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Tag: Paris Olympics 2024

  • USWNT wins its fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer with a 1-0 victory over Brazil in final

    USWNT wins its fifth Olympic gold medal in women’s soccer with a 1-0 victory over Brazil in final

    PARIS — The U.S. women’s soccer team is golden again.

    And, as has been the case throughout the team’s run at the Paris Games, the Americans have Colorado to thank.

    The United States won its fifth Olympic gold medal by beating Brazil 1-0 on Colorado native Mallory Swanson’s early second-half goal in the tournament final Saturday at the Paris Games.

    The Americans, who hadn’t won gold since the 2012 London Olympics, closed out an undefeated run to the title in their first international campaign under new coach Emma Hayes.

    Along the way, it was the golden feet of Coloradans Swanson, Sophia Smith and captain Lindsey Horan who did the most damage. Swanson finished the tournament with four goals and two assists, while Smith had three goals and one assist.

    Goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher preserved Saturday’s win with a one-handed save on Adriana’s header in stoppage time at Parc des Princes. At the final whistle, the U.S. players celebrated as Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the U.S.A.” played in the stadium.

    The loss is more heartbreak for Brazil and its iconic star, Marta. The six-time world player of the year has never won a Women’s World Cup or an Olympics. This is expected to be her last major international tournament.

    It was the third victory for the United States over Brazil in an Olympic final. The Americans also beat the Brazilians in the 2004 in Athens and four years later in Beijing.

    Brazil has never finished better than runner-up at the Olympics.

    “I’m very emotional. It’s been a dream of mine to be in this position,” said Hayes, a London native. “I have to thank my dad because he’s the one who pushed me to this point to be able to come and coach an unbelievable group of players that have received me so well and taken on board everything I have asked. They are tremendous people and players and role models. Yeah, I love them.”

    United States team players celebrate after defeating Brazil during the women’s soccer gold medal match between Brazil and the United States at the Parc des Princes during the 2024 Summer Olympics, Saturday, Aug. 10, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

    Three years ago in Tokyo, the U.S. settled for the bronze medal. The Americans were knocked out in the quarterfinals at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.

    Swanson’s 57th-minute goal came in her 100th appearance with the United States.

    Tom Cruise and former U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe were among those in the crowd.

    The U.S. also won gold in 1996 at the Atlanta Games in the first women’s soccer tournament at the Olympics.

    Anne M. Peterson

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  • Japan’s Ami Yuasa dances her way to gold in first Olympic breaking final

    Japan’s Ami Yuasa dances her way to gold in first Olympic breaking final

    Japanese B-Girl Ami beats Lithuania’s Nicka in the gold medal competition as breaking makes a cameo at the Olympics.

    The urban sport of breaking spun its way onto the Olympic stage for the first and possibly last time, with Japan’s B-Girl Ami winning the inaugural women’s gold.

    Breaking, better known as breakdancing, made its debut amid the grand elegance of Paris’s Place de la Concorde, with 17 dancers known as B-Girls going head-to-head in a series of battles on Friday.

    Ami, whose name is Ami Yuasa, beat Lithuania’s Dominika “Nicka” Banevic in the final, with China’s Liu “671” Qingyi taking bronze.

    Japan's Ami Yuasa, known as B-Girl Ami, celebrates after winning the gold medal during the B-Girls gold medal battle at the breaking competition at La Concorde Urban Park at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, Aug. 9, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
    Japan’s Ami Yuasa, known as B-Girl Ami, celebrates after winning the gold medal during the B-Girls gold medal battle at the breaking competition at La Concorde Urban Park [Abbie Parr/AP Photo]

    The sport blends urban dance with acrobatic moves set to the grooves of hip-hop music.

    Its appearance at the Olympics could be a fleeting one, however, having already been dropped from the Los Angeles 2028 programme and no guarantees it will return in the future.

    “It was disappointing it was decided that it wouldn’t be in LA, particularly before we even had a chance to show it,” said Australian B-Girl Rachel “Raygun” Gunn.

    “I think that was possibly a little premature. I wonder if they’re kicking themselves now.”

    Organisers ensured breaking made the most of its time in the spotlight in Paris, pumping up the volume for an excited crowd that included rapper Snoop Dogg.

    “I still don’t believe that I’m here because breaking is so different,” said Italian Antilai Sandrini, known by her B-Girl name Anti.

    “I never thought about breaking at the Olympics, so for me, it’s really huge.”

    Lithuania's Dominika Banevic, known as B-Girl Nicka, competes during the B-Girls quarterfinals at the breaking competition at La Concorde Urban Park at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, Aug. 9, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin)
    Lithuania’s Dominika Banevic, known as B-Girl Nicka, competes during the B-Girls quarterfinals [Frank Franklin/AP Photo]

    Afghan B-Girl makes political statement

    The first contest of the day was between India Sardjoe of the Netherlands, known by her B-Girl name India, and Refugee Olympic Team competitor, Talash.

    Talash, whose real name is Manizha Talash, left Taliban-controlled Afghanistan to live in Spain two years ago and danced wearing a blue cape with “Free Afghan Women” printed on it.

    Paris 2024 Olympics - Breaking - B-Girls Pre-Qualifier Battle - La Concorde 1, Paris, France - August 09, 2024. Talash of Refugee Olympic Team in action. REUTERS/Angelika Warmuth
    Talash of Refugee Olympic Team in action [Angelika Warmuth/Reuters]

    “There are so many people that are struggling everywhere, and this is why the world needs this,” said American B-Girl Logistx, also known as Logan Edra.

    Breaking originated as part of hip-hop culture in New York in the 1970s.

    What began in the block parties of the Bronx has reached the fountains and classical facades of one of Paris’s most opulent public spaces, overseen by the International Olympic Committee.

    Logistx said finding a balance between breaking’s roots and Olympic competition had been “a messy process”.

    “I’m just so happy with what everyone fought for on this journey because I feel like the culture pulled through,” she said.

    Netherland's India Sardjoe, known as B-Girl India, after competing during the B-Girls bronze medal battle at the breaking competition at La Concorde Urban Park at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, Aug. 9, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
    Netherland’s India Sardjoe, known as B-Girl India, celebrates after competing during the B-Girls bronze medal battle [Abbie Parr/AP Photo]

    Each battle sees B-Girls take turns to lay down their dance moves over a set number of rounds, with a panel of judges determining the winner.

    The competition opened with a pool stage featuring four groups of four B-Girls, before moving onto the knockout round.

    The B-Girls perform on a circular stage, accompanied by a DJ pumping out hip-hop classics and MCs hyping up the crowd.

    B-Girls in the women’s event come from countries as diverse as Japan, Lithuania, Morocco and Australia.

    The men’s competition takes place on Saturday.

    China's Qingyi Liu, known as B-Girl 671, competes during the B-Girls bronze medal battle at the breaking competition at La Concorde Urban Park at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, Aug. 9, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin)
    China’s Qingyi Liu, known as B-Girl 671, competes during the B-Girls bronze medal battle [Frank Franklin/AP Photo]

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  • Manu Bhaker makes history for India; Nadalcaraz enter quarters at Olympics

    Manu Bhaker makes history for India; Nadalcaraz enter quarters at Olympics

    Bhaker became India’s first-ever multi-medallist at an Olympics by winning her second bronze on a hot day in Paris.

    Great Britain’s Nathan Hales clinched the men’s trap gold at the Paris Games with a new Olympic record, while the Serbian pair of Zorana Arunovic and Damir Mikec rallied to win the 10-metre air pistol mixed team event.

    Hales hit 48 shots out of 50 in his Olympic debut and fell agonisingly short of his own world record of 49 on a hot afternoon at the Chateauroux Shooting Centre on Tuesday.

    The 28-year-old missed just one shot in each of the two stages to put daylight between himself and Qi Ying (44) of China, who settled for silver.

    “That’s quite something,” Hales said of his new status as an Olympic champion.

    Earlier, in the mixed-team pistol event, Arunovic and Mikec drew level when Turkey’s Sevval Ilayda Tarhan and Yusuf Dikec looked on the brink of victory at 14-12 in the race to the magic number of 16.

    Manu Bhaker creates history for India

    Manu Bhaker and Sarabjot Singh claimed the bronze for India, beating the South Korean pair Oh Ye-jin and Lee Won-ho 16-10.

    Bhaker, who won bronze in the women’s individual event, becomes India’s first multi-medallist at an Olympic Games since the country’s independence in 1947.

    Paris 2024 Olympics - Shooting - 10m Air Pistol Mixed Team Gold Medal - Chateauroux Shooting Centre, Deols, France - July 30, 2024. Silver medallists Sevval Ilayda Tarhan of Turkey and Yusuf Dikec of Turkey, Gold medallists Zorana Arunovic of Serbia and Damir Mikec of Serbia, and Bronze medallists Manu Bhaker of India and Sarabjot Singh of India pose with their flags. REUTERS/Amr Alfiky
    Silver medallists Sevval Ilayda Tarhan and Yusuf Dikec of Turkey, Gold medallists Zorana Arunovic and Damir Mikec of Serbia, and Bronze medallists Manu Bhaker and Sarabjot Singh of India pose with their flags [Amr Alfiky/Reuters]

    ‘Nadalcaraz’ enter quarterfinals, Gauff leaves in tears

    Rafa Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz combined their formidable firepower to down Dutchmen Tallon Griekspoor and Wesley Koolhof and reach the quarterfinals of the men’s tennis doubles.

    Meanwhile, women’s second seed Coco Gauff’s challenge wilted as she was knocked out in the third round 7-6(7) 6-2.

    Gauff was left in tears at a crucial moment of the second set when an over-ruled line call saw her slip 4-2 behind, with the American becoming embroiled in a lengthy argument with the umpire and tournament supervisor.

    Paris 2024 Olympics - Tennis - Women's Singles Third Round - Roland-Garros Stadium, Paris, France - July 30, 2024. Coco Gauff of United States reacts during her match against Donna Vekic of Croatia. REUTERS/Edgar Su
    USA’s Coco Gauff talks to an official during her match against Donna Vekic of Croatia [Edgar Su/Reuters]

    North Korea bags first Olympic medal since Rio 2016

    North Korea said they could learn from China after winning their first Olympic medal in eight years, settling for silver after a mixed doubles defeat to the table tennis superpower.

    China arrived in Paris as the world’s undisputed table tennis kings, having won 32 of the 37 available golds since it became an Olympic sport.

    They failed to claim the mixed doubles title when it was introduced three years ago in Tokyo but Wang Chuqin and Sun Yingsha set the record straight with an 11-6, 7-11, 11-8, 11-5, 7-11, 11-8 win over North Korea’s Ri Jong Sik and Kim Kum Yong.

    For North Korea, they skipped the pandemic-postponed Tokyo Olympics in 2021 over COVID-19 concerns.

    Kim said she and Ri had trained with the Chinese team to prepare for Paris and promised to come back stronger.

    “We had some time with the Chinese team, which is the world’s best,” said the 22-year-old.

    “Of course, it wasn’t enough in the end. We had a good performance but there are some regrets. We learned a lot from them.”

    South Korea's Lim Jonghoon, right, takes a selfie with North Korea's Ri Jong Sik, left, and Kim Kum, second left, China's Wang Chuqin, background, and Sun Yingsha, center, and his teammate Shin Yubin, right, and Lim Jonghoon during the medal ceremony at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Tuesday, July 30, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris)
    South Korea’s Lim Jonghoon, right, takes a selfie with North Korea’s Ri Jong Sik, left, and Kim Kum, second left, China’s Wang Chuqin, background, and Sun Yingsha, centre, and his teammate Shin Yubin, right, and Lim Jonghoon during the medal ceremony [Petros Giannakouris/AP]

    Paris sizzles in heatwave

    State forecaster Meteo France announced a high temperature of 37 degrees Celsius (98.6°F) in Paris, which led to heat protocols in some events.

    Football players were allowed water breaks, tennis players could use additional breaks to take a shower, BMX riders sat under umbrellas between runs and horses were monitored with thermal cameras.

    People refresh at a public water distribution in the center of Paris, France, during the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympics, Tuesday, July 30, 2024. Temperatures went up to 34 degrees Celsius. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)
    People refresh at a public water distribution in the centre of Paris, France [Martin Meissner/AP]

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  • Simone Biles’ triumphant Olympics comeback is a testament to something quite ordinary: consistent therapy

    Simone Biles’ triumphant Olympics comeback is a testament to something quite ordinary: consistent therapy

    Simone Biles wouldn’t be on the mat if she didn’t spend time on the couch, she explained at this year’s Olympics in Paris. 

    As the most decorated gymnast in history, Biles knows keenly what it’s like to have an immense amount of pressure on her. She’s had the world’s gimlet-eyed gaze on her multiple times, after all. Biles came to this summer’s Olympics already setting records, currently holding the title as the oldest women’s gymnast to compete since the 1950s. While this isn’t Biles’ first rodeo, she’s making sure to play the high-stakes game a little differently this time around— on her terms.

    “Being in a good mental spot, seeing my therapist every Thursday is kind of religious for me. So that’s why I’m kind of here today,” Biles said late last month after making the Olympic team. 

    The iconic gymnast made strides after the last Olympics, making a concerted effort not just to work on her mental health, but also to share insight about her journey publically to assuage stigma. She has also come forward as a survivor of sexual abuse of disgraced former national gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar, explaining “it could help a lot of people. Four years ago, Biles made headlines after dropping out of the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo due to what is called the “the twisties.”

    The ailment is known as a disconnect between the brain and body which makes gymnasts disoriented. Biles’ candor regarding the toll that this condition took and her decision to leave catapulted her into a new type of spotlight: that of a mental-health advocate. 

    “We also have to focus on ourselves, because at the end of the day we’re human, too,” she said after leaving the competition. “So, we have to protect our mind and our body, rather than just go out there and do what the world wants us to do.” 

    Not only is Biles stepping into the arena with a newfound dedication to her well-being, she’s also making sure to look after her teammates. Biles provided advice to fellow gymnast Suni Lee after she struggled during her routine. Having gone through the exact same situation, Biles said she knew Lee needed support. She explained that’s exactly what she gave her, adding “ I know how traumatizing it is, especially on a big stage like this. I didn’t want her to get in her head.”

    Her newly released Netflix documentary, Simone Biles Rising, further pushes back the curtain behind the trying experience that is competing on a national stage. Giving context to her re-emergence in the Olympics, Biles opened up about her process in going to therapy and dealing with past trauma. 

    Showing the screen her tattoo of Maya Angelou’s words, Biles says she’s not backing down from what she’s gone through. Rather, she’s letting it fuel her. “‘And still I rise’ is perfect,” she adds. “I feel like that’s kind of the epitome of my career and life story. I always rise to the occasion; even after all of the traumas and the downfalls, I’ve always risen.”

    Chloe Berger

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Francois-Xavier Marit/Pool Photo via AP

    Bans on hijab in French sports

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    AP Photo/Vincent Thian, File

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    AP Photo/Kyusung Gong

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

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

    Human rights groups criticize bans

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

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

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

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

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

    AP Photo/Vincent Thian

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

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

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

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

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

    Copyright © 2024 ABC News Internet Ventures.

    ABCNews

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  • 10 olympic sports of old that just couldn’t make the cut

    10 olympic sports of old that just couldn’t make the cut

    With the first international olympic games being held in 1896 – also known as the Games of the I Olympiad – it’s no surprise that sports have evolved. However, there were definitely some rough patches along the way.

    We thought we’d dive into the history books and see what olympic events of old went ahead and bit the bullet.

    Enjoy this race down memory lane.

    Zach

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  • Meet the fastest woman in Iran, setting records on and off the track

    Meet the fastest woman in Iran, setting records on and off the track

    Tehran, Iran – It’s 2021, in Konya, Turkey, at the fifth edition of the Islamic Solidarity Games.

    Farzaneh Fasihi’s heart races as she bends into position at the start line, the lingering effects of a COVID-19 infection still wearing her down.

    Her chest is tight, but she’s determined to compete.

    The starter’s gun goes off, and she lunges forward as swiftly as she can, her legs churning faster than ever before.

    When she crosses the finish line, she collapses; not from exhaustion, but from the overwhelming emotion of breaking her own 100-metre sprint record, clocking a lightning-fast time of 11.12 seconds to win the silver medal.

    “On the night before a race, memories of my life gush through my mind. All the hardships I’ve endured and all my successes pass before my eyes like a film reel,” Fasihi told Al Jazeera, speaking in a Zoom interview from Belgrade, Serbia. She is at a training camp ahead of the Paris 2024 Olympics, which kick off July 26, and where Iran’s fastest female runner of all time will compete in her favourite event, the 100-metre sprint.

    Fasihi is no stranger to challenges, but a strong support system in her personal life has seen her through it all.

    Farzaneh Fasihi of Iran wins a sliver medal in the 100-metres at the fifth Islamic Solidarity Games in Konya, Turkey on August 09, 2022 [Mustafa Ciftci/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images]

    “I didn’t want to do it’

    Born in 1993 in Isfahan, Iran, Fasihi, 31, hails from an athletic family. Her father was a volleyball player, and her brother a swimming and diving champion.

    “Before I got married, my father attended all my training sessions,” she recalls. “My mother also attended all my competitions. Without their support, I could not have succeeded.”

    From age five to 12, Fasihi did gymnastics. She recalls how her first foray into competitive sprinting was more by chance than design.

    “In middle school, my gym teacher forced me to participate in a running competition. I didn’t want to do it,” Fasihi remembers. That day, she broke the Isfahan provincial record, igniting her passion for track and field.

    In 2016, she made her international debut.

    Fasihi’s team performed well above expectations, winning the silver medal in the 4×400 metre relay at the Asia Indoor Athletics Championship in Doha, Qatar.

    But her standout performance did not catapult her sprinting career to new heights. With little support from the Iranian track and field federation, she left it all behind and became a personal fitness trainer.

    That all changed in late 2018, when she decided to give competitive sprinting a second try.

    A year later, that decision led to an unexpected outcome: she married one of her coaches, Amir Hosseini, who has been her staunchest supporter.

    Farzaneh Fasihi Iranian sprinter
    Farzaneh Fasihi during a training session with coach and husband Amir Hosseini at Aftab Enghelab Sports Complex in Tehran, Iran [Maryam Majd ATPImages via Getty Images]
    Farzaneh Fasihi Iranian sprinter
    Fasihi constantly works on her technique and power, which are essential for an elite 100-metre sprinter. Athlete training facilities in Iran are not up to the same standards as other nations that invest heavily in sport [Maryam Majd ATP Images via Getty Images]

    In 2020, with a support structure now firmly established with Hosseini, Fasihi’s career literally took off.

    She participated in the World Athletics Indoor Championships, where the relatively unknown runner scorched the track with a sensational entry record time of 7.29 seconds in the 60-metre sprint held in Belgrade, Serbia.

    Not only had Fasihi come out of nowhere to post a fast time – but she had also created history by becoming the first Iranian woman to compete at the championship. Her shock performance in Belgrade was where she was first given the nickname “Jaguar,” a testament to her ferocious speed off the starting block.

    A year later, in 2021, she signed with the Serbian athletics club BAK, becoming the first female legionnaire – which effectively means a club signs and sponsors a foreign athlete to relocate and compete for them – in Iran track and field history.

    “Becoming a legionnaire was a new path. It was a great risk, but I felt deep inside that I had to do it,” she said, hoping that it would inspire other female Iranian athletes.

    Setting the record straight – this one’s ‘for the people’

    In 2023, Fasihi would then go on to win gold at the 60-metre race at the Asian Indoor Athletics Championships in Astana, Kazakhstan, clocking a scintillating time of 7.28 seconds.

    As outstanding and celebratory as that personal-best performance was – the setting of a new Asian 60-metre sprinting record would ordinarily be cause for wild celebrations – the day would be remembered for something far more profound.

    As Fasihi walked to the podium, she turned directly to the camera and shouted: “For the people of Iran. For the happiness of the people of Iran!”

    Her moment of protest went viral on social media, with Fasihi declining to carry the Iranian flag and instead bowing her head as she shed silent tears, refusing to sing the national anthem on the victory dias.

    This was her statement, or way, to express the tragedy of the young Iranian woman Mahsa Amini, who in 2022 collapsed and died, allegedly after she was detained by Iran’s morality police for wearing an “improper hijab” (headscarf).

    Amini’s death made international news headlines and galvanised female activists all over the world through the “Women, Life, Freedom” movement.

    Iranian sprinter Farzaneh Fasihi.
    Fasihi has broken the Iranian 60 and 100-metre sprinting record on multiple occasions and is currently the number one ranked sprinter in Asia for 60-metres. She lives and trains in the capital, Tehran [Majid Asgaripour/WANA via Reuters]

    Olympic dreaming

    Two years earlier, Fasihi had already taken the first step towards her Olympic dream when she was selected through the so-called universality placement to participate in Tokyo 2020.

    Universality placement is a policy set by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) allowing athletes from underrepresented countries to participate, even if they have not met the standard qualifying criteria. The policy exists to ensure broader global representation and inclusivity at the Olympic games.

    In Tokyo, Fasihi competed in the 100-metre sprint, marking Iran’s return to this event after a 57-year hiatus. In the 1964 Summer Olympics, also in Tokyo, Simin Safamehr had made history as the first woman athlete to represent Iran at the games, coincidentally competing in the 100-metre sprint, as well as the long jump.

    Fasihi placed 50th in Tokyo, all the while facing scrutiny over her hijab, triggering a firestorm of debate in the Iranian social media space as some claimed the strict dress code slowed her down, hindering her performance and limiting her media exposure and sponsorship opportunities.

    But the Tokyo Olympics was also an opportunity for her to meet her sprinting idol, Jamaican track and field superstar Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. “I liked her even more when we met. Her lifestyle is impressive as she is both a professional athlete, a wife and mother, and helps many charities.“

    For Fasihi, her performance in Tokyo was below her best – but it only fueled her ambition to do better next time.

    “What makes Paris [2024 Olympics] different is that I will compete on my own merit – not through universality placement,” Fasihi told Al Jazeera.

    Women sprinter Farzaneh Fasihi leading race.
    Fasihi leads the field in her heat of the women’s 100-metre race at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, staged in 2021 due to COVID-19. She is delighted to have qualified on merit for the Paris 2024 Olympics, rather than relying on the underrepresented nations exception [Matthias Schrader/AP]

    Despite the systemic challenges, especially the lack of official government support for elite female athletes in Iran, Fasihi remains steadfast in achieving her goals. She self-finances her training, participates in competitions and is working to secure modest sponsorships.

    Fasihi believes that extensive investments in sport by countries like China, India, and Japan will yield impressive results in Asian athletics, but notes the disparity in resources across the continent.

    “In Qatar, for example, athletes work with American trainers and the federation invites analysts, physiotherapists, and sports medicine physicians from around the world. Even China and Japan coordinate training camps in Florida [in the United States],” she said.

    In May 2024, Fasihi competed in the Doha Diamond League’s 100-metre race, but came last in the final against a star-studded line-up of sprinters from the US, United Kingdom, Hungary, and Jamaica.

    At the Paris Olympics, she will face off against the world’s best athletes. She is not someone who harbours unrealistic expectations. She only focuses on what she can control – and that’s her performance.

    “Competing at the Olympics is a big challenge,” Fasihi said. “My goal is to compete with myself. I want to beat my own record.”

    Farzaneh Fasihi Iranian sprinter
    Fasihi looks forward to achieving more personal bests at the Paris 2024 Olympics [Maryam Majd/ ATP Images via Getty Images]

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