ReportWire

Tag: Olympics

  • Today in Chicago History: The ‘L’ extension to O’Hare International Airport is opened

    [ad_1]

    Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Sept. 3, according to the Tribune’s archives.

    Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.

    Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

    • High temperature: 97 degrees (1953)
    • Low temperature: 47 degrees (1974)
    • Precipitation: 1.92 inches (1961)
    • Snowfall: None
    Charles Dvorak pole vaults at the 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis. (Missouri Historical Society)

    1904: Chicago Athletic Association’s Charles Dvorak traveled to France for the 1900 Summer Olympics — but failed to win a gold medal. The pole vault competition, as he understood it, was supposed to take place on a Sunday.

    Vintage Chicago Tribune: Summer Olympians from the area who won gold

    Since this would have violated the Sabbath, he was told the event would be rescheduled. According to the University of Michigan, however, the event took place after Dvorak and other American athletes left the competition area. Dvorak was awarded a silver medal in a consolation competition that was held to accommodate the U.S. team.

    He returned to Olympic competition in St. Louis four years later, posting an Olympic record 11 feet, 6 inches to take home the gold. Dvorak, according to the Olympic Games, was the first vaulter to use a lighter bamboo pole instead of the heavier ash or hickory pole.

    After he took off with more than $1 million, Milwaukee Avenue Bank president Paul Stensland was discovered by the Tribune in Tangier, Morocco in Sept. 1906. Stensland was brought back to Chicago where he pleaded guilty to taking the money and served time in the penitentiary at Joliet. (Chicago Tribune)
    After he took off with more than $1 million, Milwaukee Avenue Bank president Paul Stensland was discovered by the Tribune in Tangier, Morocco, in September 1906. Stensland was brought back to Chicago where he pleaded guilty to taking the money and served time in the penitentiary at Joliet. (Chicago Tribune)

    1906: Fugitive Chicago bank president Paul Stensland — who fled the city with more than $1 million — was tracked down in Tangier, Morocco, by the Tribune, which persuaded him to surrender and tell his story. The Tribune’s managing editor, James Keeley, was later presented with the $5,000 reward for the arrest and delivery of Stensland to police. Keeley gave the reward to the Milwaukee Avenue State Bank, from which Stensland took the funds.

    Stensland pleaded guilty and was sent to Joliet penitentiary.

    Chicago Cubs player Billy Williams doffs his cap to the Wrigley Field fans after receiving a trophy marking his 896th consecutive game, a National league record on June 29, 1969. (John Austad/Chicago Tribune)
    Chicago Cubs player Billy Williams doffs his cap to the Wrigley Field fans after receiving a trophy marking his 896th consecutive game, a National League record, on June 29, 1969. (John Austad/Chicago Tribune)

    1970: Chicago Cubs Hall of Famer Billy Williams ended a streak of playing in 1,117 consecutive games. The left fielder sat out while the Cubs beat the Philadelphia Phillies 7-2.

    Members of the Chicago Teachers Union vote on whether to strike at Dunbar Vocational High School, 3000 S. King Drive on the morning of Sept. 2, 1975. (Roy Hal/Chicago Tribune)
    Members of the Chicago Teachers Union vote on whether to strike at Dunbar Vocational High School on Sept. 2, 1975. (Roy Hal/Chicago Tribune)

    1975: Chicago Teachers Union members voted by a nearly 9-to-1 margin to strike on Sept. 3, 1975, which was supposed to be the first day of the school year. Union President Robert M. Healey said the issues were a complete contract for the 1975-76 school year, smaller class sizes, a cost-of-living pay raise and an improved fringe benefits package.

    102 days on strike: Take a look back at Chicago’s 11 teacher strikes since 1969

    How it was resolved: The Board of Education agreed on Sept. 17, 1975, to a new contract giving CTU a 7.1% salary increase, smaller class sizes, improved insurance benefits and restoration of 1,525 teaching positions that had been cut.

    The agreement for the 1975-76 school year, in which Mayor Richard J. Daley played a behind-the-scenes role as a mediator, cost $79.6 million. Of that, $68.8 million went to employees represented by the CTU and $10.8 million to others.

    A flag-waving Mayor Harold Washington joins Chicago Transit Authority Chairman Michael Cardilli and Gov. James Thompson at ceremonies inaugurating the final leg of the CTA's rapid transit line extension to Chicago's O'Hare International Airport on Sept. 3, 1984. (John Dziekan/Chicago Tribune)
    A flag-waving Mayor Harold Washington joins Chicago Transit Authority Chairman Michael Cardilli and Gov. James Thompson, right, at ceremonies inaugurating the final leg of the CTA’s rapid transit line extension to Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport on Sept. 3, 1984. (John Dziekan/Chicago Tribune)

    1984: Chicago Transit Authority trains were extended to O’Hare International Airport. At 90 cents for a one-way trip, the “L” was “a much better deal than a taxi or special shuttle bus,” the Tribune reported.

    Want more vintage Chicago?

    Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group, stay current with Today in Chicago History and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago’s past.

    Have an idea for Vintage Chicago Tribune? Share it with Kori Rumore and Marianne Mather at krumore@chicagotribune.com and mmather@chicagotribune.com

    [ad_2]

    Kori Rumore

    Source link

  • $2.4 million for a rental: Rich tourists are already booking mega-mansions for the Olympics

    [ad_1]

    Three years from now, millions of tourists will pour into L.A. for the 2028 Olympics. For most of them, a hotel room or Airbnb will suffice.

    Some require a more extravagant stay.

    Ten bedrooms. Twenty bathrooms. A private movie theater and infinity pool overlooking the city. A battalion of chefs, butlers and drivers catering to the smallest of whims.

    The Earth’s elite — not just the athletes, but the royals, oligarchs and uber-wealthy families coming to watch them — won’t be here for three summers. And the market for mega-mansion rentals is already getting competitive.

    “We’re getting five to 10 inquiries per week,” said Hank Stark, founder of LuxJB.

    (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

    “We’re getting five to 10 inquiries per week,” said Hank Stark, founder of ultra-luxury vacation rental company LuxJB. “There are only so many homes of this size in L.A., and people want to secure their spot as early as possible.”

    LuxJB owns 14 mansions around L.A., including in Beverly Hills, the Hollywood Hills and West Hollywood. Three of them have already been secured for the Olympics — not just for the last two weeks of July while the Games are taking place, but for most of the year.

    “If you’re an Olympic federation from a specific country, you’ll be here all year training athletes before the Games begin,” Stark said. “If you’re a major sports brand, you’ll want a presence in L.A. before and after July.”

    The crown jewel of LuxJB’s collection is a 39,000-square-foot behemoth complete with nine bedrooms, four kitchens, a gym, spa, movie theater, pickleball court, basketball court and a team of three maids. A client just rented it out from January to August 2028 for $300,000 per month.

    That’s $2.4 million total. Pre-paid.

    It’s an eye-popping price, but there’s a bit of savings to be found since LuxJB covers utilities. They run about $25,000 per month once you factor in heating the pool.

    The home is on the pricier end of LuxJB’s offerings, which start at $1,900 per night for smaller five-bedroom villas and $150,000 per month for larger mansions.

    A backyard and pool

    The backyard and pool of a LuxJB mansion.

    (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

    Stark said the rentals make sense for many. For example, a superstar athlete who travels with an entourage and wants some privacy.

    “You can’t put [Cristiano] Ronaldo in a hotel room surrounded by strangers. He’s the most valuable player in the world,” Stark said. “Plus, our place has a $6,000 zero-gravity massage chair.”

    LuxJB is currently fielding interest from two Olympic committees looking for a large enough place to hold news conferences and host media outlets, as well as U.S. companies wanting to book houses for their top brass.

    A gaming room

    The mansion’s downstairs gaming room.

    (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

    Stark said it’s common for companies to rent their mansions for months at a time, and far in advance. Studios rent them for red carpet season during the fall and spring to host celebrities nominated for Emmys, Grammys and Oscars. Nine of LuxJB’s 14 homes are already booked for next summer, when the 2026 World Cup brings a handful of major matches to L.A.

    But bookings three years out?

    “It’s rare,” Stark said. “But rentals are disappearing, especially after the [January] fires, when so many were leased to house victims long-term. So I don’t think demand will slow down any time soon.”

    The main reason why the market isn’t hotter is because there aren’t that many rooms or houses available yet. Most hotels don’t accept reservations more than a year in advance, and rental companies such as Airbnb and VRBO typically don’t accept bookings more than two years out.

    There’s a reason for such policies: A lot can change in three years. Homeowners can sell their homes, take them off the market, or die.

    Hank Stark

    “There are only so many homes of this size in L.A., and people want to secure their spot as early as possible,” Stark said.

    (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

    Stark doesn’t have to worry about major changes, since LuxJB owns its homes. But other luxury rental companies, such as the Nightfall Group, rent out homes on behalf of owners, so three years out can be a bit too soon for some.

    That hasn’t stopped the calls from coming, though.

    Nightfall founder Mokhtar Jabli said he has received a steady stream of inquiries since the company created a 2028 Olympics landing page on its site highlighting available rentals. They’ve already booked one: a 10,000-square-foot home with six bedrooms, 10 bathrooms, a movie theater and infinity pool in the Hollywood Hills.

    For the month of July 2028, the guest paid $160,000.

    “That house rents for around $110,000 during a typical year, but they paid a premium to book it so far in advance,” Jabli said.

    It came from a longtime client who knew which house they wanted and locked it in before it was blocked by a long-term lease. The owner typically doesn’t take bookings so far out but was willing to make an exception — as long as the guest was willing to pay more.

    Jabli said prices for Olympic bookings are around 40% higher than usual, but he expects that number will go up as the Games get closer.

    Nightfall has rentals in luxury markets across the globe, and around 100 in Los Angeles. Its homes typically start at $50,000 per month, but the company also offers concierge services, so the house is only the start. Jabli said some clients pay $500,000 per month for swanky add-ons such as private jets, yacht rentals, security guards, drivers, chefs and housekeepers.

    The company regularly hosts international athletes: soccer stars Ibrahima Konate from France and Amine Adli from Morocco, most recently. Jabli expects wealthy Olympic athletes in more lucrative sports, such as basketball or soccer, to book homes to share with their families rather than staying in the Olympic Village on UCLA’s campus.

    A master bathroom

    One of the bathrooms in a LuxJB mansion.

    (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

    Another factor in the Olympic rental market is Southern California’s uneven, sporadic enforcement of short-term rental regulations. Rules change from year to year and city to city, and a legal booking today could be outlawed by 2028.

    For example, on Aug. 5, Beverly Hills banned short-term rentals entirely, requiring initial leases to be at least 12 months. Los Angeles beefed up its Home-Sharing Ordinance in March, calling for increased fines and more staff to monitor violations. But the city’s scaled-back budget has put many of those enforcement plans on pause.

    It’s unclear whether exceptions will be made for the Olympics, when millions of visitors will descend on a region already starved for housing.

    Either way, the glut of deep-pocketed tourists should serve as a shot in the arm to a luxury market that has been waning since the COVID-19 pandemic. Homes will rent for thousands per day. Millions per year.

    “L.A. is going through a crisis, both in the high-end luxury rental business and beyond,” Jabli said. “Hopefully, 2028 brings it back to the L.A. we know.”

    [ad_2]

    Jack Flemming

    Source link

  • Photos: AVP League Championships at Oak Street Beach

    [ad_1]

    The Association of Volleyball Professionals took over Oak Street Beach starting Saturday morning for the AVP League Championships, with winners crowned Sunday afternoon.

    Trevor Crabb spikes as James Shaw blocks during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Fans watch the AVP League Championships men's semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Fans watch the AVP League Championships men’s semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Trevor Crabb spikes as James Shaw blocks during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Trevor Crabb spikes as James Shaw blocks during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    A fan holds a Chicago flag-themed volleyball during the AVP League Championships men's semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    A fan holds a Chicago flag-themed volleyball during the AVP League Championships men’s semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Volunteers hold volleyballs during the AVP League Championships men's semifinal match warmup at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Volunteers hold volleyballs during the AVP League Championships men’s semifinal match warmup at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    AVP League Championships men's semifinal athletes warm up for their match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    AVP League Championships men’s semifinal athletes warm up for their match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Brandie Wilkerson sets the ball during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago.(John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Brandie Wilkerson sets the ball during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes celebrate a point during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes celebrate a point during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Melissa Humana-Paredes and Brandie Wilkerson celebrate their victory in the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago.(John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Melissa Humana-Paredes and Brandie Wilkerson celebrate their victory in the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Devon Newberry passes the ball to Geena Urango during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Devon Newberry passes the ball to Geena Urango during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    AVP League Championships semifinal match athletes switch sides during a break at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    AVP League Championships semifinal match athletes switch sides during a break at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Brandie Wilkerson brushes off sand on her arms during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Brandie Wilkerson brushes off sand on her arms during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Melissa Humana-Paredes passes the ball to Brandie Wilkerson during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Melissa Humana-Paredes passes the ball to Brandie Wilkerson during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Melissa Humana-Paredes and Brandie Wilkerson, left side, compete against Devon Newberry and Geena Urango during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Melissa Humana-Paredes and Brandie Wilkerson, left side, compete against Devon Newberry and Geena Urango during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Devon Newberry waits for the whistle to serve during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Devon Newberry waits for the whistle to serve during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Devon Newberry rises for a block as Melissa Humana-Paredes spikes during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Devon Newberry rises for a block as Melissa Humana-Paredes spikes during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Brandie Wilkerson, left, blocks a spike from Devon Newberry during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Brandie Wilkerson, left, blocks a spike from Devon Newberry during the AVP League Championships semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Fans cheer at the start of the AVP League Championships women's semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Fans cheer at the start of the AVP League Championships women’s semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Crab cutout decorations adorn a VIP umbrella court-side before the AVP League Championships women's semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Crab cutout decorations adorn a VIP umbrella court-side before the AVP League Championships women’s semifinal match at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    A group plays volleyball in a circle during the AVP League Championships semifinal matches at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    A group plays volleyball in a circle during the AVP League Championships semifinal matches at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Madeleine Pergande (cq), 11, poses for a picture atop an AVP sign in the sand during the League Championships semifinal matches at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    Madeleine Pergande (cq), 11, poses for a picture atop an AVP sign in the sand during the League Championships semifinal matches at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    A man trips over a sign posted in the sand but keeps his drink upright while attending the AVP League Championships semifinal matches at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
    A man trips over a sign posted in the sand but keeps his drink upright while attending the AVP League Championships semifinal matches at Oak Street Beach on Aug. 30, 2025. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

    [ad_2]

    John J. Kim, Brian Cassella

    Source link

  • Unite Here Demands $5B “New Deal” Ahead of 2028 LA Olympics

    [ad_1]

    The Olympics are still three years away, but Los Angeles is already bracing for its first major showdown over the 2028 Games

    A gathering of Unite Here Local 11 members yesterday.
    Photo: Courtesy of Unite Here Local 11

    Outside the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Thursday morning, workers in red shirts waved signs reading “Fair Games.” Hotel housekeepers, bellmen and cooks stood in protest together, demanding their cut of the city’s Olympic payouts. It was a rally, but also a warning.

    Unite Here Local 11, the Los Angeles hotel workers union, launched its “New Deal for Our Future” campaign, demanding that Olympic organizers commit $5 billion to build affordable housing, impose a city-wide moratorium on Airbnb rentals and cut ties with the company altogether. If not, the union warns, it is prepared to strike when the Games arrive in 2028.

    “ If LA28 and their billionaire backers refuse to change course, we will take this fight to the streets and to the Games,” said Kurt Petersen, Unite Here’s co-president. “ When the world’s eyes are on Los Angeles in 2028, we will not hesitate to strike.”

    The union’s timing is not accidental. Dozens of Unite Here contracts with hotels, airports and stadiums are set to expire just ahead of the Olympics, giving workers rare leverage over an event projected to bring hundreds of thousands of visitors to the city. Tourism workers at the rally do not intend to let the moment pass them by.

    “ A lot of people are gonna stay in our hotels,” said Emmanuel Cabrera, a bellman at the Westin Bonaventure and organizer with Unite Here. “We’re just asking for our fair share.”

    In response, organizers with LA28 issued a statement, promising that the Games would create good-paying jobs and real opportunities for working people in Los Angeles. The International Olympic Committee has not yet weighed in.

    The “New Deal” campaign comes amid escalating political fights tied to the Games. Earlier this year, the City Council approved a $30 minimum wage for hotel and airport workers. Business groups, backed by Delta and United Airlines, are now pushing a referendum to overturn it. Unite Here countered with its own ballot initiatives, including raising the minimum wage for all workers and taxing companies with high CEO-to-worker pay gaps.

    Meanwhile, Airbnb has mounted a shadow campaign to loosen restrictions on short-term rentals before LA hosts a string of mega-events — the 2026 World Cup, the 2027 Super Bowl and the 2028 Olympics. The company argues that expanded rentals could help cover the city’s $1 billion deficit. But Unite Here insists that Airbnb worsens LA’s housing crisis by removing units from the long-term rental market.

    Olympic organizers insist that the Games will be privately funded. LA28 recently announced that for the first time, the IOC will allow naming rights for Olympic venues (Honda and Comcast have already signed on). But if the budget overruns and costs spiral, the city is ultimately responsible, and activists warn that Angelenos could end up footing the bill. Sponsorships are nothing new, but critics say the deals have taken on a new intensity.

    “ LA28, as we speak, is literally auctioning off our city,” Peterson said. “What’s next? Welcome to ‘Airbnb Los Angeles?’”

    With contracts expiring, ballot measures on the horizon, and billions of dollars at stake, labor organizers say their battle with Olympic leaders has already begun, years before the opening ceremonies.

    [ad_2]

    Scarlett London

    Source link

  • Trump names himself chair of L.A. Olympics task force, sees role for military during Games

    [ad_1]

    In past Olympic Games held on American soil, sitting presidents have served in passive, ceremonial roles. President Trump may have other plans.

    An executive order signed by Trump on Tuesday names him chair of a White House task force on the 2028 Games in Los Angeles, viewed by the president as “a premier opportunity to showcase American exceptionalism,” according to a White House statement. Trump, the administration said, “is taking every opportunity to showcase American greatness on the world stage.”

    At the White House, speaking in front of banners adding the presidential seal to the logo for LA28, Trump said he would send the military back to Los Angeles if he so chose in order to protect the Games. In June, Trump sent the National Guard and U.S. Marines to the city amid widespread immigration enforcement actions, despite widespread condemnation from Mayor Karen Bass and other local officials.

    “We’ll do anything necessary to keep the Olympics safe, including using our National Guard or military, OK?” he said. “I will use the National Guard or the military. This is going to be so safe. If we have to.”

    Trump’s executive order establishes a task force led by him and Vice President JD Vance to steer federal coordination for the Games. The task force will work with federal, state and local partners on security and transportation, according to the White House.

    Those roles have been fairly standard for the federal government in past U.S.-hosted Olympic Games. But Trump’s news conference could present questions about whether a president with a penchant for showmanship might assume an unusually active role in planning the Olympics, set to take place in the twilight of his final term.

    There is ample precedent for military and National Guard forces providing security support during U.S.-hosted Olympic Games. But coming on the heels of the recent military deployment to Los Angeles, Trump’s comments may prove contentious.

    French President Emmanuel Macron was a key figure in preparations for last year’s Paris Games, including expressing his vocal support for the ambitious Olympic opening ceremony plan to parade athletes down the Seine River on boats. Many officials were concerned about potential threats along the 3.7-mile stretch, but authorities responded by increasing security measures that included up to 45,000 police officers and 10,000 soldiers.

    The task force, to be housed within the Department of Homeland Security, will “assist in the planning and implementation of visa processing and credentialing programs for foreign athletes, coaches, officials, and media personnel,” the executive order said. City officials have expressed concern that the president’s border policies could deter international visitors and complicate visa processing for Olympic teams.

    Tensions with L.A.

    More concentrated involvement from Trump could spell further strain with Los Angeles city officials, who sought to make nice in the wake of devastating January fires, but have fiercely bucked Trump’s recent immigration offensive. Trump swiped at Bass during his remarks on Tuesday, calling her “not very competent” and criticizing the pace of city permitting for fire rebuilding.

    “We’ve had a productive working relationship with the federal government since Los Angeles was awarded the Games in 2017 and we will continue preparing with all partners to host the best Games in history – Games that will benefit the entire nation for decades to come,” Bass spokesperson Zach Seidl said.

    Known for her coalition-building skills, Bass is not, by nature, a public brawler. In the aftermath of the Palisades fire, she appeared determined to preserve her fragile relationship with the president — and the billions of dollars of federal aid her city was depending on — responding diplomatically even as he publicly attacked her.

    But that determined cordiality crumbled when masked immigration agents and military personnel descended on the city. With troops stationed in the city and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal authorities arresting undocumented immigrants at courthouses, car washes and Home Depot parking lots, Bass took on Trump forcefully.

    At news conferences and in interviews, she accused the president of waging “an all-out assault on Los Angeles,” inciting chaos and fear and using the city as “a test case for an extremist agenda.”

    Casey Wasserman, chairman of LA28, attended the White House event, thanking Trump for “leaning in” to planning for an Olympics that was awarded to Los Angeles during his first term.

    “You’ve been supportive and helpful every step of the way,” Wasserman said, noting that the Games would amount to hosting seven Super Bowls a day for 30 days. “With the creation of this task force, we’ve unlocked the opportunity to level up our planning and deliver the largest, and yes, greatest Games for our nation, ever.”

    Wasserman will also have a delicate political balancing act, managing a Games in a deep-blue city with a famously mercurial Republican president in office.

    President Trump holds a full set of medals from the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles during Tuesday’s event at which he announced an executive order regarding federal involvement in the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

    (Julia Demaree Nikhinson / Associated Press)

    A Hollywood scion and sports and entertainment mogul, Wasserman has long been a prominent Democratic donor known for his close relationship with the Clintons.

    But in recent months he has diversified his giving, with hefty donations to the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the National Republican Congressional Committee and House Speaker Mike Johnson’s leadership fund. Wasserman has publicly praised Trump’s commitment to the Games and traveled to Mar-a-Lago in January to meet with the incoming president.

    Presidents have long played a role in the Games. In 1984, Ronald Reagan formally opened the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, becoming the first American president to do so. Reagan attended several Olympic events, but repeatedly emphasized the federal government’s role was focused on security, according to the White House Historical Assn.

    The Olympic Charter requires the host country’s head of state to officially open the Games, but before Reagan, the duty had been fulfilled by local political leaders or vice presidents representing the president.

    Ever-tightening security

    The federal government has historically provided significant funding when the Games are hosted on U.S. soil, with financial support going toward both security and infrastructure.

    Leading up to the 1996 Games in Atlanta, the federal government spent $227 million on security and transportation, playing “very much a junior partner” to the Olympic Committee, then-Vice President Al Gore said at the time. Still, a bombing at the Centennial Olympic Park during the Games that summer shook the security establishment.

    The 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City were the first Games to be classified as a “National Special Security Event,” the government’s highest security rating for any event that designates the U.S. Secret Service as the lead agency for implementing security. That standard has remained in place for U.S.-held Olympic Games ever since. The Secret Service will also lead security coordination for the 2028 Games.

    The federal government was particularly involved in the Salt Lake City Games, which were held just months after the 9/11 attacks.

    Los Angeles leaders are actively involved in the security planning, and are currently in negotiations with LA28 for the use of the city’s police, traffic officers, and other employees during the Olympics and Paralympics.

    Security, trash removal, traffic control, paramedics and more will be needed during the 17-day Olympics and the two-week Paralympics the following month.

    Under the 2021 Games agreement between LA28 and the city, LA28 must reimburse Los Angeles for any services that go beyond what the city would provide on a normal day. The two parties must agree by Oct. 1, 2025, on “enhanced services” — additional city services needed for the Games, beyond that normal level — and determine rates, repayment timelines, audit rights and other processes.

    Overtime for Los Angeles police officers, and any other major expenses, would be acutely felt by a city government that recently closed a nearly $1-billion budget deficit, in part by slowing police hiring.

    Wilner reported from Washington, Wick and Nguyen from Los Angeles. Times staff writer Dakota Smith contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Michael Wilner, Julia Wick, Thuc Nhi Nguyen

    Source link

  • Sled hockey is growing. A look at the all-inclusive sport in North Carolina

    [ad_1]

    RALEIGH, N.C. — At 9 a.m. on a Saturday morning at Polar Ice Raleigh, athletes of all abilities arrive to Hurricanes Sled Hockey practice. For many, this is more than just a sport — it’s a gateway to confidence, inclusion and independence.

    Sled hockey is a sport that makes the ice accessible to people living with physical disabilities or mental impairments. 


    What You Need To Know

    •  Hurricanes Sled Hockey is a nonprofit organization based in Raleigh, North Carolina
    •  The organization creates opportunities for kids and adults who can’t play normal ice hockey, giving them a chance to play the sport they love
    •  Hurricanes Sled Hockey was started about two decades ago and has players of all different abilities 


    Kayden Beasley was made for sled hockey. In early April, he was named to Team USA’s Paralympic sled hockey team. He knows when it’s time to focus and perform.

    “Especially on the national team, they give out jerseys, coach comes in and talks,” Beasley said.

    On the ice, the 18-year-old from Raleigh shows the same skill and determination as any other hockey player. That’s especially impressive considering he’s only been playing for about seven years.

    “I was at a doctor’s appointment and someone there asked me if I did any sports,” Beasley said. “They told me about sled hockey here. I didn’t know it was a thing at first. I didn’t know what the possibilities were for the sport, but it’s really cool to be able to do it.”

    Born in China with congenital bilateral above-the-knee amputation, Kayden has no legs. He was abandoned by his birth parents. But at age 3, his life changed. He was adopted by Anthony and Amy Beasley and brought home to North Carolina on Christmas Day 2009. With that, he gained not just a family but a new beginning.

    “I think for Kayden, he would hope for people to see him like he was everybody else. He has hopes and dreams and desires just like everybody else does,” Amy Beasley said. “That is my hope — that people will see sled hockey players as just being human.”

    Despite having no legs, Amy Beasley said he has a determination that inspires everyone around him.

    “I think he’s one of the strongest people that I know,” Beasley said. “I believe anything he puts his mind to, and anything he wants to do, he’ll find a way. He has the best attitude and fortitude that I’ve ever seen in anyone, and it’s inspiring to me.”

     

    Kayden Beasley’s story is also closely tied to his older brother, Caleb Beasley. Adopted in 2006 from the same Chinese province, Caleb Beasley isn’t biologically related to Kayden Beasley — but their bond is thicker than blood.

    Initially, Caleb Beasley wasn’t interested in playing hockey. He enjoyed being part of the community and watching Kayden Beasley play, even joking about being the team’s mascot.

    “In the beginning, Caleb didn’t really have a desire to be out on the ice,” Amy Beasley said. “He just enjoyed the friendships that came from Kayden playing and being together. And it became a joke that Caleb wanted to be the mascot. They even went as far as to find a mascot outfit and all.”

    But Caleb Beasley eventually joined the team, encouraged by the program and his brother’s spirit.

    “Caleb challenged him. And Caleb saw something in Kayden that I don’t even think Kayden saw in himself,” Amy Beasley said. “He encouraged him, was with him every step of the way and told him, ‘You can do this.’ He challenged him out on the ice in a way I don’t think anybody else could have.”

    Their sibling rivalry has turned into teamwork and trust on the ice.

    “Dude, he blows me away,” Caleb Beasley said. “Every time I skate with him, it should not be humanly possible to move the way he does. I think a lot of people equate adaptive with easier. I mean, it’s an adaptive sport — there’s nothing easy about it. Being able to see the physicality of it, the potential of it, super awesome.”

    Some of Caleb Beasley’s favorite moments are those shared on the ice, especially when one of them scores.

    “The best feeling is being on the ice when one of us gets a goal with each other,” Caleb Beasley said. “This is the first thing we’ve been able to do really competitively, so it’s a lot of fun.”

    There’s only one thing better for Anthony and Amy Beasley than watching their sons compete in Raleigh: that’s seeing Kayden Beasley compete on the international stage in tournaments. He is one of the top paralympic sled hockey players in the country.

    In 2006, the Carolina Hurricanes won the Stanley Cup. That victory inspired Brian Jacoby and his son Tyler. (Courtesy Jacoby family)

    “I think you’re on the edge of your seat for every game you see him play,” she said. “And every time he gets the puck, there’s this sense of anticipation of what’s going to happen and what’s he gonna do. I can’t describe the feeling that I have, just the sense of pride and just joy that I have, seeing him do something he loves and excel in it. It’s really incomparable.”

    Kayden Beasley’s journey is part of a larger movement sparked by a moment nearly two decades ago.

    In 2006, the Carolina Hurricanes won the Stanley Cup. That victory inspired Brian Jacoby and his son Tyler.

    “So it started with our son Tyler,” Brian Jacoby said. “In 2006, when the Hurricanes made their Cup run, we took him to one of the playoff games — that was his first hockey game — he had a blast. And on the way home, he kept talking to my wife and I about how he wanted to play hockey. He’d fallen in love with the sport. He was born with spina bifida and has no use of his legs. Obviously a pretty tall order. We just kind of assumed he would forget about it and move on to something else, but he didn’t.”

    Less than a year later, Tyler touched the ice for the first time.

    “He went from a 6-year-old kid who uses a wheelchair and was constantly being told by the experts that you can’t do this and you shouldn’t do that, you’ll never do this and you’ll never do that — to believing there’s nothing he can’t do,” Jacoby said. Tyler became the first-ever sled hockey player in both North and South Carolina. Hurricanes Sled Hockey was born, a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing access to the sport.

    “I remember it like it was yesterday,” Jacoby said. “And he skated away on his own, independently. It’s a feeling I’ll never forget — it’s indescribable. We knew right away that we had almost a responsibility to bring that type of joy to as many people as we can.”

    The organization has grown over the years, with hundreds of players and thousands of family members and supporters impacted.

    “A lot of the kids that skate out here with us describe it as a feeling of flying,” Jacoby said. “It’s so freeing for them to get out on the ice.”

    Like in the NHL, teamwork is essential to the success of Hurricanes Sled Hockey.

    “It’s almost like a pit crew,” Jacoby added. “Somebody skates off, and we have to put them back together and get them back out there.”

    The Hurricanes Sled Hockey team would grow over the years, not just in player numbers, but in coaches and volunteer numbers as well. There’s a simple reason people get involved.

    “I’ll give you one answer: smiles. And not just from the players. Look at their families when they’re watching from the side, the satisfaction they get from their kid being an athlete,” said Geoff Wing, head coach of the adult team. “People say an organization with hockey changes lives — in this sport, man, it does.”

    Cody Loyer, a Raleigh native who plays in a local rec hockey league, discovered sled hockey after attending a practice. Now a volunteer coach, Loyer said he can’t wait to get further involved with the kids who are an inspiration to him and others.

    “There’s no way I can do this, shooting top shelf and passing and zipping around, I can’t believe it,” Loyer said. “Honestly, it’s amazing to see all of these kids and adults out here, despite their limitations, learning the game and getting exercise and playing the game that I love. It’s awesome to have a community like this.”

    In the early days, families bore much of the cost: paying for sleds, ice time and travel. But in recent years, the Carolina Hurricanes Foundation, which stems from the NHL’s Carolina Hurricanes, has donated more than $75,000 to support the program. They’ve donated money, donated supplies and tried to encourage players in Hurricanes Sled Hockey with visits from their own players and mascot Stormy.

    Still, parents and volunteers remain hands-on — often literally.

    “There isn’t a practice where John or I aren’t bleeding,” Jacoby joked.

    Jacoby, now considered a sled-building expert, has built hundreds of sleds, and sometimes, even two decades after he built his first, he’s still finding moments of firsts.

    Whether a player faces a physical or cognitive challenge, Jacoby builds sleds to meet each individual’s needs.

    “This is called an anti-tip device,” he said. “If the player is bumped or falls over on the ice, it will only let them fall that far. It won’t let them fall all the way over. And different players, depending on their diagnosis, if they were to fall over, would struggle to get all the way back up on their own. So this doesn’t allow that to happen.”

    Learning to get up after a fall is part of the game and part of life. These athletes learn that lesson with every shift on the ice, backed by a community that’s always there to support them.

    Over the past six years, the Carolina Hurricanes Foundation has played a crucial role in the growth of Hurricanes Sled Hockey. But ask any parent, coach or player what the program needs most, and their answer is clear: awareness.

    They have money from many North Carolina organizations supporting them. However, they need more players to join their program, specifically their adult team.

    They have many young kids learning about the sport. But if they don’t have the numbers to play in leagues and tournaments as adults, part of their program will cease to exist, which will impact the next generation of sled hockey players currently touching the ice for the first time.

    The thing they want everyone to know is that to play sled hockey, more specifically on the adult team, you do not need to have a disability. You can be fully able-bodied. Hurricanes Sled Hockey just wants you to know they exist and are ready to welcome you with open arms.

    Hurricanes Sled Hockey is just one of several North Carolina organizations supported by the Hurricanes Foundation. The grant application process for this year’s round of funding is open and information about the program can be received by reaching out to Amy Daniels, one of the leaders of the Hurricanes Foundation. Her email address is amyd@carolinahurricanes.com.

    If you want to learn more about Hurricanes Sled Hockey, click here.   

     

    [ad_2]

    Evan Abramson

    Source link

  • What you missed at the CD-14 debate between Ysabel Jurado and Kevin De León

    What you missed at the CD-14 debate between Ysabel Jurado and Kevin De León

    [ad_1]

    PUBLISHER’S NOTE:
    Yes on Proposition 3 and Los Angeles Blade will present an urgent Town Hall on October 28 from 7:00 PM at St. Thomas Episcopal Church, 7501 Hollywood Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90046. For more information or to RSVP, click here.

    As California voters prepare for the Election Day ballot, they have a critical opportunity to address a potentially dangerous inconsistency in the state’s constitution regarding the rights of same-sex couples to marry.

    Think of it as a firewall against a potential 2nd Trump administration and Supreme Court effort to overturn same-sex marriage.

    Proposition 3, the Right to Marry and Repeal Proposition 8 Amendment, seeks to remove outdated language from the Prop 8 era, a ballot initiative that successfully defined marriage as solely between a man and a woman. 

    Although federal court rulings have rendered this language unenforceable, it has lingered in California’s constitution since 2008.

    Proposition 3 would not only eliminate this vestigial language but also establish a constitutional right to marriage regardless of gender or race.

    The history of Prop 8 is a complex and contentious chapter in California’s past. Passed in the 2008 state election, Prop 8 effectively banned same-sex marriage, following a California Supreme Court ruling that had declared a previous ban (Proposition 22 from 2000) unconstitutional. Prop 8 added language to the state constitution stating that “only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California.”

    The passage of Prop 8 shocked many who viewed California as a bastion of progressive values, highlighting a divide within the state and igniting intense debate and legal battles. Religious organizations, particularly the Roman Catholic Church and the now somewhat repentant Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, played significant roles in supporting Prop 8, with the LDS Church notably contributing more than $20 million to the campaign and mobilizing volunteers for door-to-door canvassing.

    The legal journey of Prop 8 has been long and complex. Initially upheld by the California Supreme Court in 2009, it was later challenged in federal court. In August 2010, Chief Judge Vaughn Walker of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California ruled Prop 8 unconstitutional under both the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the 14th Amendment. This decision was upheld by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2012, albeit on narrower grounds.

    The case ultimately reached the U.S. Supreme Court in “Hollingsworth v. Perry” (2013). However, rather than ruling on the merits of same-sex marriage, the Court decided that the proponents of Prop 8 lacked legal standing to defend the law in federal court. This effectively upheld Walker’s 2010 ruling, paving the way for the resumption of same-sex marriages in California.

    The uncertain landscape of LGBTQ+ rights

    The current Proposition 3 arises from recent concerns about the stability of LGBTQ+ rights at the federal level. Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, Justice Clarence Thomas suggested reconsidering other precedents, including the 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges decision that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. This potential threat prompted California legislators to act proactively to safeguard marriage equality at the state level.

    Moreover, 2024 has seen a surge of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation across the nation and in Congress. “Extremist lawmakers in Congress failed in their hateful attempts to add anti-LGBTQ+ provisions to must-pass spending bills. These measures would have restricted medically necessary health care for transgender people, allowed taxpayer-funded discrimination against married same-sex couples, and further stigmatized the LGBTQ+ community,” said a spokesperson from Equality California.

    Strong bipartisan negotiations led to the removal of 51 of 52 anti-LGBTQ+ riders, thanks in large part to the efforts of the Congressional Equality Caucus and the relentless advocacy of LGBTQ+ organizations. Speaker Mike Johnson — considered the most anti-LGBTQ+ speaker in history — attempted to slow the appropriations process with these “poison pill” amendments, leading the country to the brink of a government shutdown multiple times. 

    Despite his failures, Johnson is attempting to claim victory by highlighting a limited provision that prohibits the flying of Pride flags on embassy buildings, which imposes no limits on other displays of the flag. “While we are disappointed in the passage of this provision, it is important to consider it in the context of the overwhelming defeat of other measures. The Speaker’s attempt to use this as a symbol of victory is as laughable as his dysfunctional term as Speaker has been,” the spokesperson added.

    The fragility of rights

    The overturning of Roe v. Wade has sent shockwaves through the legal community, particularly among LGBTQ+ advocates. The decision raised alarms about the vulnerability of other civil rights protections, including marriage equality. Legal experts are now grappling with unprecedented questions about how to secure these rights amid a shifting judicial landscape.

    The fragility of unenumerated rights — those not explicitly written in the Constitution but granted through Supreme Court interpretation — has become increasingly apparent. Marriage equality, like abortion rights, falls into this category and has been upheld through the 14th Amendment’s due process clause. However, Thomas’s opinion in the Dobbs case hints at a willingness to reexamine these precedents.

    A significant concern for marriage equality advocates is the idea that rights relying on due process must be “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition.” Since nationwide marriage equality is only seven years old, it lacks the historical foundation that might protect it from future challenges.

    The patchwork possibility

    If Obergefell were overturned, the U.S. could revert to a patchwork of marriage laws reminiscent of the pre-2015 era. According to the Movement Advancement Project, as many as 32 states could potentially revert to banning same-sex marriages. This scenario would create a stark divide across the country, with some states recognizing LGBTQ+ marriages while others outlaw them.

    Such a reversion would have far-reaching implications for hundreds of thousands of couples who have married since Obergefell. While it’s unlikely that existing marriages would be invalidated, the legal status of these unions could become uncertain. This potential outcome underscores the urgency of enshrining marriage equality in state constitutions and laws.

    The challenge of codification

    While some lawmakers have expressed interest in codifying marriage equality at the federal level, legal experts are divided on whether Congress has that authority. Traditionally, marriage laws have fallen under state jurisdiction, complicating efforts to establish federal protections.

    This uncertainty adds pressure to state-level efforts to protect marriage equality. In states with existing bans, securing marriage rights would require constitutional amendments or ballot measures, necessitating extensive public education campaigns and grassroots organizing.

    The importance of proactive constitutional change

    Despite California’s progressive reputation, the state constitution still contains language that could be used to restrict same-sex marriages if federal protections were overturned. This highlights the importance of Prop 3.

    Currently, 35 states maintain constitutional or statutory bans on same-sex marriage. Although these bans are unenforceable due to the Obergefell decision, they could be reactivated if the Supreme Court were to overturn that ruling. California, despite its forward-thinking values, is among these states due to the lingering effects of Prop 8.

    Without the passage of Prop 3, California could face a situation where existing same-sex marriages remain valid, but new marriages could be denied. This potential legal limbo underscores the urgency of updating the state constitution to explicitly protect marriage equality.

    By passing Prop 3, California would not only eliminate discriminatory language from its constitution but also create a robust state-level protection for same-sex marriages. This proactive approach would ensure that, regardless of future federal court decisions, the right to marry would remain secure for all Californians.

    The path forward

    The journey to this point reflects a remarkable shift in public opinion. In 1996, 68 percent of Americans opposed legalizing same-sex marriage. By 2023, that figure had flipped, with 71 percent supporting marriage equality. This change crosses party lines, with a majority of Republicans now in favor. The trend is particularly strong among younger voters, indicating a generational shift toward greater acceptance and equality.

    The importance of Prop 3 extends beyond its practical effects. While same-sex marriages are of course recognized in California, enshrining this right in the state constitution provides an additional layer of protection against potential future challenges. Moreover, it represents a formal acknowledgment of past mistakes and a clear statement of California’s values of equality and inclusion.

    Critics of Prop 3 have raised concerns about its potential to open doors for challenges to laws against polygamy or underage marriages. However, these arguments are misleading. Constitutional rights are not absolute and can be limited by compelling state interests, as seen with other fundamental rights like freedom of speech.

    This situation highlights the ongoing nature of the struggle for equal rights and the importance of vigilance in protecting hard-won freedoms. Prop 3 represents an opportunity for California to lead by example, demonstrating how states can take concrete steps to safeguard the rights of their LGBTQ+ citizens in an uncertain legal landscape.

    As the November election approaches, California voters can align the state’s constitution with the prevailing values of equality and inclusivity. By voting yes on Prop 3, Californians can eliminate the last remnants of discrimination from their constitution and send a clear message that bigotry has no place in California’s fundamental laws.

    In a time when LGBTQ+ rights face renewed challenges across the nation, California has the chance to reaffirm its status as a progressive leader and to correct a long-standing injustice in its constitution. 

    Prop 3 is not just about changing words in a document; it’s about enshrining the principle that love and commitment deserve equal recognition under the law, regardless of who you are or whom you love.

    [ad_2]

    Gisselle Palomera

    Source link

  • Olympic wrestling gold medalist Amit Elor to be honored in Walnut Creek parade

    Olympic wrestling gold medalist Amit Elor to be honored in Walnut Creek parade

    [ad_1]

    Olympic women’s wrestling gold medalist Amit Elor is set to be honored in a parade in Walnut Creek on Saturday for her performance at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

    The parade was made possible after an online community push urging the city to recognize her accomplishments. The city initially rejected the idea but changed its tune after massive pushback.

    “That didn’t sit well with me,” said Adam Low, who initially reached out to the city. “[I] posted in some groups [and it] gained a little movement.”

    The 20-year-old Walnut Creek native became the youngest American wrestler to win an Olympic gold medal.

    Elor took down Kyrgyzstan’s Meerim Zhumanazarova 3-0 in the women’s freestyle 68kg final at the Paris Olympics.

    Elor’s dominance was very real to her opponents. She had a 31-2 advantage over four matches and was not scored upon in her final three contests.

    She became the third American woman to win gold, following Helen Maroulis in 2016 and Tamyra Mensah-Stock in 2021. Women started wrestling at the Olympics in 2004.

    After the win, she draped the U.S. flag over her back and skipped around the mat.

    “It was one of the best moments in my life,” she said at the time. “I think I’m going to remember it for my entire life. It’s one of the best feelings in the world. And when I experience something like that, it just reminds me that everything is worth it. All the hard days, the grind, it’s all worth it for moments like these.”

    Amit will now be in the city limelight as an official celebration occurs at Civic Park.

    Elor will hold a question-and-answer session and take photos with residents.

    Mayor Pro Tempore Cindy Darling said the celebration will amplify the message Elor made in Paris.

    ‘Amit has a strong message about women in what are often considered non-traditional sports for women,’ Darling said in a statement. “She has been wrestling since the age of 4 and now, at only 20, has brought home the gold. In Walnut Creek, we want everyone to have that same drive.’

    Elor’s brother Orry said he is excited about Saturday’s celebration because it will give his sister the much-deserved recognition she’s earned.

    Orry said he and Elor would play at Civic Park as kids, making the event more memorable.

    “I was”more proud of not just the accomplishment but more for Amit,” Orry said.

    [ad_2]

    Pete Suratos

    Source link

  • Jordan Chiles says Olympic gymnastics controversy took away ‘the recognition of who I was’

    Jordan Chiles says Olympic gymnastics controversy took away ‘the recognition of who I was’

    [ad_1]

    For 14 seconds, Jordan Chiles paused and looked down to collect her thoughts and emotions.

    The question — about what Chiles felt she lost when the International Olympic Committee stripped her of her bronze medal in the Olympic women’s gymnastics floor exercise — forced her to stop mid-answer. The audience at the Forbes Power Women’s Summit in New York applauded her as she regrouped and held the microphone back up to her mouth.

    Holding back tears, Chiles said she lost more than a bronze medal through the controversy that dominated the end of last month’s Paris Games. The controversy “wasn’t about the medal,” she said, but other realities that made her feel “stripped.”

    “The biggest thing that was taken from me was the recognition of who I was, not just my sport, but the person I am,” Chiles said.

    “It’s about my skin color,” Chiles added. “It’s about the fact there were things that have led up to this position of being an athlete.”

    The on-stage interview Wednesday — which occurred before Chiles appeared at MTV’s Video Music Awards at night — marked the gymnast’s most extensive comments since the IOC said it would reallocate Chiles’ bronze to Romania’s Ana Bărbosu following an appeal by the Romanian Gymnastics Federation.

    At the floor final on Aug. 5, Chiles originally finished fifth but rose to third after her coach, Cecile Landi, submitted a successful inquiry to raise her score by one-tenth of a point. Five days later, the Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled that Landi’s inquiry should be invalidated because it came four seconds after the one-minute window for such an appeal. After the ruling, the International Gymnastics Federation dropped Chiles to fifth, and the IOC reallocated the medal. USA Gymnastics has said it is appealing the CAS decision to the Swiss Federal Tribunal.

    Chiles said she felt “left in the dark” and unsupported during the controversy. She felt her voice wasn’t heard during the appeal process and compared her emotions to 2018, when she said an emotionally and verbally abusive coach caused her to lose her love for gymnastics.

    “No one was listening to the fact that there are things that we have in place,” Chiles said. “There are things that we have that should’ve been seen but weren’t taken for realization.”

    USA Gymnastics has argued that it has video evidence showing Landi made the appeal 47 seconds after Chiles’ score was posted, 13 seconds before the inquiry window closed, and that it did not have enough time to properly make its case to CAS.

    Chiles previously referred to the decision as “unjust.”

    “(It) comes as a significant blow, not just to me, but to everyone who has championed my journey,” Chiles said in a post on X on Aug. 15. “To add to the heartbreak, the unprompted racially driven attacks on social media are wrong and extremely hurtful.”

    Almost a month later, Chiles maintains that she and her coach followed the rules and did “everything that was totally and completely right” in the floor exercise competition.

    “I made history and I will always continue to make history,” said Chiles, who won gold in the Olympic women’s team competition.

    Chiles, who will return to UCLA for the upcoming college gymnastics season, received a bronze clock at the VMAs as a gift from Flavor Flav, who promised to make her one after her medal was stripped.


    Chiles receives a bronze clock from Flavor Flav on Wednesday. (Noam Galai / Getty Images for MTV)

    Required reading

    (Photo: Steven Ferdman / Getty Images)

    [ad_2]

    The New York Times

    Source link

  • How Morteza Mehrzad, the world’s second tallest man, spiked Iran to Paralympic gold

    How Morteza Mehrzad, the world’s second tallest man, spiked Iran to Paralympic gold

    [ad_1]

    “SUPER SPIKE!” the PA announcer bellows inside the electric party atmosphere of the North Arena on the outskirts of Paris.

    Arms outstretched wide, Morteza Mehrzad, sitting on the floor in his red top and black trousers, lets out a roar to celebrate yet another punishing blow which immediately ends the rally.

    It is just one of the 27 points, the most accumulated by any one player, that helped Iran win a record-extending eighth Sitting Volleyball Paralympic title after beating Bosnia and Herzegovina in the final by three sets to one (22-25, 30-28, 25-16, 25-14). When Mehrzad briefly stood to shake hands with his opponent at the end of the game, the net came up to his midriff. His team-mates came up level with his sternum.


    Mehrzad slams home another winner (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

    Standing at 8ft 1in (2m 46cm) — larger than most doors, longer than most beds — the 36-year-old is the second tallest man in the world.

    Born with gigantism, his impairment has posed some problems. Mehrzad had been sleeping on the floor in the Paralympic village. The Iran team requested an extended bed before the Games but the two extensions provided to a standard athlete’s bed were insufficient. A third extension was made and his coach Hadi Rezaeigarkani and Paris 2024 organisers confirmed this week that the issue had been resolved and Mehrzad was sleeping comfortably in the village.

    Indeed it was Rezaeigarkani — who has won eight gold medals from his 10 Paralympic games, first as a coach and then as a player — who spotted Mehrzad on an Iranian television programme featuring people with physical abnormalities. The coach contacted Merhzad — who uses a wheelchair having injured his pelvis in a bike accident at the age of 16, stopping the growth of his right leg — and got him into the sport.

    Mehrzad rarely went out in public, Rezaeigarkani has said in previous interviews, because his height and facial features — the latter caused by acromegaly, a hormonal disorder — attracted strange looks.

    “I was a depressed guy and my life changed completely with volleyball,” Mehrzad told Esportivo. Rezaeigarkani believes the sport gave him hope.


    Mehrzad was a key player in Iran’s gold medal pursuit (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

    Having stood out in public and received unwanted attention, Mehrzad is now head and shoulders above the rest courtesy of his sporting prowess.

    Evidently, there are significant advantages to having such a tall player on your team. When sitting, Mehrzad has a maximum reach of 6ft 4in (1.96m). His hand stretches 81cm above the height of the net, allowing him to generate immense power as he kills off points with winning shots. As an outside hitter, that is his job.

    Mehrzad has to make sure his body is in the right position, however, and such a large frame requires agile movement. Sweat dripping down his face, he pushes his lower body on the floor, legs extended, up and down the court swiftly, reading the quick interchange of play.


    Mehrzad’s reach stretches 81cm above the height of the net (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

    In fact, as well as his menacing spikes, what stood out most on Friday night is that Mehrzad, at the changing of ends or time-outs, always moved by shuffling and rarely got to his feet. “Morteza is the best spiker and one of the most important players in the world,” said his best friend and the final’s fastest server (73km/h), Meisam Ali Pour, speaking via a translator after the game. “He knows what to do, but he can’t do it by himself.”

    Silver medallist Stevan Crnobrnja of Bosnia viewed Mehrzad as just another one of Iran’s great players. They accepted they could not do much about his height advantage, but focused on neutralising others who were crucial in setting him up. If one of his team-mates does not set or pass the ball, Mehrzad is helpless.

    Ali Pour, who, going into the final, had contributed more points (39) than Mehrzad (28), emphasised the need for teamwork. “If all the best players in the world play together, they will not be able to beat Iran,” he said.


    Mehrzad towers above his team-mates (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

    Expressive and animated on the court, off the court, Mehrzad, who was not available for interview, is shy, reserved and does not like attention.

    His team-mates and coach see him as just one member of a very united group. “My team has 12 stars, Morteza is one of them,” said coach Rezaeigarkani. “We did not have Morteza before and we will not (always) have him in the future.”

    When asked what the secret to Iran’s success is, Rezaeigarkan replied: “Work, work, work.”

    (Top photo: Michael Reaves/Getty Images) 

    [ad_2]

    The New York Times

    Source link

  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

    [ad_1]

    Jim Thorpe’s shoes were stolen just before he competed in the Olympic decathlon. Wearing mismatched…

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Ugandan Olympic runner Rebecca Cheptegei dies after allegedly being set on fire by boyfriend

    Ugandan Olympic runner Rebecca Cheptegei dies after allegedly being set on fire by boyfriend

    [ad_1]

    Johannesburg — Ugandan athletics officials said Thursday that the country’s Olympic marathon runner Rebecca Cheptegei had died in a hospital in neighboring Kenya where she was being treated for burns to 80% of her body after her boyfriend allegedly doused her with gasoline and set her alight. Cheptegei, 33, died Thursday morning of organ failure four days after police said she was attacked by her partner during a dispute over land.

    Cheptegi placed 44th in the marathon at the recent Paris Olympics and was well known in the marathon running world. Trans Nzoia County Police Commander Jeremiah ole Kosiom said Monday that Cheptegei’s boyfriend, Dickson Ndiema, had bought a jerrican of gasoline and set her alight after the disagreement on Sunday.

    “The couple were heard quarrelling outside their house. During the altercation the boyfriend was seen pouring a liquid on the woman before burning her,” local police chief Jeremiah ole Kosiom told Kenyan media.

    Kenya Athlete Burned
    Rebecca Cheptegei competes at the Discovery 10km road race in Kapchorwa, Uganda, Jan. 20, 2023. 

    AP


    Both Cheptegei and Ndiema suffered burns and were brought to the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret, western Kenya, after neighbors reported hearing shouting and seeing fire.

    “May her gentle soul rest in peace and we strongly condemn violence against women,” President of the Ugandan Olympic Committee Donald Rukare said in a social media post Thursday. “This was a cowardly and senseless act that has led to the loss of a great athlete. Her legacy will continue to endure.”  

    The Ugandan Olympic Committee called in a Thursday statement for “law enforcement agencies to take swift and decisive action to bring the perpetrator to justice for this cowardly and deplorable action.”

    Two elite Kenyan runners, Agnes Tirop and Damaris Mutua, were both killed in the same area as Cheptegi within six months of one another by their partners.

    Tirop’s death in October 2021 sparked protests, which were amplified when hundreds of athletes took to the streets of the town of Iten calling for stricter laws and gender-based outreach centers.

    Tirop’s husband is on trial for the 25-year-old runner’s murder.

    Kenya’s Bureau of National Statistics published a report at the beginning of 2023 that found 34% of women in the country had experienced physical violence after reaching the age of 15, with women who were or had been married almost twice as likely to report violence.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • How Blind Soccer Is Played at the 2024 Paris Paralympics

    How Blind Soccer Is Played at the 2024 Paris Paralympics

    [ad_1]

    This story originally appeared on WIRED Italia and has been translated from Italian.

    The 2024 Paris Paralympics have shown the general public how vast, extraordinary, and too often ignored the world of sports for people with disabilities is. Among the events that has garnered the most interest is blind soccer, or more precisely, B1 5-a-side soccer, which demonstrates how visually impaired athletes are able to use extraordinary spatial awareness, as well as speed, precision, and technique.

    Like all disciplines practiced by people who are blind or visually impaired, it is regulated by the International Blind Sports Federation (IBSA), founded in Paris in 1981. Here’s how it works.

    B1 5-a-Side Soccer Playing Field

    There is a distinction here between B2/3 5-a-side soccer, which includes visually impaired people, and B1 soccer, in which most of the players are completely blind: The Paralympics includes only the latter. B1 soccer is played on a rectangular field, the same standard as 5-a-side football/futsal (40 meters long by 20 meters wide). Along the length of the field are 1- to 1.3-meter-high boards that prevent the ball from leaving the playing area.

    Players

    Each team consists of four movement players (all of whom are blind and must wear a mask) and a goalkeeper (sighted or visually impaired), who must remain in his own 2-meter-deep area, but can guide his teammates by giving directions when defending. When playing in attack, however, the movement players receive directions from an offensive guide who is himself sighted and is located behind the opponent’s goal. When the ball is in midfield, the coach can give directions to his team. Unlike traditional soccer, there’s no offside penalty, which keeps the game moving briskly.

    The Ball and Silence

    It is essential that, except for the goalkeeper, offensive guide, or coach giving directions, no one speaks during the game. That’s partly because the ball itself is constructed with rattles sewn between the inner tube and the outer shell, which allow blind players to envision its location through sound suggestions. Spectators are asked to remain in strict silence so as not to disturb the players, who must rely on their hearing, such as when one of the players signals to the others that he is making an action toward an opponent. The audience can cheer only after goals.

    Match Length

    Each B1 5-a-side soccer match is divided into two halves of 20 minutes each, with an intermediate break of up to 10 minutes.

    The History of the Sport

    It seems that the first 5-a-side blind soccer competitions took place in South America, with Brazil being the pioneer: In fact, the first championship of this discipline was held in the country in 1980, and Brazil has always won the gold medal since the sport became a Paralympic discipline. The game spread to Europe a few years later, with the first European championship recorded in Spain in 1986. Since 2004—that is, since the Athens Olympic Games—B1 5-a-side soccer has been officially included among the disciplines of the Paralympics. In the 2024 edition in Paris, the men’s tournament is being held in a temporary field built under the Eiffel Tower.

    [ad_2]

    Paolo Armelli

    Source link

  • Uganda Olympic athlete Rebecca Cheptegei set on fire by her boyfriend, Kenya police say

    Uganda Olympic athlete Rebecca Cheptegei set on fire by her boyfriend, Kenya police say

    [ad_1]

    A Ugandan athlete living in Kenya was attacked and set on fire by her boyfriend and is receiving treatment for burns on 75% of her body, police said.

    Rebecca Cheptegei, a distance runner who finished at the 44th position in the 2024 Paris Olympics, was attacked in her house in the western Trans Nzoia County. She was in critical condition as of Tuesday, the BBC reported.

    Trans Nzoia County Police Commander Jeremiah ole Kosiom said Monday that Cheptegei’s boyfriend, Dickson Ndiema, bought a jerrican of petrol, poured it on her and set her ablaze during an argument Sunday.

    “Her condition looks serious with facial burns and bandages,” a MTRH staff member told AFP, requesting anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the media.

    Kenya Athlete Burned
    Rebecca Cheptegei, competes at the Discovery 10km road race in Kapchorwa, Uganda Friday, Jan. 20, 2023. 

    / AP


    The police report did not mention if Cheptegei’s children were hurt in the attack.

    Ndiema also sustained burn wounds, and the two are receiving specialized treatment at the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret city.

    Cheptegei’s parents said their daughter bought land in Trans Nzoia to be near the county’s many athletic training centers.

    A report filed by the local chief states that the couple was heard fighting over the land where the house was built before the fire started.

    The Ugandan Athletics Federation expressed its regret over the incident, saying Cheptegei had “suffered severe injuries.”

    “This follows an incident involving her Kenyan boyfriend pouring petrol and setting fire on her,” it said in a statement on social media.

    Disturbing trend of gender-based violence

    The attack marked the latest horrific incident of gender-based violence in the East African country.

    A report by the Kenyan Bureau of National Statistics published in January 2023 found that 34 percent of women in Kenya have experienced physical violence since the age of 15.

    It said women who had “been married are much more likely to have experienced violence”, noting that 41 percent of such women reported incidents compared to 20 percent of unmarried women.

    The assault on Cheptegei comes two years after Kenyan-born athlete Damaris Mutua was found dead in Iten, a world-famous running hub in the Rift Valley in the west of the country.

    Her death followed the murder of record-breaking runner Agnes Tirop, 25, who was found stabbed to death at her home in Iten in 2021.

    Tirop’s estranged husband Emmanuel Ibrahim Rotich went on trial over her murder in 2023. He has denied the charges. His trial is ongoing.

    AFP contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Hunter Woodhall gears up for Paralympics after watching wife Tara Davis-Woodhall earn gold at the Paris Games

    Hunter Woodhall gears up for Paralympics after watching wife Tara Davis-Woodhall earn gold at the Paris Games

    [ad_1]

    Hunter Woodhall and Tara Davis-Woodhall have won medals, yes. But they’ve also won the hearts of millions of Americans. 

    The track and field stars, already a budding internet sensation, set off a new wave of admiration after a video of the couple celebrating Davis-Woodhall’s gold win in women’s long jump went viral during the Paris Games.

    The moment captured Davis-Woodhall making another jump after her after winning 23-foot leap, this time into the arms of her husband, Paralympic champion Hunter Woodhall. Videos of the warm embrace have garnered millions of views across social media.

    APTOPIX Paris Olympics Athletics
    Tara Davis-Woodhall, left, of the United States, celebrates with her husband Hunter Woodhall after winning the women’s long jump final at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Thursday, Aug. 8, 2024, in Saint-Denis, France.

    Bernat Armangue / AP


    “Baby, you’re the Olympic champion!” Woodhall was caught saying on camera.

    “I haven’t been on social media that much, so I don’t know how viral it’s gone!” Davis-Woodhall told People during a recent interview. “Everyone’s been telling me the whole world’s been seeing it, [but] that’s just Hunter and I.”

    Woodhall, a double-amputee sprinter originally from Syracuse, Utah, will have his own chance to vie for gold during the Paralympics, which kicked off in Paris on Aug. 28 and run through Sept. 8. According to a spokesperson, Woodhall will compete in the men’s 100m on Sept. 1 and again on Sept. 2 if he qualifies. He’s also representing Team USA in the men’s 400m and 4x100m Universal Relay on Sept. 6.

    Woodhall departed Paris on Aug. 11 to finish his preparations, and arrived back in City of Light on Aug. 26, according the spokesperson. His wife, who was in Rome for the Rome Diamond League, was set to rejoin Woodhall on Saturday, the spokesperson said.

    After being born with a condition called fibular hemimelia, Woodhall had an amputation to remove his lower legs. Doctors told his parents that he would never be able to walk, a prognosis he was determined to prove wrong.

    “They said I’d never walk, so I learned to run instead,” Woodhall’s Instagram bio says.

    The Paralympic athlete started his track and field career in the fifth grade and became the first double amputee athlete to earn a D-1 scholarship, competing for the University of Arkansas. 

    Rio 2016 Paralympics
    Germany’s Johannes Floores (R) and USA’s Hunter Woodhall (L) react after the final men’s 4x100m relay T42-47 during the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games.

    Jens Büttner/picture alliance via Getty Images


    Davis-Woodhall has been enmeshed in the track and field world since age 4, thanks to her family. The youngest of five, she attended her older siblings’ track meets regularly as a child and got interested in long jump after seeing her sister take part in the event, according to NBC. Davis-Woodhall’s dad, Ty Davis, was her coach all the way through high school, where she set records for long jump and 100m hurdles at both the state and national level. Davis-Woodhall now has a track invitational at her high school named after her, according to the spokesperson.

    The California native attended the University of Georgia before transferring to the University of Texas where she competed in long jump and hurdles. She brings a cowboy hat to her meets to honor her Texas ties.

    Davis-Woodhall made her Olympic debut in 2021 at the Tokyo Games after recovering from a string of injuries including two broken vertebrae, a broken ankle and a broken hip.

    “I sat in COVID, I figured out who I was and just tuned in to my body and what I needed to do for the upcoming season,” she told CBS News in 2021. “And luckily, my season played out really well.” 

    Athletics - Olympics: Day 11
    Tara Davis of Team United States competes in the Women’s Long Jump Final on day eleven of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Olympic Stadium on August 03, 2021 in Tokyo, Japan.

    Matthias Hangst / Getty Images


    Outside of long jump, she’s competed in 60m and 100m hurdles, triple jump, and women’s 200m for USA Track & Field.

    The couple’s romance began in 2017, after they met at a high school track meet in Pocatello, Idaho. They recount their first encounter in a YouTube video.

    According to their telling, Woodhall traveled from Utah, and Woodhall-Davis from California for an event called the Simplot Games. It was there where the two, both 18-years-old at the time, serendipitously caught each others’ eyes on the track turf. Woodhall was watching his Davis-Woodhall run the hurdle race when he texted his friend Tucker saying, “This is the girl I’m going to marry.” The next day, after the Woodhall ran and won the 400m race, Woodhall-Davis greeted him afterwards. “I just needed a hug,” Woodhall recalled her saying. “That’s really how we met,” he said.

    The two tied the knot in Texas in 2022 and now reside in Arkansas. They run a popular YouTube channel called “Tara and Hunter” that documents their athletic ventures and day-to-day life as a married couple. It currently has 863,000 subscribers.

    “Being in each other’s sport I think that’s a different way of sharing our love,” said Davis-Woodhall in an interview shared by CBS Mornings. “Not only do we love each other as humans, we love each other as athletes.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Sophie Morgan On Hosting the Paralympics: “I’m an Advocate First” – POPSUGAR Australia

    Sophie Morgan On Hosting the Paralympics: “I’m an Advocate First” – POPSUGAR Australia

    [ad_1]

    The Paris 2024 Paralympics are underway, and history is already being made. For one, the Games are providing more coverage than ever, with a record number of broadcasters covering all 22 sporting events live for the first time, per NBC. But additionally, NBCU’s Paralympics coverage is being led by hosts with disabilities for the first time ever. And while this may be a step that should have been taken years ago, it’s a move worth celebrating for all it means for disability representation.

    Sophie Morgan is one of the new faces of NBC’s coverage, but a familiar one to many UK households. Morgan first appeared on screen in 2004 as part of a BBC reality TV series, and has been a TV host and commentator since 2012, when she had a small presenter role for Channel 4’s 2012 Summer Paraympics in London. Her segue into sports broadcasting came into full force at the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games, and she has been a mainstay on British sports screens since then.

    Morgan’s career as a TV host and sports commentator has been long and accomplished – but prior to booking her first job, she never thought the profession was an option for her, a young wheelchair user, simply because she’d never seen an example of someone else doing it.

    “When I was first injured at 18, I didn’t know any other young disabled women. I hadn’t been exposed to many wheelchair users, so I was really in the dark about what was possible for me, which was harmful,” Morgan tells PS. “I now know how important it is to have representation of disabled people because I’ve lived in a world where for so long I felt like I was so out of place.” When she was starting out in TV, she hoped to be that example of representation she was missing.

    Now Morgan is stepping onto her biggest stage yet, covering the Paralympics for NBCU as part of the historic team with Lacey Henderson and Chris Waddell. Together they bring with them a wealth of lived experience of disability that many hosts who aren’t disabled simply do not have. Morgan believes this will add unique value to their commentating – and many para-athletes, viewers, and fans of parasports agree.

    Related: Paralympians Earn the Same Pay For Medals as Olympians, but Is It Enough?

    Why Representation in Sports Broadcasting Matters

    While people with disabilities aren’t a monolith and have different perspectives and experiences, in general people who understand what it’s like to have a disability are familiar with the common pitfalls those without disabilities run into when reporting on parasports. For instance, nondisabled people often have, “a fear they’re going to say something offensive or wrong,” Morgan says. “That’s a human instinct. No one wants to upset anyone intentionally and when it comes to disability, because there’s not much exposure to it, often someone might be trying to say something nice, but it will come across as offensive, patronizing, pitying, or really, let’s call it ableist.”

    Avid parasports watcher Kathryn (who asked to be identified by first name only) tells PS: “It doesn’t always, but having disabled people commentating can limit how much of the superhuman, inspiration porn narrative [is] shared,” referring to an ableist trope in which people with disabilities are objectified to motivate or inspire people without disabilities.

    This year some of the world’s most talented Paralympic champions, including sprinter Amber Sabatini and wheelchair tennis champion Gustavo Fernandez, have co-signed a social media campaign that challenges another ableist habit that’s affected how people talk about the Paralympic Games: the tendency to refer to the athletes as “participants” and not “competitors.” Morgan refers to this disparity as “offensive” for “implicitly assuming within . . . tone that [para-athletes are] any less than their counterparts.”

    “A Paralympian will most often train the same number of hours as an Olympian – and they most certainly put in the same level of effort, dedication (and pain),” notes Eleanor Robinson, a retired Paralympic swimmer for Team Great Britain. “To suggest that they are putting their bodies through blood sweat and tears for the joy of ‘participation’ and inclusion greatly diminishes their feats of sporting prowess. A Paralympian competes for the same reasons as an Olympian – to win and taste success.”

    Not only are hosts with disabilities less likely to repeat these harmful ideas; they’re also well-positioned to call them out when they hear them from others. As Morgan says, “I’m an advocate first and foremost, so I love to lean into conversations around language and attitudes and societal models and perceptions – the bigger themes.” And she’s not afraid to have those conversations on screen.

    Another reason representation is so important is that, as Robinson tells PS: “The presence of disabled people on screen aids our collective familiarization of impairments and all body types. The more familiar we are with the uniqueness and variation of the human anatomy – and disconnect ourselves from ideas about the ‘typical body’ – the less anatomy and aesthetics matter.”

    Looking Beyond Representation

    Morgan’s desire for better representation of disability in media encouraged her to keep pursuing TV roles, even as she faced numerous barriers, such as being boxed into covering only topics that explicitly related to being disabled.

    But Morgan knows representation alone isn’t enough. So in 2023 she partnered with Disability Rights advocate Keely Cat-Wells to found Making Space Media, a division of the talent acquisition and learning platform Making Space. The platform aims to serve as an antidote to the obvious lack of screen time people with disabilities receive in mainstream media by creating secure and sustainable employment opportunities for disabled talent.

    Morgan is also leading a talent training program developed as part of a partnership between Making Space and NBC. “We trained up the talent with the hope that they would be cast in the Games and a number of them have been,” she says. But the plan is for Paris to just be the beginning. NBC and Making Space are collaborating to produce more disabled hosts, analysts, and play-by-play sportscasters across sports media as a whole.

    Many hope that the Paris Paralympics will prove that attitudes are changing for good. Matt Scott, a retired Paralympian and now a NBC reporter in Paris, sees the improving coverage of parasports as evidence that although society “has had a misinformed and misguided belief that disability equals inability, [it now] has had no choice but to reconsider the preconceived notions and accept more inclusivity in every industry, including mainstream media.”

    Morgan also hopes that this year’s commitment to increased coverage is a trend that continues. “They have put these Games on the sidelines and then get surprised that there aren’t many people watching it,” Morgan says, drawing comparisons to the experience of women’s professional sports in the past. “This frustrates me about television. People fall back on that notion – but why would they watch if it’s buried on a channel that doesn’t get the same marketing budget and promotion? It’s not about the sport, it’s about the way it’s positioned.”

    And although Paris is still in full swing, Morgan already has her eye on the LA Games in 2028, and is excited about what it can do for the disability conversation in the US. “LA is one of the most influential cities globally, and Hollywood is the storyteller of the world,” she says. “The way we can change perceptions around disability is through storytelling. So we have got the perfect ingredients, we just need the recipe for change.”

    Related: What Happens If You’re Not “Disabled Enough” For the Paralympics?


    Hannah Turner is a disabled writer and journalist living with complex chronic illnesses. Her writing focuses on disability, anti-wellness culture, and pop culture. Her words have appeared in many places, including PS, Refinery29, Mashable, and Dazed.


    [ad_2]

    Hannah turner

    Source link

  • John McFall, the Astronaut Flag Bearer at the Paris Paralympics, Is Ready to Fly

    John McFall, the Astronaut Flag Bearer at the Paris Paralympics, Is Ready to Fly

    [ad_1]

    At first we studied how my disabilities and prosthesis might affect my ability to meet the requirements in-flight. At a later stage we went into detail, to the point of figuring out, for example, whether I should compulsorily use my prosthesis in space, since legs are hardly used there.

    In summary, I can say that although I would need the prosthesis at some stages, disabilities like mine fully meet the needs of space travel. I am very happy to say that we have not identified any hiccups capable of precluding a person with disabilities like mine from a long-duration space mission. This has an incredible positive outcome.

    Why is it important that people with disabilities can also operate in space? And what specific disabilities are we talking about?

    I’ll start with the second question. Fly! looked at a specific group of disabilities, those in the lower limbs. From the results I think we can extrapolate different variables in that group that are compatible with long-duration space missions. We need to progress step by step, starting with the basics, and I am sure that starting to study lower limb disabilities was a good choice. I hope we can soon focus on other disabilities, which allows me to answer the first part of the question: Why is it important?

    The ESA recognizes that talented people can boast different histories and backgrounds—meaning gender, sex, ethnicity, physical abilities. Everywhere in the world there are those who could make valuable contributions to human space exploration. Of course, this involves becoming astronauts.

    And the experience and knowledge of people with physical disabilities can bring new and valuable ideas, different ways of thinking, motivation, inspiration. For this to happen, everyone needs to have fair representation among the staff, with appropriate professional positions and roles. This is a goal, and the ESA is working to achieve it.

    In September, the Polaris Dawn mission is expected to take off from Cape Canaveral, and will feature the first spacewalk by nonprofessional astronauts. What do you think?

    They are inspiring and no less important in the landscape of human exploration of the cosmos, because every time these missions become a reality, they help enrich the knowledge we have as a community. Polaris Dawn is doing new science; it’s testing new technologies. That’s why I have great respect for private astronauts and their missions—they make a major contribution to the advancement of our space activities.

    McFall and other ESA astronauts in a weightlessness simulation.

    ESA/A. Conigli

    When are you going into space?

    I would love to travel beyond the atmosphere. I hope to have the opportunity, but what I hope most is that sooner or later someone with physical disabilities will be able to do it, fully integrated into the activities on the International Space Station.

    About the timing, I hope that at the end of this decade it can happen. As for me, if I ever have the opportunity to fly in space, it will not be before 2027. But nothing is confirmed, and I am keeping my fingers crossed at the moment.

    [ad_2]

    Emilio Cozzi

    Source link

  • ‘Disgrace’ that Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson had to ‘crawl off’ train – ParalympicsGB chief

    ‘Disgrace’ that Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson had to ‘crawl off’ train – ParalympicsGB chief

    [ad_1]

    ParalympicsGB chef de mission Penny Briscoe said it is an “absolute disgrace” that 11-time Paralympic gold medallist Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson was forced to “crawl off” a train.

    The former wheelchair racer arrived at London’s King’s Cross on Monday evening on a London North Eastern Railway (LNER) train but there was no one there to assist her. Baroness Grey-Thompson had booked assistance to help her off the 19.15 train from Leeds but missed it and took the 19.45 train instead.

    She says she “had a contract” and should have been assisted off the train but after 20 minutes, no one came.

    “So I decided that I would crawl off the train,” the 55-year-old told the BBC.

    She continued: “Trains were meant to be step free by January 1 2020. It’s exhausting. I was really angry last night. I can just about do it (get off a train) but there are lots of other disabled people who can’t and would have been stuck until who knows when. In this day and age it’s not right.”

    Briscoe, speaking from ParalympicsGB house in Paris, said: “It’s the lived experience of disabled people on a daily basis. It just doesn’t get reported.

    “You should, as a disabled person, be able to get on and off a train and go about your daily living but the reality is far more difficult than that. We’re trying, as ParalympicsGB, to inspire a better world for disabled people. We want change and our athletes want change. There’s still so much to do, and we can’t let our foot off the pedal in terms of demanding that change and creating a more equitable society.”

    An LNER spokesperson told the BBC it was investigating the incident and was “sorry to understand there was an issue”.


    ParalympicsGB chef de mission Briscoe (Jordan Mansfield/Getty Images)

    It is the first time Paris have hosted a Paralympics and Briscoe has said the City is “on an accessibility journey”.

    “We know their bus services are a hundred per cent accessible,” she added. “The fleet of buses they’ve brought in for the athletes have six accessible wheelchair spaces on every bus. We know Paris have become more accessible because of the Games. Their metro system is a work in progress.

    “The number of accessible bathrooms in hotels in Paris is still an issue, especially the older hotels. It’s one or two per hotel and that isn’t enough if you’re welcoming disabled athletes or spectators into the environment. It’s an accessibility challenge that is global. We had it in Tokyo.

    “Paris’ objective in terms of legacy is to use the Games to create a more accessible society for Parisians and we have to support them on that journey, it doesn’t happen overnight.”

    Baroness Grey-Thompson won a total of 16 Paralympic medals across the 100m, 200m, 400m, 800m and 4x100m relay between 1988 and 2004. She is ParalympicsGB’s fourth most decorated athlete of all time.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Paris Paralympics 2024: A complete guide to what’s on and the stars to watch out for

    (Boris Streubel/Getty Images for Laureus)

    [ad_2]

    The New York Times

    Source link

  • 7 Things to Know About the 2024 Paris Paralympics

    7 Things to Know About the 2024 Paris Paralympics

    [ad_1]

    The Paralympics also measures, with numerical values, the diversity of intensity of effort that each athlete can perform. Athletes from different classes can compete against each other so long as they have equal potential to execute any particular sport. For example, in team games the sum of the different scores of the members of a team must not exceed a certain quota in order to ensure equal competitions. You can read more about the scores here.

    A goalball match at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics.

    Koki Nagahama/Getty Images

    Boccia and Other Events With No Olympic Equivalents

    There are two sports at the Paralympics that have no specific correspondent during the Olympic Games. They are goalball and boccia.

    The former is a team sport designed for visually impaired and blind athletes. It was designed in 1946 for World War II veterans who had lost their sight during the conflict. Men’s goalball made its debut at the 1976 Toronto Paralympic Games, while its women’s version appeared during the 1984 New York Paralympic Games. It is played in two 12-minute halves, with two teams of three players each.

    The court is the same size as that of volleyball: 59 feet long and 30 feet wide. At either end of the court are two goals that cover the full width of the playing field. The attacking team attempts to score by quickly rolling a ball containing inner bells toward the opposing goal defended by the opponents. For the shot to be valid, however, the ball must bounce at least once in the pitcher’s landing area; defenders lie down to cover the goal. As in blind soccer, spectators must remain silent during the game so that the players and players can hear the ball.

    Boccia is played by wheelchair athletes with disabilities that affect motor function. Long practiced in amateur competitions, boccia made its debut at the 1984 Paralympic Games. It is one of the few disciplines to include both men and women in the same competitions

    The Differences Between Paralympic and Olympic Medals

    There has been much talk about the medals at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, which featured a piece of the Eiffel Tower. The fragment of Paris’ iconic monument is also contained in the medals of the Paralympic Games, which will have one difference: On the back will be an Olympic Games stamp in Braille in honor of the French inventor of the writing system for the blind, Louis Braille.

    The Symbols of the Paralympics

    During the Paris Olympics fans became acquainted with the Phryges, the mascots inspired by the Parisian caps worn during the French Revolution. For the first time in history, the 2024 Paralympics will feature a mascot displaying a racing blade.

    The other novelty in the symbolism of the Paralympics lies in the fact that this edition is the first in which the event’s logo coincides with that of the Olympic Games, a sign of greater inclusion between the two tournaments. The emblem features a gold medal, a flame, and the Marianne, a symbol of the revolution and France as a nation. In the Olympic one, the Marianne dominates the five circles, while the Paralympics logo does not consist of the five circles but of the three “agitos” red, blue, and green (mind, body and spirit).

    The Paris Paralympics, by the Numbers

    Along with London, Paris is the only city to have hosted three editions of the Summer Olympics, but the French capital had never hosted the Summer Paralympics. In fact, France had hosted the Paralympic Winter Games in Albertville in 1992.

    Some 4,400 Paralympic athletes from around the world will compete in 549 medal events in the 22 sports featured. Wednesday, the first day of the event, will feature 11 competitions.

    The Venues of the 2024 Paralympics

    As was the case in the Olympic Games, all of Paris’ iconic venues will be featured in the Paralympics, from the Palace of Versailles for Paralympic equestrian events and the Grand Palais for wheelchair fencing and Paralympic taekwondo competitions to Les Invalides for Paralympic archery. Also the Eiffel Tower, where soccer matches for the blind will be held. Roland-Garros will be the home of wheelchair tennis competitions as well as sitting volleyball.

    [ad_2]

    Daniele Polidoro

    Source link

  • 4 DEI Lessons from the Paris Olympics That Can Help Entrepreneurs Succeed | Entrepreneur

    4 DEI Lessons from the Paris Olympics That Can Help Entrepreneurs Succeed | Entrepreneur

    [ad_1]

    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    For the very first time, the world witnessed the first all-black podium in women’s gymnastics Olympic history. Brazilian gymnast Rebeca Andrade joined Simone Biles and Jordan Chiles from Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics, where they were captured in an iconic photo showing the power of women of color in sports. This Olympics hit a groundbreaking milestone, with 50% of competing athletes being women and more than half of all medal events open to female athletes.

    This year, many moments of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) were demonstrated. So, what DEI lessons can we learn from the 2024 Olympics that entrepreneurs can apply to their businesses today? The short answer is quite a few.

    1. Take care of your mental health

    In the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, the world was stunned when Biles, the greatest gymnast of all time, dropped out because of the “twisties,” a dangerous break in the brain-body connection causing the gymnast to lose sense of where they are in the air. She took a step back and let her teammate, Suni Lee, perform and subsequently take home the all-around gold in women’s gymnastics — an achievement Biles was perfectly poised and expected to win. Biles taught us that no matter what the stakes are, your mental health should come first. How can you perform at the highest levels of business and entrepreneurship if your mental health isn’t in a good place? The answer is that you can, but it’s not even what the G.O.A.T. would do. If no one’s told you today, here’s your friendly reminder that self-care is not selfish; it’s productive.

    Related: Radical Self-Care Isn’t Nice — It’s Necessary. Redefine Boundaries Between Your Life and Career to Perform Your Best.

    2. Don’t be afraid to be the first

    While some entrepreneurs dream of being the “first” to invent or discover something, others feel intimidated when finding their niche or area of genius in their industry. When faced with the daunting opportunity to be the first person to start or lead in a certain area, the fear of failure or high visibility might make some entrepreneurs squirm. Despite the nerves and fear that come with innovation, it’s okay to be “the first” in something and confidently walk into that arena with a bright idea. That’s what fencer Lauren Scruggs did at the Paris Olympics this year. She became the first Black American woman to win a gold medal in fencing, and I’m sure she was nervous. But she came ready to win and kept her eye on the prize. Entrepreneurs who are nervous about stepping into the space of being the “first” should take a deep breath and know why they’re there, then bravely step into their arena with confidence and focus.

    Related: The Burden of Breaking Barriers is Pushing Black Leaders to Breaking Point. This DEI Expert Reveals Where We Are Going Wrong

    3. Lift others up with you

    As entrepreneurs, we wear numerous hats and fight for our business success. However much success we gained, we didn’t do it alone. We must always remember to give people their flowers and lift them up as we grow. For example, while running the preliminary heat 100-meter race, South Sudanese runner Lucia Moris collapsed to the ground in the heat of the day and was unable to get up and finish the race. As soon as fellow competitor Silina Pha Aphay from Laos finished her race and realized Moris was on the ground in pain, she stopped and ran back to make sure Moris was okay and offered comfort and support while waiting for the medical teams to arrive. The business world can often feel cutthroat and like every person is out for themselves, but the heroic and noble athletes at the Olympics remind us that as we grow, we must lift others up with us. We’re not winning if others suffer as a consequence.

    4. Create value and set yourself apart

    Like most athletes that go to the Olympics, the goal is to win, and they know winning requires them to stand out. Most athletes don’t get an opportunity to stand out when the other competitors are neck and neck with them. But Simone Biles certainly has. After having several gymnastic moves named after her, she reminds us all to be aware of what we contribute to our areas and how we can set ourselves apart by doing what others aren’t doing. Creativity and innovation are the name of the game, and exceptional athletes like Biles show how our creativity can inspire others in business and entrepreneurship to imagine more.

    Final thoughts

    When it comes to business, we all want to be number one and become entrepreneur of the year. But the best of the best in the world of sports can teach us a thing or two about how to get there. Lifting others up when they’re down doesn’t give your competitor the upper hand; it gives your competitor a compassionate hand. Creating value and being the first to do something sets a standard for others in your sphere to strive for more and reach higher, too. Finally, taking care of your mental health isn’t selfish; it’s one of the most productive things you can do for yourself and others. While the Paris Olympics have come and gone, the lessons live on. Let these lessons seep into your mind and business, and see where you go. Who knows, you might just get the gold.

    [ad_2]

    Nika White

    Source link