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Tag: Olympic games

  • Marseille and the sea: A portrait of the millennia-old port city that is hosting Olympic sailing

    Marseille and the sea: A portrait of the millennia-old port city that is hosting Olympic sailing

    MARSEILLE, France — Her black headscarf flying up, a teen jumped into the sparkling Mediterranean from a concrete pier at a city marina, then scrambled back to shore and onto a giant paddle board for a quick tour with a dozen excited comrades.

    They were bused in for a swimming camp from a social services center in the mostly Muslim, North African-origin neighborhoods that ring Marseille, which is hosting the 2024 Olympicsailing competition at the opposite end of its spectacular, monument-fringed bay.

    The millennia-old port is a crossroads of cultures and faiths, where the sea is ever present but not equally accessible, and the beauty and cosmopolitan flair rub shoulders with enclaves of poverty and exclusion even more intimately than in the rest of France.

    “There are kids who see the sea from home, but have never come,” said Mathias Sintes, a supervisor at the Corbière marina for the Grand Bleu Association, which has held camps for about 3,000 marginalized children — 50% of whom, he estimates, didn’t know how to swim. “The first goal is to teach them to save themselves.”

    Brahim Timricht, who grew up in the northern neighborhoods known as the “quartiers nord,“ founded the association more than two decades ago to bring children to enjoy the sea that shimmers below their often-dilapidated high-rises on the rocky cliffs.

    Then he realized that many weren’t learning basic swimming in school — a requirement for elementary students in France — and figured he could take advantage of the warm summer months to introduce them to that skill.

    “Then the mothers told me they still wouldn’t go to the beach, because they didn’t know how to swim and were afraid, so we started programs with them,” Timricht said as dozens of children happily splashed under the hot July sun a few days before the opening of the Olympic sailing competition.

    The lack of pools for school programs is a sign of “social and economic segregation,” said Jean Cugier, who teaches physical education in a high school in the quartiers nord and belongs to the national union of PE teachers.

    Over the past academic year, he’s been taking 30 sixth-graders 45 minutes by bus to a pool where two lanes were reserved for them — an unsustainable model, he said, that he’s hoping to modify with pool-based summer camps.

    While the city has discussed using the Olympic marina after the Games — as Paris plans to do with an Olympic pool — the sea is too chilly to swim in during most of the school year. So the only concrete answer to the pool shortage is building more infrastructure, Cugier believes.

    Another issue complicating swimming education, according to the Ministry of Education, has been the medical certificates that parents bring to excuse children from class. Officials say these are often fake and driven by the desire of some conservative Muslim families not to have boys and girls together at a pool.

    Pools have become a flashpoint in France’s struggle over its unique approach to “laïcité” — loosely translated as “secularism” and strictly regulating the role of religion in the public space, including schools and even the Olympics.

    But sports are also a way out of the margins. One of France’s soccer greats, Zinedine Zidane, who carried the Olympic torch in the Paris opening ceremony, was born in the most notorious of Marseille’s quartiers nord. And soccer remains the unifying passion of Marseille’s residents, who routinely flock to cheer home team Olympique de Marseille at the Vélodrome stadium — one of the venues for Olympic soccer matches.

    For the boys and girls at the Corbière marina, the overall seaside experience has been a chance to meet new people from outside their neighborhood.

    “They don’t want to leave,” said one of the group leaders, Sephora Saïd, on the camp’s last day. She had worn a hijab during the outing, including while paddle-boarding.

    The sea as an entry and a meeting point is engrained in the very DNA of Marseille. Founded by Greek colonists 2,600 years ago as a trading post, it is France’s oldest city, and its second largest.

    “Before it’s a city, Marseille is a port,” said Fabrice Denise, director of the Museum of Marseille History, built next to the Greek archeological site in what is still the city’s center. “If you want to understand all that’s extraordinary about it, including the realities of cosmopolitanism, you need to understand its multi-century history as a port.”

    Today’s port, the Mediterranean’s third largest in cargo tonnage, includes everything from refineries to a busy cruise ship area and extends along nearly 40 kilometers (25 miles). But it all started in a small inlet that is today’s top tourist attraction, the Vieux Port.

    Large boats built of wood and caulked with cotton and fiber carried transforming cargos like grapevines, Denise said. The trade expanded north along the Rhone River in what is now one of France’s most celebrated wine-producing regions.

    At the end of the harbor, a small boatyard still restores a handful of boats built in the old way. They were used for fishing until a few decades ago but now are too expensive to maintain for utilitarian purposes.

    Not far away are the forts that King Louis XIV added in the 17th century to protect the port and the military arsenal he established. The small city became a metropolis.

    Religious diversity arrived by sea too — Christians in reality and in myth, one of the most popular ones being that Mary Magdalen herself sailed to Marseille, which is commemorated with a large boat procession each year.

    Centuries later, and increasingly since decolonization, Muslims from North Africa flocked to Marseille’s shores. Of the city’s 870,000 residents, some 300,000 trace their roots to Algeria alone.

    In the narrow streets uphill from the Vieux Port, Arabic rings from market stalls, cafés and couscous restaurants — the second-most spoken language in the city. Marseille’s French itself is unique, incorporating not only a distinctive accent but words from the countryside’s Provençal language, said Médéric Gasquet-Cyrus, a linguist and professor at the University of Aix-Marseille. He is co-author of the French-language book “Marseille for Dummies.”

    On its cover, as on the background of most photos including those of the Olympic regattas, stands the hilltop black-and-white-striped 19th century basilica of Notre Dame de la Garde, topped by a nearly 10-meter (33-foot) gold-covered statue of the Virgin Mary looking out to sea. It’s known as “la Bonne Mère” — the good mother.

    “The Bonne Mère, it’s almost a pagan symbol,” quipped Gasquet-Cyrus, who says he i an atheist but still goes to visit. “She’s the protector of the city.”

    The church welcomes around 2.5 million visitors a year, many for its daily Masses and more on its wide terrace. Its 360-degree views encompass the new and old ports, the villa-studded neighborhoods where the Olympic marina is nestled as well as the blocky towers of the quartiers nord.

    “You can see Marseille, and the sea, and the horizon, all under her benevolent gaze,” said the basilica’s rector, the Rev. Olivier Spinosa. “It’s easier to see beauty from up high, and it invites us to work on beautiful things when we’re down below.”

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    Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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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

    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.

    Maggy Wolanske

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  • Swimmer Tamara Potocka collapses after race at the Olympics

    Swimmer Tamara Potocka collapses after race at the Olympics

    NANTERRE, France — Slovakia swimmer Tamara Potocka collapsed poolside Friday morning after a qualifying heat of the women’s 200-meter individual medley at the Paris Olympics. She was given first aid and then carried off on a stretcher.

    Potocka, 21, was seen wearing an oxygen mask as she was taken away for medical attention. Medical personal at the pool said she was conscious.

    Potocka collapsed as she got out of the water and almost immediately was surrounded by a half-dozen medical attendants who put her on a stretcher after about a minute and carried her off the pool deck.

    It was not clear if she received CPR.

    Israeli swimmer Lea Polonsky, who swam two heats after Potocka, said swimmers know their sport has inherent risks.

    “Of course that’s something in the back of your mind, but we do every day push ourselves to the limit,” she added. “You always know something like that can happen. It’s not something you think about during the race, but it’s always there.”

    This is Potocka’s first Olympics. She resides in the Slovakian capital of Bratislava.

    Potocka finished seventh in her heat in a time of 2 minutes, 14.20 seconds. Her time was not fast enough to advance her to the semifinals of the event, which eliminated her from the competition.

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

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  • Olympics draw new investments to niche sports and women’s teams

    Olympics draw new investments to niche sports and women’s teams

    Players of Team United States celebrate following victory during the Women’s Rugby Sevens Bronze medal match between Team United States and Team Australia on day four of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Stade de France on July 30, 2024 in Paris, France. 

    Michael Steele | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    The 2024 Paris Olympics are attracting new funds for lesser-known sports and women’s teams, with USA women’s rugby sevens, water polo and women’s track and field scoring major contributions this year.

    The USA women’s rugby sevens team earned a $4 million gift from investor Michele Kang earlier this week. Rapper and reality TV personality Flavor Flav threw his support behind water polo, and Alexis Ohanian, the husband of tennis superstar Serena Williams and the co-founder of Reddit, is investing in women’s track and field.

    “Niche sports often don’t get the spotlight they deserve, but they are packed with incredible talent and heart,” Flavor Flav said in announcing his support for water polo in July.

    Flavor Flav announced a five-year partnership with USA water polo, which includes funds for the 2024 USA women’s team as well as serving as the “official hype man” for both the men’s and women’s teams. The size of his contribution wasn’t disclosed.

    He pledged to his support after player Maggie Steffens posted on Instagram that she and her teammates often have to work a second or third job in order to compete, given that water polo doesn’t garner as much attention as other sports.

    The USA women’s water polo team has won gold for the past three Olympics, and Flavor Flav aims to elevate their visibility. The partnership includes his commitment to boosting USA water polo on social media, beyond cheering poolside.

    Growing support

    Beyond the Games

    Ohanian already co-own’s a women’s soccer club, and he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” this week that he aims to extend the popularity of women’s track and field beyond its Olympics peak.

    He announced in April that his venture capital firm will host a competition in late September with the largest ever prize pool for a women’s track and field event. Ohanian is doubling the stakes of the Paris Games with a $30,000 top prize.

    “Nothing about this is charity nor should it be charity,” Ohanian said. “This is about excellence, about celebrating it.”

    — CNBC’s Jessica Golden, Kasey O’Brien and Nicolas Vega contributed to this report.

    Disclosure: CNBC parent NBCUniversal owns NBC Sports and NBC Olympics. NBC Olympics is the U.S. broadcast rights holder to all Summer and Winter Games through 2032.

    Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

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  • Coco Gauff is out of women’s doubles at Paris Olympics a day after her singles loss

    Coco Gauff is out of women’s doubles at Paris Olympics a day after her singles loss

    PARIS — Coco Gauff lost in women’s doubles at the Paris Olympics on Wednesday, a day after her tearful exit in singles.

    Gauff and her U.S. teammate, Jessica Pegula, were the top-seeded women’s pair but were eliminated in the second round by the Czech duo of Karolina Muchova and Linda Noskova 2-6, 6-4, 10-5 in a match tiebreaker.

    “We were playing well,” Gauff said. “Both of them just played a better tiebreaker.”

    On Tuesday, Gauff was defeated by Donna Vekic of Croatia in straight sets in the third round of singles, where the American was seeded second. Gauff got into an argument with the chair umpire over an officiating decision close to the finish of that match.

    Even after the two setbacks, Gauff still had something to play for in Paris, where she was one of the U.S. flag bearers during last week’s opening ceremony and had hoped to head home with three medals. She was scheduled to play in mixed doubles with Taylor Fritz later Wednesday.

    “If I play like what I did today (with Pegula),” Gauff said, “we have a good chance.”

    Gauff arrived in France as one of the biggest stars in her, or any, sport.

    The 20-year-old from Florida won her first Grand Slam singles championship at the U.S. Open last September, and she collected her first major doubles title at the French Open in June — although not with Pegula, who was out injured, but with Katerina Siniakova of the Czech Republic.

    Gauff also has reached a singles final at the French Open, losing the trophy to Iga Swiatek in 2022. That major tournament is played each year at Roland Garros, the same clay-court facility being used to host Paris Games tennis matches.

    Muchova was the runner-up to Swiatek at the French Open last year and also made it to the semifinals at the U.S. Open before losing to Gauff in a match interrupted for 50 minutes by a climate protest.

    Muchova returned to action in June after missing 10 months because of surgery on her right wrist.

    Wednesday’s match was delayed because of rain right before Noskova served for the second set with the Czechs ahead 5-4. When play resumed, they took that set, then dominated the first-to-10, win-by-two match tiebreaker that is used in place of a traditional third set for all doubles matches at the Olympics.

    “Honestly, sometimes 10-point tiebreakers are a little unlucky,” Pegula said. “They played pretty much the perfect tiebreaker.”

    The 19-year-old Noskova closed out the victory with a volley winner.

    Her biggest achievement to date came at the Australian Open in January, when she beat Swiatek in the third round. That made Noskova the first teenager to beat a No. 1-ranked woman at Melbourne Park since 1999.

    “I was just standing there, letting her play,” Muchova said with a laugh about her partner, “and that’s how we won.”

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

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  • Full-time scientist and part-time basketball player Canyon Barry chases gold in 3×3 at Paris Games

    Full-time scientist and part-time basketball player Canyon Barry chases gold in 3×3 at Paris Games

    PARIS — Canyon Barry is a part-time basketball player.

    His full-time job is system engineer for a defense and space contractor.

    Barry, who will take the courts at the Paris Games searching for a 3×3 gold medal for the U.S. men’s team, has an undergraduate degree from the College of Charleston in physics and a master’s degree in nuclear engineering from Florida. So, is he a rocket scientist? A nuclear physicist?

    “Scientist, engineer, problem-solver, take your pick,” said Barry, with a slight chuckle and a wink.

    As for what his work entails with the aerospace and defense company L3Harris Technologies, Barry is tight-lipped.

    “I’ve talked to L3Harris and they’ve said to not give too much specifics in terms of programs that we’re working on for clearance and security reasons,” he said. “But we have a great international compliance and trade security. (And) they briefed me on all this stuff and just said kind of leave it at systems engineering.”

    The U.S. men lost their opener Tuesday night against Serbia. The Americans play Poland on Wednesday.

    When not with teammates Jimmer Fredette, Kareem Maddox and Dylan Travis preparing for the Olympics, the son of Hall of Famer and NBA champion Rick Barry is often on his laptop working on projects for L3Harris Technologies.

    Because of the team’s international travel in the run up to the Paris Games, Barry would be taking zoom calls and doing his day job in the middle of the night while the rest of the team was sleeping.

    The 30-year-old Barry appreciates the support he’s received from the company as he’s prepared for the Olympics. He’s on vacation from his job during the Games to devote his full attention to the chase for gold.

    “Really fortunate to work for that company and what they’ve allowed me to do,” Barry said. “And I also think that they’ve really matched up with the Olympic spirit because they protect our U.S. war fighters abroad and kind of bringing that American spirit is really cool.”

    The 6-foot-5 Barry was interested in science from a young age, and despite being born into a basketball family, his mother, Lynn Barry, made academics the top priority in their home.

    “She would always say: ‘You never know what’s going to happen with sports in terms of injuries or when might be your last game,’” he said. “So having … a career that you’re passionate about and can kind of have an identity outside of sports means a lot to me. Because now, when the ball does stop bouncing, I know that I have a passion and a job that I can go back to that I find fulfillment in and can really enjoy that for the rest of my life.”

    While Barry’s teammates appreciate his intellect and attention to detail on the court, there are times where they tire of him correcting them off it.

    “That’s never fun,” Fredette said. “He’s always trying to be like no, this is how you say it, or this is the right way to do it. So, he’s always making sure that we’re on our P’s and Q’s.”

    Still, it’s all love between Fredette and Barry.

    “You can see it when he plays on the court, he has a similar thinking aspect of how he likes to play the game,” Fredette said. “So, he’s obviously one of my best friends — love the guy — and don’t tell him I said it, but he’s super smart.”

    Though his scientific brain is most often used for that top-secret government work, he’s also used physics to justify an unconventional part of his game. His father famously shot underhand free throws or “granny shots” and he’s done the same throughout his career.

    “There’s been a bunch of physics articles that have come out in terms of it’s a more repeatable motion,” Barry said. “When you shoot free throws overhanded your wrist, your elbow and your shoulder all have to fire at the correct time and move in to create the proper trajectory and launch angle and arc. Versus for an underhand shot, it’s really just your shoulder.

    “So, with one joint, you’re really simplifying the shot.”

    Barry’s family is with him in Paris as he’ll try to help the U.S. men have a better outcome than they did in the last Olympics. The men didn’t qualify in the sport’s debut at the Tokyo Games — though the American women won gold.

    He’ll also have a room full of scientists rooting for him back in Melbourne, Florida. His co-workers hosted an ice cream party as a sendoff, where everyone wore T-shirts they had made in his honor.

    “It said: ‘Go Canyon,’ and then had a picture of the Eiffel Tower with a satellite orbiting instead of the basketball,” he said.

    And when he returns to Florida, he hopes it’s with some special hardware.

    “I would love nothing more than to come back to that office with a gold medal,” Barry said, “and let all of them feel it and take pictures with it.”

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

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  • Rafael Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz win to reach the Paris Olympics doubles quarterfinals

    Rafael Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz win to reach the Paris Olympics doubles quarterfinals

    PARIS — PARIS (AP) — Rafael Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz are getting the hang of this doubles thing, improving to 2-0 as a team at the Paris Olympics and moving into the quarterfinals with a 6-4, 6-7 (2), 10-2 match tiebreaker victory over Tallon Griekspoor and Wesley Koolhof of the Netherlands on Tuesday night.

    Playing a day after Nadal’s singles loss to rival Novak Djokovic and Alcaraz’s win against Griekspoor, the old-and-young Spanish duo, wearing polo shirts in slightly different shades of red, didn’t look like a pairing that never had played together until this event.

    As has been the case throughout tennis at this Summer Games, the attention was fully on the 38-year-old Nadal, owner of 22 Grand Slam titles and two gold medals, and the 21-year-old Alcaraz, whose major trophy total already is at four, including from the French Open last month and Wimbledon this month.

    Nadal — whose wife and 1 1/2-year-old son, Rafael Jr., were in the stands — and Alcaraz will face the fourth-seeded American team of Austin Krajicek and Rajeev Ram for a semifinal berth. Krajicek and Ram beat Thiago Monteiro and Thiago Seyboth Wild of Brazil 6-4, 7-6 (3) on Tuesday.

    In the scorching morning, more than six hours before this doubles match began, fans crowded into tiny Court 3 a short walk away for a practice session with Nadal at one baseline and Alcaraz at the other. Some folks waited in lines dozens deep hoping to get in to catch at least a glimpse of the two stars.

    Then, in the muggy evening, spectators filled every seat at 10,000-capacity Court Suzanne Lenglen, the second-largest stadium at Roland Garros, the facility being used for Summer Games tennis and also the site of the annual French Open that Nadal has won a record 14 times.

    Koolhof, a former doubles No. 1 and the 2023 men’s doubles champion at Wimbledon, and Griekspoor were introduced first, to polite applause and yells from their orange-clad Dutch supporters. Then came Nadal and Alcaraz — “Nadalcaraz,” as some have coined them — and the noise was rather substantial. As at Nadal’s previous outings at these Olympics, the chants of “Ra-fa!” or shouts of “Vamos, Rafa!” or “Let’s go, Rafa! Let’s go!” were forceful and frequent.

    And he and Alcaraz delivered.

    Nadal, who’s been dealing with various injuries the past two seasons, including hip surgery in 2023, did not seem nearly as hampered as he did against Djokovic; then again, doubles requires far less running and exertion than singles, of course.

    Alcaraz showed no signs of being bothered by a painful groin muscle that he says has bothered him since Wimbledon and led him to take a medical timeout against Griekspoor on Monday.

    The Spaniards kept earning break points in the opening set, taking advantage of Griekspoor’s trouble volleying — can’t be easy to handle from up close the powerful shots off the rackets of Nadal or Alcaraz — then finally converted one to go up 4-3.

    That lead arrived when Alcaraz smacked a forehand winner.

    Nadal cried out, “Si!” Alcaraz screamed, Vamos!” They slapped palms. There would be more work to do, especially after dropping the second set, but they came through and will play on.

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

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  • Coco Gauff loses an argument with the chair umpire and a match to Donna Vekic at the Paris Olympics

    Coco Gauff loses an argument with the chair umpire and a match to Donna Vekic at the Paris Olympics

    PARIS — The scene felt all too familiar to Coco Gauff. An officiating decision she was sure was wrong. A chair umpire who wouldn’t listen. Tears streaming down her cheeks. And, most disappointing of all, a loss, this time at the Paris Olympics.

    Even the site was the same: Court Philippe Chatrier was where the reigning U.S. Open champion was eliminated in the third round at the Summer Games by Donna Vekic of Croatia 7-6 (7), 6-2 on Tuesday. That’s also the main stadium used annually for the French Open, where Gauff found herself in a nearly identical dispute over a call while being defeated by eventual champion Iga Swiatek in the semifinals last month.

    “There’s been multiple times this year where that’s happened to me — where I felt like I always have to be an advocate for myself on the court,” Gauff said afterward, renewing a call for video review to be used in tennis, as it is in many other professional sports.

    “I felt that he called it before I hit, and I don’t think the ref disagreed,” she said. “I think he just thought it didn’t affect my swing, which I felt like it did.”

    Gauff, a 20-year-old American who was seeded No. 2 at the Olympics in singles, already was trailing by a lot when the episode happened two games from the end of the match.

    She hit a serve and Vekic’s return landed near the baseline. A line judge initially called Vekic’s shot out; Gauff did not keep the ball in play. Chair umpire Jaume Campistol thought Vekic’s shot landed in and awarded her the point, giving her a service break and a 4-2 lead.

    Gauff walked over to talk to the official and play was delayed for several minutes.

    “I never argue these calls. But he called it out before I hit the ball,” Gauff said to Campistol. “It’s not even a perception; it’s the rules.”

    She easily won her first two singles matches, dropping a total of just five games. But her first Olympic singles tournament — she is still in women’s doubles and mixed doubles — ended with a performance that was hardly her best on the hottest day of the Summer Games so far, with the heat rising above 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius).

    “These points are big deals. Usually afterward, they apologize. So it’s kind of frustrating. The ‘Sorry’ doesn’t help you once the match is over,” Gauff said. “I can’t say I would have won the match if I would have won that point.”

    Even before the trouble over the umpiring decision, Gauff could not sustain a good start against Vekic, who was a semifinalist at Wimbledon this month.

    The American led 4-1 and was a point from moving ahead 5-1 and serving for the opening set. But she didn’t close the deal, then wasted a couple of set points at 6-4 in the ensuing tiebreaker. Vekic surged to the end of that set, then maintained her level in the second.

    One measure of Vekic’s superiority on this afternoon: She finished with 33 winners to just nine for Gauff.

    “I’m not going to sit here and say one point affected the result today,” Gauff acknowledged, “because I was already on the losing side of things.”

    Still, the most memorable moment in the match was that second-set argument. Gauff even alluded to that Swiatek loss while talking to Campistol and a supervisor who joined the conversation on the court Tuesday.

    “It always happens here at the French Open to me. Every time,” Gauff said, holding a tennis ball in one hand and her racket in the other while pleading her case. “This is like the fourth, fifth time it’s happened this year.”

    Vekic did not get involved, staying at her end of the court and fiddling with her strings.

    When Gauff gave up and headed back on court to resume play, fans booed loudly — anger directed at the official.

    The first point of the next game went Gauff’s way, and spectators cheered wildly for her.

    But about 10 minutes later, the match was over.

    Gauff was scheduled to head back out on court with U.S. teammate Taylor Fritz for a first-round mixed doubles match later Tuesday. She also is competing in women’s doubles with Jessica Pegula at these Olympics.

    Over the weekend, Gauff spoke about aiming to leave with three medals — one from each of her events in Paris. That won’t happen now.

    “I want” Gauff said Tuesday, “to come home with something.”

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

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  • What is that? Olympic Phryge confounds some, but is very French

    What is that? Olympic Phryge confounds some, but is very French

    PARIS — PARIS (AP) — “Is it the Eiffel Tower?” asks a puzzled American tourist queued in front of the Paris 2024 Megastore.

    To international visitors, the triangular Olympic Phryge mascot might resemble the iconic monument, a “poop emoji” — that’s according to another shopper, a tongue or even, well, female anatomy. However, it rings a particular bell for the French.

    It’s been over 200 years since the “bonnet phrygien” was last a common sight in the streets of Paris. Yet, the hat still carries the same revolutionary spirit it first did in 1789.

    The official Olympic Phryge mascot is a nod to the Phrygian cap, an emblematic accessory of the French revolutionaries. Revived from Roman times, when freed slaves used to wear it, the revolutionaries adopted it as a testimony to their values of freedom and emancipation for both men and women.

    The heritage of the French Revolution and the birth of the 1st Republic have deeply influenced the French, who now associate the Phrygian cap — and subsequently the Phryge (pronounced along the lines of “freezh”) — with its ideals.

    “It’s the symbol of liberty, and it’s also a very strong message linked to the revolution that we want for those games,” declared Tony Estanguet, president of the Paris 2024 organizing committee, before the Games.

    Showing a little more respect for French authorities this time, the Phryge is making its presence felt across France. Life-sized Phryges have been popping up at Olympic venues, where fans wait in line to take pictures with them. They’ve visited famous French monuments and even posed with foreign police officers.

    The Olympic mascot is all over the Games — and, of course, the Paris 2024 official stores. It adorns mugs, caps, T-shirts, key rings and more. Within just 15 minutes of the Megastore’s opening Monday on the Champs-Élysées, tourists are already hastily lining up to snag some souvenirs.

    Some, such as Kevin Cahill, brim with enthusiasm at the idea of buying “everything, everything because I’m very excited to be here.” Even though he admits he doesn’t know the mascot’s symbolism, he describes it as “amazing.”

    His excitement mirrors that of many others, as seen with Pierre Leonardi, who’s sporting the Phrygian hat: “I wanted to wear this one today, in memory of France.”

    However, not everyone is convinced by the incongruous appearance of the mascot. Before the Games, the historical symbol seemed overshadowed by its apparent resemblance to a clitoris. “We’ve published a new guide to the anatomy of the clitoris!” posted the U.K.’s Vagina Museum, along with an updated guide to the organ that includes images of the Phryge. Somewhat appropriately, condoms bearing the Olympics logo prominently feature the Phryge with a megaphone: “Score a win: Yes to consent, no to STDs.”

    Whether or not the true intent of the mascot is clear to them, the tourists at the Megastore are ensuring the Olympic Phryge will make its way around the world.

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    Associated Press journalist Megan Janetsky contributed reporting from Paris.

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  • Two female boxers meet Paris Olympics rules after gender test issue at world championships, IOC says

    Two female boxers meet Paris Olympics rules after gender test issue at world championships, IOC says

    PARIS (AP) — Two female boxers at the Paris Olympics who were disqualified at the 2023 world championships after being judged to have failed gender eligibility tests have complied with all rules to fight at the games, the IOC said Monday.

    Lin Yu-ting of Taiwan and Imane Khelif of Algeria are competing at their second Summer Games. Both finished outside the medals at the Tokyo Olympics held in 2021.

    “All athletes participating in the boxing tournament of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 comply with the competition’s eligibility and entry regulations, as well as all applicable medical regulations,” the International Olympic Committee said in a statement.

    The 28-year-old Lin is a two-time worlds gold medalist and the 25-year-old Khelif won a silver at the 2022 tournament.

    Both were removed from their competitions in New Delhi last year at the world championships, run by the International Boxing Association which has been banished from Olympic boxing since before the Tokyo Games.

    The different status of Lin and Khelif at the Olympics and worlds is fallout from the years-long dispute between the IOC and the Russian-led IBA over alleged failures of governance and integrity, plus reliance on funding from state energy firm Gazprom.

    The IOC has appointed officials to run boxing at two straight Summer Games and acknowledged Monday the tournament rules for Paris are “descended from” those in place eight years ago at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

    Boxing officials picked to run Paris qualifying and finals tournaments tried “to restrict amendments to minimize the impact on athletes’ preparation and guaranteeing consistency between Olympic Games,” the IOC said.

    The IOC-run database of about 10,700 athletes competing in Paris detailed both boxers’ experiences at the 2023 worlds.

    Khelif was disqualified “just hours before her gold medal showdown” against a Chinese opponent “after her elevated levels of testosterone failed to meet the eligibility criteria.”

    Lin “was stripped of her bronze medal (by the IBA) after failing to meet eligibility requirements based on the results of a biochemical test,” the IOC database stated.

    On Thursday, Khelif will fight Italy’s Angela Carini in the 66-kilogram category at the North Paris Arena. Lin, who got a first-round bye as the top seed in the 57-kilogram category, will have her opening bout Friday in the round of 16.

    Medal bouts in boxing at Paris will be staged at the Roland Garros tennis venue.

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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

    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.

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  • South Korea tops host nation France to win 3rd straight men’s team archery gold

    South Korea tops host nation France to win 3rd straight men’s team archery gold

    PARIS (AP) — A fired-up home crowd couldn’t push France past the South Korean juggernaut in the Paris Olympics men’s team archery final.

    The first set finished with a score of 57-all, but South Korea took the second 59-58 and the third 59-56 to win 5-1 overall on Monday at Les Invalides.

    Kim Woo-jin, Kim Je-deok and Lee Woo-seok won the third straight team gold for South Korea.

    French fans waved their flags feverishly throughout the final and brought the noise whenever one of their archers hit a 10. Even after things clearly were going South Korea’s way in the third set, the French fans remained engaged.

    “While we were facing the French team, there was a lot of cheers from the audience,” South Korea’s Kim Woo-jin said through a translator. “That was the biggest challenge.”

    Kim Woo-jin was on the past three winning teams but he has not claimed individual gold. He will compete for that on Aug. 4. He also will participate in the mixed team competition on Aug. 2.

    “I think that some of my first initial goals are already met because those were my initial targets,” he said. “And now I have my individual games left. But usually, the higher the goals, I think that usually, you have a lot of mistakes. So I will try to relieve my head of all of those goals and try to just focus with my heart.”

    It was South Korea’s seventh team gold medal since the sport returned to the Olympics in 1972 – no other nation has won more than once in that span.

    Turkey claimed bronze by defeating China 6-2. France and Turkey claimed their first medals since that 1972 return.

    Turkey’s Mete Gazoz added to his medal collection — he was the individual gold medalist in Tokyo.

    After the loss, French fans cheered loudly when team members Baptiste Addis, Thomas Chirault and Jean-Charles Valladont stepped up to the podium with the Eiffel Tower standing in the distance.

    “It’s true that we’re making history today,” Chirault said through a translator. “We have the first silver medal for the men’s team. We had medals in individuals or for women, but this one, we didn’t have it. So now we’re opening the games and we hope to have others after. So we’re very proud to have opened this medal count, if you like, and we are confident. We really want to reproduce this success in the future.”

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  • Who is Ilona Maher? Here’s what to know about the US women’s rugby sevens Olympian and TikTok star

    Who is Ilona Maher? Here’s what to know about the US women’s rugby sevens Olympian and TikTok star

    SAINT-DENIS, France (AP) — Rugby sevens star Ilona Maher has been a huge hit on social media as the U.S. women’s team has progressed to the semifinals at the Paris Olympics.

    She’s been busy making funny TikTok and Instagram reels and also empowering posts about women and sports. She’s also producing some big hits on opponents at Stade de France as a regular starter for the U.S. women’s rugby sevens team.

    Her video recruiting recently retired NFL center Jason Kelce as a super fan for the No. 4-ranked U.S. team after their first two games on Monday magnified the attention.

    The 27-year-old Maher isn’t new to this. Her hilarious takes on village life in the pandemic-era Tokyo Olympics three years ago made her one of the breakout stars of those Games.

    How did Maher become famous on TikTok?

    Spectators were barred from Olympic venues in Tokyo, and there’s always strict rules anyway about who is allowed into the athletes’ village. Those weren’t barriers for Maher. With fans locked out under harsh social-distancing rules, her social media followers got a humorous inside look at the Games — starting with the bedding.

    Maher and her rugby sevens teammates tested out the cardboard beds in a TikTok video that gained millions of views, showing them performing CPR on the bed, doing yoga and even throwing a mock tantrum.

    What is Maher doing during the Paris Olympics?

    Another Olympic village, more cardboard beds.

    “Hey everyone, we’re back testing out the cardboard beds. My bed is going to break, yes, but I’m going to do it anyway,” Maher says by way of introduction to the video that showed her and some of her teammates wrestling on the beds, doing gymnastics moves and Irish jigs, among other things. Nothing to lose sleep over.

    Her U.S. teammates, including Nicole Heavirland, Naya Tapper and Sammy Sullivan, often make it into Maher’s posts. Then there’s the people she runs across at the Olympics — like Snoop Dogg (“He’s an insanely cool dude”) and U.S. tennis star Coco Gauff (the topic turned to pickleball). To the guy who asked if she was an Olympian and then wrongly guessed which sport: “All 5’10” of me, 200 pounds — a gymnast. Wrong!”

    What is #beastbeautybrains?

    Maher uses a #beastbeautybrains hashtag with the aim of spreading body image positivity and bringing more attention to rugby and women’s sports in general.

    From the U.S.-branded bikini, to the rugby uniform to the stylish formal Ralph Lauren clothes, Maher wears them all with pride and seemingly equal comfort in a vast range of photos and reels of her Olympic wardrobe.

    She’s strong — her stiff-arm shoving away attempted tackles against Japan and France were plenty evidence of that.

    She’s fast — running almost the length of the field to score against Japan showed that.

    She’s smart — as well as gaining a nursing degree, following in the footsteps of her mom, she worked to graduate from rugby enthusiast to professional athlete. Next step is to make its pay better.

    She summed it up in a quick post to her million-plus Instagram followers before the opening ceremony on Friday.

    “As the Olympics officially start, I want you all to take a look at all the different body types on display. All body types matter. All body types are worthy from the smallest gymnast to the tallest volleyball player, from a rugby player to a shot-putter and a sprinter. All bodies are beautiful and can do amazing things. So truly see yourself in these athletes and know you can do it, too.”

    How is the US women’s rugby sevens team doing in Paris?

    The U.S. advanced to a semifinal match against defending champion New Zealand with a 17-7 quarterfinal win over Britain, avenging a loss to the British at the same stage in Tokyo three years ago.

    Maher played an instrumental role in the first try, using her big fend to brush off one tackler, draw in a defender and then release Tapper into the clear on the left wing to score.

    She made another barging, long-range run just before halftime to ensure the U.S. kept momentum.

    Sammy Sullivan and Kristi Kirshe scored second-half tries to seal the win.

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

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  • 17-year-old Canadian Summer McIntosh wins gold in 400-meter IM, her second medal of the Games

    17-year-old Canadian Summer McIntosh wins gold in 400-meter IM, her second medal of the Games

    NANTERRE, France — Canadian phenom Summer McIntosh claimed the first gold medal of her just-burgeoning career Monday night with a dominating victory in the 400-meter individual medley at the Paris Olympics.

    The 17-year-old McIntosh collected her first medal of any color on the opening night of swimming, taking a silver in the 400 freestyle behind Ariarne Titmus — and ahead of Katie Ledecky.

    Now, McIntosh has the most prized color of all.

    “I try to take every event very individually and just do my work, but starting off for me — getting on the podium — is definitely a great way to start,” McIntosh said. “You try to continue to get better and better.”

    She pushed the pace hard through the first half of the grueling race — the butterfly and backstroke legs — to leave everyone in her wake except American Katie Grimes.

    McIntosh was under her own world-record pace, but couldn’t keep it going. She touched in 4 minutes, 27.71 seconds, more than three seconds off the mark of 4:24.38 she set at the Canadian trials in May.

    But it was more than enough to blow away the field in the Olympic final.

    McIntosh seemed to take it all in stride. Maybe it’s because she competed at the Tokyo Olympics at age 14, so she sort of feels like a veteran now.

    “Every single time I get to race on the world stage, I learn more and more about handling mentally and physically and emotionally and trying not to get too high or too low,” McIntosh said.

    She’s got a grueling schedule in Paris which includes two more individual races — the 200 butterfly and 200 IM.

    There are no plans to celebrate just yet.

    “I mean, obviously I’m super happy with this gold,” McIntosh said. “But now I’m all about the 200 fly on day five.”

    Grimes, who is also swimming the open water event in Paris, held on to claim the silver in 4:33.40. The Americans also grabbed the bronze when Emma Weyant touched in 4:34.93.

    David Popovici made the teenagers 2-for-2 on the night when he pulled off a thrilling victory in the men’s 200 freestyle.

    The 19-year-old Romanian was among three swimmers who swapped the lead back and forth on the final lap. First, it was American Luke Hobson edging in front. Then Britain’s Matthew Richards, out in Lane 1, pushed to the lead.

    Finally, it was Popovici mustering everything he had to get to the wall in 1:44.72 — a mere two-hundredths ahead of Richards, with Hobson just 0.07 back to earn the bronze.

    Britain’s Duncan Scott, the silver medalist in Tokyo three years ago, finished in 1:44.87 to miss out on the podium this time. The top four were separated by a mere 0.15 seconds.

    Thomas Ceccon gave Italy its second gold in as many nights at La Defense Arena, rallying to win the men’s 100 backstroke.

    China’s Xu Jiayu led at the turn, just ahead of American Ryan Murphy — the 2016 gold medalist. Ceccon was third, but he switched to another gear on the return lap.

    The Italian, who has held the world record since the 2022 world championships in Budapest, now has a gold medal to go with it after finishing in 52.00.

    Xu claimed the silver (52.32), while the 29-year-old Murphy settled for the bronze for the second Olympics in a row at 52.39.

    Ceccon followed Nicolo Martinenghi, who grabbed Italy’s first gold at the pool with a victory in the 100 breaststroke Sunday night.

    In the only semifinals of the night, Australia’s Kaylee McKeown and Regan Smith of the U.S. set up a much-anticipated duel in the women’s 100 backstroke.

    They each won their heats, with McKeown posting the fastest time (57.97) ad McKeown right on her heels (57.99).

    McKeown is the reigning Olympic champion and former world-record holder — a mark that Smith snatched away with time of 57.13 at the U.S. trials last month.

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

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  • Vandalism hits communication lines in France, but the Paris Olympics aren’t affected

    Vandalism hits communication lines in France, but the Paris Olympics aren’t affected

    PARIS — The French government was investigating after multiple telecommunications lines were hit by acts of vandalism Monday, affecting fiber lines and fixed and mobile phone lines as cities around France host events for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

    Organizers for the Paris Games say their operations were not affected. France’s second largest telecommunications company said it had made repairs in several areas already or workarounds kept the scale of the impact low. Some other providers also got things back up and running later Monday.

    The vandalism came after arson attacks hit train networks around France on Friday, hours before the Olympics opening ceremony.

    A national investigation has been launched into the attacks on optic cables and “the damage to the telecommunications systems,” according to Paris prosecutors. The crimes they’re investigating include damaging property with an intent to harm vital national interests and attacking data processing systems by an organized group, which carry 10- to 15-year prison sentences, prosecutors said.

    Marina Ferrari, secretary of state in charge of digital affairs, posted on X that damage in several regions overnight Sunday to Monday affected telecommunications operators. She said that led to local impact on access to fiber lines and fixed and mobile telephone lines.

    A French police official said there were issues in at least six of the country’s administrative departments, which include the region around the Mediterranean city of Marseille, hosting Olympic soccer and sailing competitions.

    Paris 2024 organizers said they have been informed of acts of sabotage on fiber optic networks across several French departments but “we can only confirm that there is no impact on our operations.”

    SFR, France’s second-largest telecommunications company, said its long-distance network “was the target of acts of vandalism at five points in five departments between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m.”

    “Maintenance teams are on site to carry out repair work,” SFR said in a statement. It added that the impact of the vandalism acts on its customers was “very low because there are sufficient backups and workarounds.”

    Up to eight French and international operators, who use SFR’s infrastructure, have been affected, the company also said, adding that full service has already been restored by Monday afternoon in several areas.

    Telecom operators Bouygues and Free confirmed they were affected. Free later said service had been restored after an “incident effecting multiple networks in 11 departments.”

    A national investigation also is underway into last week’s train sabotage, which disrupted travel for nearly a million passengers in France as well as people in London and in other neighboring countries. Train traffic had largely resumed by Monday.

    French media reported that an extreme-left activist was arrested at a rail facility on Sunday in the Seine-Maritime region of western France. But the Paris prosecutor’s office said it was unconnected to what happened Friday and that no one has been arrested so far in the national investigation into the arson attacks. ___

    Surk reported from Nice. Nicolas Vaux-Montagny contributed from Lyon.

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  • Nita Ambani inaugurates India House, a first for the country at the Olympics

    Nita Ambani inaugurates India House, a first for the country at the Olympics

    PARIS (AP) — Fresh off the year’s most extravagant wedding, Nita Ambani inaugurated the India House for the Paris Olympics on Saturday.

    The first of its kind at an Olympic Games for India, the temporary house is meant to promote Indian culture as the country aspires to host the 2036 Games. The endeavor was born from the partnership between the Indian Olympic Association and the Reliance Foundation, which Ambani founded and chairs.

    “Today we gather here at the Paris Olympic Games 2024 to open the doors to a dream. A dream that belongs to 1.4 billion Indians. A dream to bring India to the Olympics and our shared dream to bring the Olympics to India,” Ambani, an International Olympic Committee member, said in her address.

    India House is one of several hospitality houses that spring up around the Games, affiliated with participating countries or brands. This is a smattering of what’s on offer from Saturday through Aug. 11, the day of the closing ceremony:

    — Tributes to Indian architecture and artistic motifs (think tigers and peacocks)

    — Virtual reality tourism

    — Cricket matches

    — Workshops on block printing

    — Henna tattooing and Bollywood dance

    — A lounge for athletes

    — Food, of course, which ranges from biryani and mutton curry to curd rice and several desserts.

    “It’s beautiful, it’s colorful. It’s smiles, it’s joy, it’s happiness. It’s India,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said at the event. “It’s what we all love, the entire world. The world is here today. And India House unites the world.”

    Infantino was there to encourage the development of soccer in India, whose men’s team ranks 124th and women’s team 67th in their respective FIFA standings.

    “In India, football is fantastic,” he said. “Together, we make it grow even more. And, I’m here for that. So to all Indians: Watch us, football is coming seriously now in India.”

    India has sent 112 athletes in 16 sports to the Olympics.

    In addition to daily activities, India House will have performances, including an opening night concert from famed Bollywood playback singer Shaan. Sunday is “Bollywood Day” but will feature an hourlong session with ex-cricketer and coach Rahul Dravid on the future of cricket at the Olympics.

    Men’s and women’s cricket, played in the Twenty20 format, will be added at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

    Ambani was accompanied by her husband, Mukesh Ambani, the billionaire industrialist who is Asia’s richest man. It’s been a busy month for the couple: Their youngest son, Anant Ambani, was married just two weeks ago in an elaborate, global celebrity-filled affair that many have dubbed the wedding of the year.

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  • Talk of Olympic fashion — and the Paris rain — at starry Ralph Lauren fashion event

    Talk of Olympic fashion — and the Paris rain — at starry Ralph Lauren fashion event

    PARIS (AP) — Fashion. Sports. And of course, the rain.

    Those were the topics — separately, and together — on everyone’s lips as a gaggle of luminaries from sports, entertainment and media packed into Ralph Lauren’s Paris eatery Saturday evening in yet another high-wattage celebrity Olympic gathering in the French capital.

    The starry crowd at Ralph’s Restaurant included Oscar winner Jessica Chastain, Nick Jonas, John Mulaney and Alan Cumming, among other entertainers. First lady Jill Biden arrived late and drew a large crowd around her.

    “Saturday Night Live” executive producer Lorne Michaels was there, pointing to his shoes and noting they were still wet from the previous evening’s epic, and rainy, opening ceremony. “These shoes are not all-weather,” he explained. The ceremony had left many drenched, but most still very happy to be there — including Michaels.

    “Let’s put it this way, I was watching in a place with a lot of stars, and nobody was complaining,” he said.

    Also not complaining: the Olympic athletes in attendance, who’d spent much of the previous evening on a boat in the rain. Had they been worried about catching cold?

    “It was a thought,” said Jeffrey Louis, a member of the U.S. breaking team competing in the sport’s Olympic debut, “but then I figured we’d just all get sick at the same time.”

    “So we all embraced it,” added Louis, who said he had tried to cover up with a poncho briefly, but when he put it down, someone swiped it. But he survived the rains in good health — in any case, his competition is not until the end of the Olympics.

    Likewise, Chiaka Ogbogu, a U.S. volleyball player, decided to not to worry about colds. “We’re in it, so might as well not worry about it,” she said she thought at the time. Also, she noted: Athletes are some of the toughest people out there. They can deal with colds.

    Ogbogu, who is competing in her second Olympics after Toyko in 2021, said she was delighted to be at a Ralph Lauren event because she is a self-described “fashion nerd.” Asked which team uniform she liked the best — besides her own Team USA kit, which she was wearing — she noted the elegant Mongolian uniform, which has been widely acclaimed. She also admired Haiti’s vibrantly colored designs, which likewise have gained attention

    Singer-actor Nick Jonas cited a special reason for loving the Indian uniforms in the three colors of that country’s national flag: “My wife’s Indian,” he noted, referring to spouse Priyanka Chopra. He’d just flown into Paris a few hours earlier for a whirlwind few days at the Games, during which he plans to watch gymnastics with star SImone Biles, among other things.

    Jonas missed the chance to see the opening ceremony in person — and to get wet — but watched it on TV. He said he was amazed by the production values — noting in particular the French tricolor smoke billowing over a bridge. “That was like nothing I’ve ever seen,” he said.

    As for fashion — the theme of the night — almost everyone seemed to agree that these 2024 Olympics had taken fashion up a notch. Ogobogu, the volleyball player, said it was “almost inevitable — I mean, it’s Paris!”

    David Lauren, the label’s chief branding and innovation officer and son of founder Ralph Lauren, who did not attend, attributed it partly to the rise of social media and how quickly images of Olympic fashion travel these days, as compared to 2008 when the label began outfitting the U.S. team.

    To make his point, he whipped out his phone and showed an Instagram video of LeBron James, a U.S. flag bearer with Coco Gauff, being readied in his white Lauren jacket with red-and-blue trim. It had nearly 850,000 likes.

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  • Russian media throw shade at Paris Olympics, which TV won’t show

    Russian media throw shade at Paris Olympics, which TV won’t show

    TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — Watching the Paris Olympics will be difficult for most people in Russia — and in the view of its media, it’s not really worth the effort.

    Only 15 Russian citizens will be competing in the Games and, in principle, they won’t be representing Russia. Because Russia and neighboring Belarus were banned from fielding national teams because of the war in Ukraine, Russian and Belarusian athletes approved to compete will be doing so as neutrals.

    Russians have been intense Olympics fans since the days when the Soviet Union’s sports prowess was nicknamed “The Big Red Machine.” But with so few of their countrymen competing, Russia’s state TV channels aren’t broadcasting any of the events. Russians may find feeds online, but could need a virtual private network to circumvent the country’s block of some channels.

    The last time the Olympics weren’t on TV in Russia — which has won the second-largest number of medals, counting the Soviet era — was in 1984, when the Soviet Union boycotted the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

    State news channel Rossiya 24 did broadcast a report from Paris on the opening ceremony Friday night, showing dancing and plumes of colored smoke rising over the Seine River. News agencies Tass and RIA-Novosti gave it glancing attention, with terse stories saying the opening ceremony had begun, but little detail other than noting the rain drove many spectators away.

    Newspapers aren’t ignoring the Olympics entirely, but their main approach has been to accentuate the negative, writing at length about crime in Paris, the inconvenience of barricades placed throughout the city and reported food shortages for athletes.

    “The Paris Olympics is an amazing event, if not to say a phenomenon: Competitions in individual disciplines have just just started, the opening ceremony has not even taken place, and so many scandals have already accumulated that they will be enough for several Games,” Sovietsky Sport newspaper reporter Alexander Shulgin wrote Thursday.

    “I think that this Olympics will go down in history with a completely negative result,” the newspaper Sport-Ekspress quoted Irina Rodnina, a three-time figure skating gold winner and now a member of the Russian parliament, as saying.

    A whiff of schadenfreude floats through many of the stories. Writing about the fences and barriers erected in Paris, Sovietsky Sport’s Andrei Tupikov said: “Once upon a time, everyone pointed their finger at the structure of sports competitions in Russia. Many did not like the fact that before any mass events there were too many different fences and barriers around the arenas and stadiums. … In our reality the practice is slowly fading away, but in Europe it is being actively adopted.”

    Shulgin, seemingly smarting from criticism about the facilities at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, suggested Paris may face an opening ceremony embarrassment similar to Sochi’s, when a display of the Olympic rings malfunctioned.

    “If the ring did not open in Sochi, it’s scary to imagine what could happen in Paris,” he wrote, but did not follow up after the ceremony.

    No such disaster occurred, but Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova on Saturday compared Paris unfavorably to Sochi.

    “The Western media did not like (stray) dogs at the Sochi Games. In Paris, they were smiled at by the rats that flooded the city streets,” she said in a statement. She also called the opening ceremony “ridiculous.”

    Commentary on the Paris Games also verged into ethical and philosophical questions, such as whether one should root for the few Russians participating despite the national team’s exclusion. To receive approval from the International Olympic Committee, the athletes cannot have demonstrated support for the Russian invasion of Ukraine, among other stipulations.

    Sport-Ekspress commentator Oleg Shamonaev analyzed the connotations of each word in the Individual Neutral Athlete designation and concluded: “The 15 ‘neutrals’ with a Russian passport who did not change their flag, despite 2 1/2 years of sanctions … are worthy not of condemnation but of respect.”

    “It’s stupid to pretend we don’t care about what happens to them at the 2024 Games,” he said.

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    For more coverage of the Paris Olympics, visit https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games.

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  • Paris barricades start to come down after opening ceremony on the Seine, but many still struggling

    Paris barricades start to come down after opening ceremony on the Seine, but many still struggling

    PARIS (AP) — Gomes Antonio has spent the past few weeks waking up at 4 a.m. to begin his laps around Paris delivering sheets of glass in his white van.

    It was the only way the 60-year-old glass vendor was able to navigate shuttered streets throughout the heart of the city and walls blocking off bridges across the Seine River, set up as part of heightened security restrictions for the Olympics 2024 opening ceremony Friday along the waterway.

    The metal barricades blocking streets, closed metro stations and then sabotage of French train lines Friday that halted high-speed rail travel heading to and from the city has left Parisians and visitors alike grumbling. But now that the opening ceremony is over, many hope parts of the city center will open back up.

    The Pont Des Invalides, a bridge spanning the Seine near the Eiffel Tower, was already opening up Saturday, and some police barricades were being taken down. But people like Antonio said they were still struggling to get to work.

    “I’m hoping things will be a bit more flexible” in the coming days, said Antonio, who’s Portuguese and has lived in Paris for 42 years. “We have to do a ton of laps.”

    He planned to drive 4 kilometers to deliver his glass Saturday but had driven more than 10. “I’ve had to change our route, the streets, everything.”

    Shops and restaurants also have griped about slower-than-expected business that they largely attributed to the chilling effect from the opening ceremony’s security measures. They also pointed to tourists avoiding Paris altogether during the Olympics and many Parisians escaping the city.

    At the opening ceremony, rays of light from the Eiffel Tower illuminated a rainy sky, the Olympic cauldron floated up in a hot air balloon and some of the world’s most famous singers gave jaw-dropping performances, including Celine Dion and Lady Gaga.

    The show left Parisians and visitors alike in awe, but some were still frustrated and unconvinced a day later as crews cleaned up from the ceremony and armed police and military roamed the streets.

    “All of this is a red zone,” Antonio said. “Right now, it’s a bit easier … but I think they should open things up more for people who work. … Without this car, we can’t work.”

    Up to 45,000 police and gendarmes as well as 10,000 soldiers have been deployed for Olympic security. People needed QR codes to get through snaking metal barriers marking the security zone for the opening ceremony, but many in Paris had struggled to get passes or didn’t know they were necessary.

    Despite the barricades coming down Saturday, Antonio, who was dropping off glass he had to install at a house Monday, worried that the respite from the transport chaos would only be brief.

    Still, he acknowledged that some of the security restrictions were necessary and saw the heavy presence of police blocking off streets important during a “complicated moment” of larger global tensions.

    Some Parisians who travel by bike said they were frustrated because they weren’t able to cycle home. Others strolling along the Seine as it drizzled said they were thrilled by slashed levels of traffic because they had “never seen Paris so calm on a Saturday.” Some welcomed authorities cleaning up metro stations and working to make lines within the city run smoothly.

    For 58-year-old Paris resident Katherine Quéroel, walking across the Invalides bridge was exciting after struggling with transport in the past few weeks.

    With a sick mother who lives near the Eiffel Tower and a father who just died, she said closed metro stations and bridges added significant hurdles as she tried to take her mother to the hospital and arrange her father’s funeral.

    Quéroel said she and her mother got a taxi Thursday and had to pay far higher rates than usual trying to find a way across the Seine. It took an hour to travel 2 kilometers, she said.

    “Today is much better, because you can walk and go by bicycle. But on Thursday, it was really complicated,” she said Saturday.

    Despite some of the blockades lifting, she said she was planning to adjust her travel routes in the long term as Olympic and Paralympic activities are set to run through September.

    “We’re going to have to organize ourselves,” she said. “But until September, it’s going to be difficult.”

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

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  • Martinenghi races from the shadows in Paris Olympics to beat Peaty and Qin in the 100 breaststroke

    Martinenghi races from the shadows in Paris Olympics to beat Peaty and Qin in the 100 breaststroke

    NANTERRE, France — Nicolo Martinenghi won gold in the 100-meter breaststroke on Sunday at the Paris Olympics, thrilling Italian fans and canceling several of the main story lines going into the race.

    Martinenghi was the bronze medalist in this event in the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, and won at the world championships earlier this year in Doha.

    But he was not the expected winner.

    That was to be Great Britain’s Adam Peaty — the two-time defending Olympic champion in the event in Lane 4. Another potential gold medalist was thought to be China’s Qin Haiyang in Lane 5, who swept the 50, 100 and 200 breaststroke last year in the world championships.

    Qin is the world record holder in the 200, and Peaty holds the 100 mark.

    Martinenghi won from Lane 7 in 59.03 seconds, just ahead of Peaty and American Nic Fink, who tied for silver at 59.05. Qin finished in seventh in 59.50.

    “I was in my favorite lane, in seven,” Martinenghi said. “Nobody saw me. I was like in the shadows. I love to race that way and that was my favorite lane. I have a chain with No. 7 on it. When I was younger I trained in that lane.”

    Martinenghi called the atmosphere at the La Defense Arena “insane,” created by Frenchman Leon Marchand’s runaway victory earlier in the 400-meter individual medley.

    “To become Olympic champion today, next to Adam — one of my idols when I grew up. Amazing,” he said.

    Peaty sat out of competitive swimming for about a year after winning in Tokyo, focusing on his mental health and what he has called his “personal demons.”

    His return was good enough, even if it wasn’t gold.

    “I’m not sad at all,” Peaty said. “I think anyone that’s done sport — you’re willing to put yourself on the line every single time, so there’s no such thing as a loss.”

    He referenced is mental health journey as more important that the Olympic result.

    “I’m not defining myself — this whole journey back, 14 months — by a medal,” he added. “I define myself by, you know, my heart and what it’s made me feel, what it’s made me produce.”

    Qin is one of 11 Chinese swimmers in Paris who tested positive for a banned heart medication before the Tokyo Games but were not sanctioned.

    Peaty has been outspoken about doping and on Saturday called for a “fair game” going into Sunday’s final. Qin had also responded, suggesting unfounded claims against China and complaining about stepped-up testing of Chinese swimmers.

    “I’m so happy the right man won,” Peaty said,

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

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