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ATHLETICS: Brown beats Thomas at 200 m, Kipyegon unbeatable at 1,500 m in promo-heavy Athlos NYC meet (and show)

Athlos NYC 100 m winner Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith getting her Tiffany crown (Athlos NYC screenshot)

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≡ ATHLOS NYC ≡

Another new entry in the U.S. track & field meet roster was the Athlos NYC meet at a mostly-full Icahn Stadium in New York, a project of Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, featuring only six races with only women competing.

The races – sprints and the 800 and 1,500 m – were spaced 20 minutes apart, had all the expected hyped-up introductions and track-side fireworks (and the accompanying smoke), and had betting at DraftKings.com. The races had prizes of $60,000-25,000-10,000-8,000-5,000-2,500.

Beyond all the hype, there were the races, in good, 73 (F) temperatures:

100 m hurdles: Diamond League winner Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (PUR) flinched in the blocks, but the race went off anyway. She and Alaysha Johnson got out best, with Olympic champ Masai Russell trailing, but Camacho-Quinn steadily built her lead.

Russell was fourth at midway and came on hard, but Camacho-Quinn got to the line first in 12.36 (wind: +0.6 m/s), just 0.01 off her seasonal best. Russell ran out of track and Johnson got second, 12.43 to 12.44, with Tonea Marshall fourth in 12.51.

Camacho-Quinn won the $60,000 first prize and also received a post-race silver Tiffany silver crown – said to be valued at $25,000 and given to all winners – in a highlighted ceremony.

100 m: Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith (CIV), the 2017 Worlds silver winner but eighth in Paris, was the betting favorite at -170 and she got out well, chased closely by Olympic 200 m bronze winner Brittany Brown of the U.S.

Ta Lou-Smith pulled away in the final 20 m and won in 10.98 (+0.1), with Brown at 11.05, a seasonal best. Candace Hill of the U.S. pulled into third in the final 40 m in 11.14, with Britain’s Daryll Neita back in fourth at 11.29.

400 m: Olympic champ Marileidy Paulino (DOM) was – quite properly – the prohibitive favorite at -475, starting in lane six. She was out well, but Paris silver winner Salwa Eid Naser (BRN) was chasing hard in lane four and the two were 1-2 through 200 m.

Paulino made up the stagger on American Alexis Holmes outside her by the 200 m mark and pulled away from Naser on the straight, winning in 49.60. Holmes, an Olympic finalists in Paris, surged in the final 70 m and got second, 49.99 to 50.40. Americans Shamier Little finished fourth in 51.28 and Lynna Irby-Jackson was sixth in 51.83.

800 m: Kenya’s Mary Moraa, the 2023 World Champion, went off as the -145 favorite and she and Paris silver winner Tsige Duguma (ETH) went through the first 400 in 58.13.

Duguma continued leading down the final backstraight with Moraa only a step behind and American 1,000 m record-setter Addy Wiley third and Jamaican record holder Natoya Goule-Toppin in fourth, both in a strong position.

Coming into the straight, Duguma had the lead by a step and Moraa could not catch her. The race was over with 50 m left and she finished in 1:57.43 to 1:58.05. Goule-Toppin was third into the straight and was third in 1:58.63, with Wiley fourth in 1:58.93. Fellow American Nia Akins was sixth in 2:01.32.

Duguma – in her first race since Paris – was underestimated at +200 to win, pulled a nice “upset” if you had her.

1,500 m: Triple Olympic champ Faith Kipyegon (KEN) was also a huge, –500 favorite, undefeated in five races in 2024. There was a pacesetter to go through 800 m in 2:07, aimed at a sub-4:00 time.

Kipyegon was second, with Ethiopia’s two-time World Champion (5,000-10,000) Gudaf Tsegay moving up to challenge just past 800 in 2:09. Kipyegon passed the bell in 3:06 and had a step on Tsegay and World Road Mile champion Diribe Welteji, and Kipyegon and Welteji were 1-2 with 200 to go.

Kipyegon opened up off into the straight and ran away to win in 4:04.79, with her final 400 m in 58.45. Welteji was alone in second in 4:05.58, with Kenyan Susan Ejore-Sanders was third in 4:06.25. Tsegay was fourth in 4:06.81 and American Cory McGee was fifth (4:07.09).

200 m: Olympic champ Gabby Thomas of the U.S. was the –360 favorite in lane six, but with Diamond League champ Brown of the U.S. outside of her in lane seven (+300).

Thomas was off well and made up the stagger on Brown, but Tokyo Olympian Anavia Battle was close in lane five. But Brown was only a step behind and surged to the front in the final 50 m and just edged Thomas, 22.18 to 22.21 (+0.7). Battle got third in 22.34, with Jenna Prandini at 22.62 and Tamara Clark fifth in 22.83.

Viewing was on various online platforms and peaked on YouTube at about 5,000, and on X (ex-Twitter) after the 200 m at 116,500. There were others.

The meet was more celebration than anything else, continuously promoting women in sports – with a lot of interviews between the events – more than track & field. But it’s another highlight for the sport, in a year when private equity has decided to dip its toe in the water for track & field.

Hopefully, there will be more.

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PANORAMA: London Marathon raises almost $99 million for charity in 2024; Canadian swim star Mac Neil retires; Oz’s McKeown gets a WR

Canadian swim star Maggie Mac Neil, celebrating a 2022 World 25 m Championships gold (Photo: World Aquatics)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Athletics ● Grand Slam Track announced another contracted “Racer” for the 2025 season in 2022 World men’s 400 m hurdles champion Alison dos Santos (BRA).

He’s been one of the event’s “Big Three” along with Tokyo 2020 Olympic champ and world-record holder Karsten Warholm (NOR) and American Rai Benjamin, the winner at Paris 2024.

Grand Slam Track also signed Paris Olympic men’s 400 m bronze winner Muzala Samukonga (ZAM) and 400 m hurdles fourth-placer Clement Ducos of France.

The announcements bring the Racer total to 13 so far.

The London Marathon announced another new record for fund-raising, with the 2024 race bringing in £73.5 million (about $98.6 million U.S.), far surpassing the 2019, pre-pandemic total of £66.4 million. Said London Marathon Events chief executive Hugh Brasher (GBR):

“The TCS London Marathon is an extraordinary day and a wonderful celebration of humanity, where tens of thousands of people take on an incredible challenge and do good for others.

“We salute every single participant who has contributed to this world record-breaking total of £73.5 million for the thousands of charities which provide essential services to so many. It is astonishing that the London Marathon has now raised more than £1.3 billion for charity since the first edition in 1981.”

The race had a record number of 53,840 finishers.

● Shooting ● Technology marches on in sports, with the International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) now discussing video review for shotgun – Skeet and Trap – events.

Travision, a Norwegian company, demonstrated the possibilities of its system in Lonato (ITA):

“[T]here was a test event to trial this new system which includes giving the judges or referee a tablet that records the progression of the scores on a digital scoreboard, automatically updated after each target. It also allowed them to check the target to see if it has been hit or if it counts as a miss.

“This check had a Video Assistant Referee (VAR) replay to further confirm if a target has been clipped or not, providing better clarity over close calls for athletes, judges and the viewers in attendance live and at home.”

No commitment yet, but the possibilities are clearly of interest, with the goal to ensure correct judging and scoring.

● Swimming ● Canadian star Maggie Mac Neil, 24, announced her retirement from competitive swimming, following her fifth-place finish in the Paris Olympic 100 m Butterfly final and appearances on three relays. She won three Olympic medals at Tokyo 2020, winning the 100 Fly and earning a silver on the women’s 4×100 m Free relay and a bronze in the women’s 4×100 m Medley relay.

She posted on Instagram:

“I have always wondered what the moment would feel like, when I decide to hang up the cap and goggles.

“Well, here it is. I am officially retiring from competitive swimming. The little girl above would have never dreamed this is where her love of swimming would take her.

“I’ll keep it brief, but I am so grateful for all the memories, people, and places I have gotten to experience just through swimming. Anyone who I crossed paths with never, ever told me I couldn’t achieve my goal of going to the Olympics. It’s still surreal to be able to say I’m a 2x Olympian.

“I’m excited to begin the next chapter of my life journey, as I embark on discovering who I am outside of swimming.”

Mac Neil was the 2019 World Champion in the women’s 100 m Fly and took silver in that event in 2023, plus six more medals (0-2-4) in relays. She won seven World Short-Course Championships golds in 2021 and 2022, including the 50 m Back (2021-22), 100 m Fly (2021-22) and 50 m Fly (2022), plus two relays. She set world 25 m records in the women’s 50 m Back (two) and 50 m Fly.

She won three NCAA titles at Michigan (2) and LSU (1) in Freestyle and Fly events.

Australia’s Paris Backstroke star Kaylee McKeown won the Australian 25 m women’s Nationals in the 100 m Backstroke and set a world record of 54.56, crushing the mark of 54.89 by fellow Australian Minna Atherton from 2019.

McKeown doubled in the 100-200 m Back in the Tokyo and Paris Olympic Games and won both events for Australia at the 2022 World Short-Course Championships in Melbourne (AUS). It’s her sixth world record – long-course and short-course combined – all in Backstroke events.

She’s still expecting to swim the 50 and 200 m Backstrokes and 100 m Medley later in the meet.

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ATHLETICS: 50th Berlin Marathon comes Sunday, with eyes on Kenya’s Kandie and Ethiopians Ketema and Dibaba

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≡ BERLIN MARATHON ≡

One of the truly iconic international road races is the Berlin Marathon, a World Marathon Major, which will celebrate its 50th anniversary on Sunday, with much faster racing than in 1974, when Gunter Hallas won the men’s race in 2:44:53 and Jutta von Hasse took the first of her three women’s titles in 3:22:01.

The race will also be without five-time winner and two-time world-record setter Eliud Kipchoge (KEN), yet the men’s field has more sub-2:06 marathoners than ever before: 15. They are:

● 2:03:34 in 2023: Tadese Takele (ETH)
● 2:04:22 in 2023: Ronald Korir (KEN)
● 2:04:34 in 2022: Cybrian Kotut (KEN)
● 2:04:41 in 2021: Haliemaryam Kiros (ETH)
● 2:04:48 in 2023: Kibiwott Kandie (KEN)

● 2:04:57 in 2022: Bazezew Asmare (ETH)
● 2:05:08 in 2023: Samwel Mailu (KEN)
● 2:05:29 in 2022: Milkesa Mengesha (ETH)
● 2:05:30 in 2024: Haymanot Alew (ETH)

● 2:05:35 in 2023: Philimon Kipchumba (KEN)
● 2:05:42 in 2023: Josphat Boit (KEN)
● 2:05:42 in 2024: Dejene Megersa (ETH)
● 2:05:47 in 2023: Enock Onchari (KEN)
● 2:05:51 in 2023: Oqbe Ruesom (ERI)

● 2:05:57 in 2023: Justus Kangogo (KEN)

The top two by time – Takele and Korir – were 3-4 in last year’s Berlin Marathon. Much attention is being paid to former Half Marathon world-record holder Kandie – 57:32 in 2020, still no. 2 all-time – who will be running his third marathon. He was ninth in New York in 2021 (2:13:43), but 2:04:48 for sixth in Valencia last December.

The women’s field is thinner, with four under 2:20 and seven under 2:21:

● 2:16:07 in 2024: Tigist Ketema (ETH)
● 2:17:36 in 2022: Tadu Teshome (ETH)
● 2:18:05 in 2022: Ginzebe Dibaba (ETH)
● 2:19:36 in 2018: Yebrugal Melese (ETH)
● 2:20:45 in 2024: Mestawot Fikir (ETH)

● 2:20:48 in 2019: Azmera Gebru (ETH)
● 2:20:50 in 2022: Sisay Gola (ETH)
● 2:20:52 in 2022: Mizuki Matsuda (JPN)

Ketema won the Dubai Marathon in January and ranks no. 2 in the world this year with her 2:16:07 winner. She only started running the marathon this year, winning in Dubai, then seventh in London in 2:23:21. Fikir won the Paris Marathon this year.

Dibaba, now 33, one of the greatest women’s distance stars ever – the 2015 Worlds 1,500 m winner, five World Indoor golds at 1,500 and 3,000 m, the 2016 Olympic women’s 1,500 m silver medalist, and no. 2 all-time at 3:50.07 – will be running her fourth career marathon. She’s had mixed success, running second at Amsterdam in 2022 in 2:18:05, then did not finish at London 2023 and was sixth in Chicago last year in 2:21:47. A breakout in Berlin?

Prize money is available to the top 10 finishers in both the men’s and women’s races at €30,000-15,000-10,000-8,000-6,500-5,000-4,000-3,000-2,000-1,500. There are also time bonuses for sub-2:02:30 for men or 2:16:00 for women of €30,000 and for sub-2:30:30 or 2:18:00 of €15,000.

More than 58,000 participants of all kinds are expected at the start, with a 9:15 a.m. runner’s start with cool temperatures in the high 40s (F), rising into the mid-50s, under sunny skies.

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BOXING: World Boxing to add Kazakhstan, world champ Golovkin heads federation’s new Olympic Commission

Iconic boxing star Gennadiy Golovkin, President of the National Olympic Committee of Kazakhstan (Photo: World Boxing)

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≡ INTEL REPORT ≡

Kazakhstan’s National Olympic Committee is headed by 2004 Olympic middleweight silver medalist and two-time middleweight world champion Gennadiy Golovkin, who wants boxing to stay in the Olympic Games.

On Thursday, he was announced as the Chair of a new Olympic Commission by World Boxing, created to help the federation gain recognition as the worldwide governing body for Olympic boxing. Golovkin said in a statement:

“For me personally, as well as for all the sports world, it is important to preserve boxing as an Olympic sport, and this will be my top priority. I also intend to work closely with the IOC on issues of boxing’s commitment to the Olympic values of honesty, fairness and transparency.

“I am confident that my experience as a professional athlete will help build systemic work within World Boxing, and through joint efforts we will be able to give boxing a new impetus to its development, but there is still much to be done.”

The Commission, still in formation, will be an outreach group for World Boxing to recruit new members, promote the federation and appeal to potential sponsors.

Also on Thursday, and in a related development:

“The Kazakhstan Boxing Federation has made an important decision as a result of lengthy discussions and analysis.

“Kazakhstan submitted an official application to join the World Boxing organization.

“This decision is primarily related to the Olympic future of domestic boxers.”

Said Kazakh boxing federation head Shahmurat Mutalip:

“Now the issue of boxing’s remaining in the Olympic program is being discussed at the HOC level. We are ready to work together with all countries in order to preserve boxing in the Olympic Games program.”

Observed: This is more or less the starting gun for a six-month sprint to try and get as many new members as possible for World Boxing, to try and gain recognition from the International Olympic Committee for itself and to keep boxing on the program for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

World Boxing held its founding Congress in November 2023 and has 44 national federation members at present, not counting Kazakhstan. Golovkin and the other Commission members to be named with him will have a difficult task ahead of them, probably needing to approach 100 members within six months or so.

IOC President Thomas Bach (GER) said near the end of the Paris Games that the decision on whether to include boxing in the LA28 program will come in the first part of 2025, with the obvious target being the 143rd IOC Session in Greece from 18-21 March 2025.

The now-disenfranchised International Boxing Association, excommunicated from the Olympic Movement in June 2023 by a special meeting of the IOC membership, is clearly worried, as it recently posted another series of insults, this time from chief executive Chris Roberts (GBR). 

The first target of Golovkin and his Commission will be the Asian Boxing Confederation Extraordinary Congress in Thailand on 23 November, at which the sole issue will be the future of Olympic boxing.

A prior vote for the ASBC to join World Boxing was defeated on 31 August, but the issue of what to do about LA28 still lingers. And for the national boxing federations, most of which get their primary support from their governments to select and train athletes for the Olympic Games and related regional competitions, the question is well asked why government support would continue … if boxing is no longer an Olympic sport?

World Boxing already has eight members in Asia – Bhutan, Chinese Taipei, India, Japan, Mongolia, Pakistan, the Philippines, Singapore and South Korea – with Kazakhstan coming. But there are only two African members – Algeria and Nigeria – and 13 in Europe. Those are where the new members must come from.

And the clock is running.

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PANORAMA: Ukraine screams as Belarus salutes Olympic medalists; FIFA could ban Israel on 3 October; USA Gymnastics files Chiles’ support brief

The Swiss Federal Tribunal, in Lausanne (Photo: Swiss Federal Tribunal).

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● The four Belarusian Olympic medal winners from Paris were saluted and given national honors in Minsk during the annual “National Unity Day” on Tuesday (24th).

Ukrainian Sports Minister Matviy Bidnyi told the German site DW.com:

“We expect the IOC to take immediate action regarding this event.

“The participation of athletes in a ceremony that contradicts the principles of neutrality demonstrates a blatant disregard for the IOC’s requirements. Ukraine insists on strengthening sanctions against Russian and Belarusian athletes.”

Russian and Belarusian athletes competed in Paris as “neutrals,” without identification of national origin or national symbols, the regulations state clearly that such athletes must “refrain from any activity or communication associated with the national flag, anthem, emblem or any other symbol of the Russian Federation, the Republic of Belarus … at any official venue … prior to, during and following the Olympic Games Paris 2024. This includes any national events related to their participation in the Olympic Games Paris 2024.”

None of this mattered to the Belarusians, with national leader Alexander Lukashenko saying at the ceremony:

“They tried to sideline us, deprive us of our flag and anthem. But the world still talked about Belarusians, [and] admired their victories together with us.”

Said Bidnyi:

“The conferral of state awards … once again proves that athletes with Russian and Belarusian citizenship have never been, are not, and cannot be ‘neutral.’”

● Olympic Winter Games 2034: Salt Lake City ● International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach (GER) is headed to Salt Lake City for meetings this weekend – Friday and Saturday – with the 2034 organizing committee-in-formation and to see the University of Utah, the Utah Olympic Oval in Kearns and the Utah Olympic Park in Park City.

Expect lots of compliments on all sides, but Bach will also no doubt be asked about the continuing war of words between the World Anti-Doping Agency and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, which has resulted in additional language added to the “termination clause” of the Olympic Host Contract signed by the Salt lake City-Utah Committee for the Games.

● International Olympic Committee ● Japan’s Morinari Watanabe, the head of the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique, told a news conference on Tuesday about his goals if elected as President of the IOC:

“I’ve traveled more than 160 countries over the past eight years, discussing with their sports personnel how the Olympics should be and how sports can contribute to the society.

“I won’t change that stance should I become the president, and would not be top-down but bottom-up…We need to listen to the opinion of the public and create Olympics that satisfy the people in the places hosting them.”

He said he wants the Olympic Games to be “loved by people” and asked about his chances, deadpanned:

“I might just get a few votes, or turn out to be the lucky one.”

Watanabe is one of seven running to be the next IOC President, with the vote next March.

● World Anti-Doping Agency ● A “stakeholder consultation” is underway, asking for comments on a position paper on what to do about countries which withhold their dues payment from the World Anti-Doping Agency.

This is a continuing issue for Russia, and for the U.S., where the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy has been asked to obtain further information about the January 2021 Chinese swimming doping incident before paying the U.S. dues in full.

The WADA Executive Committee approved the paper in May 2024 and feedback will be received until 15 October 2024. Per the announcement:

“The Paper described what was meant by voluntary withholding of funding and set out the consequences as well as the process for imposing them. Some of the consequences – concerning limitations on the relevant country bidding for major events, as well as restrictions on its government representatives attending major events and sitting on Code Signatory boards/committees etc. – will require implementation by certain Signatories. As such, the implementation of these consequences will require a number of limited additions to the [World Anti-Doping] Code.”

WADA also published its 2025 Prohibited List, of both prohibited substances and methods.

● Athletics ● The Grand Slam Track circuit has been busy adding new “Racers” to its roster in the women’s 100 m and 100 m hurdles:

100 m: Melissa Jefferson (USA)

100 m hurdles: Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (PUR), Cyrena Samba-Mayela (FRA), Masai Russell (USA)

Jefferson had a career year, taking the Olympic women’s bronze at 100 m, running a lifetime best of 10.80 for second at the Olympic Trials and leading off the victorious U.S. women’s 4×100 m relay in Paris.

The hurdlers are the Paris medal winners, with Russell taking gold, Samba-Mayela the silver and Camacho-Quinn the bronze, after her win in Tokyo in 2021.

The Grand Slam Track formula is to sign 48 “Racers” as its roster base and add in 48 “Challengers” to fill it lanes for its four meets in 2025. So far, it has signed five men and five women, including the new signees above.

The Athletics Integrity Unit has sanctioned another Kenyan distance runner, this time Faith Chepkoech for three years from 6 September 2024 for the use of Erythropoietin (EPO). Chepkoech, 21, failed an out-of-competition test on 26 July 2024; she won a fast 10 km race in Castellon (ESP) on 25 February in 29:50, moving her to ninth all-time.

Moroccan marathoner Taoufik Allam was also sanctioned with a three-year ban from 16 August 2024 for EPO as well. Now 35, he has a best of 2:07:43 from 2023, and won the Enschede (NED) Marathon this year in 2:08:58, now wiped out by the ban. He tested positive after the race.

● Biathlon ● The International Biathlon Union announced increases in its prize money awards for the 2024-25 season, with the total raised to €9,366,700 (or $10,426,542). Places 1-30 in each race, in all disciplines, earn prize money.

Another increase is expected for the 2026-27 season.

● Cycling ● At the UCI World Road Championships, Australia won the Time Trial Mixed Relay in 1:12:52, just one second ahead of Germany (1:12:53), followed by Italy in 1:13:00.

Australian star Grace Brown, the winner of the women’s Time Trial, collected a second World Roads gold, to go with her Olympic Time Trial win in Paris.

The U.S. finished sixth in 1:15:09 with Emily Ehrlich, Brandon McNulty, Amber Neben, Neilson Powless, Lauren Stephens and Kevin Vermaerke.

● Fencing ● USA Fencing chief executive Phil Andrews (GBR) told Colorado Springs-based television station KRDO that it is considering a possible headquarters move, but that nothing has been decided yet:

“USA Fencing is indeed considering a new strategic partner for the future home of our headquarters and a USA Fencing training center as we look toward the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics and Paralympics.

“We have been approached by Pueblo and other great potential partners, but those conversations are still in the extreme early stages, including the possibility of remaining in our historic home of Colorado Springs. We’ll share developments about a potential future home for USA Fencing at the appropriate time.”

● Football ● The Palestinian Football Association said that FIFA Council will take up its request for a ban of Israel’s national team and clubs on 3 October.

The Palestinian federation, supported by other Middle East federations, submitted the request in February (as it has done multiple times previously) and FIFA said it would take up the matter after its own inquiry into the legal issues involved, following the 7 October 2023 invasion of Israel by Hamas, the governing body in Gaza, and Israel’s ongoing response. 

Twila Kilgore, the interim U.S. Women’s National Team coach between Vlatko Andonovski and Emma Hayes, has resigned to pursue other coaching opportunities.

Kilgore took over in the fall of 2023 and compiled a 10-1-3 (W-L-T) record with the women’s team, including 2024 CONCACAF W Gold Cup. She remained as an assistant to Hayes since June and had been with the federation with multiple youth teams since 2019. She was previously the head coach at UC Davis.

Verizon was announced as the Telecommunications Services Sponsor for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

● Gymnastics ● USA Gymnastics filed a supporting brief for Jordan Chiles’ appeal to the Swiss Federal Tribunal on Tuesday, asking for the video evidence showing that the inquiry to change Chiles’ score during the Paris 2024 Olympic women’s Floor Exercise final was made in a timely way.

The 36-page brief argues specifically that the video evidence should be allowed in view of Swiss case law that the truth of the matter – proven by the video – is an “interest worthy of protection” and that all five conditions for such protection are met.

USA Gymnastics’ statement noted:

“The audiovisual evidence which [the Court of Arbitration for Sport] refused to consider clearly proves Jordan’s bronze-medal finish in Paris was correct. With today’s filing, we are simply asking that the CAS arbitration be decided based on a true and accurate understanding of facts. As Jordan has publicly stated, the case at this point is about her peace and justice, and the right of all athletes to be treated fairly. We all continue to pursue justice for Jordan.”

Chiles and the USA Gymnastics brief are not asking for the Swiss Federal Tribunal to decide the merits of the case, but to annul the Court of Arbitration decision and send it back for a fresh hearing.

● Wrestling ● United World Wrestling has relaxed its eligibility restrictions for Russian and Belarusian athletes, with the UWW Bureau agreeing Tuesday:

“[O]nly evidence of direct military participation in the war against Ukraine or public declarations [in written or orally] in support of the war and/or of their promoters or participants will be considered to declare an athlete as ineligible.

“UWW will also re-examine all cases, according to the new criteria, that had earlier been declared ineligible.”

This will significantly increase Russian and Belarusian participation. However, Russian and Belarusian athletes will continue to compete as “neutrals,” without identification, flag or anthem to be used.

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OLYMPIC GAMES 2036: Momentum Movement, which sank Budapest’s 2017 bid, formally requests a referendum for 2036 effort

Emblem of the Hungarian Olympic Committee

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≡ INTEL REPORT ≡

Hungary’s Momentum Movement, initially formed out of the anti-Olympic movement that killed Budapest’s 2024 Olympic bid, is now forcing a referendum to be held on the question of whether Budapest can bid for the 2036 Olympic Games.

Momentum won seats in the National Assembly for the first time in 2022, now with 10 seats in the 199-seat body. It received 9.86% of the vote in Hungary’s 2019 European Parliament vote, the third largest party by vote totals.

Now, the Momentum leader, Marton Tompos – a National Assembly member – announced on Instagram on Tuesday (computer translation from the original Hungarian):

“THERE IS NO OLYMPICS WITHOUT A REFERENDUM!

“On behalf of the @Momentum movement, I submitted a referendum question about not being able to decide on an Olympic bid without consulting the people.

“We must put an end to this matter once and for all, because unfortunately, after 2017, the government is still dreaming of hosting an Olympic Games in Budapest in 2024, while the economy is standing with its pants down…

“Our position has been the same for seven years: as long as the government is unable to organize a stray Tuesday, we cannot talk about the Olympics! Not without asking people!”

The 2017 “NOlimpia” campaign gathered 266,151 signatures on a petition to require a public referendum on Budapest’s candidature for 2024, where it was considered a serious candidate, along with Paris and Los Angeles.

The referendum petition succeeded not in a vote, but in the political collapse of the Budapest bid altogether, leaving Paris and Los Angeles head-to-head, eventually leading to the dual award of 2024 to Paris and 2028 to Los Angeles.

Now, Hungary – specifically for Budapest – has shown interest in 2036 and was planning to bid for 2032 when Brisbane jumped ahead in the process and won the Games with an aggressive campaign as the International Olympic Committee had embarked on a new, consultative process rather than a direct vote to select host cities.

GamesBids.com posted some of Tompos’ comments in a video, including:

● “We would like to put an end to the issue of organizing the Olympics once and for all. We want, if this country wants to submit any Olympic bid, a referendum should be held first. It’s a decision at a level that we have to make together.”

● “[A]s long as there is not an adequate number of doctors and teachers in the country, there is not adequate drinking water everywhere … it is completely wrong to dream of hosting the Olympics.”

Despite abandoning the 2024 Olympic bid, Budapest has become a center for major international championships, hosting the 2023 World Athletics Championships in a new, national athletics stadium, and the World Aquatics Championships in 2017, 2022 and slated for 2027.

There is considerable political tension in Hungary already, with Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s Fidesz-KDNP Party holding 135 of 199 seats in the National Assembly. But the Budapest Mayor is from the Green Party and Momentum is among the small parties which opposed Orban.

Added to this are the large number of other candidates for 2036, some of whom are quite loud about it – India for example – but there is also interest from at least Chile, Egypt, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea and Turkey.

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BOXING: Asian confederation calls for new emergency Congress; USA Boxing membership up 63% since 2016

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≡ PIVOT POINT ≡

Time is running out for boxing to be included in the sports program of the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games, with International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER) saying in August that the decision will likely come early in 2025.

The Asian Boxing Confederation is once again trying to do something about it.

Since the expulsion of the International Boxing Association from the Olympic Movement in June 2023, the sport has been in limbo. The IOC itself took control of the boxing program for Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024, but has said it will not continue to do so.

World Boxing, the new federation founded in November 2023, has slowly been adding members, with 44 now, but still well short of the number needed to be recognized as the new federation for the sport.

Worried by the potential failure to be included on the 2028 Olympic program, the Board of Directors of the 42-member Asian Boxing Confederation called once again for a special meeting concerning 2028:

“The Asian Boxing Confederation arranged its next Board of Directors Meeting on September 22 two days ago and the management decided to convene a new Extraordinary Congress due to the threat of the potential removal of boxing from the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games.

“The President of the Asian Boxing Confederation Mr. Pichai Chunhavajira [THA] and the Board of Directors decided to arrange the next ASBC Extraordinary Congress in Bangkok, Thailand on November 23 before the ASBC Asian Elite Boxing Championships.”

On 31 August, an Extraordinary Congress was held on the question of whether the ASBC should join World Boxing, with the Board’s motion to join rejected by 21-14 with one invalid vote.

Chunhavajira issued a statement later that day underscoring his goal of inclusion in 2028:

“I want to make it abundantly clear that our commitment to the Olympic Charter remains unshakeable. We will fight with everything we have to ensure that boxing retains its rightful place at the LA2028 Games. The Olympic spirit is deeply intertwined with the essence of our sport, and we will not allow it to be compromised.

“In light of the decisions made today, I have chosen to resign from my position on the IBA Board of Directors. This was not an easy decision, but it is necessary. My full focus and energy will now be devoted to one goal: securing the future of boxing in the Olympics and ensuring that the ASBC continues to play its long-standing, vital role in this sport.

“We stand at a crossroads, but I am confident that we have many paths available to us. Together, we will explore every option, overcome every obstacle, and do whatever it takes to save not just Asian boxing, but the entire global boxing community. This is a fight we cannot afford to lose, and I am fully committed to seeing it through.”

So now the issue of 2028, not specifically World Boxing, will be the focus of the 23 November Congress.

There are several Asian federations which have joined World Boxing, but the ASBC has not and most of its members have not. A mass shift would be a major shift in favor of World Boxing and its recognition for 2028.

BoxingScene.com interviewed USA Boxing Executive Director Mike McAtee, who has been assisting World Boxing with its development. McAtee explained the process:

“World Boxing is working to meet IOC requirements, such as anti-doping regulations, financial transparency, and integrity in the field of play. We’re optimistic that a decision on boxing for LA 2028 will be made by the IOC in early 2025.

“There are around 35 to 40 requirements that need to be met, as outlined by the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF). These include things like selection procedures for officials, governance standards, and financial transparency. For example, World Boxing will host an international event, the world qualifier in Colorado later this year, to demonstrate our compliance with these requirements. Each of these elements is necessary to ensure the sport is governed with integrity and transparency, and we are working diligently to fulfill all of them.”

World Boxing also announced its first World Championship tournament, for men and women together, to be held in Liverpool (GBR) from 4-14 September 2025.

At the same time, McAtee noted that his own federation continues to grow:

“USA Boxing has grown tremendously since 2016. When I started, we had about 38,000 members and 1,800 boxing gyms. Today, we have over 62,000 members and 2,600 gyms.”

● “Growing the sport at the grassroots level is critical. The larger your base, the greater your chances of developing high-performance athletes. Since 2016, we’ve increased our membership, and now we’re even expanding into adaptive boxing programs and partnering with esports platforms like Virtual Reality Golden Gloves.”

He added, “Boxing may be a niche sport, but it has immense potential for health benefits and building confidence in young people … We know that growth won’t happen overnight, but we’re dedicated to showcasing boxing’s value as a sport and a community-builder.”

Observed: The sport has about six months to determine its Olympic future and the  second ASBC Extraordinary Congress on 23 November looks to be a potential pivot point, one way or the other.

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GYMNASTICS: Romanian news site says Romanian and U.S. federations “negotiating” Olympic Floor bronze. WRONG!

Image credit: OnlyGFX.com

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≡ PARIS 2024 ≡

A Monday story posted on the Romanian online news site Ziare.com was headlined:

“Federa ia român de Gimnastic i cea din SUA vor negocia asupra medaliei olimpice de bronz, din cazul Chiles-B rbosu”

In English, this reads as (computer translation from Romanian):

“The Romanian Gymnastics Federation and the US Gymnastics Federation will negotiate over the Chiles-Bărbosu Olympic bronze medal case”

Nope. No. Not a chance. The headline writer needs to be retrained.

The story explained that the President of the Romanian Olympic and Sports Committee – the National Olympic Committee of Romania – Mihai Covaliu talked about contact with USA Gymnastics:

“This week we will have an online meeting with our partners in the United States, it is more of a technical meeting, with the American gymnastics federation. First and foremost, we will discuss what is happening with these athletes, because they have suffered a lot on an emotional level, and then we will see a common way in which we can close this whole case as soon as possible.”

Covaliu went on and the story quotes him, concerning the award of the Paris 2024 Olympic women’s Floor Exercise bronze medal to Romania’s Ana Barbosu, based on the Court of Arbitration for Sport decision on 10 August and the resulting change in the standings by the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique:

“We must defend what we have won so far and we are talking about a medal that a Romanian athlete has won and we must also defend the honor and protect the other Romanian athlete [Sabrina Maneca Voinea], who at one time could also win the bronze medal, but after that the whole process intervened.

“All parties involved collaborate, inform each other, and so far things are fine from our point of view. It is not a story without end, it is a story that ended with the Olympics, but it seems that the verdict was not the one expected by the other participants.

“So the fight continues off the sports field as well, this time through lawyers. The Important thing is that we have done our lessons, we are in contact with everything that is happening and with the American side, and with the Swiss side. There are things that change from day to day, what we have so far is a bronze medal in individual gymnastics for Romania. And from here on we have to pay attention to everything that happens, and I assure you that we are.”

This story, which has been picked up elsewhere, including U.S.-based news sites, is, in its assertion that the Romanian and American federations can somehow agree on what happens next, COMPLETELY WRONG. Here’s the short summary of reality:

● American Jordan Chiles won the women’s Floor bronze in Paris on 5 August and was awarded the bronze medal.

● The Romanian federation appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport the next day and a hearing was held on 10 August. The Court of Arbitration decided that an inquiry on Chiles’ score that ended up increasing her total by 0.10 was invalid and removed, advancing Barbosu to the bronze and leaving Chiles in fifth place. The change in the standings was confirmed (as required) by the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique.

● In multiple filings with the Court of Arbitration, one of the requests made by the Romanian federation was for Barbosu, Chiles and Maneca Voinea to all share the bronze medal. This was rejected as outside the Court of Arbitration’s authority, but was publicly posted by the Romanian federation on 30 August.

● Romania appealed Maneca Voinea’s score to the Swiss Federal Tribunal, saying video evidence shows she should not have received an out-of-bounds deduction. Chiles also appealed to the Swiss Federal Tribunal, saying the arbitration panel was improperly assembled and that a series of communications errors by the Court of Arbitration prevented her from making a proper defense.

● Both appeals are with the Swiss Federal Tribunal now, with no indication of when a decision will come on either. The Swiss court will not decide the case, but if it agrees with either appeal (or both), it will direct the Court of Arbitration to re-hear the cases, with a new panel of arbitrators.

That’s where we are today. And here’s where we’re going:

(1) Neither the Romanian or U.S. federations can decide this matter. The Swiss Federal Tribunal has both appeals and the matter is in its hands.

(2) The only agency which can officially change the standings of the women’s Floor Exercise final from Paris 2024 is the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique. Period. End. It’s their competition.

(3) The only agency which can re-allocate medals won at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games is the International Olympic Committee. Period. End. The IOC owns the Games.

Any other assertion, including by the Ziare news site, is wrong.

What is true is that the IOC Executive Board is meeting in Lausanne on 8 October and again from 3-5 December of this year. And the IOC, if it wishes, CAN do something about the Olympic Floor bronze situation, as it did at the 2002 Winter Games in the figure skating Pairs judging scandal, creating co-gold-medalists.

So, why not tri-bronze medalists for Paris? It’s in the IOC’s hands, in cooperation with the FIG.

Anything you read otherwise is WRONG.

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PANORAMA: All-women Athlos NYC meet on Thursday; FIFA in trouble on Club World Cup sales? $1.2 million in swim World Cup prizes

The elegant FIFA Club World Cup Trophy

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 1996: Atlanta ● A.D. Frazier Jr., who served as the Chief Operating Officer of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games (ACOG), passed away on Monday, according to a report from a family member.

Frazier, 80, had apparently been ill for some time and died at his home in Mineral Bluff, Georgia.

Frazier had been involved in the staging of the 1977 Presidential inauguration of former Georgia governor Jimmy Carter and helped to organize the White House staff in the early days of the Carter Administration. But he was best known for his work with the 1996 Olympic Games as the organizing committee’s no. 2 executive.

After the Atlanta 1996 experience, he became the head of the global investment management group INVESCO and later was the Chair and chief executive of the Chicago Stock Exchange.

● Athletics ● The Paris Olympic Games and the Diamond League are over, but here comes another track & field meet of note, the Athlos NYC meet, an all-women’s event that will debut on Thursday, 26 September at Icahn Stadium in New York.

There are six events (with six entries each) on the program: 100-200-400-800-1,500 m and the 100 m hurdles. The meet was created by Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian and will pay substantial prize money: $60,000-25,000-10,000-8,000-5,000-2,500 for six places in each event.

Ticket prices range from $75-200 plus fees on the lower level and $35-125 on the upper level; the meet is to be shown live on the social-media platform X.

The leading performers advertised to compete include Olympic champ Gabby Thomas and bronze medalist Brittany Brown of the U.S. in the 200 m, Olympic champ Marileidy Paulino (DOM) and runner-up Salwa Eid Naser (BRN) in the 400, 2019 World Champion Halimah Nakaayi (UGA) and 2023 World Champion Mary Moraa (KEN) in the 800 m and triple Olympic winner Faith Kipyegon (KEN) and 2022 World Indoor gold winner Gudaf Tsegay (ETH) in the 1,500 m.

The best event might be the 100 m hurdles, with Tokyo 2020 Olympic winner Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (PUR), Paris winner Masai Russell (USA) and two-time World Champion Danielle Williams of Jamaica.

● Football ● Multiple reports state that FIFA is having difficulty finding broadcasters interested in the newly-expanded Club World Cup, with 32 teams competing over a month at U.S. venues in 2025.

Stories posted last Friday said that FIFA President Gianni Infantino (SUI) called “an emergency meeting” with broadcasters over the lack of interest, at least at the pay levels which FIFA wants to receive. There has been criticism of the expansion of the Club World Cup by player and league association as adding too many matches for top-level players to the 2025 calendar, a position that FIFA has rejected.

● Ice Hockey & Skating ● Interesting tie-in between the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) and the International Skating Union (ISU), together with the German ice hockey federation in a joint meeting on 11 September, “creating a platform for worldwide experts in the field to foster synergies, share technical knowledge and boost innovative solutions in support of more eco-friendly ice rinks.”

The conference was designed as a kick-off event to eventually involve more federations – in bobsled, curling, ice hockey, luge and skating – to advance better usage of water and energy.

Among the discussions were a variety of scientifically-researched techniques capturing the entire operation cycle of ice rink arenas, including the manufacturing process of artificial (polymer-based) ice to expand horizons on alternative ice surface possibilities.

● Swimming ● SwimSwam.com reviewed the prize money structure of the forthcoming, three-meet World Aquatics World Cup circuit in October, in Shanghai (CHN), Singapore and Incheon (KOR). These are short-course meters events (25 m pool) with times qualifying for the 2024 World Aquatics 25 m Championships from 10-15 December in Budapest (HUN).

As with last year’s World Cup, points are awarded for each event not only for placement, but for how fast the swim is “worth” on the AQUA points table. Up to three events per swimmer can be combined for their meet score, with the top 20 to receive from $12,000 down to $4,000.

This is $112,000 per gender per meet, so $672,000 in all. There is another $524,000 awarded for overall rankings in the series: $100,000-70,000-30,000-15,000-14,000-12,000-11,000-10,000 per gender. So, the total available is $1.196 million, the same as in 2023.

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LOS ANGELES 2028: Los Angeles Metro details “Games Enhanced Transit System” in new report

A slide from the September 2024 L.A. County Metro presentation on transportation for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games

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≡ INTEL REPORT ≡

A 35-slide presentation titled “Metro 2028 Games Mobility Concept Plan” was shared last Wednesday (18th) by Metro document watcher Numble, giving a capsule view of the public transit plan by the county-wide Los Angeles Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro).

The overview was just that – an overview – with a lot of questions unanswered, 47 months prior to the 2028 opening at SoFi Stadium. But there were very clear indications of what to expect:

● The objectives include the now-formalized “Car-Free, Transit-First Games” which is to mean “no spectator parking at venues.”

● A “Games Route Network” will be established, with “Priority Games Lanes where needed” with the added “NOT necessarily everywhere.”

● Coordination to minimize disruptions: road re-engineering, reductions in crossing points, signal improvements, temporary stoppage of road works, more monitoring, better enforcement and rapid vehicle removal for accidents.

The plan identifies an 80-day operations period, beginning on 13 June with Olympic operations beginning at the venues and ending on 1 September as the Paralympians return home. The “Supplemental Bus System” for spectators is scoped at 30 days, only during the competitions of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (15-30 July and 15-27 August).

The “Games Route Network” would be in operation for only 60 days, from the Olympic Village opening on 30 June, through the end of the Paralympic departure cycle on 30 August.

Metro is planning on efficiency improvements for spectator traffic, such as bus priority lanes, bus signal priorities, all-door boarding and better bus shelters.

The “Games Enhanced Transit System” will need a lot of support:

● 25 large park-and-rise sites to support spectator transfers to venues.

● 13 temporary bus malls adjacent to venues for spectator drop-off and hop-on, supported by 13 temporary bus staging areas.

● 15 temporary maintenance yards.

A total of 2,700 buses are projected to be needed for the entire project, with an added 6,000 drivers and maintenance personnel required to support them.

The presentation identified the areas with the largest expected number of ticketed spectators for the 2028 Olympic Games:

● 1.27 million: University of Southern California area, including the Memorial Coliseum.

● 1.05 million: Inglewood, including SoFi Stadium, the Kia Forum and Intuit Dome.

● 940,000: Carson area, including the Dignity Health Sports Park.

● 790,000: Pasadena area, principally the Rose Bowl

● 698,000: Long Beach area

Other downtown Los Angeles venues, such as the Crypto.com Arena and L.A. Live venues are projected to have about 677,000 total public tickets available. The presentation noted that the current average weekday Metro bus ridership is 800,000, but that the peak-day spectator trip needs during the Games could be 1.2 million.

The plan commits to zero-emission or near-zero-emission buses for 2028, but with no guarantee that that many so-equipped buses are actually available for use. School bus usage, a key in 1984 for athletes and Olympic Family members, is included as a key support element.

Special attention is being made to light-rail improvements to the A Line, which connects downtown Los Angeles to Long Beach, and the E Line, connecting downtown L.A. to Santa Monica, with stops at Exposition Park and the Coliseum.

There is a long list of things that Metro would like to do and some funding has been allocated, including $151 million in Federal funds so far. But $520 million in requests did not get awarded and $187 million in new requests have been submitted. None of this is Games-specific, but if awarded, will be used to create longer-term programs which will also help in 2028.

Observed: This latest public report shows that Metro and its planning partners have a good grip on what needs to be done, with a set of early assumptions on crowds and timing that will be refined over time.

Whether it will have the resources and will to meet these known challenges are the questions yet to be answered.

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TOKYO 2020: Prosecutors ask ¥300 million fine for Dentsu in Olympic bid-rigging scandal

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≡ SPOTLIGHT ≡

The continuing court drama over one of the major Tokyo 2020 financial scandals saw Tokyo prosecutors ask for a ¥300 million fine (about $2.09 million U.S.) last week against Dentsu, one of the world’s iconic advertising and marketing agencies.

The sentencing portion of the case also had prosecutors telling the Tokyo District Court that Koji Hemni, 57, the former deputy head of the Dentsu sports department, should be imprisoned for two years for his role in coordinating the rigged bids for test-event operations contracts.

This is the larger of the two major Tokyo 2020 scandals, with former deputy executive director of the Tokyo 2020 Games Operations Bureau, Yasuo Mori – who has pled guilty in the case – and Henmi coordinating the bidding program for 26 test events bid for in 2018, which led to much larger contracts for venue management during the Tokyo Games. The test-event contracts involved ¥538 million (about $3.75 million U.S. today) and the Games venue management agreements were worth about ¥43 billion (about $300.0 million U.S. today).

Five companies were involved, including Dentsu, ad agencies Hakuhodo, Inc. and Tokyu Agency, Inc., and event management companies Cerespo Co., Fuji Creative Corporation and Same Two, Inc. Dentsu was alleged as the ringleader of the project.

Defense attorneys for Henmi asked for a suspended sentence, with the court scheduling a 30 January 2025 sentencing date. Henmi told the court that he was trying to help the Tokyo 2020 organizers and was not colluding for Dentsu’s benefit, but to assure the success of the test events.

Dentsu’s attorneys told the court that while Henmi was involved in the arrangements for the test-event contracts, the 2020 Games venue management contracts were bid independently and without collusion.

Ad agency Hakuhodo, Inc., was fined ¥200 million (~$1.40 million U.S.) last July and its former president was sentenced to 18 months, but with the sentence suspended for three years. Both sanctions have been appealed.

Mori, the “inside man” on the contracts, was sentenced last December to two years in prison, suspended for four years.

The bid-rigging scandal is separate, but much larger than the bribery-for-sponsorship program allegedly run by former Tokyo 2020 Executive Board member Haruyuki Takahashi, also a former Dentsu senior director. That matter is continuing in the courts.

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PANORAMA: Russia not optimistic on 2026 Winter Games; India wants to be in top-10 medal winner by 2036; World Field gold for Ellison

World Champion Brady Ellison of the U.S.

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● The President of the Russian Olympic Committee, Stanislav Pozdnyakov, said Friday he is not optimistic about Russian athlete competing at the 2026 Winter Games:

“It’s quite a difficult question. If we look retrospectively at the number of international federations that allow Russians to compete, it’s not high, to be honest.

“Therefore, the prospects are difficult, there are many more of them in relation to the 2028 Games. In 2022, I couldn’t even imagine that Russian athletes would be banned from participating in any status, anything is possible.”

Russia had 15 athletes competing as “neutrals” at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.

Asked about the possibility of sanctions being lifted, Pozdnyakov said:

“Of course, there are prospects, I have spoken about this many times, unfortunately, the IOC today is not a completely independent organization, and this issue depends entirely on the global agenda.

“Our task is to prepare the Olympic reserve, which will represent Russia at the next major competitions. As for our relations with the IOC, we have not interrupted them, we have informal, but constant contact. We are looking for those opportunities that we can use to restore the ROC.”

● International Olympic Committee ● The Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA), whose President, Mustapha Berraf (ALG), had proposed that Thomas Bach (GER) have his term as IOC President extended, now is asking for a new honor. At Thursday’s ANOCA Executive Committee meeting:

“Acknowledging Dr Thomas Bach’s leadership of the Olympic Movement over the past 12 years and his unmatched skills to sail the Olympic ship amid heavy storms and challenges in all areas including political, health and economic into safe harbour, President Mustapha Berraf proposed that the IOC President be made ‘Honorary IOC President for Life.’

“This proposal was warmly welcomed by EXCO members, who requested their colleagues, IOC members in Africa, to push this forward on behalf of the African Olympic and Sports Movement, considering the tireless efforts he has constantly made in the supreme interest of athletes, their coaches and entourage. It was unanimously agreed that the exceptional management of this iconic leader and his legendary foresight in rising to the challenges occasioned by the persistent inexplicable conflicts that have been rocking the entire planet, as well as his exemplary merit and astuteness must be revealed to the Youth of the World. The entire African continent will thus be eternally grateful to him.”

Such status can only be made by the IOC Session, which will next meet in Greece in March to elect the next IOC President.

● India ● A concerted push is coming in sports, as India bids to host the 2036 Olympic Games. Mansukh Mandaviya, the Sports and Youth Affairs Minister said at a conference on Thursday:

“[W]e must create world-class sportspersons.

“To develop such talent, we initiated Khelo India. With the help of Khelo India, young sportspersons should get the opportunities to play. We will have to identify sports talent and provide them with the necessary facilities. These talented individuals, in the coming days, will become athletes like [Paris men’s 50 m Rifle/3 Positions bronze medalist] Swapnil Kusale.

“We undertook a project named KIRTI (Khelo India Rising Talent Identification), through which more than one lakh [100,000] talented sportspersons have been identified. From this pool, further talented individuals were selected and provided with special assistance under Targeted Olympic Podium Scheme (TOPS).”

He noted, “We aim to host the 2036 Olympics in India and we plan to be in the top 10 in the medals tally.” India won six medals at Paris 2024.

● Archery ● Five-time Olympic medal winner Brady Ellison of the U.S. won his third World Field Championship at Lac La Biche (CAN), defeating Ryan Tyack (AUS) in the final by 60-52.

Matt Nofel of the U.S. won the bronze with a 5-4 shoot-out win over Patrick Huston (GBR) after a 53-53 tie. Ellison previously won in 2014 and 2016 and won the 2018 World Fields bronze, in one of his favorite tournaments.

Italy’s Roberta di Francesco won the women’s gold with a 57-47 win over Gaby Schoesser (NED), and teammate (and defending champion) Chiara Rebagliati took the bronze, 58-57, over German Elisa Tartler.

In the Recurve team finals, Slovenia defeated Italy to win the men’s gold, 61-58, and Italy won a shoot-off with the U.S. (Alex Zuleta-Visser, Paige Pierce and Fawn Girard) to take the women’s title, 14-11 after a 53-53 tie.

Italy also won the Recurve Mixed Team event, 76-67, over Australia.

● Athletics ● At the USATF 10 km Championships, incorporated into the Great Cow Harbor 10K in Northport, New York, Biya Simbassa won his second title in 28:18, six seconds ahead of Hillary Bor (28:24), who won the USATF road titles earlier this season at 10 miles and 20 km.

The two were well in front by midway and fueled until the last mile, with Simbassa finally pulling away. Sam Chelanga was third in 24:34.

Jessica McClain won the women’s national title in 31:40, pulling away in the second half of the race. Natosha Rogers (32:00) passed Emma Grace Hurley (32:05) with about 3 km left for second.

● Badminton ● Host China won four of five titles at the 2024 China Open, a BWF World Tour 1000 event, in Changzhou (CHN). Hong Yang Weng won the men’s Singles over Japan’s Kodai Naraoka, 21-17, 21-12 and Zhi Yi Wang took the women’s Singles, 21-17, 21-15, against Japan’s Tomoka Miyazaki.

China’s Yi Jing Li and Xu Min Luo won the women’s Doubles and Yan Zhe Feng and Dong Ping Huang took the Mixed Doubles. Malaysia’s Sze Fei Goh and Nur Izzuddin won the men’s Doubles.

● Canoe-Kayak ● The fifth and final leg of the ICF Slalom World Cup was in La Seu (ESP), with Olympic champion Jessica Fox (AUS) taking the women’s C-1 in 104.30 seconds (0 penalties) for her third win of the season and for the seasonal title.

She was followed by Gabriela Satkova (CZE: 104.41) and Olympic bronze winner Kimberley Woods (GBR: 106.38/0). In the K-1 final, Spain’s Rio 2016 gold medalist Maialen Chourraut won in 100.30 (2), ahead of 2019 World Champion Eva Tercelj (SLO: 102.67/2) and American Evy Leibfarth (102.69/0), the Olympic C-1 bronze medalist.

Tokyo C-1 runner-up Mallory Franklin (GBR) won the Kayak Cross race, ahead of Woods.

The men’s C-1 win went to Spain’s Miquel Trave (93.51/2) over Britain’s Ryan Westley (94.16/0), while Tokyo winner Jiri Prskavec (CZE) took the K-1 in 87,47 (0), ahead of Mathieu Desnos (BRA: 88.80/0).

Tokyo men’s Kayak Cross runner-up Joseph Clarke (GBR) took the Kayak Cross win over Spain’s David Llorente.

● Cycling ● The Olympic champions ruled at the first day of the UCI World Road Championships, centered in Zurich (SUI).

In the men’s 46.1 km Time Trial, defending champion – and Olympic champ – Remco Evenepoel (BEL) was the last to start, but got on top right away, already six seconds ahead at the first checkpoint and winning in 53:01.98, ahead of Italy’s two-time World Champion Filippo Ganna (53:08.41), who finished second for the second straight year. Fellow Italian Edoardo Affini was third in 53:56.42; Brandon McNulty was the top American in 10th (+1:58.03).

In the women’s 29.9 km Individual Time Trial, Australia’s Grace Brown – the Paris winner, who has said she will retire at the end of the season – was also the last to start and had the edge over Demi Vollering (NED) at the first checkpoint. But Brown fell behind Vollering at the second split, then poured it on to the finish to win in 39:16.04, ahead of Vollering (39:32.83) and America’s defending champ Chloe Dygert – also the bronze winner in Paris – in 40:12.46.

Brown had been second in 2022 and 2023, but left no doubt this time. Dygert won her third Worlds Time Trial medal, after wins in 2019 and 2023.

● Football ● North Korea won its third FIFA Women’s U-20 World Cup, 1-0, over Japan, at Bogota (COL), in a defensive-minded match.

Striker Il-Son Choe, 17, who scored the only goal in the 1-0 semifinal win over the U.S., scored here in the 15th minute to give North Korea a 1-0 lead, and that was enough. The Koreans, winners of this tournament in 2006 and 2016, managed only nine shots in the game, with Japan getting only five. Choe won the Golden Boot award, with six goals in the tournament.

It’s the second Women’s U-20 silver in a row for Japan, after winning in 2018, and a medal in their fourth consecutive Women’s U-20.

The U.S. women’s squad won the bronze-medal match against the Netherlands, 2-1, on more late heroics in extra time.

The Americans went up 1-0 in the 10th minute on a score from midfielder Ally Sentnor for her third goal of the tournament, on a hard shot from beyond the 18-yard line. But the Dutch tied it in the 26th, as midfielder Robine Lacroix was set up by striker Fleur Stoit on a through-ball for the easy finish from 10 yards out.

But the Dutch did not produce much offense from there and although the U.S. continued to press, the game ended 1-1 after 90 and went to extra time. In the 119th, Sentnor was on the prowl again and her shot was deflected in front of the Netherlands’ goal and rolled to forward Maddie Dahlien on the left side, who sent a cross back toward the middle of the penalty area. The pass hit defender Nayomi Buikema and rolled into the net for an own goal and the bronze medal for the U.S.

The Americans finished with a 26-11 shots advantage and won their first medal in this tournament since 2012.

Following the great success of the UEFA Euro 2024 men’s tournament, which drew a sensational 2.68 million spectators to 10 venues, the German football federation announced Friday that it would seek the 2029 UEFA Women’s Euro for the third time, previously in 1989 and 2001.

AFP reported that Portugal, Denmark and Sweden are also interested, with the host to be announced in December 2025.

● Skateboarding ● At the World Skate Games in Rome (ITA), the Park finals were held on Sunday, with Brazil’s Raicca Ventura winning her first Worlds medal – a gold – scoring 93.73 on her second run. It was Brazil’s first-ever women’s Worlds medal in Park.

That was good enough to win over Japan’s 2023 runner-up Hinano Kusaki (91.44 on her third run) and Spain’s Naia laso (90.14 on her third run). Japan has won at least one medal in all seven Park World Champs now.

The men’s final was a Brazilian 1-2 for Paris bronzer and 2022 Worlds silver winner Augusto Akio (93.53 on his third run) and 2018 World Champion Pedro Barros (90.72 on his third run). Denmark’s Viktor Solmunde was third with his first-round 90.58, Denmark’s first Worlds Park medal.

Barros has now won five medals (1-3-1) across the first seven Park men’s finals.

● Sport Climbing ● American Natalia Grossman won her 11trh career IFSC World Cup Bouldering gold, in Prague (CZE). She finished at 3T4Z ~ 17/18 as a clear winner over Naile Meignan (FRA: 2T4Z ~ 8/11) and Oceania Mackenzie (AUS: 2T3Z ~ 8/6).

Korea’s Do-hyun Lee won his second career IFSC World Cup gold and defended his 2023 win in Prague in the men’s final (2T4Z ~ 3/19), ahead of France’s Manuel Cornu (2T3Z ~ 5/10). Paris Combined winner Toby Roberts (GBR) was third at 2T2Z ~ 6/2.

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LOS ANGELES 1984: Organizing committee staff reunion celebrates 40 years since the 1984 Olympic Games

An original Sam the Olympic Eagle mascot costume from the 1984 Olympic Games, from the new 1984 Olympic retrospective exhibit at the LA84 Foundation (TSX photo)

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≡ SCENE & HEARD ≡

A relaxed gathering of about 70 former staff members of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee met on Friday at the LA84 Foundation, the living legacy of the 1984 Olympic Games, to say hello, see old friends and remember what happened 40 years ago.

Debra Duncan, an Associate Vice President for Ticketing for the LAOOC – and later a Chair of the LA84 Foundation – was a primary coordinator of the event and spoke briefly about what was achieved, during and after the Games by an organizing committee that very few believed in prior to the opening ceremony on 28 July 1984:

“Today is much more than a reunion, it’s a celebration of the legacy we created together. …

“There just isn’t any real way to put into words what we did or how we feel about it. We certainly didn’t know at the time that these efforts would result in one of the most important Olympic Games ever.

“As [LAOOC President] Peter Ueberroth has told me several times, many people thought the 1984 Olympics would be the last Olympics. I think some of us wondered about that too for a while; we were kind of nervous.

“And you know the reasons. The [Soviet] boycott. The traffic, financial doom, smog. Remember, we had a lot of smog in those days. Fortunately, a lot of people left, so we had plenty of room for people who came in, and, guess what, none of those things happened, and it was about a perfect as we could have hoped for.”

Duncan also related a conversation she had recently had with Ueberroth, not in attendance, but who turned 87 earlier in the month:

“Peter also said, we touched the world. And that really, simply, sums it up. Everyone was watching with their doubts, but at Games-time, we had engaged the world.

“He acknowledges we had luck, and I would always say we had great leadership. But he also said being poor was a big help. We spent money like we had no money, and ultimately made more money than any other Olympics has ever made, even until now.”

And that money has gone to good use. Duncan explained that the originally-named Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles – now the LA84 Foundation since 6 June 2007 – took its original $93 million share of the LAOOC ‘s $232.5 million surplus and:

“Over these four decades, has supported four million youth, trained 200,000 coaches, built or refurbished 400 pools, fields and courts and supported 2,500 non-profit organizations.

“That doesn’t even capture the fact that we have more money than we started with, and under the leadership of our current president and CEO, Renata Simril, we’ve created another 501(c)(3) public foundation … and this foundation allows for charitable contributions from the public – like you and me – and increases advocacy for play equity for kids everywhere, and partners with folks like the NFL for the Super Bowl, the NCAA for the national college football championship and ten other things we have our fingers in.

“All because you came to work every single day, because you believed in what you were doing. You loved the Olympic Movement and agreed to be part of a team that would change the direction of the Olympics forever.

“Please know we are here today, in this place, because of you. You started it and you should be so proud.”

Happily, the attendees included Anita DeFrantz, the long-time President of the LA84 Foundation, who was a 1976 Olympic bronze medalist in rowing, the LAOOC Vice President for the USC Olympic Village and a member of the International Olympic Committee since 1986.

And, or course, the party continued at another Los Angeles icon, El Cholo – The Original, on Western Avenue.

The LA84 Foundation, beyond its activist role in supporting kids in sports, developing coaches and organization and fighting for “play equity” across Los Angeles, also created a new, retrospective look at the 1984 Games, including memorabilia, photographs and especially an intact costume for the Sam the Olympic Eagle mascot, and a full manager’s uniform, which originally belonged to Jim Easton, the only staff member with three positions: Commissioner of Archery, Vice President of Technology and Mayor of the UCLA Olympic Village.

The display is housed at the Paul Ziffren Sports Resource Center on the LA84 campus in Los Angeles. Inquiries on visits by appointment can be made to [email protected].

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LOS ANGELES 2028: City of Los Angeles beginning its festival site planning for 2028 after Paris’ huge success

La Terrasse des Jeux at the Paris City Hall during the 2024 Olympic Games (TSX photo by Karen Rosen)

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≡ INTEL REPORT ≡

In addition to the work done by the Paris 2024 organizing committee to put on the Olympic and Paralympic Games, the City of Paris undertook a massive effort to try and bring both Games to the 20 arrondissements – districts – of Paris, with each have at least one games festival site.

The City of Los Angeles is beginning this process for 2028. On Friday, a motion by Council members Curren Price (9th District) and Traci Park (11th District) started the effort; the motion included:

“[E]very Angeleno should be given the chance to experience and participate in the spectacle of the 2028 Games.

“Activation Zones are non-venue sites where the public can watch Olympics events together or experience Olympics-related activities. Paris dubbed these ‘Clubs 2024,’ which included sports and cultural activities, live screenings of competitions on big screens, moments for sharing with athletes and with the mascots, and more.

“The 2024 Games offered over 40 such sites within the greater Paris area, and 180 across the whole of France. The most prominent of the sites in the Clubs 2024 program was at Champions Park, where the public could watch the previous day’s medalists parade daily in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower.”

The Paris program was divided between the City and the organizing committee. The Champions Park program, essentially a temporary, 13,000-seat stadium set up in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower, was run by the organizing committee and featured French and other Olympic medal winners in an environment akin to – but less formal than – the Medals Plaza at the Olympic Winter Games.

In the city, there were specific “Paris fete les Jeux” programs in each of the 20 arrondissements, with massive screens, food, music and sports demonstrations.

In addition, there were two massive public celebration zones in Paris:

● The City of Paris operated the Terrasse de Jeux at the Hotel de Ville (City Hall), with all kinds of demonstrations, music, programs and, of course, big screens.

● The organizing committee arranged for more than a dozen National Olympic Committees to have their national “houses” – the “Nations Park” – at the Parc de la Villette in Paris: Brazil, Canada, Chinese Taipei, Colombia, Czech Republic, India, Mexico, Mongolia, Netherlands, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa and Ukraine.

The Club France was also there and massively attended, for both the Olympic and Paralympic Games. A special “Decathlon Playground” was also available, with sport demonstrations, food, sponsor displays and – of course – big screens, plus an Olympic collector’s fair.

The L.A. City Council wants to get in on the action and the motion adds:

“Hosting the 2028 Games provides the City an opportunity to include the whole of Los Angeles in the Olympic experience. Activation Zones located throughout the City, in every Council District, would break down the barriers to Games access imposed by venue location and ticket expense concerns and give every Angeleno a chance to witness live Olympic events in a communal environment.”

The motion itself asks that the City Council to:

“[R]equest the Mayor’s Office, and instruct the City Administrative Officer and Chief Legislative Analyst, in coordination with LA28, to collaborate with Council District offices to identify City-owned sites within their respective Council Districts that could be converted into Activation Zones for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games and other major events prior; and identify funding sources, public and private, that could support Activation Zones throughout the City.”

The motion was assigned to the City Council’s Ad Hoc Committee on the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, of which Park is the current Chair, so expect a highly favorable review and a speedy referral to the City Council.

Observed: This at the same time a good, forward-looking start to getting the City ready for 2028 and the seeds of disaster, as seen in Atlanta in 1996.

One of the important, impressive achievements of the Paris 2024 effort was the close rapport of the organizing committee, which is principally concerned with the athletes, officials, media and fans who attend the Games and the City of Paris and the Ile-de-France region, which was concerned with the area residents first as well as Olympic and Paralympic visitors.

Close – really close – cooperation will be necessary to assure that one side knows what the other is doing (and not doing), and that relations do not become strained, as they did in 1996. There, the relationship between the city government and the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games (ACOG) became strained as the Games got closer, and the City eventually allowed for open spaces to be used by anyone who wanted to put up some tents and get a license to sell some food and/or souvenirs (licensed and unlicensed).

All manner of small “fairs” popped up in and around Atlanta, with many ambush marketing sites where non-Olympic sponsors were vying for visitor attention, implicitly allowed thanks to little or no oversight from the municipal government, which provided the site licenses.

The Los Angeles City Council has the opportunity to follow the exceptional lead of Paris, but must also be wary of the dark side if their efforts are not properly planned, programmed and managed.

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BRISBANE 2032: Queensland election makes 2032 Olympic stadium question a political football

The famed Brisbane Cricket Ground (the Gabba), a center of controversy for the 2032 Olympic Games (Photo: Queensland.com)

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≡ SPOTLIGHT ≡

In Australia’s Queensland state legislature, the Labor Party holds 51 seats, the Liberal National Party has 35 and the remaining seven seats are spread across three small parties and on 26 October, elections will be held.

So with the 2032 Olympic Games being held in Brisbane and other cities in Queensland, the continuing question of what to do about a “main stadium” continue to be discussed, and is now fully engulfed in election politics.

Liberal National Party leader David Crusafulli wails that Premier Steven Miles (Labor) made the wrong decision by backing away from an A$2.7 billion renovation of the famed Brisbane Cricket Ground (the Gabba) or building a new, A$3.4 billion stadium in another location suggested by a government commission. Instead, Miles wants to upgrade the Queensland Sport and Athletics Centre as a permanent legacy. (A$1 = $0.68 U.S.)

Says Crisafulli:

“I think the premier regrets saying it because he knows it’s not the right option and he knows that Queenslanders don’t back it. QSAC is not the right venue. I haven’t met a Queenslander who thinks that’s either visionary or value for money, other than Steven.

“I don’t think there’s any scenario where any Queenslander looks at that plan and doesn’t see anything but cringeworthiness from a desperate government.”

Labor sees it differently, of course. State Development and Infrastructure Minister Grace Grace ripped Crisafulli for continuously changing his position:

“First he supported upgrades to the Gabba, now he says he never did. He said he backed Labor’s plan for a lower cost to taxpayers, with the legacy option of upgrading QSAC, yet now he’s backflipped again.

“We know the LNP is refusing to support QSAC because they’re secretly planning to spend $3.4 billion-plus on a new build stadium at Victoria Park. The only cringeworthy thing is the LNP hiding behind a 100-day Games review.”

In the middle are the Brisbane 2032 organizers, headed by for worldwide Dow Chemical head Andrew Liveris. He told reporters last week after returning from the Paris 2024 Games:

“We’ve been very, very clear. I’ve been very, very clear that until we see numbers on QSAC there is no position Brisbane 2032 is taking.

“We need to know the cost aspect of what would be an athletic stadium. In terms of the Olympics and the delivery, we’re committed to a budget – $5 billion – and we’ve got to get that budget right.

“You just have to be in the [Paris] Stade de France, watching the sevens rugby with 80,000 people providing revenue and top sponsors providing revenue, to understand the power of having a right-sized stadium.”

“We have 2,865 days to get this right. Paris were still deciding on venues 600 days out. Los Angeles still hasn’t finalised many of their venues for many of their sports.

“So, please don’t panic. We’ve got this.”

A current review of the suitability of the QSAC facility is coming, but will not be completed until the second quarter of 2025.

Liveris noted that the real issue for the Gabba is the long-term future of cricket and rugby in Brisbane: “If you don’t have a decent stadium, okay, for legacy reasons, where are you going to put the cricket on?” adding “The Olympics can’t take the lead there.”

He explained that once the leadership of the area’s cricket and rugby teams was clear, “then we will fold right in and support you.”

In the meantime, it’s all politics until 26 October.

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PARIS 2024: IOC sponsor Atos declares victory in provision of Olympic and Paralympic access control and information services

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≡ INTEL REPORT ≡

There were many positives to the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games and one of those was in results and information services and support for the volunteer staff processing and accreditation and access control.

No, not absolutely perfect, but clearly excellent, especially with the provision of competition results with almost no downtime.

The coordinator of all of these technical services was Atos, a French-based information technology giant, which has been involved with the International Olympic Committee since 1989 and a TOP sponsor since the 2005-08 quadrennial.

There was lots of chatter that Atos’ corporate financial issues, with the company possibly to be sold, would impact its performance at the Games, but it did not. A restructuring is on the way.

However, in Paris, operations were not impacted and system performance was excellent:

● 233 million unique users of the Paris 2024 Web site, with the schedule of event the most-visited page;

● 18 million downloads of Paris 2024 mobile app and an average of 20 million unique users per day during the Olympic Games;

● 1,026-plus events supported in the Olympic and Paralympic Games, with schedule data, start lists and near-real-time results data;

● 10,000-plus users per day of accredited media and Olympic Family of the MyInfo system;

● 400,000-plus accreditations were issued and managed for the Olympic Games, plus 240,000 for the Paralympic Games;

● 3.7 million accreditation access-control scans were made during the two Games;

● 300,000-plus applications to the Paris 2024 volunteer program were accepted and managed, with 45,000 volunteers eventually selected.

All of this was entered, controlled and accessed from 1,894 on-site workstations, including the television commentator systems.

Patrick Adiba, the chief executive of the Major Events group at Atos, observed:

“Our teams have demonstrated unparallelled dedication and passion to ensure the flawless delivery of the technology for the Olympic and Paralympic Games Paris 2024 in the Group’s home country. We could not imagine a better setting to showcase our expertise in digital transformation and our dedication to the Olympic Movement over the past 35 years.”

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PANORAMA: Paris restaurant spending up during Games; Spanish governing board imposes €60,001 fines on two “fans” for racist abuse

A great graphic by Paris 2024 of its Olympic Phryge mascot taking a coffee break in Paris.

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● FrancsJeux.com noted a significant uptick in spending during the Olympic and Paralympic period from credit-card payment data from the BPCE banking group.

The study of charges made in the Ile-de-France region – which includes Paris – indicated a massive 58% rise in “tourism and cultural activity” spending by French card users during the Olympic Games and a 30% rise during the Paralympic Games, compared to 2023. This would include ticket sales.

In the food-service sector, increases were seen in fast food (+9% Olympic and +12% Paralympic), bakeries (+14% and +16%), bars (+6% and +4%), and restaurants (+4% and +5%).

Spending by visitors from outside of France went up vs. 2023, with restaurant spending up 40% during the Olympic Games and up 10% during the Paralympic Games. Charges in bars were up 52% for the Olympics and 26% during the Paralympics.

There was lots of anecdotal evidence that shops did not do well during the Games, but tourism figures showed a rise in hotel stays during the Olympic Games especially as against 2023.

● Athletics ● Asked for a comment on the news that the budget for the Kenyan Anti-Doping Agency had been cut by 93% for the coming fiscal year, as well as with Kenya having 105 persons on the Athletics Integrity Unit’s ineligibles list – the most of any nation – the Athletics Integrity Unit replied:

“The AIU has no comment.”

● Football ● Important developments in the fight against racism in Spain, with the Spanish Sports Council (CSD) Anti-Violence Committee proposing a fine of €60,001 or about $66,973 U.S. against a fan who repeatedly posted racist insults and images on X (ex-Twitter) against Real Madrid star striker Vinicius Jr. of Brazil.

Further, the “fan” is to be barred from all sports venues for two years, and the case was referred to the public prosecutor for possible criminal charges under Spanish hate crimes law.

The CSD further proposed another €60,001 fine and two-year venue ban for a different “fan” for racial abuse during a La Liga match between Athletic Bilbao and Valencia CF; the same person was identified as an abuser three times during the previous season.

The Deportivo Alaves club was also hit with a €50,000 fine for social-media support of the Iraultza 1921 fan club, a group with members who have been repeatedly sanctioned.

La Liga officials have promised action against racism in Spanish football, which has drawn worldwide notice, especially for the incidents against star striker Vini Jr.

In the second semifinal of the FIFA Women’s U-20 World Cup in Cali (COL), Japan cruised past the Netherlands, 2-0. Midfielder Manaka Matsukubo broke a scoreless tie in the 55th with her first goal and scored her second to ice the match in the 83rd.

Although the teams both had 45% possession, Japan had almost all of the offense, with 24 total; shots to just one for the Dutch.

Sunday’s final will see 2018 champion Japan – also the 2022 runner-up – against North Korea, also a winner of this tournament in 2006 and 2016, in Bogota.

The Saturday third-place match in Bogota has the Dutch looking for their first medal in this event and in the third-place game for the second time in a row (losing to Brazil, 4-1, in 2022). The U.S. won the women’s U-20 in 2002-08-12, but has not won a medal since. The Americans lost the third-place match, 1-0, to Japan in 2016.

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PARIS 2024: Int’l Testing Agency collects 6,130 samples in Paris, finds five doping positives, with U.S. the most-tested country

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≡ ANTI-DOPING ≡

The International Testing Agency, the body tasked by the International Olympic Committee to handle its Olympic anti-doping testing program, provided a summary report on its activities at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. In short:

● 6,130 samples were collected from the opening of the Olympic Village on 19 July to the close of the Games on 11 August.

● 4,154 athletes were tested 4,770 times, providing the 6,130 samples, including 4,798 urine samples, 1,136 blood samples and 196 samples using the newer Dried Blood Spot technology.

● The 4,150 total represented 38.75% of all athletes at the Games – the most ever –  up 4% from Tokyo 2020 and up 10% from Rio 2016.

● 66% of the tests were in-competition at the Games and 34% out-of-competition.

● Athletes from 200 National Olympic Committees were tested, 97% of the total attending.

The most-tested countries were those which sent the largest delegations, starting with the U.S., then France, China, Australia, Great Britain, Spain, Italy, Japan, Brazil and the Netherlands in the top 10.

The most-tested sports were Athletics, Aquatics, Cycling, Rowing, Wrestling, Canoeing, Boxing, Weightlifting, Judo and Gymnastics.

Happily, there were only five positives reported during the Games, but the ITA report also notes that the pre-Games testing program identified more than 40 doping violations. Moreover, the pre-Games testing program was thorough enough that “nearly 90% of all participating athletes undergoing testing at least once before the start of the Games.”

(The five positives came from Afghanistan, Bolivia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iraq, and Nigeria.)

Moreover, all of the samples collected in Paris will be stored for re-analysis within 10 years at the ITA’s own storage facilities.

All of this was supervised by 30 ITA staff, with the actual doping control carried out by 266 doping control officers and 570 chaperones, mostly Paris 2024 volunteers.

Observed: While the five doping positives reported during the Games is commendably very low, the real answer on doping and Paris 2024 will not come for a decade, when re-analyses are made with technology more advanced than what is available today.

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MILAN CORTINA 2026: Volunteer program opens for 18,000 slots to assist at the 2026 Olympic Winter Games

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≡ INTEL REPORT ≡

Paris 2024 is over and it’s on to the 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo in Italy, with the organizers announcing the opening of the volunteer application program on Wednesday:

“The requirements to apply – exclusively on the website milanocortina2026.org – and be part of this dream include being 18 years old by November 1st 2025, having knowledge of Italian or English, participating in selection and training events, and committing to a minimum availability of at least nine non-consecutive days during the Games.

“The Team26 Programme is open to all residents or those from abroad willing to cover their own travel, visa and accommodation costs (to cover your yourselves in case anyone thinks MiCo will cover those expenses), and candidates can also offer their availability for a series of readiness activities that will take place before the Winter Games, starting with the Test Events in 2025.

“The roles assigned to volunteers will be varied and primarily aimed at enhancing the experience of all those who will participate in the event and facilitating the organisation of the Games. Additionally, it will be a genuine opportunity for personal growth and development for the volunteers themselves.”

The application itself takes about 20-30 minutes to complete, and has questions about identity, reasons for applying, areas of expertise, and preferred availability and possible locations for their assignment. Once submitted, per the Team26 Web site:

● “Autumn 2024 – The Selection: The application phase will be followed by a meeting to get to know each other better, and to tell you more about the activity.”

● “Spring 2025 – Your Role: If selected, your application will be accepted, and you can officially become a Team26 member!”

● “Summer 2025 – Training: Embark on a unique learning path (e-learning and face-to-face) so you can perform with confidence and feel safe and comfortable in your role.”

● “Winter 2025 – Uniform and Accreditation Pick Up: Not all heroes wear capes, but our volunteers certainly wear the coolest uniforms.”

● “Winter 2026 – Games Time: This is what we call the period during which the Winter Games take place, when the magic truly begins.”

There is a lengthy “Team26 Charter” to read, essentially outlining the legal relationship between the would-be volunteer and the organizing committee. And once an application is submitted, the waiting game begins.

The site does not state a deadline for submitting an application, but includes a message from Italy’s U.S. Open tennis champ Jannik Sinner, who is the Milan Cortina 2026 ambassador for the volunteer program; it included:

“Our passion, commitment, and dedication will make Milano Cortina 2026 a memorable experience for everyone. We will have the opportunity to meet people from all over the world, learn about new cultures, and share our love for sport. Every gesture we make, every word we say, will be an invaluable contribution that will remain imprinted in the memories of those who participate in this event.”

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LOS ANGELES 2028: Cedars-Sinai named Official Medical Provider in key role to support LA28 medical operations

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≡ SPOTLIGHT ≡

“Cedars-Sinai today announced a partnership with the LA28 Olympic and Paralympic Games to serve as the Official Medical Provider for the 2028 Games, providing the highest-quality care for athletes, coaches, team personnel and visitors who travel across the world for the competitions in Los Angeles.

“Cedars-Sinai will be a critical resource and medical adviser to LA28 in establishing medical services in the Olympic and Paralympic village and at sporting venues for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.”

Thursday’s announcement is a key development for the LA28 organizers, not only as its fifth “Official Supporter” in its fourth tier of commercial partners, but also from an operating standpoint.

● Cedars-Sinai joins Autodesk, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Guild and Hershey as “Official Supporters,” behind Founding Partners Comcast and Delta, Official Ticketing Providers AXS and Eventim and Official Hospitality Provider On Location, and Official Sponsors Cisco and Lilly.

● Perhaps even more important is the Cedars-Sinai will play in the development and provision of medical services during the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Both Games will require many doctors, nurses and support staff to support the venues, training sites and the Olympic Village at UCLA.

In its Fiscal 2023 Community Benefit Plan, the Cedars-Sinai organization included:

● 2,847 physicians on staff
● 4,460 nurses on staff
● 15,245 full-time staff

The relationship with Cedars-Sinai will give the LA28 organizers a solid foundation in the creation, coordination, recruitment and operating program of its medical services, as well as a wealth of knowledge and support to assist visiting physicians from foreign teams who will come to the U.S. for pre-Olympic events and for the Games in 2028.

The importance of this, as the basis for the entire medical-support program, cannot be underestimated, to the LA28 organizers and for the confidence it will bring to the visiting National Olympic Committee and the International Federations.

The Cedars-Sinai footprint is also important, noted in the Community Benefit Plan as:
“The system includes Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Cedars-Sinai Marina del Rey Hospital, a network of physicians and ambulatory services at more than 250 locations throughout Southern California, and affiliates Torrance Memorial Medical Center, Huntington Health and Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center.”

Also important: Cedars-Sinai is one of nine medical institutions in the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Medical Network, and the involvement of the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee is also crucial. California Business & Professions Code sec. 2076.5, adopted in 1997 as a follow-up to legislation for the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles specifies:

“Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a physician and surgeon lawfully practicing medicine in another state or country may be exempted from licensure while practicing medicine in this state under the following conditions:

“(1) The physician and surgeon has been invited by the United States Olympic Committee to provide medical services at training sites designated by the olympic training center or to provide medical services at an event in this state sanctioned by the committee.”

Cedars-Sinai is already the exclusive provider to the USOPC for Los Angeles and Southern California for the USOPC Medical Network and will be a key player in working with National Olympic Committees to coordinate medical support for events up to and during the Games.

Cedars-Sinai will not be in charge of the doping control program for the 2028 Games, as the International Olympic Committee has entrusted its anti-doping testing program to the International Testing Agency, which performed this role in Paris this summer.

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LANE ONE: Who will be the next IOC President? For now, only more questions than answers

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≡ INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE ≡

Since Monday’s announcement by the International Olympic Committee of seven candidates for President, the calls and e-mails have come in, non-stop.

Who’s the favorite? Who’s going to win?

Answer: no one knows, and anyone who tells you they do know should be subject to a doping test right away.

What is true is that questions for each candidate are beginning to be raised, and there is high anticipation for the publication of the candidate plan statements. For now, however, only the questions.

First, it’s worth checking out the election arithmetic, which in the case of the IOC voting process, gets a little complicated:

● At present, there are 111 members of the IOC, who break down geographically this way:

● 46: Europe
● 21: Asia
● 19: Americas
● 18: Africa
● 7: Oceania

But, two influential members – John Coates (AUS) and Dr. Ugur Erdener (TUR) – will retire to become Honorary Members at the end of 2024, so the total comes down to 109.

Further, the IOC’s protocol has been to keep members from a country which has a candidate from voting, and there are candidates from six countries: France, Great Britain (2), Jordan, Japan, Spain and Zimbabwe. Assuming this is maintained, a total of 16 members are impacted – in the first round – so removing them leaves 93 members (meaning a first-ballot majority would be 47):

● 34: Europe (4 candidates)
● 19: Americas (0 candidates)
● 17: Africa (1 candidate)
● 17: Asia (2 candidates)
● 6: Oceania (0 candidates)

Those numbers could influence the lobbying efforts of the candidates, who are, alphabetically:

Prince Feisal Al Hussein (JOR): 60, elected personally to the IOC in 2010.

Observed: Al Hussein is the younger brother of King Abdullah II, sometimes stands in for him at protocol functions and is a retired Lt. General of the Jordanian Armed Forces. A graduate of Brown University in the U.S., he is seen as independent and has been an IOC Executive Board member since 2019. He has been deeply involved in the IOC’s work against harassment and abuse and for safeguarding, and is the founder and Chair of Generations For Peace, one of two peace-through-sport organizations recognized by the IOC; it uses sport to engage children and youth to promote sustainable conflict transformation at the grassroots level.

It is also true that anywhere from a quarter to a half of Jordan’s population are of Palestinian origin or are naturalized Palestinian refugees, and an expansion of the current Israel-Hamas and Israel-Hezbollah conflicts could engulf the country – which has a peace treaty with Israel – in the future, putting Al Hussein in an impossible political situation if he were IOC President.

Sebastian Coe (GBR): 67, elected to the IOC in 2020, tied to his presidency of World Athletics.

Observed: the four-time Olympic medalist in track & field (2-2-0) in 1980-84, he has an insanely high profile, as the Chair of the highly-successful London 2012 Olympic organizing committee, as well as the head of World Athletics. He has detractors – the Russians can’t stand him – but he is unafraid to lead. His use of Olympic television money to pay the Paris gold medalists $50,000, the first time an International Federation has done this, irritated many fellow IF chiefs, including multiple IOC members.

Coe is a consummate politician and sources whisper he has been quietly courting potential votes for more than a year already. But at 67 (68 on 29 September), he would need the IOC membership not only to elect him President, but also to then (1) elect him as an individual member and (2) then give him a four-year membership extension to 2030.

Under the current rules, Coe would appear to also need a change to the Olympic Charter to allow him to serve out a full, eight-year term to 2033.

Kirsty Coventry (ZIM): 41, elected to the IOC in 2013 as an athlete, personally in 2021.

Observed: A seven-time Olympic medalist in swimming in 2004 and 2008 (2-4-1), she is the current Minister of Youth, Sports, Arts and Recreation in Zimbabwe. She graduated from Auburn University in the U.S., and provided exemplary leadership as Chair of the IOC Athletes’ Commission from 2018-21.

She was clearly being positioned as a favorite by IOC chief Thomas Bach (GER), with high-profile roles on the IOC’s Tokyo 2020 Coordination Commission, as Chair of the Dakar 2026 Youth Olympic Games Coordination Commission and as Chair of the Brisbane 2032 Coordination Commission.

At 41, she has no age issues, and would be the first woman head of the IOC, in keeping with Bach’s goals for gender equity. But in a world drifting toward war more than peace, is she the right candidate now? She would be the youngest IOC President since founder Pierre de Coubertin (FRA), 33 when he took over in 1896.

Johan Eliasch (GBR): 62, elected to the IOC in 2024, tied to his presidency of the International Ski & Snowboard Federation (FIS).

Observed: Eliasch’s candidacy was the big surprise, as it was not expected. The billionaire former chief executive of the sporting goods giant HEAD from 1995-2021, he is now its non-executive Chair.

Eliasch was initially elected as the head of the FIS in 2021 to fill the remainder of the term of retired Gian-Franco Kasper (SUI), and then was elected to a full term in 2022. He was elected to the IOC as the FIS President on 24 July of this year by a 64-17 margin. The unusually high 17 votes against him was far higher than any of the other seven members elected, with 1-2-3-4-4-4-7 votes against.

New to the IOC, but highly experienced in political circles in Great Britain, Eliasch is not to be dismissed or ignored. But his age is also an issue, and he would need to be elected as an individual member and would require an age-extension vote to complete an eight-year first term.

Even as non-executive Chair of HEAD, questions of divestiture and other conflicts of interest may be raised about his IOC candidature.

David Lappartient (FRA): 51, elected to the IOC in 2022, tied to his presidency of the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI).

Observed: A new member only in 2022, Lappartient’s stock has skyrocketed in the past year. On his watch as the two-term head of the UCI, the new all-disciplines UCI Cycling World Championships in Glasgow was a significant success in 2023, and as President of the National Olympic Committee of France, he helped calm a fractious political environment and then shepherd the underdog French Alps bid to become host of the Olympic Winter Games in 2030.

Most importantly, Bach has relied on Lappartient as the IOC’s liaison with the e-sports community as the Chair of the IOC Esports and Gaming Liaison Group, and in 2023, as Chair of the Esports Commission. Bach said in his address renouncing an extension of his term that the digital revolution is the future; he selected Lappartient as the IOC’s lead with the electronic sports community. That’s significant.

An engineer and surveyor before becoming a sports administrator, he is described as devoted and highly professional. Those are promising qualities and at 51, age is not an issue for him, but he would need to be elected as an individual member.

Juan Antonio Samaranch (ESP): 64, elected personally to the IOC in 2001.

Observed: This is the son of Juan Antonio Samaranch, the transformational IOC President from 1980-2001. He has been involved in international sport for decades, but with a professional career in financial management. He earned an undergrad degree in engineering from Barcelona University, and a Masters of Business Administration from New York University.

Samaranch Jr. was the head of the IOC’s Coordination Commission for the Beijing 2022 Winter Games and has deep experience in China, founding the Samaranch Foundation in 2012 to promote sport in China and positive relations between China and Spain.

He has also been a Vice President of the Union Internationale de Pentathlon Moderne, helping to keep it on the Olympic program, and served as an IOC Vice President from 2016-2020 and from 2022 to the present. He is the consummate insider, personable and savvy, and has said he wants to continue the Bach reforms and vision of the IOC as a values-based promoter of sport that have been highly successful already.

His age, requiring an extension to allow him to finish a first term, is against him, but he is not to be underestimated. If the IOC members do not coalesce quickly around another candidate, he will be well positioned as a candidate everyone can deal with … for one term.

Morinari Watanabe (JPN): 65, elected to the IOC in 2018, as president of the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique (FIG).

Observed: Watanabe would need to have the IOC members convert him to individual membership and give him an age extension to complete one eight-year term. He is the two-term head of the FIG and is up for a third-term in a contested election on 25 October 2024; if he should lose, he would lose his IOC membership.

He has been the Chair of the IOC’s Boxing Task Force for Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024, both successfully held. However, his tenure in gymnastics has raised questions, as he has apologized for the technical mess over the Paris 2024 women’s Floor Exercise bronze medal situation, an area fully within the federation’s control.

Moreover, although gymnastics is one of the top three federations for distribution of IOC television money, it pays no prize money at all at any of its World Championships, unlike both World Aquatics and World Athletics, which both pay millions to athletes.

A much clearer judgment will come once the candidates file their campaign statements, which should be coming soon. The election will take place at the IOC Session in Greece from 18-21 March. Candidate presentations will take place from 20-24 January, and the new President will take over in June of 2025.

There’s no favorite, only estimates and opinions and publication does not make facts out of either. This is a process, but one truth is that 74 of the 111 current members have been elected on Bach’s watch. He won’t come out publicly in favor of any candidate, but if he sends a signal, it will be very, very carefully considered.

Rich Perelman
Editor

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PANORAMA: Paris 2024 temporary facilities out soon; Russia sees return of skaters in 2025; Sinner is volunteer no. 1 for Milan Cortina

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● How fast will Paris return to “normal” after the removal of the temporary installations for the Olympic and Paralympic Games?

Pretty fast, according to the City of Paris, which announced Wednesday that the removal of Games infrastructure from all sites by the Paris 2024 organizers is slated to be completed by the end of October.

Traffic rights-of-way are being cleared now, one by one, with many to be open again by the end of September. The Paralympic Games closed on 8 September.

● Olympic Winter Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● The Italian news agency ANSA reported that Italy’s top-ranked men’s tennis star Jannik Sinner will be registered as the “first volunteer” for the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Games.

The organizing committee’s volunteer program is to be announced Thursday, but will reportedly comprise 20,000 people.

● Russia ● Famed Russian figure skating coach Tatyana Tarasova said in an interview that she believes Russian skaters will be allowed to compete in international championships in the coming season:

“I think we will already be participating in competitions this year. For example, the European Championship, and then the World Championship.

“I think we will immediately show our level. And we will see how much the judges missed us. And the representatives of other countries.”

If so, the venues will be interesting. The Europeans are scheduled from 27 January to 2 February in Tallinn (EST), a Russian neighbor and hardly friendly. The 2025 Worlds will be held in Boston, Massachusetts from 24-30 March.

The International Skating Union suspended Russian and Belarusian participation in March 2022. No Russian skaters received assignments for the 2024 ISU Grand Prix season.

Nikolai Gulyaev, the President of the Russian Skating Union, is also hopeful, but not due to any specific indications from the ISU:

“We are preparing not to compete with each other, although this is important. I would still like to return to the international arena. I managed to get to the ISU congress in Las Vegas, where I had a meeting with [ISU President Jae-Youl] Mr. Kim [KOR], but unfortunately, that’s all for now.

“I did not ask questions about when and under what conditions we would return, because I understood that I would not get answers. There is a feeling that we will wait for some warming in attitude towards us. How this will happen is still unclear, but something tells me that it will happen.

“We are waiting for the ISU Council at the end of September. We are in contact with the international federation, showing that we are part of the international family.”

● Football ● At the FIFA Women’s U-20 World Cup in Colombia, the semifinals were on in Cali, with the U.S. meeting North Korea in the first match. The Koreans, two-time champions in this event, had outscored their five opponents by 23-4 coming in and got a goal in the 22nd minute from striker Il Son Choe, who found an open area near the top of the box and rifled a left-footer into the U.S. net past American keeper Teagan Wy into the far right corner.

The Koreans were on the attack more consistently than the U.S., finding avenues for shots, but the half ended 1-0, with the Koreans leading 10-3 on shots.

The second half was more of the same, with the Koreans mostly in charge and getting some difficult chances, but keeping the U.S. at bay. But substitute striker Pietra Tordin got a strong shot off in the 76th that required a sprawling save from Korean keeper Un Gyong Chae. The Americans continued with the pressure, but could not score and the Koreans will play for a third title on Sunday. The winners finished with a 17-7 edge on shots.

Japan and the Netherlands will play in the second semifinal, at 8 p.m. local time. The third-place match will be Saturday and the gold-medal final on Sunday, both in Bogota.

● Swimming ● The long-running lawsuit by the International Swimming League and three individual swimmers from 2018 against FINA – now World Aquatics – has been revived by the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

In a Tuesday decision, a three-judge panel reversed a Northern District of California Court holding from January 2023 of summary judgement for FINA, essentially holding that there was no merit to the cases brought by ISL and the swimmers over FINA objections to a swim meet ISL wanted to hold in Italy in 2018.

The Ninth Circuit opinion said that the summary judgement holding went too far and remanded the case for trial. The standard for summary judgement requires the court to view “the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs.” The appeal opinion stated:

“Plaintiffs have created a triable issue as to whether FINA’s General Rule 4 constituted a per se unlawful group boycott by preventing member federations and swimmers from doing business with ISL without risking draconian sanctions.”

The opinion dismissed some plaintiff arguments, but sent the matter back to the District Court, which will now have to give it more time and attention. The International Swimming League has been in hiatus since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, as its founder and principal funder, Ukrainian energy billionaire Konstantin Grigorishin, has been constrained by the war against his country.

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ATHLETICS: Diamond League prize money increases 33.7% to $9.24 million for 2024, with total athlete support over $18 million

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≡ DIAMOND LEAGUE ≡

“Following a decision by the Diamond League General Assembly on Sunday, the total amount of prize money paid over the course of the season will increase to 9,240,000 US dollars in 2025.

“The new total is almost a third higher than the sum paid during the pandemic-affected period of 2021-2024, and the highest ever since the Diamond League’s launch in 2010.”

This comes less than a week after the close of the 2024 Diamond League at the Memorial Van Damme in Brussels (BEL) with the Diamond League Final.

The increase is significant from the standpoint of in-meet prize money:

2024: $25,000 per event in 14 Diamond League meets ($10,000-6,000-3,500-2,000-1,250-1,000-750-500).

2024: $60,000 per event in the Diamond League Final ($30,000-12,000-7,000-4,000-2,500-2,000-1,5000-1,000).

The announcement stated the new prize levels:

2025: $30,000-50,000 per event in 14 Diamond League meets (no distribution yet)

2025: $60,000-100,000 per event at the Diamond League Final (no distribution yet).

So in terms of the total prize money available:

2024: $4.96 million-plus at the first 14 meets (14 events x $25,000 each x 14 meets).

2024: $1.92 million at the Diamond League Final (32 events x $60,000 each)

2024: $6.88 million total, plus a little more for ninth-placers in the 100 m.

vs.

2025: $7.00 million at the first 14 meets (no breakdown given)

2025: $2.24 million at the Diamond League Final (32 events x $70,000 average)

2025: $9.24 million total, an increase of 33.7%.

The announcement also noted a lot more in addition to prizes:

“Including promotional fees for top athletes, a total of around US$18million will be paid to athletes in total over the course of the 2025 season, with many more millions being invested in athlete services such as travel and transport, accommodation and medical and physio provision.”

The 2025 Diamond League schedule is out, with 15 meets strewn across five months:

April (1): Xiamen
May (3): Suzhou, Doha, Rabat
June (4): Rome, Oslo, Stockholm, Paris
July (3): Eugene, Monaco, London
August (4): Chorzow, Lausanne, Brussels, Zurich

In between all of these are expected to be four Grand Slam Track meets, with one in Los Angeles and three elsewhere, at dates yet to be announced. The World Athletics Championships is now (finally) at the end of the season, in Tokyo from 13-21 September.

The Diamond League will also undergo a radical audience shift in the U.S., as NBC will only televise the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene in July. The other 14 meets will be on the FloTrack streaming service, which announced a multi-year agreement for the Diamond League in April.

NBC had pushed live coverage of the Diamond League onto its Peacock online service, which had 33 million subscribers as of the end of June, at $7.99 per month. The Sports Business Journal reported in May that parent company FloSports expanded to “almost one million subscribers (80% of whom are on annual plans)” by the end of 2023. 

FloTrack subscriptions are $29.99 per month or $149.99 annually.

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PANORAMA: Russians do not want Britain’s Coe as IOC President; Kenyan anti-doping budget slashed by 70%; World Boxing names first Worlds site

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● In case you were interested, the European Olympic Committees noted that the continent again won the most medals at Paris 2024:

● 448: Europe (128-144-176)
● 256: Asia (97-70-89)
● 221: Americas (62-74-85)
● 74: Oceania (28-27-19)
● 38: Africa (13-12-14)

This does not include the five medals won by “neutrals” from Russia (1) and Belarus (4), both members – in better days – of the European Olympic Committees.

● Russia ● The Russian government’s campaign against the International Olympic Committee continues without pause, as Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov lambasted the IOC in a Tuesday interview:

● “The current IOC leadership, to my great regret, is burying the Olympic Movement. I am convinced that new forms will emerge that will preserve the spirit of fair competition and respect for the partner.”

● “[T]he West is engaged in, without exaggeration, sports aggression, as well as many other aggressions, including diplomatic aggression. The West’s sports aggression undermines the fundamental principles of the Olympic Movement, the principles of the Olympic Charter that sports are outside of politics. In this situation, we are forced to look for new forms that will allow us to revive honest, truly competitive, depoliticized sports.”

● “[T]he World Anti-Doping Agency and the IOC are joining forces to finally emasculate the principles of the Olympic Charter and finally put sport at the service of the interests of maintaining the hegemony of the West in all conceivable areas of human life.”

Just in case anyone was wondering about the context of Lavrov’s remarks, he added:

“[E]very day they are increasingly trying to provoke us into further escalation in response to the unprecedented aggressive actions of the West, which unleashed a hybrid war against us at the hands of Ukraine.”

At the hands of Ukraine? Now Lavrov makes sense; the TASS story did not include any information on the last time Lavrov was tested for doping.

Russian athletes and officials are already speculating on the IOC Presidential election to be held next March. It’s clear there is one candidate they do not want elected, as two-time Olympic biathlon relay gold medalist Dmitry Vasiliev told TASS:

Sebastian Coe‘s candidacy is the worst; if he is elected, then Russia will have nothing to do in the international Olympic movement for the foreseeable future. He will be even worse than Thomas Bach.”

The head of the Russian Artistic Gymnastics Federation, Vasily Titov, a Federation Internationale de Gymnastique board member, prefers his IF chief, Morinari Watanabe (JPN):

“I think that his election would be a good option for us, because, despite pressure from the government of his country, he did everything so that the FIG would make a decision to return our athletes to their competitions.”

Vyacheslav Ekimov, head of the Russian Cycling Federation, prefers his IF head, France’s David Lappartient:

“If you look at the policy of the federation he heads in relation to Russians, the International Cycling Union allows us to compete in its competitions as neutrals, unlike the European Cycling Union.

“David is a very hard-working person, a professional who deeply understands all issues and an excellent organizer. He is good both as a practitioner and as a politician.”

● Athletics ● A major cut in Kenyan anti-doping funding was reported on Tuesday, which could potentially lead to a national suspension. NewsCentral.Africa reported:

“The Anti-Doping Agency of Kenya (ADAK) revealed that it was given only 20 million shillings ($155,000) to cover day-to-day operations for the upcoming financial year, a sharp contrast to the expected 288 million shillings ($2.2 million).

“The agency’s program was affected by widespread budget cuts imposed by the government following the withdrawal of a tax bill that sparked massive protests in June.”

Said ADAK Board Chair Daniel Makdwallo:

“This decision has paralysed the agency, preventing us from meeting our obligations and risking non-compliance with the World Anti-Doping Code.”

In track & field alone, Kenya currently has 105 persons listed on the Athletics Integrity Unit’s list of ineligible persons, out of a global total of 587, or 17.9%. Second is India with 97 and then Russia with 71.

The situation concerning doping is so critical that to avoid suspension, the Kenyan government approved a five-year, $25 million allocation to combat it. That could all be in jeopardy now.

Otis Davis, the 1960 Olympic 400 m gold medalist in Rome, has passed away at age 92, as announced by the University of Oregon. Davis was Oregon’s first-ever Olympic gold winner and also won gold on the U.S. 4×400 m relay.

He came to Oregon to play basketball but switched to track, and was elected to the National Track & Field Hall of Fame in 2003.

● Boxing ● World Boxing announced its first-ever World Championships, with the men’s and women’s title tournaments to be held together in Liverpool (GBR) from 4-14 September.

It’s another step for the federation, currently with 44 members, to show it is capable of being recognized as the International Olympic Committee’s designee to govern the sport, which is currently not on the 2028 Los Angeles program.

The IOC has said that it wants to make a decision in the early part of 2025 concerning boxing and LA28.

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PARIS 2024: Chiles’ brief with Swiss Federal Tribunal asks re-hearing on two grounds, including proof of her on-time appeal

In the middle of the storm over Paris bronze: Romanian gymnast Ana Barbosu, American Jordan Chiles and Romanian Sabrina Maneca Voinea (Photo: Romanian Gymnastics Federation)

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≡ GYMNASTICS ≡

The 55-page filing by U.S. gymnast Jordan Chiles to the Swiss Federal Tribunal asks the court to send the matter back to the Court of Arbitration for Sport for a re-hearing in front of a new panel of arbitrators.

Chiles’ action was made against the Romanian Gymnastics Federation, the two Romanian gymnasts who are now ahead of her in the women’s Olympic Floor Exercise final standings – Ana Barbosu and Sabrina Maneca Voinea – and the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique.

Under the controlling Swiss Private International Law Act §190 – in force since 1989 – there are five grounds on which an arbitration award can be set aside; Chiles specified two:

● §190 (2.a.): that “the arbitral tribunal [was] improperly constituted”

● §190 (2.d.): “where the principle of equal treatment of the parties or their right to be heard in an adversary procedure were violated”

The improper construction of the Court of Arbitration for Sport panel identifies the panel’s chair, Dr. Hamid G. Gharavi, of French and Iranian nationality, as representing the state of Romania in three significant cases at the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) with a collective value of more than €100 million.

Moreover, Ghavari was reported to represent the Romanian government since at least 2016, and the appeal states (computer translation of the original German):

“Dr. Hamid G. Gharavi finds himself in a blatant conflict of interest due to his long-standing mandate relationship with the Romanian state”

Further, this relationship was not discovered until after the 10 August award from the Court of Arbitration for Sport panel, in fact only due to media reports on 13 August, and Ghavari did not himself disclose them at the time of selection. The deadline to challenge the panel composition was on 7 August.

Chiles’ appeal notes, that given the timeframes involved, “it would also be offensive to accuse the complainant in this case of having a duty to investigate the independence and impartiality of the CAS Panel.”

The timeline in this case is also the key to Chiles’ second grounds for appeal, that she was denied the “right to be heard” on multiple grounds:

● After USA Gymnastics produced a time-stamped video showing that the U.S. inquiry on Chiles’ score was made within the required one minute on 11 August, the Court of Arbitration panel said it could not accept evidence after its decision had been delivered via news release, on 10 August.

But the appeal contends that the decision of the CAS panel is not final – and therefore closed – until the written decision is published, which was on 14 August. If so, then the CAS panel should have considered the new video evidence provided to it by USA Gymnastics. The inability to submit this evidence and have it considered denied Chiles’ right to be heard.

● The appeal also notes the unusual difficulty in communications that penalized Chiles. The Court of Arbitration notified Chiles, the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee and USA Gymnastics of the arbitration proceedings brought by the Romanian Gymnastics Federation on 6 August – the day after the Floor final took place – by electronic mail.

However, typographical errors in the e-mails to Chiles’ representative and to USA Gymnastics in-house attorney meant they did not receive any notice at all. Further, the e-mail address for the USOPC attorney was to an individual who had left the organization, meaning the USOPC also received no notice.

Continued use of these erroneous e-mails was finally corrected only on 9 August at 5:16 p.m. Paris time, with a hearing already scheduled for the next day! The Court of Arbitration finally got hold of USOPC Counsel Chris McCleary at 10:23 a.m. Colorado Springs time, who questioned why the errors were made when he had received other messages from the Court of Arbitration from Paris a few days earlier.

McCleary demanded – and eventually got – an additional eight hours to respond, but with no movement in the hearing to begin at 8 a.m. Paris time on 10 August. Chiles was not notified of the appeal until later on the 9th, already back in the U.S. and the attorney asked by the USOPC to represent Chiles – in Portland, Maine – had less than three hours to prepare a response in advance of the hearing.

Despite questions raised about the unreliability of the recording of when the U.S. inquiry about Chiles’ score was actually made, the Court of Arbitration panel insisted on using the proffered 64-second time provided by the scoring system, which was not set up to record when inquiries were made. On that basis, it decided to void the added 0.10 points to Chiles’ score and she was moved to fifth place.

However, on the next day – 11 August – new evidence was found that showed otherwise. From the appeal:

“The events of the following minutes are recorded in unedited video and audio material that was recorded by the US production company The Religion of Sports Media, Inc. (RoS) for a documentary film about Simone Biles.

“RoS had three cameras on site (A-Cam, B-Cam and C-Cam). The Footage from RoS includes also the live broadcast from the US television station NBC (video window top left) and from Olympic Broadcasting Services (OBS ) (video window in the center).

“The RoS video also includes a running clock (RoS Clock).”

The video showed Chiles’ score posted at 15:31:52 Paris time and at 15:32:41 – 49 seconds later – U.S. coach Cecile Landi signaled her inquiry:

“Cécile Canqueteau-Landi, who is not seen here in the RoS video, raises an oral objection for the first time on behalf of the complainant. In the RoS video she can be heard saying clearly and audibly: ‘Inquiry for Jordan!’

“One of the two white-clad technical assistants responsible for receiving objections made eye contact with her and nodded to her to to indicate receipt of the verbal inquiry.” (Citations omitted)

The video shows Landi saying “Inquiry for Jordan” again at 57 seconds and 59 seconds after her score was posted. The appeal states:

● “The CAS Ad Hoc Division’s decision not to admit the RoS video also raises concerns with regard to the procedural maxim applicable before the CAS Ad Hoc Division according to which the CAS Panel could have obtained the relevant evidence on its own initiative, and is all the more problematic against the background that the appellant only had a few hours to prepare for the arbitration proceedings.

For this reason, and based on the description of the further development after August 10, 2024, the complainant cannot be accused of having been able to obtain the RoS video earlier.” (Citations omitted)

● “Consequently, the CAS Panel violated the appellant’s right to be heard was violated. This violation inevitably influenced the outcome of the proceedings, since the RoS video provides evidence that Cécile Canqueteau-Landi had made the appellant’s objection of the complainant (Verbal Inquiry) within less than one minute of the announcement of the the announcement of the complainant’s result at the final.”

Complicated? Yes, but cases that get to a national supreme court always are. There’s no timetable on a decision by the Swiss court, but if Chiles wins, the matter will take even longer as a new Court of Arbitration for Sport panel will hear the issues all over again.

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COMMONWEALTH GAMES: Scottish government backs Glasgow for 2026, saving the event for now

Scottish fans will have more to cheer about in 2026 with the Commonwealth Games coming back to Glasgow (Photo: Commonwealth Games Scotland)

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≡ GLASGOW 2026 ≡

“Commonwealth Games Scotland (CGS) has secured support from Scottish and UK governments for its proposed plan for hosting the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.”

That’s the happy announcement from Commonwealth Games Scotland on Tuesday, confirming the last step to allow Glasgow to host the 2026 Commonwealth Games on reduced scale. Also:

“CGS welcomes the support and commitment from both governments which ensures that a 2026 Games in Glasgow has taken a significant step forward to being realised. CGS will now finalise discussions with wider Games stakeholders over the coming weeks and a formal announcement will follow on successful conclusion of the formal process.”

Scottish Health and Social Care Minister Neil Gray said that the award will be a “testament to Glasgow and Scotland’s fantastic reputation for hosting international events.

“In 2026 all eyes will once again be on Glasgow, and I have every confidence that Scotland’s largest city will provide a fitting platform for some of the world’s top athletes.”

The Commonwealth Games Federation – which owns the event and has been desperately looking for a 2026 host – is also thrilled with President Chris Jenkins (WAL) explaining in a statement:

“At the heart of our discussions has been an investment of £100 million from the CGF and the commitment that Glasgow 2026 would not require financial underwriting from either the Scottish or UK Governments. The additional generous contribution of around £2.3 million from Commonwealth Games Australia to the Glasgow concept will further enhance the Games delivery and is a strong sign of the support and excitement for the concept within the wider Commonwealth Games Movement. (£1 = $1.32 U.S.)

“We believe Glasgow 2026 will be an important first step in our commitment to reset and reframe the Commonwealth Games as a co-created, sustainable model that minimises costs, inspires athletes, and excites Hosts and International Federations.

“We will work closely with CGS to positively conclude final stakeholder discussions with the aim of formally announcing Glasgow as the host city for 2026 as soon as possible.”

Commonwealth Games Scotland’s April proposal was a radical slimming of the event:

● “Significantly reduced budget costing £130-150 million, with no significant ask of public funds.

● “Core sport programme of 10-13 sports.

● “Use of existing sporting venues and accommodation options, rather than developing purpose-build facilities.

● “The concept would be funded by £100 million from the Commonwealth Games Federation, with the balance through commercial income (ticketing, sponsorship, broadcasting etc).”

The £100 million from the Commonwealth Games Federation will come from the A$380 million ($256.8 million U.S. or £195.1 million) withdrawal fee paid by the Australian state of Victoria, which abandoned the event in 2023, after signing on to organize it in 2022.

It has now been reported that the Glasgow plan for 2026 will involve just four venue sites and the 10 sports, compared to 17 sports and a cost of £543 million at the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games. The BBC reported that the targeted cost is £114 million.

Observed: Once the formalities are concluded, this is another example of the IOC’s Olympic Agenda 2020 in action: less cost, less complexity, using existing facilities, which was first demonstrated at the transformational Games of the XXIIIrd Olympiad in Los Angeles in 1984.

It’s worth noting that the Commonwealth Games had just 10 sports included on its program as late as 1994, but the event has become inflated in the 2000s, reaching 20 sports at Birmingham (ENG) in 2022. But the Commonwealth Games Federation, recognizing the difficulty in attracting hosts, declared in 2021 that the only required sports in the Games are athletics and swimming.

Look for the Commonwealth Games Federation to sell Glasgow’s concept as the path forward for other possible hosts, with the event’s centennial coming up in 2030.

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PANORAMA: Three IOC candidates offer statements; Russia has 16 sub-18s on doping bans; Malinin does somersault at Lombardia Trophy!

Back to the UWW World Championships for American wrestling star Jordan Burroughs!

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● International Olympic Committee ● Statements were reported from three IOC Presidential candidates on Monday:

Juan Antonio Samaranch (ESP):

“I firmly believe that effective leadership is based on four principles: experience, perspective, judgment and collaboration.

“Experience provides the foundation for understanding. Perspective frames the opportunities and risks in proper context, and judgment provides the wisdom, ethics and critical thinking necessary for good decisions. And the basis for all of this is collaboration within our membership and beyond.

“The IOC needs a president who can articulate a clear vision and lead our movement based on these four principles. And I humbly believe I can serve in that role.”

Sebastian Coe (GBR):

“Olympic sport is fundamental to my DNA. I had the privilege of being a double Olympic champion, I’ve chaired an Olympic and Paralympic Games – London 2012 – from bid, through delivery and legacy implementation.

“I’ve chaired a National Olympic Committee – the BOA – and I’ve led an international federation through some turbulent times, retaining athletics’ position as a cornerstone of the Olympic Games.

“Sport plays a critical role in driving and maintaining the health and fitness of people, young and old, in every country around the world. But it faces significant challenges on multiple fronts.

“The Covid years saw many people struggle through inactivity and many sports organisations suffer through lack of funds. We need to invest more in both over the next decade. A laser-like focus on sport must be the priority for the IOC. I believe I can help achieve this and more. I’ll release a detailed manifesto in the coming weeks so the voting members are able to understand what I stand for and believe in.”

Morinari Watanabe (JPN):

“I want to take on the challenge to transform the IOC.”

● Russia ● The head of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency said she was concerned that 16 athletes are now on suspension, having been found to be doping while younger than 18. Veronika Loginova told the Russian news agency TASS:

“I consider the situation outrageous when more than a dozen and a half underage athletes were found to have banned substances in their samples.

“And this is not just about figure skating, but also a number of other sports. At a recent anti-doping forum in Belarus, the topic was raised that we need to start testing athletes at an even younger age. But I am firmly convinced that these young athletes must first receive anti-doping education in order to clearly understand the danger of using banned substances and methods.

“Moreover, we have recently been increasingly talking about the fact that educational work should be carried out not only with young athletes, but also with their environment. As sad as it is to say, but in almost all cases of violation of anti-doping rules by children, the athlete’s environment is involved, and especially their grandparents.”

Of the 16, two were under 15 years old at the time of sanction, two were under 16, and three were under 17.

Among those serving suspensions is figure skater Kamila Valieva, who was 15 in December 2021 when a doping test turned up a positive for trimetazidine that eventually cost Russia team the Olympic Winter gold for the figure skating Team Event at Beijing 2022. Added Loginova:

“We believe that athletes do not yet fully understand that they cannot take all the medications that are sold in pharmacies and that their parents buy.”

● Breaking ● Breaking was widely embraced at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games in its inaugural appearance, but will not be on the program in 2028.

Breaking will also not hold its previously-scheduled World Championships in 2024, as the World DanceSport Federation posted a notice on Monday that included:

“The World DanceSport Federation (WDSF) regrets to announce the cancellation of the 2024 World Breaking Championship, originally scheduled to take place from 8-9 November in Houston, Texas.

“Local organiser Break Free Worldwide has informed the WDSF that due to unforeseen circumstances the event is unable to take place as planned. …

“The WDSF is now exploring other options in hopes of rescheduling the World Breaking Championships, with new dates and location to be announced in due course.”

● Figure Skating ● He did it! The 2024 men’s World Champion, American Ilia Malinin included a now-legal somersault in his Free Skate program at the Lombardia Trophy in Bergamo (ITA), on the way to a big win in this ISU Challenger Series event.

He scored 312.55 to win easily, with 2022 Olympic runner-up Yuma Kagiyama (JPN: 291.54) second.

The U.S. went 1-2 in the women’s Singles with national champ Amber Glenn scoring 137.18 to edge Sarah Everhardt (132.77) and three-time World Champion Kaori Sakamoto (JPN: 126.41).

● Football ● Tight, amazing quarterfinals at the FIFA Women’s U-20 World Cup in Colombia on Sunday, with two 1-0 finals and the other two going to penalties!

The U.S. women might have been in the wildest game of all, down 1-0 to Germany after 90 minutes had been played, and then going down 2-0 on a Loreen Bender score at 90+2. But Jordynn Dudley scored at 90+8 and Ally Sentnor at 90+9 to send the game to extra time!

It came down to penalties and Sentnor, Leah Klenke and Riley Jackson converted their tries, and the Germans scored once, then failed on three straight – including one save by U.S. keeper Teagan Wy – and the U.S. moved on, 3-1.

The Americans will face North Korea, a 1-0 winner over Brazil on a 49th-minute goal from Un-yong Chae.

In the other semi, Netherlands will face Japan, a 1-0 winner over Spain, which had outscored its opponents by 7-1 over four matches. The Dutch tied Colombia, 2-2, in regulation and won by 3-0 on penalties.

The semis will be played in Cali on Wednesday (18th) and the final is on Sunday (22nd).

● Judo ● New faces were featured at the IJF World Tour’s Grand Prix Zagreb (CRO) that finished Sunday, with Japan leading all nations with four wins.

Kanta Nakano won the men’s +100 kg class, two-time Worlds medalist Wanaka Koga won the women’s 48 kg division, Kisumi Omori won the women’s 52 kg and Kirari Yamaguchi took the title in the women’s 63 kg tournament.

Kazakhstan, France, Hungary and the Netherlands all had two winners.

● Skateboarding ● The massive World Skate Games rolls on in Italy, with the Skateboarding Street final in Rome on Sunday, with Japan placing seven of the eight finalists in the women’s division.

But instead, it was Brazil’s Rayssa Leal – now 16 – who won her second Worlds gold (also in 2022) by scoring the best run of the day (88.43) and then scoring 88.14 and 93.99 on two of her tricks for a 270.56 total.

Tokyo 2020 gold medalist Momji Nishiya scored 269.14 for a close second and Miyu Ito was third at 249.53. Leal has now gone bronze-gold-silver-gold in the last four Worlds.

The men’s Street title went to Japan’s Toa Sasaki, who had the top run at 90.33 and two highest-scoring tricks at 96.50 and 89.81 to win with 276.64, well clear of Argentine Matias Dell Olio (265.18) and J.C. Gonzalez (COL: 258.91). It’s the first Worlds medal for all three.

● Tennis ● World no. 1 Jannik Sinner (ITA), the 2024 U.S. Open champion, announced that he fired his fitness trainer and physiotherapist, both of whom were involved in his doping positives in March.

The Associated Press reported that Clostebol, a banned substance, was absorbed “through a massage from his former physiotherapist, Giacomo Naldi. Sinner said his former fitness trainer, Umberto Ferrara, purchased a spray containing the steroid and gave it to Naldi for a cut on Naldi’s finger. Naldi then treated Sinner while not wearing gloves.”

Sinner’s two positives were reported, but were held to be unintentional and he was reinstated to the ATP Tour losing only the points and prize money from the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, California.

Sinner announced the hiring of Italian Marco Panichi as fitness coach and Ulises Badio (ARG) as physiotherapist; both worked previously worked with superstar Novak Djokovic (SRB).

● Wrestling ● United World Wrestling will hold a 2024 World Championships for the 12 wright classes – four each in men’s Freestyle and Greco-Roman, and women’s Freestyle – which were not on the Olympic program in Paris from 28-31 October in Albania.

Over the weekend, the U.S. World Team Trials were held in Omaha, Nebraska, to select the American team. In the men’s Freestyle, familiar faces earned the right to go to Tirana, as six-time World Champion Jordan Burroughs won the 79 kg class, two matches to none over Chance Marsteller. Three-time World Champion David Taylor swept his series, 2-0, at 92 kg over Zahid Valencia; Taylor is now the head wrestling coach at Oklahoma State!

Two-time Worlds medal winner James Green will represent the U.S. at 70 kg, defeating Alec Pantaleo, 2-0, and 2023 World Champion Vito Araujo defeated Marcus Blaze, 2-0, at 61 kg.

In Greco, Tokyo Olympian Ildar Hafizov won at 63 kg, 2023 Worlds participant Brady Koontz advanced at 55 kg and 44-year-old Aliaksandr Kikiniou – a 2012 Olympian for Belarus – will represent the U.S. at 82 kg. Benjamin Peak, also a Worlds veteran, won at 72 kg.

Jacarra Winchester, the 2019 women’s World Champion at 59 kg, swept her series against Michaela Beck and 2023 Worlds runner-up Macey Kilty won by 10-0 and 12-1 against Aine Drury at 65 kg.

Kylie Welker, a 2021 Worlds team member, won at 72 kg over Yelena Makoyed, 2-0, and Areana Villaescusa will be a first-timer at the Worlds after defeating Amanda Martinez, 2-0.

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PARIS 2024: Chiles files appeal of Olympic Floor Exercise scoring decision to Swiss Tribunal

Olympic champion gymnast Jordan Chiles, competing for UCLA (Photo: UCLA Athletics)

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≡ GYMNASTICS ≡

USA Gymnastics issued this statement by electronic mail at 5:46 p.m. Eastern time Monday:

“USA Gymnastics supports the appeal submitted today by Jordan Chiles at the Swiss Federal Tribunal as we made a collective, strategic decision to have Jordan lead the initial filing.

“USAG is closely coordinating with Jordan and her legal team and will make supportive filings with the court in the continued pursuit of justice for Jordan.”

This procedure is fairly unusual, as national federations and/or National Olympic Committees are often involved in these filings, but not unheard of.

Chiles, a member of the U.S. women’s gold-medal team in Paris, qualified for the Floor Exercise final and was the last athlete to compete in the finals on 5 August. She scored 13.666, placing her fifth overall behind Romanians Ana Barbosu (13.700) and Sabrina Maneca Voinea (13.700).

However, the U.S. coaches asked for an inquiry, claiming that Chiles’ score was understated by 0.10 due to the wrong degree of difficulty had been entered for her routine. This was granted and elevated Chiles to the bronze medal at 13.766, and she received the bronze on the victory stand.

The Romanian gymnastics federation appealed the change to Chiles’ score with the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Paris, which heard the case on 10 August and announced a decision that day that the inquiry made was four seconds past the one-minute limit, based on the available input data, which was admittedly incomplete.

Barbosu was then awarded third place by the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique that day and she was awarded the bronze medal on 16 August in a ceremony in Bucharest.

The Swiss Federal Tribunal is the only appeal option available for Court of Arbitration for Sport decisions and only on very limited grounds explained here. However, one of those grounds concerns errors in procedure that have limited an appellant’s right to be heard.

A lack of notice to USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee caused their participation in the Court of Arbitration to be arranged hastily, and after the hearing, evidence was found that would have confirmed the inquiry by the U.S. to have been made within the one-minute limit.

But the ruling had already been made.

Now, the Swiss Federal Tribunal can dismiss the case, or could remand it for a new hearing to the Court of Arbitration for Sport; it is not likely to make any decision on the merits of the case.

At the same time, the Romanian federation is still pursuing a re-scoring of Maneca Voinea’s score of 13.700, saying that video evidence shows that she did not step out of bounds, incurring a 0.10 deduction; if not, she would have been third at 13.800.

The Romanian federation has also asked for all three athletes to be awarded the bronze medal as a show of sportsmanship. That action can only be taken by the International Olympic Committee.

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COMMONWEALTH GAMES: Glasgow 2026 Games “more likely” now, according to Scottish Health Minister

Glasgow 2014 was so great, why not Glasgow again in 2026? (Photo: Glasgow 2014)

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≡ GLASGOW 2026 ≡

The BBC reported Monday that a Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games is “more likely” now, according to Scottish Member of Parliament Neil Gray, who serves as the Health and Social Care Secretary.

Gray told BBC Radio’s “Good Morning Scotland:”

“Reputationally my worry and the government’s worry has always been that there is going to be a comparison with the incredibly successful 2014 Games, which by any stretch of the imagination both in terms of the performances, the spectacle that it was and the legacy, were going to be hard to match.

“But I’m hopeful that if we are able to recognise that if we are to go ahead, this is a different games, this is a smaller event.

“Fewer sports across fewer sites but with good collaboration we could see something coming forward that is still positive for Glasgow and for Scotland.”

Gray emphasized the government’s review is “making sure there is no financial risks to the government is critically important.”

The scaled-down proposal from Commonwealth Games Scotland is to stage the Games at just four venues, with 10 to perhaps 13 sports, instead of the 20 held at the last Commonwealth Games in 2022 in Birmingham (ENG).

Commonwealth Games Scotland’s plan is to use £100 million provided by the Commonwealth Games Federation and stage the Games for a total of £150 million. (£1 = $1.32 U.S.)

The BBC reported that the British government is willing to provide £2.3 million to help with security costs, provided the Scottish government will match that amount.

Additionally, an amazing offer from Commonwealth Games Australia came Saturday, with Chair Ben Houston explaining:

“As one of the beneficiaries of the settlement with the Victorian Government, we today commit a multi-million pound investment into the Games to be further negotiated with Commonwealth Games Scotland and the Scottish Government.”

Added to sponsorships and ticket sales, Commonwealth Games Scotland believes it can conduct the event without public funding for the Games itself. The Commonwealth Games began in 1930 as the British Empire Games, but lost its 2026 host when the Australian state of Victoria renounced its hosting contract in 2023 and paid A$380 million in negotiated damages.

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ATHLETICS: Winning, waffles and rest the main themes at Diamond League Final in Brussels

An undefeated “dream” season for Olympic women’s discus champ Valarie Allman (Photo: Logan Hannigan-Downs for Diamond League AG)

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≡ SCENE & HEARD ≡

The Wanda Diamond League has concluded for 2024, at the Memorial Van Damme in Brussels, where the winners were happy, some were looking forward to 2025 and everyone seemed to be tired at the end of a stressful, Olympic season.

At the top of the happiness list had to be American Valarie Allman, who won the women’s discus to finish the season at 10-0, with wins at the Paris Olympic Games and in Brussels:

“I feel so happy, I really dreamed of a season like this, I really didn’t think it would be possible to have an undefeated season.

“I just fought really hard and I have such an amazing team and we just made the most of every opportunity. I just have so many great memories of this season. Brussels was the last one and it was the hardest one to prepare for, you know the Diamond League is a set of competitions that we really focus on and value and I got my fourth trophy and I´m just so happy. I knew the competition would be intense being only six competitors.

“And now off season! I really can´t wait for your fries, waffles and chocolate!”

Allman should have a new competitor for U.S. and worldwide honors in 2025 as 2019 World Champion Yaime Perez – the world leader in the women’s discus in 2024 at 73.09 m (239-9) – is in line to become eligible after her defection from Cuba in 2022.She finished third in Brussels and said afterwards:

“It was a good competition, but I didn’t get the result that I wanted. Now I have to get back to training and try to be even stronger and better next season. It was really sad that I couldn’t participate in the Olympics [not yet eligible], because I was in excellent shape and I knew that I could get a good result there.

“Unfortunately it was out of my hands and I couldn’t do anything about it. Mentally it wasn’t easy, but hopefully I will be able to be at the Olympics in L.A. My next goal is now the World Championships next year and after that we will see.”

At the other end of the spectrum was two-time World Champion Chase Jackson of the U.S., who finished second in Brussels:

“It wasn’t a really good competition. The pole vault guys were too close and there was a lot of yelling: Still my performance in these circumstances was OK. I thought that I could throw further, but it didn’t happen.

“It´s the end of the season and I´m really tired. I´m going to take a break now and just do nothing.”

She wasn’t the only one looking forward to time off:

Kirani James (GRN), the London 2012 Olympic men’s 400 m champion and second in Brussels:

“When I came into the home straight I thought that I was going to win, but Charles Dobson [GBR] finished really strong. Congratulations to him.

“Considering the [cold] weather and the fact that it´s the end of the season, I´m satisfied with the result I got tonight. At the end of the season it´s always a little bit difficult to keep the focus, but I always find a way to stay motivated. Now it´s time to rest and not to think about track and field.”

Shanieka Ricketts (JAM), the Paris 2024 Olympic women’s triple jump silver medalist and second in Brussels:

“My performance tonight was not the best. I was hoping to jump further, but still to finish second in the Diamond League final is a good result and a huge accomplishment.

“It was really cold and that made it difficult to keep going during the competition. I was happy that I could hold on to my second place. It was a long season and I felt every muscle and joint in my body.

“Now I will get some rest and go to the beach for a while.”

● Olympic men’s long jump champion Miltiadis Tentoglou (GRE) – third in Brussels – was looking ahead, but maybe to quitting altogether:

I lost today, but I´m not mad. I wasn’t feeling my legs today and the cold is not for me. It´s impressive that Tajay Gayle [JAM] was able to jump that far in these conditions, so I´m not mad that I lost from him.

“But Simon Ehammer (SUI), he is a great athlete but a decathlete. So it hurts to lose from a multi-eventer. Now we start the preparations for the indoor season, unless the change the rules about the board. If so, then I´m quitting long jumping.”

Tentoglou was referring to a proposal being experimented with to replace the solid, 20 cm deep long jump take-off board with a 40 cm take-off “zone.” from which jumps would be measured from the take-off point, not the end of the zone. It’s not coming in soon, having only been tried once in a high-level meet.

Some won’t get much rest, like Olympic men’s shot winner Ryan Crouser, who finished second in Brussels:

“I threw pretty well. It was a very solid performance. Five times over 22 meters. I just did not that big throw in me like the one Leonardo Fabbri had. He threw a lifetime best so it was a big throw from him.

“The level in the shot put was never this high. I definitely pushes me to throw better. I know that when I have an off-day, someone is going to beat me. It keeps me throwing at a high level.

“This was my last competition of the season. Unfortunately there is no vacation waiting for me. I have a lot of obligations with the media and so on.”

One of the big winners in Brussels was Olympic men’s 200 m silver medalist Kenny Bednarek, who defeated gold medalist Letsile Tebogo of Botswana, 19.67 to 19.80:

“I’m feeling great. It´s been a really long season: I got the silver medal in Paris, I had a few wins during the season, also a few losses: But being able to end the season with a victory in the Diamond League Final, gives me a lot of confidence for next year.

“I think execution-wise, I did what I needed to do and I´m happy with the performance. This year I shocked a few people with how fast I was running. I knew that I had it in me, but the last couple of seasons I had some injuries here and there.

“This season, people saw a glimpse of what I can do. It´s not a breakout year, this is something that I was supposed to be doing. Next year I will even be faster and more dangerous.”

While hardly pressed in her women’s invitational 400 m and 200 m wins, American star Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone was thrilled by being offered warm Belgian waffles and Belgian chocolates post-race in the tunnel; check out the priceless video here!

She took a bite of a waffle and said to the camera, “This is the best meet ever!”

McLaughlin-Levrone was also on the mind of principal rival Femke Bol (NED), who won the women’s 400 m hurdles easily in 52.45, then saying afterwards:

“It was really fun tonight. It was a little cold to run, but with the atmosphere in the stadium I forgot all about that. I really enjoyed my race and to be able to win my fourth Diamond League trophy is just amazing.

“Last week, I was a little bit ill. I wasn’t sure if I would compete in Brussels, because it was a really long season and it was a sign of my body that I needed some rest. However, running in Brussels feels like running in front of my home crowd and I didn’t want to miss that.

“Now I am looking forward to a two-week holiday in Sicily.

“I´m really happy that Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone was here to run, even though it was in some side events. I would have preferred running against her on the 400 m hurdles, because she´s such an amazing athlete and I can learn so much from her. Maybe the races in Brussels convinced her now to run more Diamond Leagues next season. It would be great to race against her.”

Next year.

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INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE: Seven declare as candidates for IOC President

Olympic House in Lausanne, Switzerland, home of the International Olympic Committee

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≡ THE BIG PICTURE ≡

The race to replace Germany’s Thomas Bach as the President of the International Olympic Committee is on, with seven candidates – six men and one woman – declaring their interest by Sunday’s deadline:

Prince Feisal Al Hussein (JOR): 60, elected to the IOC in 2010, the younger brother of King Abdullah II. Heavily involved in development of peace-through-sport programs, he is a retired Lt. General of the Jordanian Armed Forces.

Sebastian Coe (GBR): 67, four-time Olympic medalist in track & field (2-2-0) in 1980-84. Elected to the IOC in 2020, tied to his position as the President of World Athletics. Was the Chair of the highly-successful London 2012 Olympic organizing committee

Kirsty Coventry (ZIM): 41, the current Minister of Youth, Sports, Arts and Recreation in Zimbabwe, a seven-time Olympic medalist in swimming (2-4-1) in 2004 and 2008. Elected to the IOC in 2013, deeply involved in athlete issues and is Chair of the Brisbane 2032 Coordination Commission.

Johan Eliasch (GBR): 62, elected to the IOC in 2024, tied to his position as the President of the International Ski & Snowboard Federation. He is a billionaire and Chair of the sports equipment giant Head.

David Lappartient (FRA): 51, elected to the IOC in 2022, tied to his position as the President of the Union Cycliste Internationale. He is also the President of the National Olympic Committee of France and has been the IOC’s liaison with the e-sports community.

Juan Antonio Samaranch (ESP): 64, elected to the IOC in 2001. The son of Juan Antonio Samaranch, the transformational IOC President from 1980-2001. Long experience in sport, with strong ties in China, he was the head of the IOC’s Coordination Commission for the 2022 Olympic Winter Games in Beijing.

Morinari Watanabe (JPN): 65, elected to the IOC in 2018, tied to his position as the President of the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique.

Age is important, since the IOC’s election rules require retirement at age 70, although a term can be extended once, for four years. Also, for those candidates – four of the seven – whose membership is tied to their International Federations, they will cease being IOC members when their presidencies are over, but could be converted to individual membership by a vote of the members.

Geographically:

Africa (1): Coventry (ZIM)
Asia (2): Feisal (JOR), Watanabe (JPN)
Europe (4): Coe (GBR), Eliasch (GBR), Lappartient (FRA), Samaranch (ESP)

The election will take place in March at the IOC Session in Greece. Candidate presentations will take place in January, and the new President will take over in June of 2025.

Observed: There were several others who were thought to be possible candidates, but they’re not running; these seven are. All are highly successful people, including a Jordanian royal family member, a Zimbabwean minister and a British Lord, and are not to be underestimated.

Coventry is in her early 40s, Lappartient is in his early 50s and everyone else is 60 or older, with Coe the oldest at 67. Because of the IOC’s rules on age, it would appear that Coe, Eliasch, Samaranch and Watanabe would be limited to one term of eight years and would be aged-out – even with an extension by the membership – for a second, four-year term. Of course, the rules could be changed.

The speculation will run rampant on who is favored and who is not and most of it will be wrong. What is true is that Bach has overseen a relative youth movement in the membership; of the 111 IOC members, 37 – a third – were elected in 2020 or later. That includes Coe, Eliasch and Lappartient.

So, this is not the “old boys club” of decades past, in fact it’s likely that many members barely know each other.

The IOC has money and is coming off of a highly successful Olympic Games in Paris and has hosts lined up for its Games in 2026-28-30-32-34, so Bach leaves the organization in excellent shape. But the world is a dangerous place today and the next leader is going to have to show that he or she can deal with it.

None of the candidates are obvious choices on that score, and as Bach has said, the high regard in which the Olympic Games is held means that it will continue to be involved in politics.

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PANORAMA: Estanguet not aiming for politics; Bass and L.A. County Supervisors worry on homeless for 2028; IBA loses again in court

Paris 2024 President Tony Estanguet (FRA)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● Tony Estanguet, 46, the head of the Paris 2024 organizing committee, said Friday that he has no plans to enter politics in his immediate future. He said at a news conference:

“For me, it’s not a given that the end result of everything I’ve done is having a political career.

“I think there are other ways of serving your country. I’m convinced that I can take on new challenges other than a political one.”

● Olympic Games 2028: Los Angeles ● Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass reiterated the City’s number one issue looking ahead to the 2028 Olympic Games, and it has nothing to do with sports:

“Well, number one, we have to do whatever we can to eliminate street homelessness. We’ve been able to, for the first time in many, many years, have a 10 percent reduction in street homelessness.

“We need to build large-scale shelters that are regionally based. We have been moving forward with that. We need to do an awful lot more.”

She spoke at the CNBC x Boardroom: Game Plan panel in Santa Monica last Wednesday (11th), expressing appreciation for the success of the Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games:

“I thought they did a beautiful job. What I love the most was the way they involved the entire city. Whether you attended the Games or not, there was some way for you to be connected.”

As for 2028, she added specifics to her prior desire for 2028 to be a “no-car Games”:

“Let me be clear, what we hope to do is for no cars to the venues to the Games. Public transportation to the Games.

“Life goes on in the city. But, again, for those folks who were here in ’84, everybody was terrified that it was going to be terrible. They worked it out. Mayor [Tom Bradley] worked it out. There was none of the technology that we have today.”

“Major international sports competitions like the FIFA World Cup and the Olympic and Paralympic Games impact the local and regional economy, environment, and culture. These events often lead to a surge in the number of tourists and visitors, resulting in elevated spending on hotels, restaurants, and other local businesses.

“The surge in international tourism, and the need to establish adequate security perimeters, will also put pressure on the region to address homeless encampments near the venues and neighborhoods hosting these events. Efforts to address homelessness in advance of international sporting events in other jurisdictions have had uneven results, leading to accusations that governments are busing unhoused individuals to the outskirts of host cities without addressing the underlying of lack of shelter capacity.”

That’s from a 10 September motion by Los Angeles County Supervisors Hilda Solis and Janice Hahn, asking for “a written regional strategy by December 2025, with input from meetings with key stakeholders, to increase and sustain the capacity to address unsheltered homelessness around areas where major sporting events will take place.”

The motion was approved and directed the Chief Executive Office Homeless Initiative to develop the plan in partnership with the City of Los Angeles, the LA28 organizing committee, the Executive Committee on Regional Homelessness Alignment (ECHRA), the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, homeless service providers, local governments, and other relevant stakeholders.

● Anti-Doping ● The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency responded Friday to the full report of former Vaud attorney general Eric Cottier, challenging his report on comments made by experts about whether the 23 Chinese athletes who tested positive for trimetazidine were actually part of a long-term doping scheme.

The USADA statement noted that “Low levels of TMZ is equally consistent with intentional doping,” and “Results oscillating between positive and negative is equally consistent with intentional doping and does not, as WADA has repeatedly stated, establish that it was not intentional doping.”

USADA once again called for more of the details seen by Cottier but not published to be released and “[e]stablish a truly independent review and investigation to include WADA’s actions.”

● Athletics ● Kenyan marathoner Celestine Chepchirchir, 28, a 2:20:10 performer from 2022, is already serving a doping suspension from 26 March 2024 to 25 March 2027, but has had two years added on for using Testosterone. She’s not eligible until 25 March 2029.

● Basketball ● FIBA celebrated the latest class of inductees into its Hall of Fame in a Sunday ceremony in Singapore, including Americans Reggie Miller and coach Dan Peterson.

Miller, a star at UCLA and then with the Indiana Pacers of the NBA, and won an Olympic gold with the U.S. at Atlanta 1996, as well as a FIBA World Championships gold in 1994. He was a five-time NBA All-Star with the Pacers.

Peterson coached at Delaware from 1966-71, but was best known as the highly-successful coach of Virtus Bologna and Olimpia Milano in Italy, winning five Italian league titles and the EuroLeague title with Milano in 1987.

● Boxing ● It was reported that the International Boxing Association appeal to the Swiss Federal Tribunal over its expulsion from the Olympic Movement was dismissed.

The International Olympic Committee removed its recognition of the IBA as the governing body for boxing in 2023; no replacement federation has been named and boxing is not, at present, on the Los Angeles 2028 program.

● Canoe-Kayak ● Two-time Paris bronze medalist Kimberley Woods (GBR) won two silvers at the fourth Canoe Slalom World Cup in Ivrea (ITA), in the women’s C-1 and Kayak Cross, behind 2020 European champ Gabriela Satkova (CZE) and countrywoman Mallory Franklin, the Tokyo 2020 C-1 runner-up.

Olympic women’s Kayak Cross champion Noemie Fox finished third in that event and Stefanie Horn (ITA) won the women’s K-1.

Tokyo 2020 C-1 gold medalist Benjamin Savsek (CZE) won the men’s C-1 and Mateusz Polaczyk (POL) took the K-1.

● Cycling ● Competing for the first time since his Tour de France win, Slovenian star Tadej Pogacar finished seventh in Friday’s Grand Prix Cycliste de Quebec in Canada and then won Sunday’s Grand Prix Cycliste de Montreal.

On Friday, the 201.6 km Quebec City race came down to a mass sprint, won by Australia’s Michael Matthews for the third time in the past five editions, in 4:45:36, with Biniam Girmay (ERI) second and Pogacar in seventh.

Sunday’s Montreal race of 209.1 km was different, with Pogacar attacking with 24 km remaining and winning in 5:28:15. Pello Bilbao (ESP) was 24 seconds back in second and France’s Julian Alaphilippe was third (+0:40). It’s Pogacar’s second win in this race, also in 2022. His next stop will be the UCI World Road Championships in Zurich at the end of the month.

● Rowing ● At the World Rowing Beach Sprint Finals in Genoa (ITA), American Christopher Bak – the 2022 World Champion – dominated the final against Spain’s defending champ Adrian Miramon, leading by only 0.31 at the 250 m mark, but pulling away to a 2:33.32 to 2:43.21 victory for the men’s gold medal.

Zygimantas Galisanskis (LTU) scored a decisive win in the B-final over German Franz Werner, 2:43.87 to 2:52.59 over the 500 m course.

Austria’s Magdalena Lobnig win the women’s final in 2:51.30, ahead of Claire Jamison (GBR: 3:02.93). New Zealand’s Emma Twigg, the Tokyo 2020 Single Sculls champ and Paris runner-up, won the B-final over defending champ Janneke van der Meuten, 2:52.84 to 3:02.63.

The Beach Sprint will be a new event on the Olympic program for 2028.

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COMMONWEALTH GAMES: Comm Games Australia pledges financial support for a Glasgow 2026 Games!

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≡ GLASGOW 2026 ≡

A startling pledge of financial support for a possible Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games has come from the country which renounced that event in 2023: Australia.

The state of Victoria, Australia had contracted to host the 2026 Commonwealth Games in April 2022, but ended its contract in July, paying a negotiated damages fee of A$380 million (about $254.96 million U.S. today).

The Commonwealth Games Federation has been casting about for a host for 2026 and Commonwealth Games Scotland has put forward Glasgow – the 2014 Commonwealth Games host – as a candidate, with a guarantee of £100 million (~$131.25 million U.S.) from the Commonwealth Games Federation, and a total budget of just £150 million.

Only 10-13 sports would be contested – vs. 20 at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham (ENG) – with venues clustered in just four sites.

However, the Scottish and Glasgow governments have been reluctant to give approval, recognizing that they will have responsibilities for security and related costs.

On Saturday, Commonwealth Games Australia President Ben Houston promised “a multi-million pound investment that will support making Glasgow 2026 a reality.”

Said Houston:

“[W]e have every confidence in the model proposed by Commonwealth Games Scotland.

“As one of the beneficiaries of the settlement with the Victorian Government, we today commit a multi-million pound investment into the Games to be further negotiated with Commonwealth Games Scotland and the Scottish Government.

“Now is not the time to walk away from a Games that has inspired for generations, and we look forward to working collaboratively toward an outcome that benefits Commonwealth nations, their athletes, coaches and fans.

“The Commonwealth Games are at the heart of Australia’s performance pathway, often providing the launch pad for continued and ongoing success by Australian athletes.

“They are irreplaceable in terms of providing global competition and, in the absence of an Australian host, it is in the interests of Australian sport that we make an overseas Games a reality.”

After Victoria’s exit, Commonwealth Games Australia tried, but could not find another city or region in the country to take on the event. Houston asked for a meeting with the Scottish government on the issue, which will reportedly take place this week.

Chris Jenkins (WAL), the head of the Commonwealth Games Federation, welcomed the unexpected gift:

“We commend Commonwealth Games Australia (CGAus) for making this generous multi-million-pound offer to further enhance and support the Glasgow 2026 ambitions.

“It demonstrates the tremendous support from around the Commonwealth and the overwhelming desire to have a Games take place in 2026.

“The Commonwealth Games Federation fully endorses the innovative, cost-effective sustainable concept Commonwealth Games Scotland (CGS) has developed for the 2026 Commonwealth Games, and unreservedly believes that Scotland and the CGS team, with its significant experience in, and successful global reputation for organising major sports events, is more than able to deliver a world-class event in such a short period of time.”

Time is running out to make a 2026 Commonwealth Games happen, an event which was first held in 1930 as the British Empire Games. No bidder for a 2030 centennial Games has come forward either.

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ATHLETICS: Olympic marathoner Rebecca Cheptegei laid to rest with military honors in Uganda

Funeral procession for Ugandan marathoner Rebecca Cheptegei on 14 September 2024. (Photo: Uganda Athletics Federation)

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≡ SPOTLIGHT ≡

Ugandan women’s marathoner Rebecca Cheptegei was laid to rest on Saturday in a military ceremony on her father’s homestead in Bukwo, Uganda.

A gold medalist at the 2021 World Mountain & Trail Running Championships, she was the 44th-place finisher in the Paris Olympic Marathon on 11 August. She returned to her training base in western Kenya, and was attacked at her home on 1 September by her former partner, Dickson Ndiema Marangach, over a dispute over a piece of land Cheptegei had purchased in Kenya.

Marangach doused her with gasoline and set her on fire, burning himself in the process as well. Cheptegei was rushed to a local hospital and then transferred to a hospital in Eldoret with burns over 80% of her body; she passed away on 5 September, causing an outrage in a country already with a high rate of violence against women.

Marangach was also hospitalized, with burns over 30% of his body and died on 9 September.

The Cheptegei family received the body on Friday (13th), with dozens of activists against domestic violence accompanying at the morgue of the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret. She was 33.

The Associated Press reported that Saturday’s burial in the Bukwo district, near the Kenyan border, was attended by several thousand mourners:

“Military officers played a prominent role in the funeral because Cheptegei held the rank of sergeant in Uganda’s army, said military spokesman Brig. Felix Kulayigye, adding that she deserved a ‘gun salute that befits her rank.’

Ajilong B. Modestar, the Bukwo resident district commissioner, said “As a nation, we are indeed in a black and dark moment. We condemn in the strongest terms the manner in which Rebecca died. … We should not continue battering women in this manner.”

Cheptegei leaves behind two children, from a different relationship, ages nine and 11.

A 2022 survey of Kenyan women in relationships or married showed 41% had experienced abuse by their current or most recent partner, with the Cheptegei death only the latest incident demonstrating the need for reform.

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PARIS 2024: Rapturous parade celebrates athletes and organizers, as record 12,132,647 tickets sold for Olympic and Paralympic Games

Paris 2024 medalists celebrated under the Arc de Triomphe (Photo: City of Paris)

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≡ THE BIG PICTURE ≡

The City of Paris gave one last salute to its heroes of the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games with a parade under blue skies down the Champs-Elysees, ending at the Arc de Triomphe on Saturday.

A crowd estimated at 70,000 welcomed 139 French medal winners from both Games, including swimming hero Leon Marchand and iconic judoka Teddy Riner. Paris 2024 President Tony Estanguet, members of the organizing committee, volunteers and public-sector workers were also in the parade.

French President Emmanuel Macron, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo and many other officials were present, with Macron bestowing the Legion d’Honneur or the National Order of Merit to 120 athletes on-site and 187 in all.

A concert with multiple artists from the Olympic and Paralympic ceremonies followed to signal an end to France’s summer of sport in a final event which was not part of the Games plan, but created to celebrate the amazing success of the events.

The parade started at 4 p.m., with the protocol elements from 6:30 to 8 and the concert from 9-11 p.m. It was broadcast live on national television with an audience estimated at more than 10 million.

The International Olympic Committee participated and awarded the Olympic Cup – inaugurated to honor communities and organizations which further the Movement – to the people of France. Said IOC President Thomas Bach (GER):

“This summer, you, the people of France truly took the Olympic Games to your hearts. You created an incomparable atmosphere in the streets of Paris and all over France. …

“You embraced the Olympic values. You fell in love with the Olympic Games, and we fell in love with all of you. Thank you, France!”

A new set of giant Olympic Rings was inaugurated at the Pont d’Iena, in front of the Eiffel Tower, as a new monument to the Games.

Paris 2024 chief Estanguet told a news conference on Friday that a total of 12,132,647 tickets were sold for the Olympic and Paralympic Games combined, roughly 95% of capacity for both events.

The Olympic Games saw a record 9.56 million tickets sold, far surpassing the old high of 8.3 million for the Atlanta 1996 Games. The Paralympic Games, which had sold only about 40% of its tickets at the time the Olympics started, finished strong with 2.58 million sold, second only to London 2012.

Estanguet was asked what he would advise the 2028 Los Angeles organizers:

“The main message would be to be audacious and to build on the specificities and the strength of their territory.

“It’s up to them to define what is the main strength of LA 28 and to really be audacious.”

NBC announced strong viewership of the Paralympic Games, with 15.4 million total viewers across the 12-day event, averaging 1.2 million per day on NBC and Peacock.

The 1.2 million daily average is up 31% over the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics (888,000). Live coverage daily on USA Network averaged 162,000, up 113% vs. NBC’s daytime cable coverage for Tokyo 2020.

The top U.S. markets for Paralympic viewing were New Orleans (1.69 rating), Ft. Myers (1.37) and Greenville-Spartanburg (1.34), followed by Indianapolis (1.24) and Pittsburgh and Louisville at 1.21.

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ATHLETICS: Big Diamond League Final 200 m wins for Bednarek, Brown and McLaughlin-Levrone, but Crouser upset in shot put

No doubt about it: a win for “Kung Fu” Kenny Bednarek over Olympic champ Letsile Tebogo in the Diamond League Final 200 m (Omega timing photo).

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≡ DIAMOND LEAGUE FINAL ≡

/Updated/Conditions were once again chilly – about 58 degrees F – for Saturday’s finale of the Memorial Van Damme and the Diamond League Final for 2024, with prize money of $30,000-12,000-7,000-4,000-2,500-2,000-1,500-1,000 on the line for the top eight places.

As expected, the 200 m was a big story, but starting with the men.

Olympic gold-silver winners Letsile Tebogo (BOT) and Kenny Bednarek of the U.S. hooked up again in the men’s 200 m, with Bednarek inside in lane six and Tebogo in seven. They were even off the start, but Bednarek edged ahead on the turn and had the lead on the straight.

This time he held on and won in 19.67 (+0.7) to 19.80 for Tebogo and 19.97 for Dominican Alexander Ogando, who passed Courtney Lindsey of the U.S. late. Lindsey and teammate Fred Kerley were 4-5, both in 20.21, with fellow American Kyree King sixth in 20.45.

It was Bednarek’s first win in six tries against Tebogo, including three losses in 2024, in Paris, and Diamond League seconds in Chorzow and Zurich. Is this the breakthrough Bednarek, 25, has been waiting for? We’ll have to wait to 2025 to find out.

Kenyan Ferdinand Omanyala easily won the men’s invitational 100 m at 10.07 (0.0).

Although she had some doubts after Friday’s invitational 400 m win, U.S. superstar Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone lined up for the invitational 200 m and swept into the lead coming out of the turn and raced to a comfortable win in 22.40 (wind: +0.1 m/s). It’s her third-fastest time ever at the distance. She was well clear of Gina Bass Bittaye (GAM: 23.01) and Belgium’s Delphine Nkansa (23.03). American Lynna Irby-Jackson finished fifth in 23.34.

In the Diamond League Final of the women’s 200 m, Paris bronze medalist Brittany Brown was in the lead off the turn and won easily in 22.20 (+0.2), with Britain’s European runner-up Daryll Neita second in 22.45. Anavia Battle of the U.S. passed Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith (CIV) late to get third, 22.61 to 22.81 and then Ta Lou-Smith was disqualified for a lane violation. American Tamara Clark was sixth in 23.01.

It was down to 52 F by the time of the much-awaited men’s 800 m, featuring Paris medalists Emmanuel Wanyonyi (KEN), Marco Arop (CAN) and Djamel Sedjati (ALG), and Arop had the lead at the bell in 49.28. He continued with Wyclife Kinyamal (KEN) and Sedjati and Wanyonyi chasing. Coming into the home straight, Arop had the lead, but Wanyonyi was coming hard and got to the line first in 1:42.70, with Sedjati also passing Arop for second, 1:42.86 to 1:43.25.

Wanyonyi wasn’t perfect this season, winning six of eight meets, but he was there in the biggest moments and had an astounding four races in the 1:41s. He’s 20, by the way.

In the men’s 400 m hurdles, Jamaica’s Roshawn Clarke had the early lead on 2022 World Champion Alison dos Santos (BRA), with Abderrahmane Samba (BRN) – sixth in Paris – chasing. But dos Santos took the lead onto the straightaway and pulled away to win at 47.93, with Clarke fading to fifth (49.08) and Samba getting second at 48.20. American CJ Allen was fourth at 48.68.

In the men’s high jump, only European champ Gianmarco Tamberi (ITA) and Ukraine’s Oleh Dororshchuk made 2.28 m (7-5 3/4), and both made 2.31 m (7-7) on their first attempts. But only Tamberi could master 2.34 m (7-8), on his third try and got the win. American Shelby McEwen, the Paris runner-up, finished sixth, clearing only 2.12 m (6-11 1/2).

Portugal’s Tokyo Olympic champ and Paris runner-up Pedro Pablo Pichardo wasted no time taking charge in the men’s triple jump at 17.23 m (56-6 1/2) in the first round and then improving to 17.33 m (56-10 1/4) in round two. Germany’s 2016 European champ Max Hess got close at 17.20 m (56-5 1/4) in round three, but could not do better. Hugues Fabrice Zango (BUR), the 2023 World Champion, reached 17.05 m (55-11 1/4) in the final round for third.

In the men’s shot, European champ Leonardo Fabbri found another big throw in his career tear, getting a lifetime best, national record and meet record of 22.98 m (75-4 3/4) in the first round. Fifth in Paris, Fabbri remains at no. 5 on the all-time list.

So the chase was on and triple Olympic champion Ryan Crouser of the U.S. moved into second at 22.55 m (73-11 3/4) in round two, and got closer at 22.79 m (74-9 1/4) in round four. But that was it; Fabbri defeated Crouser for only the second time in 22 meetings, with both wins coming this year.

Paris bronze winner Rajindra Campbell (JAM) got third at 21.96 m (72-0 3/4) and American Payton Ottderdahl was fourth at 21.48 m (70-5 3/4).

Two-time World Champion Anderson Peters (GRB) took the early lead in the men’s javelin at 87.87 m (288-3) in round one, with Paris runner-up Neeraj Chopra (IND) close at 86.82 m (284-10) and then within one cm at 87.86 m (288-3) in round three. That’s the way it ended, with Peters also throwing 87.86 m on his final try!

Germany’s 2022 European champ Julian Weber was third at 85.97 m (282-0).

All three Paris medal winners – Faith Kipyegon (KEN), Jess Hull (AUS) and Georgia Bell (GBR) were in the women’s 1,500 m, with Kipyegon taking the lead after 1,000 m. Closest were Ethiopians Diribe Welteji – fourth in Paris – and Freweyni Hailu, then Hull. Kipyegon held the lead and could not be challenged and won in 3:54.75, with Welteji close behind at 3:55.25 and Hull coming up for third in 3:56.99. Hailu was fourth in 3:57.26 and Bell was seventh in 3:58.95.

Olympic champions Winfred Yavi (BRN: Paris) and Peruth Chemutai (UGA: Tokyo) had the lead in the women’s Steeple after 1,000 m, with Paris bronzer Faith Cherotich (KEN) right behind. Cherotich and Chemutai were 1-2 after 2,000 m, and that way at the bell. Cherotich took the lead with 200 m to go and Yavi closing, but the Kenyan held on and won in 9:02.36 to 9:02.87 over Yavi, with Chemutai third in 9:07.60.

Gabrielle Jennings of the U.S. was fifth at 9:09.89, with Val Constien seventh (9:13.31) and Olivia Markezich ninth (9:27.98).

All eyes were on Olympic 5-10 champ Beatrice Chebet (KEN) in the women’s 5,000 m, who had the lead by 1,600 m. She led through 3,000 m in 8:31.09 with Paris seventh-placer Medina Eisa (ETH) closest. But by 3,600 m, Chebet was firmly in charge and ran away to win in 14:09.82, just behind her world-leading 14:09.52 win in Zurich. Eisa (19) was second in 14:21.89, a World U-20 Record and teammate Foyten Tesbaye third with a lifetime best of 14:28.53. American Karissa Schweizer was eighth with a seasonal best of 14:36.88.

Tokyo Olympic champion Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (PUR) got to the front of the women’s 100 m hurdles race by midway and raced away to a decisive 12.38 win (+0.4). The race behind her was tight between Paris fourth-placer Nadine Visser (NED) and Jamaica’s world leader Ackera Nugent, with Visser timed in 12.54 for second and Nugent third in 12.55. American Grace Stark was fifth in 12.59 and Tonea Marshall was sixth (12.71).

Olympic silver and bronze winner Anna Cockrell (USA) and Femke Bol (NED) featured in the women’s 400 m hurdles, but American Shamier Little – a two-time Worlds silver medalist – was at or near the front through the first half of the race. But around the turn, Bol came on and routed the field in 52.45. Cockrell came up late for second in 53.71, and Shiann Salmon (JAM) passed Little for third. 53.99 to 55.26.

There were five remaining in the women’s vault when the bar went to 4.80 m (15-9) and two-time World Indoor champ Sandi Morris of the U.S. popped over on her first try to take the lead. World leader Molly Caudery (GBR) and Olympic winner Nina Kennedy (AUS) and bronzer Alysha Newman (CAN) made it on their second attempts. But Kennedy was the only one to clear 4.88 m (16-0) and won, with Morris second and Newman third on misses.

Italy’s European runner-up Larisa Iapichino took the lead in the women’s long jump at 6.77 m (22-2 1/2) in round one, and then 6.80 m (22-3 3/4) in round two. Olympic bronze winner Jasmine Moore moved up to second at 6.61 m (21-8 1/4) in round three, but was passed by Olympic teammate Monae Nichols – sixth in Paris – at 6.68 m (21-11) in round four.

Quanesha Burks of the U.S. was fourth at 6.56 m (21-6 1/4).

/Updated/Olympic champ Haruka Kitaguchi took control of the women’s javelin with her 65.08 m (213-6) heave in the second round, but lost the lead to Serbia’s Adriana Vilagos, the 2024 European silver winner, with a sixth-round throw at 65.23 m (214-0). But Kitaguchi responded and won with a final toss of 66.13 m (216-11) in round six! American Maggie Malone-Hardin got third at 62.40 m (204-9).

The Diamond League has concluded, but there are more meets. Of interest is the Athlos NYC, a new, six-event, all-women’s meet in New York on 26 September.

(Thanks to readers Olivier Bourgoin and Alan Mazursky for corrections!)

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ATHLETICS: McLaughlin-Levrone runs 49.11, big wins for Ingebrigtsen, Serem, Alfred, Allman in Diamond League Final day one

Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen wins the Diamond League Final 1,500 m in Brussels (Photo: Diamond League AG)

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≡ DIAMOND LEAGUE FINAL ≡

Chilly, damp conditions in the mid-50s held back performances at the Diamond League Final at the Memorial Van Damme in Brussels, but there was a lot on the line, as the Diamond League Final pays $30,000-12,000-7,000-4,000-2,500-2,000-1,500-1,000 for the top eight places.

In the much-awaited invitational 400 m, U.S. star Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone – in full-length tights – was in charge from the start and led from wire-to-wire, winning in 49.11, way ahead of Jamaican Stacey Ann Williams (50.53). It was McLaughlin-Levrone’s first race since the Paris Olympic Games and her world-record win in the 400 m hurdles.

Her race was followed by the Diamond League women’s 400, and Olympic winner Marileidy Paulino (DOM) was also in control, expanding her lead over the last 200 m and winning in 49.45, well ahead of American Alexis Holmes, who roared up from fifth at the turn to get second in 50.32. Ireland’s Rhasidat Adeleke (IRL) ended up third in 50.96.

Bahrain’s Salwa Eid Naser, second in the race, was disqualified for a lane infringement.

Said McLaughlin-Levrone afterwards:

“Running the 400 m at the end of the season definitely hurts a little bit more and I felt the cramping. That is why I chose to run with long pants, just to be safe. But I felt strong during the race. Now we’re gonna go home, rest a bit and decided tomorrow to run the 200 m or not.”

Christian Coleman of the U.S., the 2019 World Champion, got the best start – as usual – in the men’s 100 m, ahead of countryman and 2022 World Champion Fred Kerley and Jamaica’s Ackeem Blake. But Blake came hard in the final third, got the lead and won cleanly in 9.93 (wind: +0.1 m/s), with Coleman at 10.00 and Kerley at 10.01. American Brandon Hicklin was seventh in 10.13.

Blake, the World Indoor 60 m bronzer this year, posted only his third 100 m of the season, out of 14 starts!

Botswana’s Busang Kebinatshipi took the early lead in the men’s 400 m, followed closely by Vernon Norwood of the U.S. and London 2012 Olympic champ Kirani James (GRN). Norwood got to the front around the turn and was leading James in the home straight, when Charles Dobson (GBR) turned on the jets from fourth to win in 44.49, over James (44.63) and Paris bronze winner Muzala Samukonga (ZAM: 44.69). Norwood faded to fourth in 44.78 and Kebinatshipi to seventh (46.43).

Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen didn’t medal in the Paris men’s 1,500 m and had been out-dueled in some earlier Diamond League meets, but not this one. He took over by the 1,000 m mark and ran away from a good field in 3:30.37. He was completely in command by the bell and finished in 54.28.

He was tracked most closely by 2019 World Champion Timothy Cheruiyot (KEN), 11th in Paris, who was second by 1,200 m and finished there in 3:30.93, just out-leaning a final charge from Paris winner Cole Hocker of the U.S. (3:30.94). France’s Azeddine Habz ran up on the straight to get fourth (3:31.97) as American Yared Nuguse – third in Paris – faded to sixth in 3:32.30.

The question in the men’s Steeple was could anyone beat Paris Olympic champ Soufiane El Bakkali (MAR)? World no. 2 Amos Serem (KEN) and Paris bronze winner Abraham Kibiwot (KEN) were 1-2 at 2,000 m, with El Bakkali moving up to third. Serem was nicely in front at the bell, with El Bakkali and Kibiwot chasing, but Serem hung on and won in 8:06.90, with El Bakkali well back at 8:08.60 and Mohamed Jhinaoui (TUN) coming late for third in 8:09.68. It was El Bakkali’s first loss of the season, and first since 2021 (!), ending a streak of 14 straight finals wins.

A pack of seven was leading the men’s 5,000 m at the 3,000 m mark in 7:42.07, with world no. 2 Yomif Kejelcha (ETH) in front and world leader Hagos Gebrhiwet (ETH) moving up. In fact, Ethiopia was 1-2-3-4 by 4,000 m, with Telahun Bekele leading, and Tokyo 10,000 m gold winner Selemon Barega in third.

Aregawi had the lead at 4,000, and Kenyan Nicholas Kipkorir had come up the challenge, but Aregawi, Bekele and Kejelcha were 1-2-3 at the bell. Aregawi held the lead with 200 to go and into the straight and fought off a late surge from Gebrhiwet to win in a seasonal best of 12:43.66, with Gebrhiwet at 12:44.25. Bekele passed Kipkorir to get third with a season’s best, 12:45.63 to 12:49.59. Aregawi’s final lap was covered in 54.08.

Paris silver winner Daniel Roberts of the U.S. was out best in the men’s 110 m hurdles, but the race was close, with European champ Lorenzo Simonelli (ITA), Americans Cordell Tinch and Freddie Crittenden and France’s Sasha Zhoya all in the mix. Roberts fell back and Simonelli and Tinch were passed over hurdle nine by Zhoya, who won in 13.16 (+0.4). Simonelli got up for second in 13.22, and Crittenden passed Tinch for third, 13.24 to 13/27. Roberts ended up eighth in 13.44, behind fellow American Eric Edwards (13.35).

Only Paris silver and bronze winners Sam Kendricks (USA) and Emmanouil Karalis (GRE) and Belgium’s Ben Broeders cleared 5.82 m (19-1) in the men’s vault, with world-record holder Mondo Duplantis (SWE) passing. At 5.92 m (19-5), only Duplantis cleared, with Karalis, Broeders and Kendricks finishing 2-3-4.

Now Duplantis went for a meet record of 6.11 m (20-0 1/2) and made in on his first try, then retired. A long season.

The men’s long jump saw Jamaica’s Tajay Gayle, the 2019 World Champion who did not make it out of qualifying in Paris, reached 8.28 m (27-1 3/4) in round two and no one could catch him. No one else even got to 8 m until round six, when Olympic champ Miltiadis Tentoglou (GRE) got out to 8.15 m (26-9), only to be edged by Swiss Simon Ehammer, who jumped 8.16 m (26-9 1/4).

Australia’s Matthew Denny won the Olympic bronze in Paris and he made everyone chase him in the men’s discus in Brussels, unleashing a national record of 69.96 m (229-6) in the first round! No one was within 5 m through three rounds, then Lukas Weisshaidinger (AUT) woke up in round four at 66.52 m (218-3) to move to second and Paris silver medalist Mykolas Alekna (LTU) reached 68.86 m (225-11) to move into second in round five. And that’s how it ended, with Denny getting his second national record of the season.

The fourth women’s 100 m match-up of the year between Paris Olympic champ Julien Alfred (LCA) and 2023 World Champion Sha’Carri Richardson of the U.S. was all about Alfred. She got out well, along with Britain’s Dina Asher-Smith and American Tamari Davis, but Alfred was pulled away as clear winner at 10.87 (+0.2), followed by Asher-Smith (10.92) and Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith (CIV: 11.05), who moved up after 60 m. Davis faded to seventh at 11.21 and Richardson, who got a bad start, was eighth in 11.23. She and Alfred are 2-2 on the season. 

Mary Moraa, Kenya’s 2023 World Champion and Paris bronze winner, took command of the women’s 800 m at the bell, with Jamaica’s Natoya Goule-Toppin chasing. On the backstraight, British stars Jemma Reekie and Georgia Bell came up and Bell got to the front at 600 m.

But Moraa cruised back into the lead onto the straight and motored home with a seasonal best of 1:56.56 to win, to 1:57.50 for Bell – the Paris 1,500 m bronzer – in second. Goule-Toppin passed Reekie and got third in 1:58.94; Reekie finished fifth in 1:59.13.

Paris Olympic medalists Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR: gold), Nicola Olyslagers (AUS: silver) and Iryna Gerashchenko (UKR: co-bronze) quickly separated themselves in the women’s high jump, clearing 1.92 m (6-3 1/2). At 1.95 m (6-4 3/4), Mahuchikh sailed over right away, and Olyslagers on her second, but Gerashchenko missed all three and was third. Now to 2.01 m (6-7), but neither could clear, so Mahuchikh claimed another win, on misses.

Cuba’s Leyanis Perez, the World Indoor silver winner in 2024, got out to 14.37 m (47-1 3/4) for the early lead in the women’s triple jump, ahead of Paris silver medalist Shanieka Ricketts (JAM: 14.16 m/46-5 1/2). Ricketts improved in the final round to 14.22 m (46-8), but had to settle for second. Paris bronze winner Jasmine Moore of the U.S. was fifth at 13.89 m (45-7).

World Indoor champion Sarah Mitton (CAN) was the only one to reach 20 m in the women’s shot, at 20.25 m (66-5 1/4) in round three, with two-time World Champion Chase Jackson of the U.S. getting close at 19.90 m (65-3 1/2) in round five. Olympic champ Yemisi Ogunleye (GER) managed 19.72 m (64-8 1/2) for third.

In the women’s discus, Olympic champ Valarie Allman of the U.S. got out in front in the first round at 66.47 m (218-1) and then improved in round three to 68.47 m (224-7) and won easily. Bin Feng, China’s 2022 World Champion, reached 67.49 m (221-5) in the final round to get second, with world leader Yaime Perez (CUB) third at 66.96 m (219-8).

Saturday’s session will be shown live only on the Peacock streaming service, from 1:53 p.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern. There will be replays of Friday’s meet on CNBC on Saturday from 12-2 p.m. Eastern and Saturday’s session on Sunday from 1-3 p.m. Eastern.

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PANORAMA: Carrefour sold 4.3 mil Paris souvenirs during Games; U.S. U-20s move on at FIFA Women’s World Cup; Flavor Flav gifts Chiles

Carrefour says it sold a LOT of Paris 2024 Phryges during the Games! (Image: Paris 2024)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● The Carrefour Group reported that 4.3 million Paris 2024 souvenir items were sold in its regular and temporary stores, including 560,000 versions of the Phryges mascots.

Chief executive Alexandre Bompard explained, “We had an increase in activity and customers when the Games started. The figures for shops, particularly in the Olympic zones, increased by 25%.” Tote bags, water bottles and school supply items also did well.

A preliminary Paris tourism report for the Paralympic Games, at least through 6 September, showed mostly local interest, with an increase of French day-trippers into Paris of 9.7% over the same period in 2023.

Air travel into France was projected to be down by 6.9% during the Paralympic period vs. 2023, but overall traffic in September is predicted to be 1.1% higher (the Paralympics ended on 8 September). Hotel occupancy was seen as comparable to 2023.

● Doping ● U.S. Anti-Doping Agency chief Travis Tygart commented on WADA’s Cottier report, released Thursday, including:

“While WADA management wants to close the book on this scandal regarding 23 positive TMZ cases by Chinese swimmers, the full report released today by WADA’s investigator only validates our concerns and even raises new questions that must be answered. … the information that Mr. Eric Cottier did gather clearly shows that China did not follow the rules, and that WADA management did nothing about it.”

Tygart added: “The solution to these concerns is an independent investigation where the scope and the investigator are identified by neutral third parties and a proper results management process to bring finality to these positive tests.”

The Associated Press reported that WADA connected a well-respected doping-control scientist with the Russian Anti-Doping Agency for an experiment that might have shown the possibility of a defense offered for Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva for her December 2021 doping positive for Trimetazidine.

WADA Director-General Olivier Niggli (SUI) texted Gunter Younger (GER), the head of WADA’s investigations unit, that the agency “should absolutely not be involved in any way” with the scientists’ work for the Russian Anti-Doping Agency. The test was apparently completed, but not publicly revealed, and Valieva was eventually given a four-year ban and disqualified from the 2022 Olympic Winter Games figure skating Team event.

WADA commented to the Russian news agency TASS:

“The Associated Press article contains a number of factual inaccuracies, the experiment was conducted during the first instance proceedings by an independent expert on behalf of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA).

“Therefore, it was not for WADA to decide whether and how the results of this experiment could be used by RUSADA, the organization that commissioned it. The experiment was not part of the WADA investigation, there was no undue interference by WADA management in the work of I&I, which is operationally independent.

“WADA’s Director General noted that WADA should not be involved in any way in the preparation of reports commissioned by the parties in the first instance, not least given WADA’s right to appeal.”

● Athletics ● A new award in honour of legendary US sprinter Jesse Owens will be presented to two outstanding young athletes at the Wanda Diamond League Final from 2024 onwards.

“The Jesse Owens Rising Star Award will honour the best performing male and female athletes aged 23 or under at each Wanda Diamond League Final, starting with this year’s edition in Brussels on September 13th-14th.

“The award, a collaboration between the Owens family, the Jesse Owens Foundation and the Wanda Diamond League, aims to celebrate young talent in athletics and honour the legacy of one of global track and field’s most iconic figures.”

The winners will determined by a points system comparing performances across events and the winners will receive a bronze statuette of Owens designed by Belgian sculptor Jan Desmarets. Owens – born 12 September 1913 – was 23 when he won his iconic four golds at the Berlin 1936 Olympic Games.

In addition, two oak trees will be planted in the Diamond League Final host city, reflecting the oak saplings given to Owens and all other Berlin 1936 gold-medal winners by the Olympic organizing committee.

Grand Slam Track announced that U.S. sprinters Fred Kerley – the 2022 World 100 m champ and Paris 2024 100 m bronze winner – and Kenny Bednarek – the Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024 silver medalist – have signed on.

The Athletics Integrity Unit announced multiple sanctions on Wednesday.

These included Eritrean women’s distance runner Nazret Weldu, fourth at the 2022 World Championships women’s marathon was suspended for 20 months from 17 June 2024 for “whereabouts” failures; she has a lifetime best of 2:20:29 from 2022.

● Football ● At the FIFA Women’s U-20 World Cup in Colombia, the U.S. advanced to the quarterfinal round with a 3-2 extra-time win over Mexico in Bogota on Wednesday.

There was plenty of action in the first half, with Pietra Tordin scoring for the U.S. in the 10th minute, but Mexico tied in the 22nd on a Val Vargas score from the right side. The Americans went up again, 2-1, thanks to a 27th-minute goal by Ally Sentnor on a 24-yard liner from outside the box to the left side of the Mexican goal.

But it was 2-2 after Montserrat Saldivar scored on a shot from the left side that touched defender Heather Gilchrist and into the net.

After no goals in the second half, it was Jordan Dudley who got the game-winner in the 97th from the right side of the Mexican goal, ripping a shot over the keeper’s head for what turned out to be the game-winner.

The American women will face Germany, a 5-1 winner on Thursday against Argentina, on Sunday in Cali. Also in the upper bracket, Brazil needed extra time to defeat Cameroon, 3-1, and North Korea sailed by Austria, 5-2.

Spain eliminated Canada in the lower bracket, 2-1 and Colombia defeated South Korea, 1-0. They will play the winners of the late matches on Thursday, also on Sunday.

● Gymnastics ● The continuing saga of the Paris Olympic women’s Floor Exercise bronze medal saw a new twist on Wednesday at the MTV Video Music Awards in Elmont, New York, as rap star Flavor Flav awarded American gymnastics Olympic Team gold medalist Jordan Chiles a specially-created bronze clock necklace.

The New York Post reported Flav – who wears a signature clock necklace – telling Chiles, who was awarded the Floor bronze at the Games before a Court of Arbitration for Sport ruling moved her to fifth place:

“I know they’re trying to take your medal away from you but you know what, I got you something that they can’t take away from you.

“That’s why I wanted to turn this into an Olympic moment, Jordan. And guess what else, too? I got your prize money, too. I got that for you. I just wanted to surprise you with that.”

(U.S. bronze medal winners receive $15,000 from the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee; Flavor Flav is a sponsor of the U.S. women’s water polo team.)

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ATHLETICS: Diamond League Final on Friday with 19 Olympic champs; Alfred-Richardson, Hocker-Nuguse-Ingebrigtsen on tap

Yared Nuguse of the U.S. won this Zurich showdown with Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR) and Cole Hocker (USA). They'll meet again in Brussels! (Photo: Diamond League AG)

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≡ DIAMOND LEAGUE ≡

The finale of the Wanda Diamond League for 2024 takes place on Friday and Saturday in Brussels at the Memorial Van Damme meet, with added races for U.S. star Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone on both days.

There is more money at stake: the Diamond League Final pays $30,000-12,000-7,000-4,000-2,500-2,000-1,500-1,000 for the top eight places. However, entries must have qualified during the season, so some of the season’s stars are not competing.

On Friday, Olympic gold medalists will be in action in nine events:

Men/1,500 m: Another match-up of Paris winner Cole Hocker (USA), bronze medalist Yared Nuguse of the U.S. and Tokyo 2020 gold medalist (and Paris 5,000 m winner) Jakob Ingebrigtsen of Norway.

Men/Steeple: Morocco’s Soufiane El Bakkali, now a two-time Olympic gold medalist, faces world no. 2s Amos Serem (KEN: 8:02.36) and Abraham Seme (ETH: 8:02.36).

Men/Vault: All-conquering Mondo Duplantis (SWE) is back, after setting three world records this season, along with silver winner Sam Kendricks of the U.S. and bronze winner Emmanouil Karalis of Greece.

Men/Long Jump: Greece’s two-time Olympic winner Miltiadis Tentoglou is in, along with silver medalist Wayne Pinnock. Tentoglou says he doesn’t have much motivation right now; is $30,000 enough?

Women/100 m: Paris winner Julien Alfred (LCA) is back to battle 2023 World Champion Sha’Carri Richardson of the U.S., plus 2019 200 m World champ Dina Asher-Smith (GBR).

Women/400 m: Olympic star Marileidy Paulino (DOM) is the headliner in the Diamond League final ahead of silver winner Salwa Eid Naser (BRN) and finalist Alexis Holmes of the U.S. McLaughlin-Levrone, the 400 m hurdles winner, will be in an invitational race with a shot at the American Record of 48.70 by Sanya Richards-Ross from 2006.

Women/High Jump: Ukraine’s Yaroslava Mahuchikh has the Olympic gold and the world record and will compete against Australia’s silver and bronze winners from Paris: Nicola Olyslagers and Eleanor Patterson.

Women/Shot: Surprise Olympic winner Yemisi Onguleye (GER) will face a real challenge from World Indoor winner Sarah Mitton (CAN) and two-time World Champion Chase Jackson of the U.S.

Women/Discus: Two-time Olympic winner Valarie Allman of the U.S. is the feature, but Cuban Yaime Perez is the world leader at 73.09 m (239-9) from April.

Americans Fred Kerley (Paris bronze) and Christian Coleman (2019 World Champion) are in the men’s 100 m, Paris silver medalist Daniel Roberts leads the 110 m hurdles, and silver-bronze winners Matthew Hudson-Smith (GBR) and Muzala Samukonga (ZAM) are in the 400 m.

World-record setter and Paris silver winner Mykolas Alekna (LTU) is in the discus, along with bronzer Matt Denny (AUS), Tokyo 2020 Olympic champ Daniel Stahl (SWE) and 2022 World Champion Kristjian Ceh (SLO). Kenya’s 2023 World Champion Mary Moraa leads the women’s 800 m field and the Paris 2-3 finishers in the women’s triple jump – Shanieka Ricketts (JAM) and Jasmine Moore of the U.S. – are in.

On Saturday, eight more events with Olympic champions from Paris:

Men/200 m: Botswana’s Letsile Tebogo is the world leader at 19.46 and has been on fire, once again facing Olympic runner-up Kenny Bednarek of the U.S., Paris fourth-placer Erriyon Knighton and Americans Courtney Lindsey and Kerley.

Men/800 m: In a year in which as astonishing five men have run under 1:42, could Kenyan David Rudisha’s 1:40.91 world record from 2012 be under attack? Olympic champ Emmanuel Wanyonyi (KEN: 1:41.11), runner-up Marco Arop (CAN: 1:41.20) and bronzer Djamel Sedjati (ALG: 1:41.46) are all in, along with France’s Gabriel Tual (1:41.61).

Men/Shot: Another showdown between triple Olympic winner Ryan Crouser of the U.S. and teammate, triple Olympic silver medalist Joe Kovacs, the world leader at 23.13 m (75-10 3/4), plus bronze winner Rajindra Campbell (JAM) and European champ Leonardo Fabbri (ITA).

Women/1,500 m: Triple Olympic champion Faith Kipyegon (KEN) is in, along with silver winner Jess Hull (AUS) and bronzer Georgia Bell of Great Britain. Will Kipyegon just run to win, or ready to go something special; she set the world record of 3:49.04 in Paris in early July.

Women/Steeple: Paris champ Winfred Yavi just missed the world record in Rome on 30 August, with Tokyo 2020 gold medalist Peruth Chemutai (UGA) not far behind. Kenya’s Faith Cherotich, third in Paris, will also be in the mixed.

Women/5,000 m: Kenya’s 5,000-10,000 m Olympic champ Beatrice Chebet looks unbeatable, but says the world record (14:00.21) is out of reach this year. World nos. 2-3 – Ethiopians Tsigie Gebreselema (14:18.76) and Ejgayehu Taye (14:18.92) will make sure she doesn’t fall asleep.

Women/Vault: This has been Australian Nina Kennedy’s year, winning the Olympic gold, now facing Olympic bronzer Alysha Newman (CAN) and world leader Molly Caudery (GBR: 4.92 m/16-1 3/4).

Women/Javelin: Japan’s Paris champ Haruka Kitaguchi is in, along with 2023 Worlds bronze winner Mackenzie Little (AUS).

In the men’s 400 m hurdles, 2022 World Champion Alison dos Santos (BRA) is the headliner, and Paris silver medalist Shelby MacEwen (USA) and Tokyo 2020 co-winner Gianmarco Tamberi (ITA) are the stars in the men’s high jump. Portugal’s Paris triple jump silver winner Pedro Pichardo leads the triple jump and Paris silver-bronze winners Neeraj Chopra (IND) and Anderson Peters (GRN) lead the javelin.

In the women’s invitational 200 m, McLaughlin-Levrone is the feature, while Paris bronze winner Brittany Brown and 2023 Worlds bronze medalist Richardson of the U.S. are the top entries in the Diamond League race.

Tokyo 2020 gold medalist Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (PUR), Paris runner-up Cyrena Samba-Mayela (FRA) and Jamaica’s world leader, Ackera Nugent (12.24) are the leaders in the 100 m hurdles. American Anna Cockrell (Paris silver) and Dutch star Femke Bol (Paris bronze) are the ones to watch in the 400 m hurdles and American bronze winner Moore is in the women’s long jump.

In the U.S., the meet will be shown live only on the Peacock streaming service, from 1:53 p.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern on Friday; the early start will catch McLaughlin-Levrone in the women’s 400 m. Same time on Saturday; there will be replays on CNBC on Saturday from 12-2 p.m. Eastern and on Sunday from 1-3 p.m. Eastern.

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LANE ONE: WADA investigator’s report shows CHINADA did not follow the rules on the 23 doping positives, and WADA let it go

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≡ ANALYSIS & OBSERVATION ≡

On Thursday, the World Anti-Doping Agency released the 59-page report of former Vaud attorney general Eric Cottier into questions of WADA’s actions – or lack of action – after being informed that 23 Chinese swimmers had tested positive for trimetazidine at a meet in January 2021.

A ferocious war of words has gone back and forth between news media reports, especially an April 2024 broadcast of “The China Files” by the German ARD channel, and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency and WADA over the handling of these 2021 positives. But there are other issues.

Cottier was asked by WADA to answer only two questions: (1) did WADA show bias toward China in its handling of the situation and (2) was WADA’s decision not to appeal the Chinese finding of “no fault” a reasonable one.

Cottier answered yes to both questions, but his report went much, much further. Perhaps the key conclusions of the report came on page 39. This is pretty dense reading, but important:

“[T]he Investigator notes that the procedural rules recalled by the [consulting expert] and rightly described as fundamental, were neither respected nor applied by CHINADA [Chinese Anti-Doping Agency] when it learned of the 28 AAFs [adverse analytical findings]. This can be summed up in two sentences.

● “Firstly, the national agency decided from the outset not to deduce from the AAFs the presumptions laid down by the regulations, thus reversing the roles of burden of proof in the investigation to be carried out.

● “Secondly, this option spared swimmers the consequences provided for by the regulations: Notification, hearing, suspension (in principle compulsory), withdrawal of results, loss of bonuses, etc.

● “Moreover, the Agency [WADA] does not dispute CHINADA’s failure to comply with the applicable rules … Nor can it be disputed that CHINADA’s choices ‘benefited’ the athletes, both in terms of their status in the procedure and in terms of their lives and activities as athletes, at least temporarily, in relation to strict compliance with the procedure.

● “While admitting that CHINADA’s modus operandi did not comply with the rules of procedure, to the best of the Investigator’s knowledge, WADA has never formally and publicly challenged it.

● “In any case, it did not do so before deciding not to lodge an appeal. Nor does it appear to have done so subsequently. Even in their recent determinations, while admitting that the rules were not respected, it relativizes the fact, particularly by placing it in the complicated period of time, i.e. the pandemic and its consequences in terms of complications for athletes in exercising their rights and their personal involvement in the acts of investigation, their difficulty in accessing means of proof.”

In a nutshell, that’s what happened. But Cottier give plenty of specifics, all of which contributed to exonerating the swimmers and placing WADA in a completely impossible situation in which it was powerless to achieve any kind of satisfactory result.

Let’s start with the timetable of the case:

03 Jan. 2021: The Chinese national swimming championships were held in Shijiazhuang City, in the Hebei province, city of 11 million people southwest of Beijing. Some 39 swimmers were tested.

14 Jan. 2021: The test samples were transferred to the Beijing doping laboratory on 14 January. Before then, a new Covid-19 wave had appeared, causing the Zhengding Huayang Holiday hotel in which the swimmers stayed, to be closed until the end of February.

15 Mar. 2021: Because of the new Covid infections, the Beijing lab froze the samples and did not report the test results until 15 March, 72 days after the samples were collected.

16 Mar. 2021: WADA was notified by CHINADA of the positives, but took no action.

07 Apr. 2021: CHINADA followed up with a letter detailing its investigation of the positives, which was ongoing. No reaction from WADA.

31 May 2021: CHINADA’s draft decision was send to WADA, with comments and suggestions welcomed. No reply was made by WADA.

08 Jun. 2021: CHINADA sent its completed decision to WADA.

End of case, and the swimmers received no sanctions as CHINADA concluded that the positives came from environmental contamination, in specific, in the food they were served at the hotel.

The positives showed low amounts of trimetazidine and most of the athletes who tested positive had been tested both before and after the nationals meet and returned negative findings.

The Cottier report then went into questions of the pharmacological aspects of the case and the legal procedures used:

● As to the science of trimetazidine and doping, Cottier involved experts in the field and found:

(1)[T]he time elapsed between doping control (1-3 January 2024) and the announcement of the case to WADA and FINA (16 March 2021), i.e. more than 70 days, did not appear to comply with the applicable standards.”

In fact, the famous case of Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva concerning the 2022 Olympic Winter Games in Beijing involved a doping positive on 25 December 2021 that was not reported – due to delays relayed to Covid – until 7 February 2022, 44 days later. In the case of the swimmers, it was 72 days later.

(2) As to the possibility of contamination, Cottier referred to the question to an outside expert, who was not identified, who reported:

“[O]n the basis of these pharmacokinetic data alone, it is not possible to rule out intentional (or unintentional) intake of TMZ for doping or therapeutic purposes in the weeks leading up to the competition.

“Environmental contamination with low doses of TMZ during the hotel stay is also possible and can neither be ruled out nor affirmed with certainty on the basis of scientific data, but I see no scientific argument of a pharmacokinetic nature in favor of one hypothesis over another.”

In other words, the expert could not tell one way or the other, and later cited circumstantial factors in favor of contamination, notably that so many swimmers produced doping positives at one time.

● As to the way the case was handled by CHINADA, the responses were more stern. Cottier engaged the law firm of CMS von Erlach Partners SA, whose replies included:

In short, the Chinese Anti-Doping Organization, by refraining from notifying the positive athletes, completely ignored [International Standards for Results Management] Article 5.1.2.1, which the expert describes as a fundamental violation of anti-doping rules. This violation gave rise to a whole series of consequences which, in the expert’s view, are the results of many flaws in the proceedings conducted by CHINADA.

“In his conclusion on question 2, the expert basically replied that CHINADA’s handling of the case had deviated significantly and fundamentally from the procedures laid down in anti-doping standards, that these deviations were particularly serious given that they had enabled the athletes concerned – in the absence of an appeal by WADA – to benefit from an absence of an [anti-doping rules violation] (as well as an absence of any consequences), outside the application of the specific circumstances likely to call into question an [adverse analytical finding], notably a negative “B” sample analysis or a causal deviation in the [International Standard for Testing and Investigations] or [International Standard for Laboratories].

“Referring to his earlier comments, the expert replied that CHINADA had not complied with the applicable procedure by failing to give notice within the meaning of ISRM Article 5, the result was that it did not issue a provisional suspension, which was mandatory at the time.

“The expert considered that the fact that CHINADA was carrying out an investigation in parallel did not change anything, given that this investigation did not concern elements likely to justify a lack of notification.

“CHINADA should therefore have imposed a provisional suspension (mandatory) on the athletes concerned by the [adverse analytical findings]. CHINADA would have retained the possibility of lifting the suspension during the course of the proceedings, depending on the outcome of the investigation and/or the athletes’ determinations.”

So, what about WADA? Cottier’s report makes some points clear:

(1) As for CHINADA’s finding of no fault, clearly against the rules contained in the World Anti-Doping Code, Cottier writes of WADA:

“In retrospect at least, the Agency’s silence is curious, in the face of a procedure that does not respect the fundamental rules, and its lack of reaction is surprising.”

(2) Cottier wrote of CHINADA’s 7 April letter and WADA’s non-reaction:

● “The content of the 7 April 2021 notice clearly left no doubt that CHINADA was managing the results and conducting its investigation in deviation from the fundamental rules and principles of procedure, not only by conducting a very thorough investigation, but also, while the AAFs led to a presumption of ADRVs, and this presumption was not overturned by any of the circumstances allowing it, by not initiating formal proceedings against the swimmers.”

● “Legally, the Investigator can follow the very short explanation from the Agency, in the sense that, formally, there was no rule requiring it to act. On the other hand, given the role of WADA, the frontline guardian of the fight against doping worldwide, this simple reference to the absence of a rule imposing action is not satisfactory. At the very least, the extraordinary nature of the case (23 swimmers, including top-class athletes, 28 positive tests out of 60 for a banned substance of therapeutic origin, etc.), could have led to coordinated and concerted reflection within the Agency, culminating in a formal and clearly expressed decision to take no action.”

(3) He pointed out that this lack of action was, apparently, standard procedure:

“It should also be remembered that in the cases of group contamination on which the Investigator asked WADA for information, there was, with one exception, never any notification, suspension or hearing. This means that the procedure, with its presumptions, reversals, burden of proof, etc., has apparently not been respected by the anti-doping organizations and/or federations concerned. WADA has not reacted to these cases, even if only by reminding them of the formal rules.”

(4) WADA looked past all the procedural irregularities, knew it could not produce a compelling case of intentional doping in an arbitration hearing and, in view of the pandemic and an impending Olympic Games in Tokyo, let it go:

“The Investigator cannot imagine that the procedural non-compliance of CHINADA’s actions would have escaped the attention of the experienced legal experts who deal with doping on a daily basis, whether at WADA or its lawyers. The reality is that the Agency considered, in casu, that it was the final result and its concrete consequences that mattered.”

Cottier noted in the report that “further investigations would not be able to change the assessment of the case” for WADA and that WADA “pointed out that they had not appealed, as they were unable to contest the food/environmental contamination scenario.”

(5) And Cottier noted that any WADA on-site inquiry at the hotel where the contamination was to have taken place would have been useless even a week after the tests, since the hotel closed due to Covid and was thoroughly cleaned and disinfected:

“In view of the documents in the Chinese file and the answers given between June and July 2021 to WADA’s questions, the possibility of obtaining further details seems illusory. The vagueness that remains is regrettable. It suggests practices that are questionable from a hygiene point of view.

“That said, total and absolute disinfection when the hotel closed, or when it reopened, with a view to eliminating any risk linked to the COVID-19 virus, would not have been more useful to the investigation operations. On the contrary, it would have entailed the risk of obliterating many, if not all, traces.”

Moreover, Cottier wrote that the pharmacokinetic evidence indicated that the use of trimetazidine in “clinically effective and potentially doping doses” was ruled out.

Observed: Cottier wrote compellingly about the issues of procedure and trust which are raised by this case late in the report, stating:

“[T]he Investigator is aware that 23 athletes were ultimately granted a kind of ‘no contest,’ which the body in charge of the worldwide fight against doping did not contest even though, according to the letter of the applicable provisions, introduced to strengthen the worldwide fight against doping, the positive results of their tests created a presumption of guilt on their part, based on the principle of strict liability, which they did not have to rebut because of the failure to apply the rules on the burden of proof.

“Given the ratio legis of the system established by the Code and the various rules for its
application, this may come as a shock. It may even create a feeling of injustice among
competitors opposed to the athletes in question in one or other discipline.

The sense of justice or injustice, however, goes far beyond the scope of this investigation.”

But that is the situation that WADA finds itself in, and Cottier said so:

“WADA’s apparent silence is hardly compatible with its role as worldwide guardian of compliance with procedures.”

That WADA was placed in an impossible situation, with a mass of positives from a single meet in a country locking down due to Covid, and with an Olympic Games just weeks away that would prevent any arbitrator from disqualifying athletes absent rock-solid proof of doping, is clear. How it reacted is now the issue.

Based on the Cottier report, WADA should clearly have issued a public notice about the positives when it was notified in 2021. And it should have required CHINADA to enforce the rules in place on sanctions and appeals.

Moreover, the Cottier report indicates that based on what he called unimpeded access to all of the files in the case, they should have been made available to the anti-doping community – such as U.S. Anti-Doping Agency head Travis Tygart – to answer all the questions.

Transparency might have been the best play here. The Cottier report does not say WADA did nothing wrong. It says only that it did not show favoritism to the Chinese athletes – WADA simply concluded it would be defeated in any arbitration hearing – and was not unreasonable in not appealing a case it knew it had no chance of winning.

That’s not much of a victory. But maybe changes will come from it.

Rich Perelman
Editor

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INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE: Ethics Commission letter inserts major new technicalities into race for IOC President

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≡ THE BIG PICTURE ≡

Just a couple of days after International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER) told the IOC Session in Paris that he would not agree to any extension of his term, a detailed set of election regulations was posted on the IOC’s Web site, laying down a series of rules and restrictions on anyone wishing to run for President.

The decision will be made at the 143rd IOC Session in Greece next March, and the deadline for declaration of candidatures is coming up on Sunday, 15 September.

On Monday, a letter from IOC Ethics Commission Chair Ki-Moon Ban (KOR) – the former United Nations Secretary General – appeared on the site, which offered key technical interpretations of the election rules that could have major impact on the election of the next IOC President:

● “[T]he IOC President must be a member of the IOC at the time of the election and during the entire duration of their term as IOC President.”

● “The Olympic Charter does not grant the IOC President any exception regarding the end of their IOC membership because of either the age limit or the loss of the function for which the member was elected, namely as an active athlete, or as a president or holding an executive or senior leadership position within an NOC or [International Federation].”

● “An IOC member reaching the age limit of 70 will lose their IOC membership, unless the member is proposed by the Executive Board and elected by the IOC Session for a four year extension; the Olympic Charter provides for such an extension only once.

“Similarly, an IOC member elected in relation to a function who loses this function during their term as an IOC member, including as IOC President, will automatically lose their IOC membership, and as such end their term of office.”

Who does this impact? Remembering that the next IOC President’s first term will be from 2025 to 2033, among those who are considered possible candidates:

Pierre-Olivier Beckers-Vieujant (BEL): The head of the IOC’s Paris 2024 Coordination Commission, Beckers – the former head of the supermarket giant Delhaize Group – is 64 and would reach 70 in 2030, short of the end of a first term.

Sebastian Coe (GBR): Coe is an IOC member by virtue of his role as President of World Athletics, but his term – and his IOC membership – will end in 2027. Moreover, he is 67.

Ingmar De Vos (BEL): Only 61, De Vos’ IOC membership is also tied to his position as the head of the Federation Equestre Internationale (FEI). He was initially elected in 2014 and re-elected in 2018 and 2022, so he will conclude his FEI mandate for certain in 2026.

David Lappartient (FRA): Riding a high profile after the success of the Paris 2024 Games, Lappartient is the head of the UCI cycling federation and the CNOSF, the French National Olympic Committee. However, his IOC membership – from 2020 – is tied to his role as the UCI President; he will be up for election in 2025 for a third and final term, which would end his IOC membership in 2029, short of the 2033 term of the next IOC leader.

Juan Antonio Samaranch, Jr. (ESP): Samaranch is a long-time individual member, elected in 2001. He is 64, but could have his term extended to complete an eight-year presidency through 2033.

The Ban letter is clear that one, four-year age extension can be granted, and an IOC member by virtue of their position with an International Federation could be elected as an individual member after being elected President in order to comply with the rules.

Three of the five possible candidates noted above are heads of an International Federation; of the nine IOC Presidents, only one – Sigfrid Edstrom (SWE-Athletics: 1942-52) – came from an IF. All others had ties to the IOC from its formative days, or to National Olympic Committees.

The letter does not appear to impact other favorites, such as individual members Kirsty Coventry (ZIM: 40), who has been deeply involved in the Bach years in multiple roles, or Aruban lawyer Nicole Hoevertsz, 60, the head of the IOC’s Coordination Commission for the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

The IOC is expected to publish the list of declared candidates next week, although the Ethics Commission will be asked to do further vetting to certify those actually eligible.

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PANORAMA: Police foiled three plots vs. Paris 2024; Scottish gov’t not sure on 2026 Commonwealth Games; “Raygun” really no. 1 breaker?

Headquarters of the World Anti-Doping Agency (Photo: U.S. Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● French counter-terrorism prosecutor Olivier Christen said Wednesday that forces were able to shut down three planned attacks on the Olympic Games in Paris. The Associated Press reported:

“In all, five people, including a minor, were arrested on suspicion of involvement in the three foiled plots against the Summer Games … The suspects are facing various terrorism-related charges while they remain in pretrial detention, the prosecutor said.”

Among the planned actions were attacks against Israeli institutions or their representatives, although the Israeli Olympic team was not a defined target.

A survey of Paris businesses found that those within security districts related to the Games suffered. An Associated Press story noted, for example:

“For Patrick Aboukrat, whose association represents 190 shopkeepers and restaurant owners in Paris’ central Marais neighborhood, the Olympics were ‘more than catastrophic.’ From mid-June to the end of July, sales were down roughly 35% to 40% on average in the area, he said.”

Other merchants observed that after the costs of travel, hotels, meals and Olympic tickets, few visitors had money for shopping. French government data indicated 1.7 million international visitors came to Paris during the Olympics, up 13% from 2023.

● Olympic Winter Games 2034: Salt Lake City ● The head of the Utah Olympic Legacy Foundation and a key member of the Salt Lake City-Utah Committee for the Games, Colin Hilton, saw the power of Olympic venues during his inspection tour of Paris during the Olympic Games:

“They had given a ticket to every local citizen to be able to come out and see kids in the community performing at the Olympic venue in skateboard, and they didn’t care that it wasn’t the Olympic event.

“They were at this Olympic venue and seeing this. So I was like, ‘Oh my god, we gotta do this for slopestyle, big air competitions in downtown Salt Lake.’”

● Commonwealth Games 2026 ● British and Scottish government officials are skittish about agreeing to have the 2026 Commonwealth Games rescued by Glasgow, which successfully held the 2014 Commonwealth Games.

Although Commonwealth Games Scotland proposed a privately-funded Games on 30 August, with most of the money coming from the exit fee paid by the Australian state of Victoria, there are worried about costs and reputation.

Scottish Secretary Ian Murray told reporters on Tuesday:

“I think the UK and Scottish governments have both been clear, there’s no public money to invest or underwrite the Commonwealth Games, but you know, we’re leaving no stone unturned in what we can do to help.

“There’s obviously a role for the UK Government in terms of visas, wider security issues, around terrorism, those kinds of issues which [the Department for Culture, Media and Sport] I know are working through.

“So we want there to be a positive outcome here, and we’re working with Scottish Government to make sure we can get one.

“The games themselves, I think, will be fully covered by the Commonwealth Games [Federation] and the Glasgow organising committee, I think they’ve got a big contingency in there too. So the games themselves are not the issue. I think it’s the issues around the games that are the discussion points at the moment.”

Neal Gray, the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care, was also cautious:

“There are risks inherent here that we need to bottom out, that we are working with both the UK Government, the Commonwealth Games Scotland and the Federation, to understand.

“It is a new concept. It is untested. The figures that we are being quoted are ambitious, and of course, we continue to be ambitious.

“But when there is an ambitious program and an ambitious target within the financial envelope that inherently draws risk, and we have already set out the situation that we have with the public purse.”

Gray also noted that the smaller program of 10 sports – 20 were held in Birmingham (ENG) in 2022 – could be a “reputational risk.”

It was noted that government spending on security issues for Birmingham 2022 amounted to £41.9 million (about $54.65 million U.S.).

● Anti-Doping ● The New York Times reported that the World Anti-Doping Agency was trying to keep Dr. Rahul Gupta, the director of the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy – the White House liaison agency on anti-doping matters – from being involved in Executive Committee discussions concerning the 23 Chinese swimmers who tested positive for trimetazidine in January 2021.

The story said a White House attorney wrote a nine-page letter to WADA, including

“Any attempt to impose preliminary measures will be met with strong opposition and appropriate action(s) from the United States government.”

The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency said that the full report of former Vaud attorney general Eric Cottier‘s limited inquiry concerning WADA’s actions in response to the 23 Chinese positives in 2021 is to be provided to the WADA Executive Committee on Thursday.

● Russia ● Commenting on the just-completed Paris Olympic Games, Russian Olympic Committee President Stanislav Pozdnyakov said Wednesday:

“The obvious proof that the Olympic Movement is really in its decline, is that within such relatively short period of time there was a transformation of ideals, traditions, as well as an utter disregard of all traditions.”

He said this was not because of Russian athletes being almost completely banned from the Games, but referring to boxers Imane Khelif (ALG) and Yu-Ting Lin (TPE) being allowed to compete after being disqualified a year earlier by the International Boxing Association, now de-recognized by the International Olympic Committee.

The IBA is led by Umar Kremlev, the former Secretary General of the Russian Boxing Federation.

● Athletics ● American shot superstar Ryan Crouser notched another win in the Gaia dei Castelli, a World Athletics Continental Tour Silver meet, in Bellinzona (SUI) on Monday, reaching 22.25 m (73-0) on this fourth throw. That was enough to win over countryman Payton Otterdahl (21.61 m/70-10 3/4), with three-time Olympic silver winner Joe Kovacs fifth at 21.07 m (69-1 1/2).

Fellow American Bryce Deadmon won the men’s 400 m in 44.76 over Matthew Boling of the U.S. (45.30), but Olympic 110 m hurdles victor Grant Holloway was edged by France’s Sasha Zhoya, 13.22 to 13.23 (wind: +0.7). It was Holloway’s second loss of the season; Cordell Tinch was third at 13.54.

Americans Tamari Davis and Anavia Battle won the women’s sprints in 10.97 (+0.5) and 22.58 (+1.0) respectively, and Tokyo 2020 women’s 100 m hurdles gold winner Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (PUR) edged Grace Stark of the U.S., 12.52 to 12.54 (+0.6) in their race.

European women’s vault champ Angelica Moser (SUI) thrilled the home crowd with a win over two-time World Indoor winner Sandi Morris of the U.S., clearing 4.64 m (15-2 3/4) to 4.54 m (14-10 3/4) for Morris.

● Bobsled ● Sweden’s Ludmila Engquist, the Olympic women’s 100 m hurdles champion at Atlanta 1996, who won World Championships golds in the event in 1991 for the USSR (as Ludmila Narozhilenko) and for Sweden in 1997, admitted to doping to get out of bobsledding.

In an Swedish television (SVT) interview, Engquist, now 60, said that she wanted to win Olympic medals in track and bobsleigh and got involved with the Swedish bob federation. But it didn’t turn out too well. She explained it in her memoir, coming out Friday; in the interview story:

“Engquist admits that during a visit to Russia in the summer of 2001 she bought a protein powder that she knew contained methandrostenolone, an anabolic steroid known in Sweden as ‘Russian fives,’ and drank it with water.”

She knew what she was doing:

“I hated bobsledding. It was a complete nightmare. Constant unhappiness; before, during and after training – day and night. …

“There was nothing to hide, I wanted to get caught. End the madness. Get rid of the fear. No one could have stopped me, not even myself. Now the doping police would take me. …

“I have made enormous mistakes and I am, in a way, a product of my defeats. They shaped me, for better or for worse.”

● Boxing ● The new World Boxing federation announced that Algeria and Japan have joined, bringing the membership total to 44.

These are the sixth and seventh federations to join since the close of the Paris Olympic Games, but still well short of being sufficient for recognition by the International Olympic Committee.

● Breaking ● Breaking had its Olympic moment in Paris and is not on the program for 2028, but is in the news again thanks to an embarrassing situation of its own making.

Australian Olympic breaker Dr. Rachael Gunn – competing as “Raygun” – lost her three pool-stage Olympic matches by a combined score of 54-0 and was promptly eliminated. But she is suddenly the world’s top-ranked female breaker according to the World Dancesport Federation rankings.

How can this be?

The WDSF explained in a statement:

“The WDSF Breaking World Ranking List is governed by the WDSF Breaking Rules and Regulations Manual (BRRM) and is updated based on each athlete’s top four performances within the past 12 months. Points earned in these competitions remain valid for 52 weeks from the date of the event.”

It was noted, however, that due to “limited athlete quotas,” neither of the Olympic Qualifying Series events or the Olympic Games counted in the newest ranking totals.

Raygun’s major point surge, from winning the Oceania Continental Championships in October 2023, will expire after 12 months.

It’s an embarrassment that will not be forgotten when the WDSF asks to be on the program in Brisbane (AUS) in 2032, when Raygun will be 44.

● Hockey ● Pakistan’s Mohammad Tayyab is the only candidate for President of the International Hockey Federation (FIH), with the list of candidates posted on Tuesday.

Tayyab was elected in November 2022 to fill an open seat after India’s Narinder Batra resigned, so after the FIH Congress on 9 November, he will be serving a first full term.

● Ski Jumping ● Norwegian star Daniel Andre Tande, 30, has decided to retire. He won a Team Large Hill gold at the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Games as well as four Ski Flying Worlds golds (3 team, 1 individual) and eight FIS World Cup victories. But it was time:

“After my bad fall in Planica [SLO] just over three years ago, I needed time to realize that my fear of ski jumping was perhaps greater than I initially thought. That’s why it feels right to end my ski jumping career now.”

His crash on the giant, ski-flying hill in Planica in March 2021 was so serious he had to be resuscitated in the outrun. But he recovered fully and returned the next season. He added:

“I have fulfilled many dreams in my career, two of the biggest highlights are the World Championship gold in ski flying in Oberstdorf in 2018 and the World Cup victory at Holmenkollen in 2022.

“I’m keeping all my options open for the future and I’m excited about what’s to come.”

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ATHLETICS: Holloway not paid enough to run in Brussels; McLaughlin-Levrone will face modest fields in 400 and 200 m

Olympic hurdles champ Holloway: no pay, no play at Diamond League Final (Photo: Diamond League AG)

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≡ DIAMOND LEAGUE FINAL ≡

After everyone got clear that American star Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone was not going to be able to run as an invited entry in the 2024 Diamond League Final at the Memorial Van Damme in Brussels on Friday and Saturday, special races were set up for her.

But whatever McLaughlin-Levrone is being paid to appear – she is not running for free – may have impacted one Diamond League race significantly.

That would be the Olympic men’s 110 m hurdles champ Grant Holloway of the U.S., the man now with the most legal sub-13.00 clockings in history, who posted Tuesday:

“I will not be participating in the Brussels Diamond League Final due to a failure to reach agreements on the terms of my participation between my team and the meeting directors of the Diamond League. Shame that they doing athletes like that. #BrusselsDL #NeverCompeteForLess”

While Holloway did not agree on an appearance fee, he will be turning away from a possible $30,000 payday if he won his race; the Diamond League Final pays $30,000-12,000-7,000-4,000-2,500-2,000-1,500-1,000 for the top eight places.

The Brussels 110 m hurdles is now headlined by Olympic silver winner Daniel Roberts of the U.S. and European champ Lorenzo Simonelli (ITA).

Meanwhile, invitational races in the men’s and women’s 400 m are set for Friday and a 100 m invitational for men and 200 men invite race for women on Saturday:

Women/400 m: McLaughlin-Levrone stands no. 4 on the world list for 2024 at 48.75 from the NYC Grand Prix meet in June and will face a modest field, with three who have run under 51 seconds this season.

Jamaica’s Stacey Ann Williams has run a lifetime best of 50.00, in Zagreb (CRO) on 8 September; teammate Stephenie Ann McPherson has run 50.65 this year, but has a best of 49.34 from 2021 and finished fourth at the Tokyo 2020 Games. Romania’s Andrea Miklos set her best at 50.54 this season in the heats in Paris; she got as far as the semifinals.

Women/200 m: McLaughlin-Levrone is equal-eighth on the 2024 world list with her 22.07 lifetime best at the L.A. Grand Prix at UCLA’s Drake Stadium in May. No one else is under 22.6 this season; next best is Tasa Jiya (NED: 22.62) and Ghana’s Gina Bass Bittaye (22.66).

McLaughlin-Levrone could have been invited to the Diamond League Final if she had run in a Diamond League race this season. The only Diamond League meet in the U.S. was the Prefontaine Classic in late May, which she skipped.

The women’s Diamond League Final in the 400 m will have Paris gold and silver winners Marileidy Paulino (DOM) and Salwa Eid Naser (BRN); the women’s 200 m will have bronze winner Brittany Brown of the U.S. and the women’s 400 m hurdles will have Paris’ 2-3 finishers Anna Cockrell of the U.S. and Dutch star Femke Bol.

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FOOTBALL: U.S. Soccer hires Pochettino as men’s coach as men’s National Team in drab 1-1 draw with New Zealand

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≡ SPOTLIGHT ≡

Just before the kickoff of Tuesday’s friendly between the U.S. men’s National Team and New Zealand in Cincinnati, the U.S. Soccer Federation formally announced Argentine Mauricio Pochettino as the new men’s head coach:

“Pochettino, 52, a seasoned and highly respected manager, has had successful stints with several top European clubs, including Tottenham Hotspur, Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea. Known for building teams with dynamic styles of play, he will now take the helm of the USMNT, bringing his extensive experience and tactical acumen to lead the team into the FIFA World Cup 2026 on home soil.”

Said the new manager:

“I see a group of players full of talent and potential, and together, we’re going to build something special that the whole nation can be proud of.”

Pochettino has been a considerable success as a coach in the English Premier League and France’s Ligue 1:

2013-14: Southampton (English Premier): 23-19-18 (W-L-T)
2014-19: Tottenham Hotspur (English Premier): 159-72-62
2021-22: Paris-St. German (Ligue 1): 55-14-15
2023-24: Chelsea (English Premier); 26-14-11

Pochettino played in 20 matches for the Argentine national team from 1999-2002 as a center back, scoring two goals.

Signed to a two-year contract through the 2026 FIFA World Cup, he will take over for the two October friendlies, against Panama in Austin, Texas on 12 October and against Mexico on 15 October in Guadalajara.

Pochettino had been selected some weeks ago, but continued haggling with Chelsea over his contractual release delayed the announcement. The U.S. federation has now entrusted both of its national teams to Chelsea coaches: Pochettino for the men and Emma Hayes for the women. Hayes has started 10-0, including winning the Olympic gold in Paris.

The U.S. men, in the meantime, suffered through another dreary performance, ending in a 1-1 tie with New Zealand on Tuesday, holding the lead from the 69th minute until the 89th, when Ben Waine “scored” the equalizer for the Kiwis.

The U.S. had 66% possession in the game, and striker Ricardo Pepi scored in the 19th minute, but the goal was wiped away due to a Pepi push-off that was ruled a foul.

Scoreless at half, midfield star Christian Pulisic came in as a substitute in the 57th minute and scored to give the U.S. a 1-0 lead in the 69th, taking a Pepi pass, then angling in the box for a left-footed shot that slid into the net.

The Americans looked poised to win when the defense broke down in the 89th. A long lead pass for substitute striker Waine was headed by U.S. defender Caleb Wiley, then when Mark McKenzie tried to clear, the ball ricocheted off of Waine’s leg and popped over the head of American keeper Matt Turner, who had come out to cut down the angle.

The U.S. ended with a 17-8 shots edge, but to no avail. Since the 2-0 win over Bolivia to start the Copa America in June, the U.S. is now 0-3-1, losing to Panama, Uruguay and Canada and now tying New Zealand. For the calendar year of 2024, the U.S. men are 3-5-2, with two games left.

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INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE: Panasonic ends 37-year TOP sponsorship, but Toyota is more important for LA28

The IOC's TOP partners for Paris 2024.

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≡ ANALYSIS & OBSERVATION ≡

“Panasonic Holdings Corporation (Panasonic) today announced that the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and Panasonic have agreed not to extend their Olympic Partner (TOP) Programme agreement after the expiration of the current contract term at the end of December 2024.”

That’s from Panasonic’s Tuesday news release, which added:

“While the Panasonic Group’s support of the Olympic philosophy and its stance of supporting athletes who continue to rise to the challenge and sports enthusiasts remain unchanged, a decision to end the sponsorship has been made as the Group continually reviews how sponsorship should evolve with broader management considerations. As a result of this review, and after extensive consultation with the IOC, the parties agreed to refrain from renewing the Olympic and Paralympic Partner Agreement.”

IOC President Thomas Bach (GER) said

“The IOC understands and fully respects that the Panasonic Group has to adapt its business strategy. Therefore, this partnership is ending in a respectful and friendly way. The IOC would like to thank Panasonic and its Group CEO Yuki Kusumi, for over four decades of close partnership. Panasonic was a founding member of the Worldwide Olympic Partner (TOP) Programme and has been a great support to Olympic Games’ organisers, National Olympic Committees and athletes around the world. The appreciation of the IOC for Panasonic will continue.”

Panasonic’s product category was in audio-visual equipment category, including televisions, audio-visual equipment for broadcast and professional use, AV storage media, car navigation and related on-board entertainment systems equipment, and video surveillance equipment.

Another Japan-based sponsor, Toyota, was reported last May to end its Olympic sponsorship at the end of the Paris 2024 cycle, but has made no announcement itself. An inquiry by The Associated Press as to the status of Toyota’s TOP sponsorship received this reply:

“Toyota has been supporting the Olympic and Paralympic movements since 2015 and continues to do so. No announcement to suggest otherwise has been made by Toyota.”

Through the end of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, the IOC partner program included 15 companies – headquartered in nine countries – of which 10 have committed so far for Los Angeles in 2028:

● ABInbev (BEL) ~ in for 2028 (MichelobUltra)
● Airbnb (USA) ~ in for 2028
● Alibaba (CHN) ~ in for 2028
● Allianz (GER) ~ in for 2028
● Atos (FRA)
● Bridgestone (JPN)
● Coca-Cola (USA)/Mengniu Dairy (CHN) ~ in for 2028
● Deloitte (GBR) ~ in for 2028
● Intel (USA)
● Omega (SUI) ~ in for 2028
● Panasonic (JPN)
● Proctor & Gamble (USA) ~ in for 2028
● Samsung (KOR) ~ in for 2028
● Toyota (JPN)
● Visa (USA) ~ in for 2028

Technology coordination provider Atos is going through a reorganization, Panasonic is out, Toyota has said nothing publicly and Bridgestone and Intel have been silent.

The IOC itself is in fine financial shape and will find new sponsors, mostly likely in Asia, with Chinese and Indian companies well positioned to join the party.

For the LA28 organizers, the real question is about Toyota or a replacement in the automotive category. From the 2028 Host City Contract:

“for indicative purposes only, based on the experience of the IOC from previous editions of the Games of the Olympiad and without taking into account potential evolutions in the International Programme that may occur after the execution of the HCC (including, without limitation, potential renegotiations or renewals of current agreements covering key product categories which are forecasted to generate an estimated increase of USD 200.000.000 (two hundred million United States dollars) in the amount indicated below), the amount of the OCOG’s share of the net revenues (including cash and value-in-kind) from the International Programme foreseen under §8.1(e), is currently estimated at USD 437.000.000 (four hundred thirty seven million United States dollars).” (Emphasis added)

The LA28 revenue projection of $6.88 billion includes both the $437 million estimated in the Host City agreement and the expected additional $200 million from increased renewals. Those amounts could come into question if Toyota does not, in fact, continue.

Another issue for the IOC and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Properties folks, the sales arm of LA28, is how the IOC will release categories for domestic sponsorships. Panasonic got into the Olympic world as a supplier (not sponsor) for the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles for sound systems.

The “mobility category” – if Toyota decides not to renew – is more of question because it’s a big-money area for which the IOC may decide to wait. That won’t help LA28, which will need to make decisions in the next year or so about how to acquire the thousands of vehicles – cars, vans, motorcycles and trucks – it will need for Games operations. It would prefer to have a sponsor than to have to rent them.

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ATHLETICS: Cheptegei ex-partner Marangach dies of burns from own attack in Kenyan hospital

Ugandan women’s marathoner Rebecca Cheptegei, tragically killed in an attack by her partner, who set her on fire (Photo: Uganda Athletics Federation)

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≡ THE LATEST ≡

The hideous attack against Ugandan Olympic women’s marathoner Rebecca Cheptegei claimed the attacker on Monday when former partner Dickson Ndiema Marangach died from burns resulting from his attack on her.

In a statement reported by Reuters, Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital chief executive Philip Kirwa explained he died at 6:30 p.m. local time in Elodoret (KEN):

“He developed respiratory failure as a result of the severe airway burns and sepsis that led to his eventual death.”

Marangach had burns over 41% or more of his body as a result of his attack on Cheptegei, who he doused her with gasoline and set her on fire after she returned home from church with her two children on Sunday, 1 September.

Cheptegei had burns over more then 75% of her body and was taken to the same hospital, where she passed away on Thursday (5th). The two had an argument, apparently over ownership of a piece of land that one of them had purchased.

While Marangach was being treated, he was also in police custody and a murder investigation was ongoing.

The incident was another in a line of attacks against women in Kenya; Sports Minister Kipchumba Murkomen said, “This tragedy is a stark reminder of the urgent need to combat gender-based violence, which has increasingly affected even elite sports.”

The 2021 stabbing death of 25-year-old star Agnes Tirop, the 2015 women’s World Cross Country champion and a two-time Worlds 10,000 m bronze medalist, raised the profile of violence against women in Kenya, and a 2022 national survey showed 34% of women had experienced some form of physical violence.

Viola Cheptoo, the co-founder of Tirop’s Angels, a support group for domestic violence survivors, told Reuters:

“Justice really would have been for him (Marangach) to sit in jail and think about what he had done. This is not positive news whatsoever.”

Cheptegei, a gold medalist at the 2022 World Mountain and Trail Running Championships in Chiang Mai (THA) and who placed 44th in the Olympic women’s marathon in Paris, had two children, ages nine and 11, reported to have been fathered by another man, living in Uganda.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo has promised to name a sports facility for Cheptegei to continue her memory.

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PANORAMA: Eiffel family fights post-‘24 Olympic Rings on tower; China’s Gu wins Halfpipe opener; Woodhalls inspired each other in Paris

Hunter and Tara Davis-Woodhall in Paris after Hunter’s Paralympic T62 400 m gold on Friday (Photo: U.S. Paralympic Track & Field on X)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● The descendants of French engineer Gustave Eiffel are considering court action against the Paris plan to retain the Olympic Rings on the Eiffel Tower into 2028 or possibly beyond.

In a Sunday statement, the Association des Descendants de Gustave Eiffel (ADGE) said it would “oppose any alteration that negatively impacts respect for the work” and that the Olympic Rings would interfere with “the neutrality and meaning acquired over the years by the Eiffel Tower, which has become the symbol of the city of Paris and even all of France across the world.”

It further objects to the visual impact of the Rings, “substantially modifying the very pure forms of the monument.”

The association is in agreement to leave the Rings in place until the end of 2024.

● Olympic Games 2036: Copenhagen ● The city of Copenhagen (DEN) will study the possibilities for hosting a 2036 Olympic Games and is interested in the 2030 Youth Olympic Games.

That’s from Copenhagen Culture and Leisure Mayor Mia Nyegaard in a Monday statement, explaining:

“My vision is that we must have the smallest and most sustainable Olympics ever.”

An allocation of 500,000 Danish kroner (about $74,000 U.S.) has been included in the city’s 2025 budget to study the ideas. Nyegaard’s concepts include having the Olympic Village on cruise ships in the harbor and constructing a temporary main stadium and then recycling it after the event.

The project would require significant national government funding, for which there is, as yet, no enthusiasm.

● Paralympic Games 2024: Paris ● More great performances from Paris, where two U.S. teams won their third consecutive Paralympic golds.

The men’s wheelchair basketball squad defeated Great Britain, 73-69, thanks to 26 points from Jake Williams and 24 from Steve Serio. The U.S. had a seven-point halftime lead, were up 10 at the end of the third and then held on for the win.

In women’s sitting volleyball, the U.S. also completed a three-peat, beating China in four sets after losing to the Chinese, 3-1, in group play. This time, the Americans won by 25-21, 23-25, 25-20, 25-22, in the fifth straight Paralympic final between the two sides.

U.S. opposite Heather Erickson led all scorers with 28 points on 25 kills, two blocks and one ace and was named Most Valuable and Best Attacker. She finished the tournament with 96 points.

Hunter Woodhall’s dramatic men’s T62 400 m came with inspiration from his wife, Olympic women’s long jump champ Tara Davis-Woodhall. Hunter said afterwards:

“Tara has taught me a lot about self-affirmation.

“Before the Olympics, she was writing in her journal, ‘I will be the Olympic champ’. And ‘I am strong, I am fast.’ I have had my journal here and I wrote in it today, ‘I will be the Paralympic champion.’ And now I am.”

● Athletics ● Agence France Presse reported:

“The funeral for Ugandan Olympic runner Rebecca Cheptegei, who died in Kenya after being set on fire by her boyfriend, will be held on September 14 in her home country, organisers said Sunday.”

Cheptegei, 33, died on Thursday after being burned over more than 75% of her body on the Sunday prior (1st). Her Kenyan partner who doused her with gasoline, was also badly burned and is being treated in an Eldoret hospital, in police custody.

Not everyone is super-excited about the Diamond League Final in Brussels (BEL) on Friday and Saturday. Tokyo 2020 Olympic women’s 100 m hurdles champ – and Paris bronze winner – Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (PUR) said after winning at the Weltklasse Zurich:

“Brussels? I am tired…. we will see. The goal for these post-Olympic races is to stay positive, make some money and have some fun. In the box, I am always calm and confident. The end of the season is for cash.”

Two-time U.S. Olympic race walker Allen James is leading the charge to get the 50 km Walk returned to the Olympic program.

The event was held for men beginning in 1932 in Los Angeles through Tokyo 2020 (except Montreal 1976), but never for women. For Paris 2024, the men’s event was dumped in favor of a Mixed Marathon Relay, with two walkers – one man, one woman – alternating legs over a four-part, 42.2 km event.

James, who was 30th in the 1992 men’s 20 km Walk and 24th in the Atlanta 1996 men’s 50 km, proposed on an international walker’s forum that walkers write to World Athletics and to the International Olympic Committee that the 50 km race be reinstated for men and added for women.

He takes IOC President Thomas Bach (GER) at his word, emphasizing that walks are the most urban, inclusive and sustainable of any sport, and:

“[W]alking also offers the ultimate endurance test in the Olympic program, as the 50 km walk. Men and women have proven themselves to be warriors in this ultimate test. Women especially begin to close the performance gap in the 50 km as they have a greater capacity to handle the test than men. In the 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha, a simultaneously conducted event for men and women, the top woman would have finished 18th place overall, a remarkable accomplishment given the excellence of competitors.

“World Athletics’ compromise move to 35 km was a huge judgement error, as the two races, 20 km and 35 km are so similar that we have nearly identical finishing fields in both races. This is due to the 35 km only slightly opening up an athlete to glycogen depletion, the major factor in a 50 km or ultramarathon type of event.”

And, of course, he notes that in the Winter Games, both the men and women will race at 50 km in Cross Country Skiing at Milan Cortina 2026. It’s an uphill battle, but one which James and others will keep trying to win.

● Freestyle Skiing ● The FIS Freestyle World Cup has started, at the Winter Games NZ in Cardrona, with Monday’s day-delayed Halfpipe final for men and women.

China’s 2022 Olympic champ Eileen Gu scored her 15th career World Cup gold, winning 96.00 on her third run, after taking the lead at 92.00 on run no. 1 and scoring 94.50 in her second try. China’s Kexin Zhang (89.25) finished second and Canada’s Rachael Karker (87.00) was third. Shea Irving was the top American, in fourth (84.25).

Canada’s Brendan Mackay, the 2023 World Champion, moved into the lead in round two of the men’s event at 90.00 and no one could catch him, although America’s two-time Olympic medalist Alex Ferreira came close … twice.

Ferreira scored 89.00 on his second run and then improved to 89.50 in the third round, but had to settle for silver, ending a five-event World Cup event win streak in the Halfpipe. Canada’s Andrew Longino was third (87.75), ahead of Americans Birk Irving (86.00) and Hunter Hess (83.00).

● Modern Pentathlon ● The Union Internationale de Pentathlon Moderne (UIPM) announced its candidate list for November elections, including for the first new President since 1993, when German Klaus Schormann was elevated from a Vice Presidency.

Three candidates are running for President:

Joel Bouzou (FRA), a four-time Olympian and a Team bronze winner at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, who was the federation Secretary-General for 15 years and is now a Vice President.

In the aftermath of the success of the Paris Games and his long-time ultra-insider status, he is seen as the favorite.

Sharif El Erian (EGY), a 1992 Olympian and a UIPM Vice President.

Rob Stull (USA), a 1988 and 1992 Olympian in fencing (1988 only) and modern pentathlon, is the chief executive of USA Pentathlon and a member of the UIPM Executive Board.

All are long-time pentathlon politicians, who face the continuing challenge of maintaining the sport’s relevance as the pressure for change continues to impact the Olympic program. The change from riding to obstacle raises possibilities, but in the end, Schormann’s major achievement across 31 years has simply been to keep the sport on the program into 2028. It is not at all clear that it will continue.

Also running for re-election is Treasurer John Helmick from the U.S., in office since 2000. The Associated Press reported on 9 August a federation statement that included:

“UIPM confirms that UIPM Treasurer, John Helmick, has handed in his accreditation for Paris 2024 and left the Olympic Games pending an investigation by a specially-convened UIPM disciplinary panel into alleged credentials irregularities.”

No report has been posted by the UIPM on the resolution of the inquiry. Helmick is being opposed for treasurer by Brazilian Helio Meirelles, who has been a UIPM Auditor.

● Swimming ● The U.S. led the medal table at the World Aquatics Junior Open-Water Championships in Alghero (ITA) in Sardinia, with Paris Olympic women’s 4×200 m Free relay silver winner Claire Weinstein winning two golds and a silver.

She took the 3 km Knockout Sprint over teammate Brinkleigh Hansen, 5:50.8 to 6:00.0 and won the 7.5 km race in 1:25:43.3, plus a silver on the Mixed 4×1,500 m relay, with Claire Stuhlmacher, Ryan Erisman and Luke Ellis.

Stuhlmacher had already won the women’s 10 km title and the 5 km race went to Hansen.

In fact, the American women swept their four races, winning five medals, plus the Mixed 4×15 silver. The U.S. men were shut out.

● Wrestling ● The U.S. topped the medals at the United World Wrestling World U-20 Championships in Pontevedra (ESP) that closed on Sunday, totaling 16 (3-7-6) to 15 for Russian and Belarusian “neutrals.”

The American men’s Freestyle team took the team title with 175 points, over Iran (160) with Luke Lilledahl winning the 57 kg class; the U.S. won nine medals in the 10 classes (1-4-4).

The men’s Greco-Roman team was sixth (three total medals) and the women’s Freestylers were third (101 points). Cristelle Rodriguez (55 kg) and Jasmine Robinson (72 kg) won golds, among the women’s total of four.

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OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES 2026: Italian Olympic construction overseers say work on schedule on new Cortina sliding track

Construction in progress at the new Cortina bob, skeleton and luge track for the 2026 Olympic Winter Games (Photo courtesy IBSF).

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≡ MILAN CORTINA 2026 ≡

A joint statement from the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) and Federation Internationale de Luge (FIL) offered assurance that the under-construction track in Cortina d’Ampezzo (ITA) will be ready on time for 2025 time trials.

IBSF President Ivo Ferriani (ITA) explained:

“After our inspection on the site, I am very pleased to confirm that the quality of the product and the timing we see in the execution of the work, make us absolutely positive about the final result.

“We are sure that the track will be ready in the ways and times expected and above all with the quality necessary for the safety of the athletes.”

Work on the 1,650 m, 16-turn track was delayed over and over again and in 2023, a request for proposals from the Italian SiMiCo government agency responsible for Olympic construction received no bidders.

While it appeared that the bobsled, skeleton and luge events would be held at an existing track outside of Italy – likely in Austria or Switzerland – a political storm in Italy led to a trimming of the requirements and Parma-based Impresa Pizzarotti & C. submitted a bid of €81.6 million (about $90.1 million U.S. today) in January 2024.

Although the International Olympic Committee expressed its firm preference for an existing venue, this bid was accepted and construction began on 19 February and is required to be completed in time for trial runs and certification in March 2025.

According to Monday’s statement:

“During a track walk, the representatives of IBSF, FIL, The International Olympic Committee and Milano Cortina 2026 could see the progress which was made over the past months.

“In a meeting, Ing. Fabio Saldini, CEO of SiMiCo, the responsible company for the infrastructure buildings, updated both international federations and the IOC representative on the work accomplished so far and the works to be done over the upcoming months, including a ‘snow plan’ for works to continue during cold and snowy weather conditions.”

Saldini explained:

“The work schedule respects the timing, production and strategic objectives that will lead the track to pre-homologation in March 2025 and its use in view of the 2026 Olympic Winter Games.

“The spring season of intense bad weather did not affect the construction which respected the main stages and continues to progress according to the established times. The number of workers involved amounts to 200 resources, of which 150 are engaged in construction activities and 50 in pre-assembly activities at the production sites of the cooling systems.

“The snow emergency plan necessary to guarantee the possibility of using all the construction areas has already been activated: the glycol water present in the cooling pipes will be heated to ensure the temperatures suitable for the work.“

The new construction is replacing the famed Eugenio Monti track used for the 1956 Olympic Winter Games in Cortina, and is slated to be part of an entertainment and sports district in the mountain resort. It, along with a new hockey arena and student housing to be used as the Athlete’s Village are the highest-profile construction works key to the success of the Milan Cortina Winter Games in 2026.

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PARALYMPIC GAMES: IPC chief Parsons congratulates Paris: “this is the benchmark now”

International Paralympic Committee President Andrew Parsons speaking at the closing ceremony, with Paris 2024 President Tony Estanguet at right. (Photo: IPC)

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≡ PARIS 2024 ≡

“They really raised the bar here and I think it’s good. We had that in Barcelona, we had that in Beijing, we had that in London, and now we have it in Paris.

“By raising the bar, it showed our friends in Milano Cortina (2026), L.A. (2028), French Alps (2030), Brisbane (2032), Salt Lake City Utah (2034) that this is the benchmark now, and they had to deliver against that.”

That’s from International Paralympic Committee President Andrew Parsons (BRA), speaking about the now-concluded XVII Paralympic Games in Paris, which he now recognizes as the Games against which future Paralympics will be measured:

“We are moving this Movement forward and making sure that also these organizing committees, they see the potential. It’s not only about raising the bar, but also allowing the other organizers, host cities and host nations understand the potential of what we saw here.

“Two and a half million tickets were sold; they were not given. The number of broadcasts is higher than ever before, and this shows commercial value. So, let’s say, this gives them a few challenges, but many opportunities.”

He explained further in an IPC feature, reflecting on what transpired in Paris:

● “I think these Games brought us to a completely new level. It’s the most spectacular Games ever – just the quality of sport and the quality of venues, while the enthusiasm and the atmosphere that the crowd provided was just insane.”

● “I think everything we had anticipated, predicted and even dreamed of happened during the Games. “

● “The fans were an important part and a fundamental part of the Paris 2024 Games. It was a combination of the sport performances, the great venues, very smooth operations, but certainly the participation of the Parisians or the spectators in the stands that made these Games so spectacular.”

● “I think athletes were happy, the National Paralympic Committees are happy, the International Federations are happy. I think it was a complete success. What’s in my mind now is what’s the next step after we have come so, so, so far prior to Milano Cortina (2026) and L.A. (2028).”

● “There were also so many friendly volunteers working behind the scenes. If the athletes are at the heart of the Games, the volunteers are probably the muscles. They are the ones making sure that things happen and that the athletes have what they need.

“I saw so many beautiful smiles and I interacted with so many volunteers here from different parts of the world. It was just very touching to see how proud they were. They will leave this experience for the rest of their lives, no doubt about it.”

At a news conference prior to the closing, Paris 2024 President Tony Estanguet confirmed that 2.5 million tickets were sold for the Paralympics, close to a sell-out of the available seats, second only to the 2.7 million tickets sold at London 2012 for a Paralympic Games.

Combined with the nearly 9.6 million tickets sold for the Olympic Games – a huge leap ahead of the old high of 8.3 million in Atlanta in 1996 – some 12.1 million people attended the Olympic and Paralympic Games, the most ever; London sold 11 million tickets in 2012.

Estanguet added:

“We sold more tickets for the para-nations than for swimming. At the Stade de France, the athletics session where we sold the most tickets was for the Paralympic Games.”

And at the Club France, the “home” of the French team in Paris at the Parc de la Villette, more than 100,000 people came during the Paralympics. Said Estanguet: “It’s completely crazy.”

Parsons noted the importance of the Paralympic Games broadcasts, reaching a worldwide audience:

“This is what we want. When we have a vision to make a more inclusive world through Para sport, it’s not only about the people, the spectators at the venues. It’s about the people watching it at home in the four corners of the world.

“When we have numbers of broadcasting as the ones we have here, it shows that we are expanding the reach of the Paralympic Movement, and this means impact. First of all, they understand that if we can remove barriers and allow athletes with disabilities to excel at a global stage, as we do in the Games, we can do it everywhere in society. And this is the strongest message.”

But Parsons was also already looking to the future:

“The success of Paris 2024 gives us great confidence for Los Angeles 2028.

“I’ve said it before, we want to make a breakthrough in America. We’re not where we want to be in the United States in terms of the Paralympic Movement. The Los Angeles Games will give us the opportunity to do that.”

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ANTI-DOPING: WADA back on the attack, whines that U.S. anti-doping “testing performance is far from optimal”

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The World Anti-Doping Agency dropped its latest bomb in its war of words with the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, responding to a letter from a group of European anti-doping agencies with a three-page blast at the USADA.

Friday’s letter, sent to USADA Board Chair Dr. Tobie Smith and not to chief executive Travis Tygart, repeats the long-standing WADA gripes against anti-doping in the U.S.:

“The letter expresses alarm that athletes competing at a very high level, such as within the college sports system and professional leagues, do not receive the protection of the Code and are not bound by its provisions. In addition, the signatories to the letter appeared to be concerned that the U.S. was sending athletes to major events, such as the Olympic Games and World Championships, without being sufficiently tested in advance.”

● “The fact is 90% of American athletes compete outside the protection of the Code. Specifically, we are referring to the professional leagues and college sports. Of primary concern is the matter of college sports, which account for so many athletes who go on to compete at the very highest levels, including the Olympic Games.”

● “Mr. Tygart said [in 2020] he was concerned that foreign athletes were coming to the U.S. for ‘a doping vacation where they are subject to, I think, a pretty weak anti-doping program in the NCAA.’ It should be hugely concerning for USADA that so many top athletes are competing in a U.S. system that fails to protect their interests, their performances and, ultimately, their health. We are sure it horrifies you to know that top overseas athletes may be taking “doping vacations’ on U.S. soil.”

● “Generally, USADA’s overall testing performance is far from optimal. In 2023, according to its own figures, USADA collected just 7,773 samples from 3,011 athletes. This is a disappointing number when you consider the country’s population, high number of athletes and size of their Olympic team. With more than twice the budget, USADA collects fewer than half the number of samples as its counterpart in Germany.”

“USADA’s record does not compare favorably up against its peers in other countries. Yet, to distract from these serious issues with the state of the U.S. antidoping system, USADA apparently tries to undermine U.S. athletes’ confidence in the integrity of their rivals overseas.”

The letter, from WADA President Witold Banka (POL) and Director-General Olivier Niggli (SUI) closed with a reversal of what Tygart has been calling for from WADA:
More generally, athletes of the U.S. and their opponents all over the world deserve better protection and support. Therefore, WADA is calling for root and branch reforms of the anti-doping system within the U.S, especially when it comes to college sports.”

This is almost funny, but it’s not.

U.S. Anti-Doping Agency head Tygart responded quickly with a dismissal of the latest WADA attack:

“It is sad to see current WADA leaders stoop so low as to attack U.S. college and pro athletes. With the full Cottier Report [on the 2021 Chinese doping incident] due for release on Thursday, this latest attempt at deflection is telling.

“WADA leaders are obviously running scared to resort to such despicable actions to deflect from their own failure to do their job as the global regulator in the handling of the 23 positive Chinese TMZ cases. Where is the accountability for WADA leadership’s decisions?

“The reality is that U.S. Olympic athletes are covered by both the USADA and NCAA programs. If WADA leadership bothered looking into all the data, not just the pieces that serve its agenda, it would know that 100% of U.S. NCAA athletes who competed at the Paris Olympic Games were tested by USADA in 2024.

“USADA has also worked closely with the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) over the past several years to encourage the NCAA to advance their program. Unfortunately, the over-the-top attacks today by WADA leaders have probably completely undermined that effort. And if there was any doubt before, this latest attack is a perfect example of why U.S. college and pro sports would want nothing to do with WADA.”

Observed: WADA’s letter does nothing to advance their case, but shows that the leadership is smart enough to lay off heavy criticism of U.S. professional leagues and their doping programs.

In those cases – Major League Baseball, the NFL, NBA, NHL and others – the athlete voice is real, in the form of a formalized union, which negotiates its terms of employment – including anti-doping – directly with the team owners. This is the real athlete voice in action, not an “athletes commission” which has some input and a minority vote.

WADA would do well to stay from the U.S. pro leagues entirely, because its version of the “athlete voice” is barely a shadow of the status of American major-league athletes.

As for the NCAA, WADA may be wasting its time; it’s not clear that intercollegiate athletics as currently known will even exist by the time of LA28.

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