of how far she’s come, and not just because she’s grown as an athlete in such a short period.

    He also had something to prove to USA Fencing and the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee, who furnished that money four years ago.

    “It’s one of those great success stories, when somebody gives you a grant and you’re hoping that it’s going to turn into something great. In this case, when you have an athlete that goes from zero to the Paralympics in two years, I mean, that’s incredible. So we’re really excited,” he said. “I mean, the US Olympic committee’s probably not going to be happy until we bring back medals for them.”

    China and Italy are the teams to beat, he said. Though adaptive sports have grown in the U.S. in recent years, they’re still vastly underfunded compared to those countries.

    “They’ve got a million-dollar budget. And we’re kind of like the rebellion in “Star Wars,” where we’re trying to piece everything together and hopefully it works,” Anderson joked.

    A woman sitting in a wheelchair smiles wide at the camera, holding a fencing sword and wearing a fencing jacket.
    Jataya Taylor sits in a fencing chair during practice at the Denver Fencing Center, across the street from Ruby Hill. June 27, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Taylor is competitive, so of course she’d like to bring home a medal. But just being there, on the top of her game, in the company of athletes she’s come to regard as family, she said that’s ultimately the best reward.

    “It is about the experience. Because for fencing, every time you lose, you learn something. The only time you actually lose or fail is when you don’t learn something. And that’s what I’ve come to enjoy,” she said. “I am beyond excited.”

    The Paralympics begin on Aug. 28.

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  • Choosing high-quality timber for fencing: a practical guide – Growing Family

    Choosing high-quality timber for fencing: a practical guide – Growing Family

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    Collaborative post

    Choosing the right timber for your fencing project is essential to ensure your fence looks good and lasts for a long time. With a variety of wood types and treatments available, understanding how to choose the best quality timber can save you time and money, and ensure a durable finish.

    This guide will walk you through the essential considerations to make when selecting timber for your fencing needs.

    timber fence

    Understanding timber qualities

    Durability and Treatment: When choosing timber for fencing, it’s important to factor in your local weather conditions. In Derby, for example, where weather can be unpredictable, choosing wood that can withstand the elements is vital. Look for pressure-treated woods that are resistant to rot, decay, and fungal growth. Treated pine and cedar are popular choices due to their natural durability and resistance to moisture.

    Aesthetic Appeal: You should also consider the appearance of the timber. Some woods, like cedar, not only resist decay but also have a pleasing natural grain and colour that ages beautifully without the need for stains or paints.

    Choosing the right supplier

    Finding a reputable supplier is key to obtaining high-quality timber for your fencing project. For those looking for timber fencing supplies in Derby or elsewhere, choosing a supplier that offers a variety of options at competitive prices is crucial.

    A good timber supplier will understand the local environmental factors that influence timber performance and can guide you in making the best choice for your needs.

    white timber fence in a gardenwhite timber fence in a garden

    Types of timber fencing supplies

    Different types of timber suit different garden styles and functional requirements. Here’s a quick overview of the most popular types of fencing used in domestic settings:

    Picket fencing: Ideal for decorative purposes, offering a classic look.

    Privacy fencing: Taller, solid panels that provide privacy and noise reduction.

    Post and rail fencing: Ideal for larger properties or rural settings, offering a traditional appearance.

    Planning your timber fencing project

    Measure your space: Accurate measurements will help you purchase the right amount of material without excessive waste.

    Check local regulations: Your local council may have specific rules regarding fence height and placement. Ensuring compliance will avoid potential issues.

    Fencing installation tips

    Setting posts: Ensure that posts are set deep into the ground with concrete to withstand Derby’s often wet soil.

    Sealing and treatment: Even if your wood is pre-treated, applying a waterproof sealant can extend the life of your fence.

    person painting a fence with preservativeperson painting a fence with preservative

    Fence maintenance

    Timber fencing requires regular maintenance to retain its appearance and structural integrity. Inspect your fence annually for signs of wear or damage. Clean your fence with a mild soap solution and reapply sealant or stain as necessary to protect against the elements.

    Conclusion

    Choosing the right timber for your fencing not only enhances the visual appeal of your home, but also ensures privacy and security. Selecting high-quality timber from trusted suppliers and adhering to proper installation and maintenance practices will make your fence a lasting and appealing addition to your property. Remember, a successful fencing project depends on meticulous planning and taking into account the specific requirements of your local environment.

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  • Forced kiss claim leads to ‘helplessness’ for accuser who turned to Olympics abuse-fighting agency

    Forced kiss claim leads to ‘helplessness’ for accuser who turned to Olympics abuse-fighting agency

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    DENVER — When Kirsten Hawkes, a one-time elite fencer, reached out to her childhood coach for advice about starting her own fencing club, their meeting turned awkward right away.

    It began, she said, with an unwanted kiss on the lips when the two met at a bar during a fencing tournament in Minneapolis last October. A few hours later, as she and the coach were saying good-bye, Hawkes said he forcibly kissed her — “stuck his tongue in my mouth,” she told investigators.

    Hawkes filed a complaint against the then-assistant coach with the U.S. Paralympic team to the U.S. Center for SafeSport, whose mandate is to combat sex abuse in Olympic sports. But it didn’t take long for her to realize she was pitted against not just the coach, but one of the most renowned sports attorneys in the United States.

    “It just led to a sense of helplessness,” Hawkes, 36, told The Associated Press about the process that led to her allegations against the 52-year-old coach ultimately being rejected.

    “The whole point is, it shouldn’t be an undue burden for a victim to come forward. But that’s how it ended up.”

    To Hawkes, the 10-month-long ordeal illustrates why the Denver-based SafeSport Center has come under increasing scrutiny for what critics, from athletes to high-ranking Olympics officials, contend is an opaque, confusing process that often takes far too long to resolve cases.

    A draft report in September by a congressionally appointed commission obtained by the AP concluded the center was “in potential crisis.” More than half of the 1,756 athletes, coaches and administrators in the Olympic movement surveyed said SafeSport wasn’t meeting its goals; nearly 25% disagreed or strongly disagreed when asked whether the center was successful in its mandate to sanction sex abuse in Olympic sports.

    Formed in 2017 as the depths of former gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar’s crimes were being exposed by hundreds of his victims, SafeSport is responsible for resolving abuse cases involving not just Olympians but all athletes in Olympic-related sports down to the grassroots level — a scope that covers more than 11 million athletes, including those like Hawkes.

    Since then, more than 1,900 offenders have been placed on SafeSport’s disciplinary database — showing, it says, that efforts to corral abusers who might otherwise go unchecked have been successful.

    But Hawkes’ former coach never went on that list — not after SafeSport handed him a three-month probation in May, six months after its initial hearing in December, nor after he was immediately removed from his Paralympics coaching job by USA Fencing. Then, an eight-hour arbitration hearing in August overturned the probation and other sanctions.

    In her ruling, the arbitrator noted her decision was partly influenced by the “different and contradictory messages” sent by the kiss that began the evening.

    The AP is not identifying the coach because his name never landed on SafeSport’s disciplinary database. His probation only meant he had to disclose his status to anyone he worked for and faced harsher punishment if he committed another violation.

    Hawkes’ complaint also included abuse accusations against the coach when she was a child in Huntington, New York. She told SafeSport investigators he touched her between her legs, squeezed her thigh, poked and touched her breasts using his fencing foil, and made comments about her breasts, starting when she was 12.

    SafeSport told Hawkes those allegations were not pursued because New York state law and fencing rules at the time would not have resulted in charges or sanctions.

    That policy undercuts what SafeSport touts as one of its biggest strengths — its authority to pursue cases without regard to statues of limitation.

    “It’s frustrating to the center, as it is rightly to claimants, when rules or laws did not exist that prohibited conduct in the past” that SafeSport rules would punish today, communications director Hilary Nemchik said in an email.

    Nemchik said the center is constantly exploring ways to improve and next year will announce changes stemming from feedback and internal review “on how to make its processes more timely, understandable and trauma-informed.”

    Hawkes said the center’s response fed into her belief that the process is flawed if it won’t even consider older allegations like hers.

    “It has to be consistent,” she said. “If it doesn’t work for everybody, then it doesn’t work for anybody.”

    Hawkes said as a kid, with her father not in the picture, her reaction to the coach’s alleged behavior was less horrified than it it should have been.

    “I think about it now and it’s really disturbing,” she said. “There are a lot of things that happened when I was a kid and young adult where it was just less awkward” to let it pass, “than to just say ‘No.’”

    Hawkes also said she was thinking about good memories from her childhood fencing days when she decided to meet with the coach to pick his brain about a business venture she was considering to open her own fencing center in San Diego.

    Both said the evening began with the kiss on the lips, but in arbitration testimony, they disagreed over who initiated it.

    Hawkes testified the coach began talking to her about her sex life and interlocking legs with her under the bar. She said she was uncomfortable, but tried to make the best of a difficult situation because she knew they would cross paths again at the tournament.

    She said she answered “No” when the coach asked if she would invite him to her hotel room. As they parted ways in front of her hotel, Hawkes said she reached out for a hug and the coach leaned down and forcibly stuck his tongue in her mouth.

    “I was like, ‘No, no, no, no, no, no, no,’” she testified, adding that she pushed him away.

    The arbitration decision says the coach “acknowledged kissing claimant that evening, stating he thought she wanted him to kiss her” — something Hawkes adamantly maintained was far from the vibe she was putting out.

    In seeking evidence the kiss was unwanted, Hawkes said she asked the hotel for surveillance video and was told it was caught on camera. But the hotel refused to hand it over without a subpoena.

    Hawkes said she filed a report with Minneapolis police but was told an unwanted kiss — the likes of which has dominated headlines in recent weeks following Spain’s Women’s World Cup soccer victory, prompting an international outcry and the resignation of the Spanish soccer federation chief — did not rise to the level of sexual misconduct needed to open an investigation.

    SafeSport, though chartered by Congress and acting as a quasi-legal agency, does not have the authority to compel the hotel to turn over the surveillance video. Hawkes said she realized she would have to hire an attorney and initiate a civil proceeding to access it, which she couldn’t afford.

    Nemchik said because the center isn’t designed to act like a criminal or civil court system, it limits respondents’ ability to call witnesses and subpoena evidence — powers she said wouldn’t “be appropriate and would potentially lead to more trauma for those involved.”

    But to Hawkes, the arbitration hearing prompted by the coach’s appeal of SafeSport’s sanctions was, in fact, traumatic. It included cross-examination and what she described as “slut shaming” by the coach’s lawyer, Howard Jacobs, a top sports attorney involved in some 100 SafeSport cases over the agency’s six years.

    In arbitration cases, a SafeSport attorney is tasked with defending the agency’s sanctions. Claimants such as Hawkes are not required to participate, but she said she thought it was important to be heard.

    The coach “was still working with children, and working with other fencers and athletes, and justice hadn’t been served,” Hawkes said.

    It put her in a position to field what Jacobs concedes were tough-but-necessary questions — about Hawkes’ sexual history and her actions the night she met the coach.

    It also led Hawkes to wish she’d hired her own attorney — something she said she believed was unnecessary according to SafeSport rules and a center intake coordinator.

    Also playing a key role was USA Fencing, which removed the coach from his Paralympic team job and limited his one-on-one contact with athletes after the complaint.

    This was the latest in a line of cases in which a national agency overseeing an Olympic sport has been at odds with SafeSport, which has primary jurisdiction over abuse cases. In this instance, SafeSport imposed less-stringent sanctions than USA Fencing. The coach did not get his job back after the arbitration, but USA Fencing’s other penalties were lifted, meaning the coach was able to return to training fencers who might make the Paralympic team.

    USA Fencing CEO Phil Andrews expressed frustration about cases in which SafeSport rules sometimes hamstring his agency and others that “wish to act in the interests of safety and abuse-prevention of its members and are prevented to do so because of jurisdictional control.”

    At a September hearing in Washington by a congressionally appointed committee looking into the Olympics, witnesses took special aim at SafeSport’s arbitration process.

    “It has routinely resulted in re-traumatization of victims and reversal of well-founded claims,” said Marci Hamilton of the advocacy group Child USA.

    SafeSport CEO Ju’Riese Colon called arbitration “one of the stickiest pieces we have to deal with.”

    Even Jacobs, who estimated that about two-thirds of the 40 cases he’s taken to arbitration have resulted in sanctions being overturned or reduced, thinks the SafeSport system is broken.

    “I certainly wouldn’t say the arbitration process is perfect, but they have to give somebody who’s accused some reasonable process to challenge it,” he said.

    Hawkes called arbitration the final step of a frustrating process that left her feeling overmatched and barely heard.

    “I didn’t feel like I could trust anyone,” she said. “I felt like I was dealing with this useless, for-show organization that didn’t solve anything.”

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  • Betts, Outman homer as Dodgers stun Padres 5-2

    Betts, Outman homer as Dodgers stun Padres 5-2

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    Mookie Betts hit a game-tying homer with two outs in the ninth inning and James Outman hit a two-run shot in the 10th to give the Los Angeles Dodgers a 5-2 win over the San Diego Padres

    ByRICHARD J. MARCUS Associated Press

    SAN DIEGO — Mookie Betts hit a game-tying homer with two outs in the ninth inning and James Outman hit a two-run shot in the 10th to give the Los Angeles Dodgers a 5-2 win over the San Diego Padres on Sunday.

    The Dodgers won two of three games in the series in the first meeting between the teams since the Padres stunned Los Angeles in the NL Division Series in October.

    With the Padres leading 2-1, San Diego reliever Josh Hader got two outs before Betts homered over the left-center field fence to tie the game.

    In the 10th, Michael Busch drove in the go-ahead run ahead of Outman’s shot.

    Dodgers reliever Caleb Ferguson (2-0) earned the win and Evan Phillips earned his fifth save with a scoreless 10th inning. Brent Honeywell (2-1), who pitched the 10th inning for San Diego, took the loss.

    Manny Machado had three hits and an RBI for the Padres. Fernando Tatis Jr. had a double and made a spectacular sliding catch in the second inning to rob Max Muncy of a hit.

    Padres starter Joe Musgrove was sharper in his third start of the season then his first two starts. He gave up one run and three hits in five innings while striking out five.

    The Dodgers knocked him out in the sixth after Will Smith doubled to drive in Freddie Freeman, who reached second on a two-base error by San Diego left fielder Juan Soto.

    Padres’ relievers Tim Hill and Steven Wilson combined for the three outs in the inning without allowing the tying Dodgers run.

    The Padres jumped on Dodgers starter Julio Urias in the first inning. Tatis and Machado hit consecutive doubles to give San Diego a 1-0 lead. Later in the inning, Xander Bogaerts hit a ball up against the wall in right-field that Betts got his glove on but could not haul in.

    SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA RIVALRY

    The last time the Padres won a regular season home series against the Dodgers at Petco Park was when they swept them in three games from June 21-23, 2021. Since then, San Diego has lost all four series versus Los Angeles. In the regular season since August 24, 2021, the Padres have gone (6-25) against the Dodgers.

    UP NEXT Dodgers: RHP Tony Gonsolin (0-0, 3.38) takes the hill to start a three-game series on Monday night at the Milwaukee Brewers.

    Padres: RHP Michael Wacha (2-1, 5.46) opens a three-game series on Tuesday night at the Minnesota Twins.

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    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

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  • Fencing event in France canceled after Russians readmitted

    Fencing event in France canceled after Russians readmitted

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    A fencing World Cup in France has been called off after the international governing body voted to let Russians compete

    PARIS — A fencing World Cup in France was canceled on Friday after the international governing body voted to let Russians compete.

    The French Fencing Federation said it would not host the men’s Challenge Monal epee tournament near Paris in May following the International Fencing Federation’s decision this month to end the year-long exclusion of competitors from Russia and its ally Belarus due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

    The decision led to a backlash when more than 300 fencers signed a letter of protest and the organizers of another World Cup in Germany withdrew as hosts.

    Organizers of an upcoming competition in Poland have said they will demand Russians and Belarusians sign a statement saying they do not support the war.

    The FIE voted to readmit Russians and Belarusians at events from mid-April, even before the International Olympic Committee said on Tuesday it wants sports to allow them to compete again as neutral athletes, as qualification for next year’s Paris Olympics ramps up. The IOC has recommended conditions including no Russian or Belarusian entries in team events and a bar on athletes who are contracted to the military, but the FIE has yet to confirm if it will comply.

    Fencing is an influential sport in Olympic circles. IOC president Thomas Bach is a former fencer who won gold at the 1976 Olympics. Russia’s and Ukraine’s national Olympic bodies are headed by ex-fencers.

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    More AP coverage of the Paris Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • Former Harvard fencing coach and Maryland businessman are both acquitted of bribery charges | CNN

    Former Harvard fencing coach and Maryland businessman are both acquitted of bribery charges | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    A former Harvard fencing coach and a Maryland businessman were both acquitted of conspiring to get the businessman’s two sons admitted to Harvard in exchange for more than $1.5 million in bribes, authorities announced Wednesday.

    Former fencing coach Peter Brand, 67, and businessman Jack Zhao, 61, were acquitted of conspiracy to commit federal programs bribery and federal programs bribery – more than two years after they were indicted, according to the US Attorney’s Office in Massachusetts.

    Brand’s attorney said the verdict exonerates his client.

    “We are very grateful to the jury for their service and careful consideration of the evidence,” Attorney Douglas Brooks said. “Today’s verdict exonerates Peter Brand who is 100% innocent.”

    Attorney Bill Weinreb, who represents Zhao, told CNN, “We are grateful to the jury for their service and for doing justice in this case.”

    Brand was Harvard’s men’s and women’s fencing coach from 1999 until 2019, when Harvard University fired him, months after he was accused of selling his home to Zhao, whose son was actively looking to apply to the school.

    The sale of the Needham, Massachusetts, home in 2016 particularly drew investigators attention because Zhao bought it for almost twice what a tax document said it was worth.

    The purchase of the home was among $1.5 million in payments scrutinized by prosecutors in the case, including a large payment to Brand’s charitable foundation and college tuition payments for Brand’s son.

    Zhao has two sons who are fencers and were admitted to Harvard. He denied the bribery allegations and his attorney has called his children academic and fencing stars who got into Harvard on their own merit.

    After the two men were acquitted, a spokesperson for the US Attorney’s Office in the District of Massachusetts told CNN in a statement that they fundamentally disagreed with but respected the verdict.

    “This case was prosecuted for the millions of high school seniors and their families who engage in the stressful and humbling exercise of applying to college every year. That process is supposed to be a meritocracy,” the US Attorney’s Office statement read. “The instant case exposed such profound levels of privilege, entitlement and wealth abusing the college admissions process that something had to be done. And I am proud that we did.”

    The case against Brand and Zhao came amid a sprawling college admissions scam, first revealed in March 2019, in which rich parents of college applicants used their wealth to cheat on standardized tests, bribe sports coaches and lie about the payments.

    “Our trial team worked tirelessly and tried an excellent case. Their efforts were not in vain,” US Attorney’s Office said. “This case and all of the college admissions prosecutions have led to significant reforms at colleges and universities across the country aimed at curtailing the ability of those with means and access to flagrantly ignore the rules that apply to everyone else.”

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