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TSX REPORT: French authorities disclose Azeri disinfo effort vs. Paris 2024; Games traffic will be difficult; Emma Hayes confirmed as USWNT coach

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 ≡

1. French note Azeri disinformation campaign vs. Paris 2024
2. French transport minister says Paris 2024 traffic “complicated”
3. U.S. Soccer announces Emma Hayes as women’s coach
4. USA Wrestling announces $380,000 in World Champs bonuses
5. Skating’s core audience maintained against the NFL

● The French government’s digital watchdog agency said that an Azeri disinformation campaign had been launched against Paris 2024, beginning in July. Carried primarily on X (ex-Twitter), it depicted images of riots against symbols of France and Paris 2024. The agency previously detected a Russian effort in June against the French government.

● The French transport minister told hotel and restaurant representatives that traffic in Paris during the Olympic period in 2024 will be “complicated.” The detailed plan for transportation is due to be presented at the end of November or in early December.

● U.S. Soccer formally announced the hiring of Chelsea coach Emma Hayes, born in England, but with long experience in the U.S. She has been a sensation for Chelsea, establishing it as the premier club team in England. She will start next year, following the close of the current club season.

● American wrestlers who won medals at the 2023 UWW World Championships received bonuses of $380,000 from the Living the Dream Medal Fund. The four gold winners each received $50,000, with $25,000 for the three silver medalists and $15,000 for the seven bronze medalists. For Paris, the Fund will offer prizes of $250,000, $50,000 and $25,000 for medal-winning performances!

● The core audience for U.S. figure skating appears to be about 600,000 off of the latest television viewing statistics, after the fourth ISU Grand Prix highlights broadcast pn NBC last Sunday drew 606,000 in direct competition with the NFL. The prior three Grand Prix audiences were close to that number.

Panorama: Russia (2: Ski federation chief says feds will beg Russians to come back; Olympic Committee calls gymnastics re-entry regs “segregation”) = Alpine Skiing (Shiffrin names her seventh reindeer) = Athletics (Crouser and Lyles finalists for men’s athlete of the year) = Ice Hockey (English police arrest suspect in Johnson’s throat-slash death) = Luge (Gustafson and Farquharson win U.S. individual titles) ●

1.
French note Azeri disinformation campaign vs. Paris 2024

“The investigations showed that at least one foreign actor close to Azerbaijan had acted, via the use of unauthentic processes, with the objective of harming at France’s reputation in its capacity to host the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games.”

That’s from a report from the French state agency for Vigilance and Protection against Foreign Digital Interference (VIGINUM) made available to media on Monday.

An inquiry was opened in late July after “several visuals calling for a boycott of the 2024 Olympics” were posted on X (formerly Twitter), showing rioting, Paris and the Paris 2024 logo, accompanied by hashtags #PARIS2024 and #BOYCOTTPARIS2024. On 26 and 27 July, more than 1,600 posts using these items were seen on X, with about 90 accounts doing the posting, which the report classified as “suggesting artificial amplification.”

Of these, 40 accounts were created in July alone and carried only anti-Paris 2024 messages. Of these accounts, “a significant proportion had at least one link to Azerbaijan,” showing the Azerbaijani flag, locations in the country or quotes from Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

Agence France Presse reported:

“The account @MuxtarYev published 15 visuals calling for a boycott, which were then amplified by inauthentic accounts and picked up by X accounts linked to Azerbaijan — a pattern that ‘reinforces the hypothesis of a coordinated manoeuvre,’ Viginum said.

“Created in June 2023, the @MuxtarYev account claims to be located in Azerbaijan.

“The name Muxtar Nagiyev and the account’s profile photo coincide with the identity of the chairman of the Sabail district organisation of the New Azerbaijan party, the ex-Soviet country’s ruling party.”

Relations between Azerbaijan and France have been strained over the September Azeri takeover of the Nagorno-Karabakh area, also claimed by Armenia.

The Paris 2024 organizers stated on Tuesday, “Between now and the Games, Paris 2024 will continue to monitor, in conjunction with the relevant authorities, the veracity of information circulating about the event and its organisation.”

The disclosure of the VIGINUM report follows an International Olympic Committee statement last Thursday condemning “fake news posts targeting the IOC,” notably on the Telegram social-media service and others.

VIGINUM previously announced a Russian disinformation campaign in June, “involving Russian actors and to which government bodies or bodies affiliated with the Russian State have participated by spreading misinformation.

“This campaign consists, among other things, of creating fake web pages usurping the identity of national media outlets and government websites as well as creating fake accounts on social media. …

“VIGINUM has also observed that several government bodies or bodies affiliated with the Russian State participated in spreading certain content produced under this campaign.”

2.
French transport minister says Paris 2024 traffic “complicated”

“By the end of November, at the very beginning of December at the latest, the long-awaited traffic plans in Paris will be presented. I will not hide from you that these traffic plans … they will be ‘hardcore.’

“On competition days, it will be complicated to get around Paris.”

That’s French Transport Minister Clement Beaune, speaking on Tuesday to the Group of Hotels and Restaurants of France, explaining what they should expect from the government in order to make their own plans for deliveries, guests and staff.

Beaune said there would be further discussions with the group and others concerning traffic flows and restrictions. Also:

“There will be an information campaign both on anticipation of the Games, how to ensure that we have a little less unnecessary travel … during the Games,” and “to explain this, what happens during the Games: the plans, the exemptions, those who have the right to travel.”

Transportation is one of the most complex and unforgiving aspects of any Olympic Games, with priority given to athletes, teams and sports officials who need to get to their venues, along with television production crews, technical and security staff and volunteers, along with media and, of course, spectators. For those simply living in the host city, daily life can get re-arranged pretty quickly.

The transportation authorities, especially in the Ile-de-France region that includes Paris, have consistently warned about preparations, even as to a limit for the Opening Ceremonies on the Seine River that would be limited to the capacity of the public transit systems close to the river.

3.
U.S. Soccer announces Emma Hayes as women’s coach

Although already widely publicized, U.S. Soccer formally announced the hiring of Chelsea women’s coach Emma Hayes (GBR) as the new head coach of the U.S. Women’s National Team.

Hayes, 47, has plenty of American experience, having worked in the U.S. since 2001 and served as the head coach of the Chicago Red Stars of Women’s Professional Soccer from 2008-10. She was hired by Chelsea in 2012 and will serve to the end of this season, having compiled a brilliant 237-58-39 record (W-L-T) so far.

She was named “Best FIFA Football Coach” in 2021 and her Chelsea squad won five Women’s F.A. Cup titles in 2015-18-21-22-23 and six F.A. Women’s Super League trophies, in 2015-18-20-21-22-23.

According to the announcement:

“Hayes will finish the 2023-24 Women’s Super League season in England and then join the U.S. team officially two months prior to the start of the 2024 Olympics. Interim head coach Twila Kilgore will continue in her role and then join Hayes’ staff full-time as an assistant coach.”

She will have four matches as the head of the USWNT prior to the start of the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.

Hayes was asked about moving on from Chelsea, where she has had so much success:

“I’m sure everybody can understand when you’ve been associated with a club for almost 12 years, a club built from the bottom up, they’ve become my family, become so much of my own identity. Without question it pulled up my heartstrings because I care so much for the players and everybody that I’ve built relationships with.

“But I’m all about challenge. We’ve won a lot at Chelsea and I’m very proud of that, and I’m proud of the fact that I can leave that club in a better place and one that I hope continues to compete. But for me, the challenge of competing for World Cups, for Olympics, the dream of coaching a team that I’ve always wanted to get the opportunity to, I simply couldn’t turn it down.”

And Hayes has a clear concept of what she will be expected to produce:

“I understand how important the team is to people and culture of the United States.

“This is not just about the soccer community and I fully understand the prestige and place that the team has in U.S. society. I’ve lived it. I remember being a young coach working my way up through the system in the U.S. and watching all those young girls aspire to play on the U.S. Women’s National Team.

“For me, the honor of building on that legacy is part of my motivation, no question. I have watched all the teams endlessly since I was a teenager. I have coached players at different points that have been across the program. I understand what it means to the U.S. people, and I will do everything possible to make sure that we compete on the top end, because in the world game there’s no denying the gaps have closed worldwide so it’s important we work hard, but we work together because we’re not going achieve that alone. It’s the entire ecosystem and landscape that has to cooperate to make sure that the U.S. Women’s National Team is at the top of the podium. That’s our objective.”

Hayes follows Vlatko Andonovski as the head coach of the American women’s team. He had a shiny 51-5-9 (W-L-T) record from 2019-2023, but the U.S. was eliminated by Sweden in the first playoff round at the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. He is now the head coach of the Kansas City Current of the NWSL.

4.
USA Wrestling announces $380,000 in World Champs bonuses

U.S. wrestlers who won medals at the recent UWW World Championships in Serbia received a total of $380,000 in bonuses from the federation’s Living the Dream Medal Fund, with the bonus total across 14 years now totaling $5.060 million paid to 46 athletes.

There were 14 Americans who won medals in Belgrade, each receiving significant amounts:

Gold: $50,000, awarded to Vito Arauju (men’s 61 kg Freestyle), Zain Retherford (men’s 70 kg Freestyle), David Taylor (men’s 86 kg Freestyle) and Amit Elor (women’s 72 kg Freestyle).

Silver: $25,000, awarded to Kyle Dake (men’s 74 kg Freestyle), Jacarra Winchester (women’s 55 kg Freestyle) and Macey Kilty (women’s 65 kg Freestyle).

Bronze: $15,000, awarded to Zahid Valencia (men’s 92 kg Freestyle), Kyle Snyder (men’s 97 kg Freestyle), Mason Parris (men’s 125 kg Freestyle), Sarah Hildebrandt (women’s 50 kg Freestyle), Helen Maroulis (women’s 57 kg Freestyle), Jennifer Page (women’s 59 kg Freestyle), and Adeline Gray (women’s 76 kg Freestyle).

The fund is supported by private donations and direct support from USA Wrestling and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee. The amounts in World Championship years exceeds the Operation Gold amounts offered by the USOPC for Olympic medals of $37,500-22,500-15,000.

For Olympic medals, the Living the Dream Medal Fund payments are sensational, with $250,000-50,000-25,000 offered for Paris in 2024.

The total payout for 2023 ($380,000) was down from 2022, when 15 wrestlers won prizes, including seven gold winners for a total of $530,000.

The 2021-24 quadrennial is shaping up to be the best yet in terms of payout, with $1,360,000 already awarded for the 2021, 2022 and 2023 Worlds. The prior quad payouts have included:

● $1,850,000 for 2017-20
● $1,075,000 for 2013-16
● $775,000 for 2009-12

The all-time Fund payments leader is 2012 Olympic winner and six-time World Champion Jordan Burroughs, with $595,000, with Snyder – the Rio 2016 gold medalist – the only other recipient over $500,000, at $530,000.

5.
Skating’s core audience maintained against the NFL

After four stops on the ISU Grand Prix circuit for 2023, the core U.S. TV audience for figure skating in the U.S. has become clear at about 600,000.

The latest evidence came from the fourth leg of the tour, the Cup of China last weekend. Right-holder NBC keeps the live programming on its Peacock subscription streaming service, then shows a highlights package on Sunday or even a week later.

So for the Cup of China last Sunday (12th), the NBC highlights show came on at 3:00 p.m. Eastern, right up against the final hour of the 1:00 p.m. games which drew 28.8 million on Fox and CBS combined.

The average audience was 606,000, right in line with the other Grand Prix stops on NBC so far:

Oct. 21 (Sat.): 191.000 on E! for Skate America: live
Oct. 22 (Sun.): 699,000 on NBC for Skate America: delayed
Nov. 04 (Sat.): 622,000 on NBC for Skate Canada International: delayed
Nov. 05 (Sun.): 551,000 on NBC for the Grand Prix of France: delayed

The Grand Prix moves back to Europe this week, for the Grand Prix Espoo in Finland from 17-19 November and then finishes its regular season in Japan and following week for the NHK Trophy in Osaka. The Grand Prix Final will be held from 7-10 December in Beijing.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Russia ● The President of the Russian Ski Federation, Elena Vyalbe, told reporters on Tuesday that the IOC and other sports organizations will be asking for Russians to return to competition:

“What [IOC President Thomas] Bach [GER] says today does not mean that tomorrow it will be the same repeated words again; he can say something of his own, come up with something new. His last statement was that he is not very happy that we are holding tournaments, that it could affect the reputation and interest in international organizations that have been around for a long time.

“My deep conviction is that Bach and not only him, but also the top IOC staff do not have the right to say what they would like to say.

“I’m sure that he, as a former athlete, would like everyone to compete, but there are sponsors who dictate what should be done. So you have to cancel Russia: they canceled us. But from nothing, let’s wait, they themselves will come crawling on their knees, they will still beg.”

Asked about Russian participation in the 2026 Winter Games in Italy, she replied:

“Do I believe in competing at the 2026 Olympics? I’m an optimist in life, so we need to believe to the last that sooner or later, of course, we will be allowed to participate in international competitions, including the Olympics. …

“There is faith that we will take part [in the Games] in 2026, why shouldn’t there be this faith?”

As for the participation regulations issued by the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique (FIG), the Russian Olympic Committee issued another statement, that included:

“The FIG issued a list of requirements for the admission of Russians to competitions, this document reads like a real ode to segregation. It simply talks about the complete neutralization of the color scheme of competitive equipment and equipment, and the already most impersonal gymnasts and gymnasts are invited to perform in a single-color outfit. In artistic gymnastics, where leotard design is a separate art and an element of production, which is of great importance for the integrity of any image and performance, respectively, its visual perception and evaluation.

“The policy of double standards and discrimination based on nationality seems to abolish all moral and ethical norms and common sense in the Olympic movement.”

● Alpine Skiing ● American skiing superstar Mikaela Shiffrin posted on X (ex-Twitter) a note on her seventh Levi reindeer naming:

“Loved all the suggestions for reindeer names that everyone sent (head over to Insta to see all of the ideas)! Finally landed on one that I don’t think too many people would expect: Grogu!”

She included a photo of her and Grogu, with the animal distinctly nonplussed; Shiffrin commented: “Thank goodness [boyfriend] @AleksanderKilde [NOR] doesn’t look at me like this when I try to kiss him”

● Athletics ● The finalists for the World Athletics’ Men’s World Athlete of the Year were announced Tuesday, including two U.S. stars:

● Neeraj Chopra (IND) ~ Worlds javelin gold, Asian Games gold
● Ryan Crouser (USA) ~ Worlds shot gold, world shot record
● Mondo Duplantis (SWE) ~ Worlds vault gold, world record
● Kelvin Kiptum (KEN) ~ Marathon world record
● Noah Lyles (USA) ~ Worlds 100/200/4×100 m golds

The announcement noted that two million votes from the public were tallied for this award, with the winner to be revealed on 11 December.

● Ice Hockey ● The South Yorkshire Police in England arrested a man on Tuesday in connection with the death of Nottingham Panthers play Adam Johnson (USA), who died after receiving a skate cut to his throat during a 28 October game against the Sheffield Steelers in Sheffield.

Johnson, 29, died afterwards. The Associated Press reported that video of the incident showed Steelers player Matt Petgrave [CAN] falling after a collision with a Panthers player and his left skate hit Johnson in the neck.

The police did not release the name of the arrested individual taken on suspicion of manslaughter.

● Luge ● USA Luge crowned its national champions in Lake Placid, New York over the weekend, with Johnny Gustafson and Ashley Farquharson taking the individual titles.

Gustafson won his second U.S. championship on a difficult track, with hard ice and a bumpy course that changed the scoring to the best combined two runs out of three. Gustafson finished his two best runs in 1:45.811, ahead of 2018 Olympic silver winner Chris Mazdzer (1:46.169) and Hunter Harris (1:46.340).

Farquharson took her first American championship in 1:30.659, comfortable ahead of junior competitors Sophia Gordon (1:32.158) and Emma Erickson (1:32.181).

Current World U-23 champs Zach DiGregorio and Sean Hollander won the men’s Doubles in 1:29.859, ahead of Marcus Mueller and Ansel Hauhsjaa (1:30.666) and debutante pair Dana Kellogg and Frank Ike (1:31.746). The women’s Doubles crown went to 2022 Worlds bronze winners Chevonne Forgan and Sophie Kirkby in 1:32.726, the only pair to post two finishes.

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For our updated, 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: Bach calls for federation unity on governments and Russia; federations in panic over LA28 TV money; key poll on U.S. view of Olympics

A July poll said Americans like the 2028 Olympics being in Los Angeles by 78-4%!

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

To get The Sports Examiner by e-mail: sign up here!

≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Bach rips governments, Russia and Friendship Games in one speech!
2. Federations panic over LA28 money split among new sports
3. CSUSOP poll shows support for LA28 Games, no idea about USOPC
4. Poll: Paris 2024 support in France at 65%, 56% in Paris region
5. Russian gymnasts to decide whether to apply as neutrals

● International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach of Germany urged the International Federations to stay unified behind the IOC’s recommendations for eligibility for Paris 2024 while backhanding Russian attempts to create a parallel sports structure, including multi-sport events before and after the 2024 Olympic Games.

● A meeting of the summer Olympic federations raised considerable concerns about the explosion of sports for 2028 in Los Angeles and the impact that it will have on their shares of the IOC’s television revenue.

● A national poll compiled for the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics found that sport is important to Americans, that the 2028 Olympics is a good thing and that few understand the role of the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee as the coordinator of community and youth sport as well as the American Olympic and Paralympic teams.

● A poll in France showed a continuing decline in enthusiasm for the 2024 Paris Games, with national support now at 65% and at 56% in the Ile-de-France region which includes Paris. Some 56% of those polled in the Ile-de-France said they plan to leave the area during the Games and many hope to rent out their homes for high fees.

● Russian gymnastics officials said it will be up to individual athletes to decide if they want to apply to participate as neutrals in 2024, but the national coaches of the artistic and rhythmic teams are both against it.

Panorama: SportAccord (Erdener appointed President) = Athletics (five finalists for women’s athlete of the year) = Basketball (U.S. national team creams Tennessee and Duke in exhibitions) = Modern Pentathlon (group named to figure out 2028 fencing format) = Wrestling (2024 qualifying tournaments to skip finals) ●

1.
Bach rips governments, Russia and Friendship Games in one speech!

The three-day International Federation Forum taking place in Lausanne, Switzerland was opened by International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER) on Monday, with a pointed address aimed mostly at Russia, but also at Western governments.

Bach’s themes were not new, but his comments were a bit more specific thanks to recent events:

● On the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee:

“[W]e have received questions from a number of you regarding the impact of the suspension of the Russian NOC on you. The Russian Olympic Committee had to be suspended by the IOC because it violated the territorial integrity of the NOC of Ukraine by including as its members sports organisations of regions of Ukraine.

“This is a blatant breach of the Olympic Charter. This decision is purely based on the actions of the ROC and does not imply that the IFs should automatically suspend their respective Russian member federation. It is up to each IF, on a case-by-case basis, to examine the situation in view of the IF statutes.”

● “The autonomy of sport – your autonomy as an International Sports Federation – is under threat. The actions of these divisive political forces would effectively mean that they take over your role as International Federations.

“Some want to decide which athletes can compete in which competitions.

“Others want to decide where your competitions can take place. Still others want to organise their own political sports events. Especially the latter would mean a government takeover of international sport. If they succeed with this, your role and the role of the Olympic Movement would become obsolete.”

“For all these reasons, I call on all of you to stand against such politicised sport. None of us should participate in any way in such politically motivated sports events.”

The last comment was a direct swipe at Russia, where President Vladimir Putin has directed the construction of a parallel sports governing body to the IOC and the creation or expansion of multi-sport events organized along political lines. This includes the BRICS Games (Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa), held in South Africa in October 2023 and to be held just prior to the 2024 Olympic Games in June next year in Kazan (RUS), and the “Friendship Games” planned in September in Russia and possibly also in Belarus.

Bach continued to trumpet his call for sport as a force for good in the world:

“The current geopolitical tensions are extremely complex. In such times, the unifying power of sport is more important than ever before. To be such a unifying power, it is essential that we all stand together.

“Today, millions of people around the globe are longing for such a unifying force that brings us all together in our so confrontational world. Our role is clear: to unite – and not to deepen divisions. Therefore, we carry an important responsibility – to stand together for the power of sport and to live up to our shared mission to make the world a better place through sport.”

Observed: Bach is quite right to be on offense here, as what he has called our “aggressively divisive” times are tearing societies apart everywhere. But it is also true that he has a tight line to walk because the athletes in every country in the world except one – the U.S. – are dependent on government support, whether direct or through their National Olympic Committee or national sports federations.

A litmus test of sorts is coming in Australia, which will host the 2032 Olympic Games in Brisbane, and where Australian Olympic Committee chief Matt Carroll said in March:

“Based on the federal government’s forward estimates, there is a $2 billion shortfall in direct investment in Olympic, Paralympic and Commonwealth Games sports in the 10 years leading to Brisbane 2032.” (A$2 billion = approx. $1.28 billion U.S.)

Bach’s training in the unity of the Olympic Movement came from the late Juan Antonio Samaranch (ESP), the IOC President from 1980-2001, who stressed this aspect relentlessly, both publicly and privately. Samaranch brought Bach in as a member of the first IOC Athletes Commission, in 1981 and was elected to the IOC in 1991, during Samaranch’s term.

However, the world Samaranch worked in was far different from Bach’s. The Cold War had dissolved and peace was breaking out. Now, the opposite has happened, with Russia invading Ukraine, and Hamas, the governing body in Gaza, invading Israel in October, with dangerous escalations possible all around them.

Bach, a lawyer by trade, points repeatedly to the Olympic Charter, whose second Fundamental Principle of Olympism states:

“The goal of Olympism is to place sport at the service of the harmonious development of humankind, with a view to promoting a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human dignity.”

As the National Olympic Committees in each country “have the exclusive authority for the representation of their respective countries at the Olympic Games,” the argument can be made that those countries which are not “promoting a peaceful society” should not be part of the Olympic Games.

The IOC has taken this step with the Russian Olympic Committee, but not because of its invasion of Ukraine, but the absorption of Ukrainian sports organizations in occupied territories, more or less like convicting infamous gangster Al Capone of tax evasion instead of the murders he organized. Is this why not a word has been spoken about the National Olympic Committee of Palestine?

Going one step further, because every country except the U.S. financially supports their National Olympic Committees (and the country’s athletes), should athletes who are financially supported by an aggressor country – Russia for example – be able to compete at the Paris 2024 Games?

This is the question that British Minister Lucy Frazer has asked repeatedly, but with no answer from the IOC. At least so far.

2.
Federations panic over LA28 money split among new sports

The Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF) held its final Council meeting of the year on Monday, also in Lausanne, and issued a remarkable summary which included:

“In October, the [IOC] Session approved five additional sports for the LA28 Olympic Games, which are baseball/softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash, implying record numbers of sports and athletes for this edition. The decision has raised several questions among ASOIF members, including, but not limited to the International Federation (IF) Olympic revenue share (as of LA28) and Games delivery. During its meeting, the Council agreed to raise these urgent matters with the IOC leadership.

“ASOIF President Francesco Ricci Bitti [ITA], who chaired the meeting, said: ‘Over the last years, the nature of the Olympic Programme has changed, making it more dynamic than ever. New principles, processes and frameworks are required to deal adequately with this evolution and important matters like IF revenue share, athlete quotas, Olympic qualification systems and Games optimisation. These are the issues that hugely impact IF operations and have far-reaching effects on the entire Olympic Movement.’”

The IOC provides a bulk sum to ASOIF which is distributed according to multiple criteria on the profile and impact of each sport involved. Some $520 million U.S. was split for the London 2012 Games, a huge increase from Beijing 2008 ($297 million). But the raise for Rio in 2016 was only to $540 million and remained the same for Tokyo 2020. Now, the federations are expecting another significant raise for Paris 2024 and beyond as NBC’s new television contract for 2022-32 has kicked in.

And as nearly all of the International Federation are dependent on Olympic revenue shares to stay solvent, the issue of potentially more federations to pay is a problem.

London 2012 had 26 sports participating, with 28 at Rio 2016 and 33 at Tokyo 2020; the Tokyo total included five added sports which did not receive television revenue shares. For Paris 2024, there will be 32 sports, of which four were added, and not eligible for TV shares. But for 2028, sport climbing, skateboarding and surfing were added to the permanent program, raising the total number of federations to receive TV shares to 31, with boxing still to be confirmed (so 30 right now). And will a change be made to provide some payments to the federations of the five added sports for 2028? It’s an important question for the IFs, and therefore for ASOIF.

And with the Olympic Charter target of 10,500 athletes, the potential of these added sports to reduce the number of athletes in each sport, especially the big ones such as athletics and swimming, is already causing consternation. The report given at the IOC Session indicated the additional sports would add 742 more athletes (plus coaches and support personnel).

The ASOIF Council also took note of the politically-inspired Games situation noted by Bach:

“The Council also took a clear position on the World Friendship Games and calls on ASOIF’s member federations to exercise great caution regarding their involvement with this initiative, which is not conducive to dialogue within the sports world during these challenging times.”

3.
CSUSOP poll shows support for LA28 Games, no idea about USOPC

The Aspen Institute’s Project Play program posted a link to a detailed July poll compiled by Survey USA of 1,000 U.S. adults on behalf of the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics, asking about the state of sport in the U.S. and about the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee.

The overall takeaways from the 53-question survey are that sport is important in the U.S., but that Americans know very little about Olympic sports and how they are administered in the country. Some highlights:

● Asked whether sports was important in the U.S., 81% agreed vs. 6% who didn’t, with 13% not sure. However, only 34-38% reported that they or their children participated in youth or recreational sports. 43% reported not participating in any sports.

● A staggering 98% said it was important that “your child’s coaches and other sports staff are trained in safety practices and have undergone background checks.” And 87% said that athletes and staff safety was a priority.

● As to costs, 49% said they had struggled to afford their child’s participation (fees, equipment, uniforms), but 48% said they had not.

Multiple questions were asked about the Olympic and Paralympic Games in general and the Los Angeles 2028 Games in specific:

● An impressive 78% view the 2028 Games positively, with 4% against and 18% not sure. Asked for the reasons, 74% cited economic impact, but everything else drew only middling interest. Just 53% thought the Games would engender a positive view of the U.S.; 53% thought it would increase national pride and unity and only 49% said it would increase tourism.

Even those who liked the Games thought economic development projects related to the Games were hardly helpful: 59% said they were not. Almost 60% of those who were against the Games – 21 of 36 people – cited costs as a major reason for their disdain. Of that 36-person group, 75% were not concerned about “displacement of vulnerable populations,” an aspect constantly asserted by naysaying groups.

Over the preceding decade, 56% said their enthusiasm for the Olympics and Paralympics has stayed the same, with 27% saying it has increased and decreased for 14%.

The survey showed huge gaps in American understanding of how Olympic, Paralympic and youth sports are organized:

● Some 43% said they did not know what organization was charged by Congress to coordinate “amateur sports activity” in the U.S. The USOPC was named by just 21%, the President’s Council on Physical Fitness was cited by 16% and the NCAA by 9%.

Moreover, 70% said they had no idea that the USOPC and the U.S. National Governing Bodies impacted youth sports in the U.S. Only 20% said yes. But 81% said promoting and supporting youth sports in the U.S. was important.

● Accessibility to sport for underserved communities was important to 84% of those polled and the involvement of current and former athletes in decisions was supported by 78%.

And there is very little understanding of exactly what the USOPC and athletes are doing:

● The consensus of how much money the USOPC raises from corporate partners was $537 million annually; the report cited the 2021 total of $205 million. Respondents said athletes who win Olympic or Paralympic gold medals get $423,000; the USOPC’s Operation Gold pays $37,500.

There were also strong opinions on doping in sports, with 90% agreeing that doping should be prohibited and 69% supporting the work of the U.S. Center for SafeSport as at least somewhat effective. But:

● 52% thought that reforms undertaken in response to the Larry Nassar scandal need to go further, vs. 25-27% who think the reforms are good and about 25% who were not sure. And 87% want continued reforms to be implemented over time.

● There were 31% whose opinion of the USOPC has improved since the reforms, vs. 12% saying it’s worse now and 57% saying it’s the same or not sure.

Several questions asked about public funding of sport, with 52% saying that more money for youth and school sports was the best use; 14% said Olympic athletes and 7% said Paralympic athletes.

Raising money was another issue, with 17% suggesting more corporate sponsorships (the USOPC would be happy to hear any ideas), 16% for grants and subsidies and 11% for lottery funds. A tax on sports betting attracted 9% interest.

Near the end, a question on whether someone other than the USOPC should take over youth and community sports in the U.S. drew a near-majority of 49%, vs. 16% against and 35% who said it would make no difference or were not sure.

Observed: That the USOPC is a near-national secret is hardly a surprise, since it holds no national events, but there were encouraging confirmations in this poll on the importance of safety in sport and a positive view of the LA28 Games by 78-4%.

Possibly the most important finding was in question 52 on whether another organization besides the USOPC should be responsible for community and youth sport, with 49% support. The question will be who, how funded and how would such an entity govern intensely private-sector efforts such as Little League, AYSO and other youth programs.

The poll also did not touch directly on the role of schools and the existence – or lack thereof – of physical education programs which have been cut in many places for funding shortfall reasons. This is an area which the Aspen Institute has been working on and is trying to come up with policy options for future consideration by the U.S. Congress.

Good for the CSUSOP for commissioning this, providing a disciplined insight into an area which has been subject to speculation, but almost no hard data for decades.

4.
Poll: Paris 2024 support in France at 65%, 56% in Paris region

The newest poll by the Odoxa survey group of opinions around the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris shows a dip in support, with a developing split between those interested in the Games and those who want to leave Paris during the event.

Taken over the weekend, with 1,207 polled in the Ile-de-France region – which includes Paris – and another 1,005 across the rest of France, the overarching like/dislike questions showed a continued flattening:

● 65% nationally were in favor of the Games, down from 76% in September 2021. Some 34% were against the Games and only 1% were undecided.

● Only 56% of the Ile-de-France respondents were in favor, with 44% against. This is down from 77% in favor in September 2021.

Asked about some of the main areas of organization, the national survey showed 71% in favor of the Opening Ceremonies on the Seine River, but 66% expressing concern about transportation, 62% about security and 55% worried that the organization of the Games will not be completed in time.

For those in the Ile-de-France, 81% were worried about transport, 73% about security and 71% about getting the event ready on time.

Within the Ile-de-France, a “love it or leave it” attitude was expressed: 14% expect to attend the Games, 32% wanted to enjoy the ambiance of having the Games in Paris and 52% said they wanted to leave town during the Games.

And for those leaving town, there was a great interest in renting their places out for bid returns: 15% of Ile-de-France respondents want to rent (25% of the Seine-Saint-Denis region at the center of the Games!) and preferably at 300% of the going rate today.

5.
Russian gymnasts to decide whether to apply as neutrals

Vasily Titov, the President of the Russian Artistic Gymnastics Federation, said Monday that the decision to apply for neutral status to the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique will be up the athletes themselves. He told the Russian news agency TASS:

“I want to remind you of the history of the issue; the FIG executive committee decided to admit Russian and Belarusian athletes in a neutral status to international competitions from January 1, 2024.

“But at the same time, FIG took quite a long time to develop the criteria for determining neutrality, which we received in late last week. Now we are studying them carefully, they are very complex.

“The decision to participate in a neutral status will be made by the athletes themselves, who theoretically can meet the conditions of neutrality. At the same time, the position of each Russian federation on individual gymnastic disciplines will be important.

“Today I will not undertake to say whether we are able to fulfill the conditions that were outlined to us. They, I repeat, are very difficult. But now to say unequivocally that none of the Russian athletes will go anywhere, I think, is somewhat premature.”

Titov’s point about the Russian gymnastics system is not to be overlooked, as there are separate national federations for artistic gymnastics, rhythmic gymnastics, trampoline and others. The head of the Russian rhythmic federation has been expressly against “neutral” athletes. So is the national artistic gymnastics coach, Valentina Rodionenko:

“We do not agree with any of the admission criteria that FIG has developed. Until the international federation makes changes to its document, we will not send athletes to the events. This is the decision of the national team’s coaching staff.

“We could not decide otherwise. We are offered to compete under some kind of blue flag. The International Federation in these criteria even exceeded the recommendations of the International Olympic Committee in terms of severity.”

The reported requirements for participation in gymnastics include the expected limitation to individual entries, competing without any national symbols. The key neutrality requirement, was reported as:

“Only those athletes who have not expressed support for the special operation in Ukraine (including those who have not expressed approval of Russia’s military actions on social networks through reposts or forwarded messages) and are not associated with the armed forces or national security agencies can be allowed to participate in competitions.”

Athletes will be required to apply for themselves and pay a fee, with a decision due from FIG within 30 days.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● SportAccord ● At the International Federation Forum in Lausanne, Dr. Ugur Erdener (TUR) was appointed as SportAccord President for four years, adding to his responsibilities as the President of World Archery, President of the National Olympic Committee of Turkey, IOC member and a member of the World Anti-Doping Agency Foundation Board.

He was appointed Monday, along with eight other members, which include American Beau Welling, the President of World Curling, and Russian Anna Arzhanova, head of the World Underwater Federation (CMAS), representing the Association of Recognized International Sports Federations.

SportAccord now sits in the position of the now-disbanded Global Assembly of International Sports Federations (GAISF), and will continue to administer GAISF programs, including the review and approval of new International Federations.

● Athletics ● World Athletics named its finalists for its Women’s World Athlete of the Year, with four world champs and the new marathon world-record holder:

● Tigist Assefa (ETH) ~ Marathon world-record setter in Berlin
● Femke Bol (NED) ~ Worlds 400 m hurdles gold medalist
● Shericka Jackson (JAM) ~ Worlds 200 m gold, 100 m silver
● Faith Kipyegon (KEN) ~ Worlds 1,500/5,000 m champ, three world records
● Yulimar Rojas (VEN) ~ World triple jump champion

The winner will be announced on 11 December.

● Basketball ● The U.S. women have won seven straight Olympic golds and are already qualified for Paris, and have started with exhibition games to gain cohesion, sailing past Tennessee, 95-59, on 5 November and 87-58 over Duke on Sunday.

Against the Vols in Knoxville, the U.S. team got out to a 23-15 lead at the quarter and 52-31 at halftime, with seven-of-12 from the three-point line. A 20-8 third quarter extended the lead, with six U.S. players scoring 10 or more, led by Betnijah Laney (14), Jackie Young (13) and Kahleah Copper (12).

Against Duke in Durham, Copper scored 15 points in the first half to lead the national team to a 46-27 lead at the break. The U.S. shot 50.8% from the field for the game and after a 19-18 edge in the third quarter, ran away in a 22-13 fourth for the 87-58 final.

Copper ended with 21 on 7-9 shooting, with Allisha Gray getting 16 and Dearica Hamby and Rhyne Howard getting 14 each. Center Brittney Griner, a two-time Olympic gold winner, played in both games, scoring 11 against the Vols.

A further selection of players will be made for Paris, with several stars not available for these games due to injuries. The American women will play next in February at an Olympic qualifying tournament as a further tune-up.

● Modern Pentathlon ● The sport survived and will be contested at the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. However, in addition to obstacle replacing riding, the fencing ranking round in which all competitors face each other, with significant scoring and the establishment of the order for the final-day bonus round, has been eliminated.

Now, the Union Internationale de Pentathlon Moderne (UIPM) has created a 12-member panel to figure out how to create a system to replace the scoring program from the ranking round. The first meeting is scheduled for 21 November.

● Wrestling ● United World Wrestling announced that the four continental qualifiers for Paris 2024 will not have tournament winners, but will end after the semifinals, with the two finalists qualified for Paris and no further competition.

For the final, World Qualifier in May, the two semifinal winners will earn quota spots and the two bronze-medal winners will compete for the third quota spot. No gold-medal matches will be held. The five tournaments combined will confirm qualification of 198 quota positions for Paris.

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TSX REPORT: Shiffrin wins 89th World Cup gold in Levi; second Valieva doping hearing ends; online disinformation campaign aimed at IOC

Ski star Mikaela Shiffrin: a seventh win in Levi! (Photo from 2019 by Jeff Shiffrin, courtesy U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Shiffrin wins Sunday Levi slalom as Vlhova skis out
2. Valieva hearing ends, decision in January 2024
3. FIG competition conditions for Russians and Belarusians reported
4. British Olympic chief “happy” on Russian “neutrals”
5. IOC warns of fake news campaign on Telegram

● Skiing superstar Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S. claimed her 89th Alpine World Cup victory on Sunday at the “reindeer races” in Levi, Finland, after Olympic Slalom champ Petra Vlhova of Slovakia did not finish her second run. Vlhova dominated the Saturday race and won her sixth Levi Slalom, with Shiffrin fourth. Sunday’s win is Shiffrin’s seventh Levi win.

● The Court of Arbitration for Sport hearing on the Kamila Valieva doping case from the 2022 Beijing Olympic Winter Games concluded on Friday, with the decision to come by the end of January 2024. The World Anti-Doping Agency continues to ask for a four-year ban.

● The conditions for Russian and Belarusian participation in international gymnastics competitions were reported, with athletes required to apply themselves and a check against any support for the Russian war against Ukraine to be made before approval. No official announcement has been made by the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG).

● The head of the British Olympic Association says that his organization and British athletes are “happy” with the restriction of competing in Paris 2024 to “neutral” Russian and Belarusian athletes, at least for now. That may or may not be the position of the British government.

● The International Olympic Committee warned of “fake news” on the Telegram social-media channel and others in a tri-lingual statement on Thursday, just two days after a U.S. State Department note detailed a Russian disinformation campaign project in Latin America. These two projects are clearly related.

World Championships: Gymnastics (Yan and Page collect second Trampoline golds as U.S. wins nine medals) ●

Panorama: Paris 2024 (decision on surfing judging tower due by end of November) = Winter Games 2030 (Swedish government supports bid) = Alpine Skiing (Zermatt-Cervinia races canceled due to heavy weather) = Athletics (USATF extends Siegel to 2028) = Badminton (Momota returns to winner’s circle at Korea Open) = Curling (Retornaz and Gim win The National) = Cycling (Lavreysen, Archibald take Champions League titles) = Fencing (U.S.’s Massialas and Guzzi Vincenti take World Cup wins) = Figure Skating (Canada wins two at ISU Cup of China) = Ice Hockey (U.S. beats Canada twice in Rivalry Series) = Speed Skating (Goetz stars in ISU World Cup opener) = Triathlon (Jorgensen wins wild Vina del Mar World Cup) ●

1.
Shiffrin wins Sunday Levi slalom as Vlhova skis out

It looked very much like 2022 Olympic champ Petra Vlhova (SVK) was going to sweep the weekend’s Slalom “reindeer races” at Levi, Finland. But it didn’t quite work out that way.

She won on Saturday, racing to the fastest first run and then flying through the second run as the fastest again to win this race for the sixth time.

Vlhova, the 2021 World Cup champion, had won at Levi in 2017, then both times in 2020 and 2021. She led after the first run by 53.79 to 53.97 over German Lena Duerr, with American star Mikaela Shiffrin third in 54.21. Austria’s Katharina Liensberger roared into the lead with a 57.33 second run, but Vlhova was more than equal, timing 56.80 on her final run and winning, 1:50.59 to 1:52.00 over Duerr, with Liensberger (1:52.14) getting third and Shiffrin settling for fourth (1:52.29)

On Sunday, Vlhova crushed the field on the first run, timing 55.92, with Shiffrin second at 56.68 and Sweden’s Sara Hector third at 56.76.

Croatia’s Leona Popovic, fifth after the first run, moved into the lead in the final run at 1:51.86, with only four others ahead of her. Neither Duerr or Hector could pass her, then Shiffrin uncorked a strong effort at 55.00 to take the lead at 1:51.68, with only Vlhova remaining.

Needing only a 55.75 to win, Vlhova flew down the course, but lost control mid-way and ended up straddling a gate and did not finish. That gave Shiffrin the win, her first this season and her 89th career World Cup gold, extending her own record.

“I was sort of settled on second place. Petra really did a masterclass in slalom skiing this weekend, in my mind she earned this victory and I’m quite lucky to have it.

“It feels like she should have won and I think everybody knows that. But I did earn a podium so I was actually pretty satisfied with second place. I’ll take the luck this time.”

Shiffrin revealed this week that she suffered a left knee bone bruise during a training crash and was unable to train for about 11 days, but felt no pain during her races.

The win gives her seven golds at Levi, breaking a tie with Vlhova at six; no word yet on what name she will give to her seventh reindeer, as the Levi winners get to name a reindeer from a nearby farm in a very clever promotional stunt by the race organizers for the resort which lies north of the Arctic Circle.

2.
Valieva hearing ends, decision in January 2024

The Court of Arbitration for Sport confirmed Friday that the added hearings in the Kamila Valieva doping case had concluded:

“The parties have been informed that the CAS Panel in charge of the matter will now deliberate and prepare the Arbitral Award containing its decision and grounds which is expected to be notified to the parties by the end of January 2024.”

The Russian news agency TASS reported that Valieva, who appeared by video link, was interviewed last Thursday (9th).

The case as heard is a combination of appeals brought by the World Anti-Doping Agency, the International Skating Union and the Russian Anti-Doping Agency against the decision of the independent Russian disciplinary review board. After Valieva’s positive test for the endurance enhancer trimetazidine, RUSADA imposed a four-year suspension, but it was cut to one day by the review committee on appeal.

In a statement, WADA said its position on Valieva has not changed:

“WADA appealed to CAS in the interests of fairness for athletes and clean sport. We are pleased that we were able to present our arguments before the panel of arbitrators and now await a decision. We have maintained our request for a four-year period of ineligibility and the cancellation of all results of the athlete from the date of sample collection, including at the 2022 Olympic Games in Beijing.”

Valieva was a member of the winning Russian squad in the Olympic Team Event in Beijing that concluded on 7 February 2022, for which the results have never been finalized and no medals awarded. With the decision of the arbitrators due at the end of January, it will be just about two years since the competition ended.

RUSADA said in a Friday statement:

“[T]he case that is currently being considered by CAS is resonant. Representatives of Russian and international media regularly contact us for comments. And we say over and over again that we cannot give any comments due to the fact that the case concerns a protected person [Valieva, who is still a minor].

“The hearings last a long time, yesterday it was 6 hours, but we really hope that everything will end today and we, like all other participants in the process, will expect a fair decision from the court.”

In the meantime, Valieva, 17, returned to competition at the Russian Grand Prix stage in Kazan over the weekend, winning the Short Program, but fell in the Free Skate and ended up fourth (213.59). Sofya Muravyova, 17, won with 228.81 points, ahead of Alina Gorbacheva (219.02) and Daria Sadkova (214.54).

3.
FIG competition conditions for Russians and Belarusians reported

Although not published yet by the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique (FIG), the conditions required for the participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes in their competitions have been reported in Russia.

Consistent with the recommendations of the International Olympic Committee, only individual entries are allowed (no teams), who must compete without any national symbols. The key is the neutrality requirement, reported as:

“Only those athletes who have not expressed support for the special operation in Ukraine (including those who have not expressed approval of Russia’s military actions on social networks through reposts or forwarded messages) and are not associated with the armed forces or national security agencies can be allowed to participate in competitions.”

In order to compete, Russian and Belarusian athletes must apply themselves; there will be a fee, which must be paid by the athlete personally. FIG’s disposition of the application is to be completed within 30 days; an appeal against a negative finding can be made by the Russian or Belarusian national federation to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

The possibility also exists for participation in FIG events by support personnel, such as coaches and medical staff, but no Russian or Belarusian government employees are allowed.

The FIG Executive Committee will allow cleared athletes to compete again as of 1 January 2024.

Russian Artistic Gymnastics Federation Vasily Titov told TASS on Friday:

“This evening we received from the International Gymnastics Federation the criteria for admission of Russian and Belarusian athletes to international competitions. We are now carefully studying this document and are not yet ready to comment on its contents.”

4.
British Olympic chief “happy” on Russian “neutrals”

“The difference between Tokyo and these Games in Paris will be clear.

“Any Russian or Belarussian athlete present will be doing so clearly as an independent. That is the current guideline and we are happy with that, happy that as long as it’s not teams representing Russia, as long as they are not affiliated with military, we are happy this is the right approach.”

That’s Andy Anson, the British Olympic Association chief executive, speaking to Sky Sports on Friday. The British government has been asking for more detail on what the International Olympic Committee’s specific definition of “neutrality” will be, but Anson went a lot further:

“The Russians have been banned from a lot of international events in the build up to Paris, so there are not that many who have been able to qualify.

“Even if there are a number of independent Russian athletes at Paris, we expect up to 100, not the 400 that were at Tokyo.

“We’re supportive of having independent athletes there, we don’t want to have athletes punished all the time for the conflicts going on around the world, so as a national association we are supportive of that.”

He also noted that there has been some Russian presence at some events:

“We were at the European Games in Krakow and there were no Russians, but at Wimbledon there were Russian athletes competing. I think we have a happy balance at the moment, it’s not easy.

“We talk openly with our athletes all the time. We have got to point where we are happy. Clearly there will be some people who don’t agree, but we have a solution, a position we are happy with at the moment.”

Lucy Frazer, the British Secretary for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, said in April that Russian or Belarusian athletes who receive state funding should not be eligible to compete at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. That is not covered by the present IOC position, with a specific determination on Paris 2024 eligibility promised after the start of 2024.

5.
IOC warns of fake news campaign on Telegram

This announcement, posted online and on X (formerly Twitter) in English, French and Spanish last Thursday, drew considerable attention:

“The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has recently been faced with a number of fake news posts targeting the IOC. These are being shared on Telegram accounts and other social media platforms in a number of languages.

“For example, quotes purporting to be from IOC representatives have recently been fabricated and added to a fake news report in order to give it an air of legitimacy.

“This is not the first time the IOC has been faced with disinformation campaigns being run against the organisation on social media. Earlier this year, there was an entire documentary produced with defamatory content, a fake narrative and false information, using an AI-generated voice of a world-renowned Hollywood actor. This was removed from social media platforms because of its fabricated and defamatory nature. All this appears to be part of an organised disinformation campaign.”

Telegram is a multi-lingual social-media platform that is especially popular in Russia and Ukraine, in the Cyrillic language and is widely used by sports officials for personal and professional messages.

Interestingly, the U.S. Department of State published a concerned note last Tuesday (7th), titled “The Kremlin’s Efforts to Covertly Spread Disinformation in Latin America”:

“The Russian government is currently financing an on-going, well-funded disinformation campaign across Latin America. The Kremlin’s campaign plans to leverage developed media contacts in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, Venezuela, Brazil, Ecuador, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay, among other countries in Latin America, in order to carry out an information manipulation campaign designed to surreptitiously exploit the openness of Latin America’s media and information environment.

“The Kremlin’s ultimate goal appears to be to launder its propaganda and disinformation through local media in a way that feels organic to Latin American audiences to undermine support for Ukraine and propagate anti-U.S. and anti-NATO sentiment.”

Since the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, comments from the Russian Olympic Committee and the Russian government have continuously and vociferously complained that the IOC is a “tool of the West” or is being directed by the U.S. government or U.S. sponsors. The U.S. State Department brief added:

“Russia’s influence actors have adapted their efforts to increasingly hide their hand, laundering their preferred messaging through a vast ecosystem of Russian proxy websites, individuals, and organizations that appear to be independent news sources.

“Moscow seeds original stories or amplifies preexisting popular or divisive discourse using a network of state media, proxy, and social media influence actors and then intensifies that content to further penetrate the Western information environment. These activities can include disseminating false content and amplifying information perceived as beneficial to Russian influence efforts or conspiracy theories.”

The State Department note also included specifics on the “mechanics” of the project.

As Michael Corleone said in The Godfather, Part III: “They’re the same problem. … They’re connected.”

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Gymnastics ● The 37th FIG Trampoline World Championships in Birmingham (GBR) saw former champions rise to the top once again in both the men’s and women’s Trampoline finals.

China’s Langyu Yan repeated his 2021 performance as men’s champion scoring 60.690 to edge teammate Zisai Wang (60.680), with Japan’s Ryusei Nishioka, the 2021 runner-up, third (60.640).

The women’s final had Britain’s Bryony Page, also the 2021 World Champion, win again, at 56.680, beating Xueying Zhu (CHN: 56.640), and American Jessica Stevens (55.740). For Stevens, she won the first U.S. individual medal in Trampoline since Alexandra Nicholson’s gold-medal performance in 1974!

The U.S. also scored in the non-Olympic synchro events with Ruben Padilla and Aliaksei Shostak taking silver (50.770) in the men’s final, behind Caio Lauxtermann and Fabian Vogel of Germany (51.130). It’s Padilla’s 11th career Worlds medal!

Americans Nicole Ahsinger and Cheyenne Webster did even better, winning the women’s Synchro final at 49.490, with Zheng Qiu and Qianqi Lin (CHN: 48.950) finishing second. It’s the first Worlds golds for Ahsinger and Webster and the first for the U.S. to win a medal in this event since 1976!

In the men’s Trampoline team final, France won with 12 points, to nine for Spain (silver) and Great Britain (bronze). The U.S. was fifth with seven. China won the women’s team gold with 15 points, to 10 for France and seven for Georgia.

The Double Mini events are not part of the Olympic program, but the U.S.’s Padilla repeated as World Champion, scoring 30.600 in the final, ahead of Spain’s David Franco (29.300). Padilla got a second gold in the men’s team final, scoring 12 points with Tomas Minc, Simon Smith and Dylan Kline, and moved up from bronze in 2022. Spain, which won in 2022, finished second (11), with Great Britain third (9).

Spain struck gold in the women’s Double Mini final, as 2021 Worlds bronze winner Melania Rodriguez (ESP: 26.300) won, just beating Americans Aliah Raga (26.200) and Grace Harder (26.100). Great Britain, third in 2022, won the women’s team final with 14 points, as Portugal got silver (10) and Canada the bronze (10). The U.S. was fourth with six points.

In the Tumbling events, also not on the Olympic program, 2021 silver medalist Mikhail Malkin (AZE) won the individual gold, scoring 31.100, ahead of 2021 Worlds bronze winner Kaden Brown of the U.S. (30.100). Malkin won a second gold in the Team final, with Azerbaijan scoring 13 points to edge Great Britain (12) and Denmark (8). The U.S., with Brown, finished fourth with eight points.

The women’s individual winner was France’s Candy Briere-Vetillard, the 2022 World Games champ (26.000), ahead of 2021 World Champion Megan Kealy (GBR: 25.800). Kealy won her third Worlds Team gold as Britain scored 12 points to win, beating France (with Briere-Vetillard, 11 points) and the U.S. (11), with Miah Bruns, Tia Taylor, Anastasia Katchalova and Hope Bravo.

The American team won the All-Around title for the first time with 29 points, winning on a tie-breaker over Portugal (29) and Great Britain (26). The U.S. and Britain both won three golds, with the British collecting 10 medals in all (3-2-5) and the U.S. with nine (3-3-3).

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● Reuters reported that a decision on the installations for the surfing competition in Tahiti will be made by the end of this month. Activists have protested the construction of a 14 m (46 foot) aluminum tower for the Games for judging and scoring on environmental grounds, while the wooden tower used for smaller events is considered unsafe for Olympic needs.

Paris 2024 chief executive Tony Estanguet told reporters on Friday:

“We reopened the issue a few weeks ago to see how we could improve it and respond to the concerns and expectations of the local population. Various options are currently being worked on by engineers, local authorities and the Polynesian government, which is responsible for building the tower.

“They are looking at different options for potentially reusing the foundations of the previous tower, which have not been compliant up to now for safety reasons.”

Worldwide Olympic sponsor Visa said that it is sponsoring 117 athletes from 60 countries in 40 sports for the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games. The athletes range in age from 15 to 48 and the U.S. has seven athletes included: Noah Lyles (athletics), Catarina Macario (football), Caroline Marks (surfing), Oksana Masters (para-cycling), Samantha Mewis (football), Ryan Neiswender (wheelchair basketball) and Mallory Swanson (football).

● Olympic Winter Games 2030 ● The Swedish government said Sunday that it backs the bid for Sweden to host the 2030 Winter Games:

“The government is ready to proceed to the next phase and examine the conditions for providing the state guarantees required to host the 2030 Winter Games in Sweden.”

Minister of Social Affairs and Sport Jakob Forssmed told SVT Sport:

“We will now test the conditions for providing guarantees for the games. Financial guarantees, guarantees that the authorities cooperate with the organizers and guarantees for safety.

“It is not intended that the Swedish taxpayers contribute money to the Olympic budget. But the Olympic Games must stand on their own financial merits. …

“There are many obstacles on the way. We will investigate the conditions for the guarantees required for this, but basically we have a positive view.”

Sweden, Switzerland and France are all working on bid submissions, with meetings upcoming later this month with the IOC’s Future Host Commission for the Winter Games.

● Alpine Skiing ● The men’s cross-border Zermatt-to-Cervinia Downhill was canceled due to heavy snows and wind, on both Saturday and Sunday.

Ironically, the races were canceled last year for lack of snow!

● Athletics ● USA Track & Field announced that chief executive Max Siegel was signed to a contract extension into 2028. He joined as chief executive in 2012.

● Badminton ● The home team had a lot of cheer about at the Korea Masters in Gwangju, winning three of the five classes.

Top-seeded Ga Eun Kim (KOR) won the women’s Singles title over Tomoka Miyazaki (JPN), 19-21, 21-17, 21-12, and Na Eun Jeong and Hye-Jeong Kim won the women’s Doubles over Rui Hirokami and Yuna Kato (JPN), 21-12, 21-19.

In the Mixed Doubles, Seung Jae Seo and Yu Jung Chae (KOR), the top seeds, defeated second-seeds Zhen Bang Jiang and Ya Xin Wei (CHN), 21-14, 21-15.

The all-Japan men’s Singles final was another comeback step for former no. 1 Kento Momota, who defeated Koki Watanabe, 21-16, 21-15, in the final. It’s Momota’s second BWF World Tour win after a terrible auto accident in 2020, before which he was the 2018 and 2019 World Champion. It’s Momota’s 16th career tour title in 22 finals.

In the men’s Doubles, Jhe-Huei Lee and Po-Hsuan Yang (TPE) defeated countrymen Yang Lee and Chi-Lin Wang, 21-17, 21-19.

● Curling ● There were first-time winners at the Grand Slam of Curling The National held in Pictou County (CAN), with Italian skip Joel Retornaz and Korea’s Eun-ji Gim taking the trophies.

Retornaz, a three-time Olympian, had won two prior Grand Slam events, including the season-opening Tour Challenge, and managed two tight wins to grab the victory. His rink got by five-time winner Brendan Bottcher (CAN) by 6-5 in the semis, then faced six-time World Champion Niklas Edin (SWE) in the final. Edin was up 2-0 early, but Retornaz scored 2-1-1-2 in ends three through six to take a commanding 6-2 edge and held on for a 6-5 win as Edin managed three points in ends 7-8. But it was not enough.

Gim had never won a Grand Slam event before, having gotten as far as the semis four times last season. After shutting down four-time defending World Champion Silvana Tirinzoni (SUI) in the semis by 7-3, her team took on 2017 World Champion Rachel Homan (CAN). This was another thriller, with points scored in every end. Gim’s 2-0 lead after one was gone by the third end and a 4-2 lead evaporated after the fifth. A 6-4 lead in the sixth was also erased by Homan for a 6-6 tie after seven. But in the final end, Gim scored a single point for the 7-6 win.

● Cycling ● The final two legs of the UCI Track Champions League were held in London (GBR) at the Lee Valley VeloPark on Friday and Saturday, with the series leaders holding on in all four events.

Friday’s Sprint final came down to Olympic champ Harrie Lavreysen (NED) and Australia’s Matthew Richardson once again, with his third win, 9.787 to 9.799. In the Keirin, Colombia’s Kevin Quintero got his first win of the season in 10.154, with Lavreysen second (+0.069) and Richardson third (+0.089).

On Saturday, Richardson got his second win, in 9.814, with Lavreysen second by 0.094. That left the Keirin, and Lavreysen got his fourth win, by 0.035 seconds over Richardson in 9.802. Added together, Lavreysen ended with 191 points, to 162 for Richardson and 134 for Poland’s Mateusz Rudyk.

Canada’s Dylan Bibic came in as the leader in the men’s Endurance classification and won with 131 points to 117 for William Tidball (GBR) and 113 for Jules Hesters (BEL). All had moments in the London races, as Roy Eefting (NED) won the first Scratch race over Bibic, with Tidball fourth on Friday, then Tidball and Hesters went 1-2 in the Elimination race, with Bibic in 13th.

On Saturday, Britain’s Mark Stewart won the Scratch race, over William Perrett (GBR) with Bibic sixth, then Tuur Dens and Hesters were a Belgian 1-2 in the last Elimination race, with Bibic 11th.

The women’s Sprint saw German Alessa Catriona-Propster get her third win of the series, in 11.149 over Katy Marchant (GBR), 0.248 behind. Martha Bayona (COL) got her first win of the series in the Keirin, at 11.122 over series leader Ellesse Andrews (NZL) by just 0.037.

On Saturday, Andrews won the Sprint for the third time in five events, this time over Bayona by 0.352 in 11.044. Then Andrews confirmed her class by winning the Keirin to clinch the series title in 11.079 over Bayona (+0.042). Andrews finished with 173 points to 154 for Catriona-Propster, with Bayona third at 127.

Britain’s Katie Archibald, the five-time Worlds gold medalist, came in as the series leader in the Endurance grouping, but finished sixth in Friday’s Scratch race, with British teammate Dannielle Khan winning over Lily Williams of the U.S. In the Elimination race, Archibald won for the fourth time in a row, this time against Anita Stenberg of Norway and Ireland’s Lara Gillespie.

Britain’s Leah Evans won the Scratch race on Saturday, ahead of Gillespie, with Archibald fourth, then Gillespie got her first win of the series in the Elimination finale, beating Stenberg with Archibald third. So, Archibald took the title with 160 points to Stenberg’s 145, with Williams third (128) and Gillespie fourth (123).

● Fencing ● The FIE World Cup season for 2023-24 commenced, with two U.S. wins on the opening weekend!

At the World Cup Sabre in Algiers (ALG), France’s Bolade Apithy got his first career World Cup gold, defeating the 2019 World Champion, Sang-uk Oh of Korea, 15-14 in the men’s final. Apithy got to the final by defeating three-time Olympic champ Aron Szilagyi (HUN) in his semi, also by 15-14. In the women’s final, France’s Sara Balzer completed the sweep by winning her third World Cup tournament of the year, overcoming Ukraine’s four-time World Champion, Olga Kharlan in the final, 15-11.

The U.S. men’s squad of Eli Dershwitz, Andrew Doddo, Colin Heathcock and Daryl Homer took the Team gold, defeating South Korea in the final, 45-32. The Koreans won the women’s title, 45-43, over France.

In Bern (SUI), the men’s Epee World Cup ended in an all-Swiss final, with Lucas Malcotti defeating Alexis Bayard, 15-13. It’s Malcotti’s first career World Cup medal. France won the team title, 41-37, over Italy.

American Margherita Guzzi Vincenti, 33, won her first career World Cup medal with a win in the women’s Epee final in Legnano (ITA). She out-dueled Swiss Pauline Brunner, 15-8, in the final. Ukraine won the team gold, 41-40, over Korea.

Olympic and Worlds silver medalist Alexander Massialas of the U.S. won the men’s Foil in Istanbul (TUR), for his sixth career World Cup win and his third of 2023. Massialas defeated Hong Kong’s Ka Long Cheung, the Tokyo Olympic champ, 15-12 in the final.

The U.S. team, with Massialas, Gerek Meinhardt, Miles Chamley-Watson and Nick Itkin won the team bronze, 45-42, over China, with Italy defeating Japan in the championship final, 45-41.

● Figure Skating ● The fourth leg of the ISU Grand Prix, the Cup of China in Chongqing saw many familiar faces on the podium, as Canada claimed two wins and three prior gold medalists this season added a second.

France’s European champ Adam Siao Him Fa came from second after the Short Program to win the Free Skate, thanks in part to four quad jumps, over two-time World Champion Shoma Uno of Japan – who suffered a fall – and Siao Him Fa won his second Grand Prix gold this season, 298.38 to 279.98.

Americans Jimmy Ma and Lucas Broussard finished ninth (205.16) and 12th (181.15)

Canada’s Deanna Stellato-Dudek and Maxime Deschamps added to their Skate Canada gold by winning the Short Program and Free Skate to win with 201.48 points, ahead of Rebecca Ghilardi and Filippo Ambrosini (ITA: 191.00). American brother-and-sister combo Maria Mokhova and Ivan Mokhov were eighth (134.81).

Two-time Worlds bronze medalists Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier led a Canadian 1-2 in Ice Dance, also winning after a gold at Skate Canada with 207.83 points, coming from second after the Rhythm Dance. Marjorie Lajoie and Zachary Lagha, second at Skate America, were just behind at 206.02, finishing second in the Free Dance.

Americans Caroline Green and Michael Parsons, the 2022 Four Continents winners, took the bronze at 189.33, ahead of teammates Eva Pate and Logan Bye (184.58).

Japan scored a 1-2 finish in the women’s competition, with 18-year-old Hana Yoshida winning her first Grand Prix medal – a gold – coming from third after the Short Program with a win in the Free Skate and a 203.97 total. That was just enough to edge Rinka Watanabe (203.22) and Skate America winner Loena Hendrickx (BEL: 201.49). American Audrey Shin was ninth at 156.84.

● Ice Hockey ● The two best women’s teams on the planet – Canada and the U.S. – resumed their annual Rivalry Series with games in Tempe, Arizona and Los Angeles, with the U.S. winning both games.

Last Wednesday, nine-time World Champion Hilary Knight opened the scoring at 19:52 of the first period off a lead assist from forward Abbey Murphy, but Canadian forward Brianne Jenner equalized at 12:32 of the second off a rebound in front of the U.S. net.

Forward Taylor Heise’s goal at 4:28 of the third on a put-back of a defender Rory Guilday shot put the U.S. in front and then forward Alex Carpenter sent a backhander into the net at the 18:40 mark to finish off a 3-1 victory. Aerin Frankel saved 35 of 36 shots for the U.S. to key the win.

At the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Saturday, the U.S. scored twice in the second and third periods to earn a 5-2 win, with two goals from forward Gabbie Hughes.

Carpenter scored the first goal on a tap-in off a rebound at 17:19 of the opening period on a 5-on-3 power play, but the game was tied in the second on a shorthanded goal by Laura Stacey.

But the U.S. got untracked as forward Britta Curl fired home an intercepted pass at 11:51 of the second and forward Hannah Bilka gave the Americans a 3-1 advantage off a rebound of a Tessa Janecke shot.

Canada closed to 3-2 on a Jamie Lee Rattray goal at 2:37 of the third, but Hughes scored at 3:19 on a power play for a 4-2 lead, and finished at 14:19 with a powerful shot off a set-up pass by Heise. Nicole Hensley saved 23 of 25 shots for the U.S. in goal.

Game three of the seven-game Rivalry Series for 2023-24 will resume on 14 December in Kitchener, Ontario.

● Speed Skating ● The ISU World Cup schedule opened in Obihiro (JPN), with Japan winning four of the six men’s individual events, and American Kimi Goetz winning five medals in one World Cup!

Goetz, 29, won five World Cup medals last season (1-2-2), with her lone win at 1,000 m. In Obihiro, she took her second career World Cup gold, this time in the 500 m (37.82), beating Olympic champ Erin Jackson of the U.S. (37.89) and World Champion Femke Kok (NED: 37.93).

World 1,000 m champ Jutta Leerdam (NED) won that race in 1:14.57, with Olympic winner Miho Takagi (JPN: 1:14.68) second and Goetz third in 1:14.75. Fellow American Brittany Bowe, a three-time Worlds winner at this distance, was sixth in 1:15.35.

On Saturday, Kok won the second 500 m race in 37.89, leading a Dutch 1-2 with Leerdam (38.00), but with Goetz winning another medal in third (38.15), with Jackson fourth (also 38.15). In the 1,500 m, Takagi – twice an Olympic runner-up – win decisively in 1:54.54 with World Champion Antoinette Rijpma-De Jong second (1:56.23) and Goetz taking a fourth medal in 1:55.56. Bowe was seventh in 1:57.41.

In the distance races, Canada’s Olympic runner-up Ivanie Blondin won the Mass Start in 8:25.11, ahead of Esther Kiel (NED: 8:25.45) and American Mia Kilburg (8:25.58). Norway’s Ragne Wiklund, the reigning World Champion, won the 3,000 m in 4:01.88 over Japan’s Momoka Horikawa (4:03.42).

Goetz won a fifth medal with Conor McDermott-Mostowy in the Mixed Relay, finishing third (2:57.63), behind the Dutch (2:55.53) and Poland (2:56.12). She equaled her total from all of last season in her World Cup opener.

In the men’s racing, triple World Champion Jordan Stolz of the U.S., still just 19, won three medals, but Japanese stars won four of the six races. Tatsuya Shinhama, the 2020 World Sprint champ, took the first 500 m in 34.52 over teammates Wataru Morishige (34.69) and Yuma Murakami (34.892), with Stolz fifth in 34.91. Morishige, the Beijing 2022 bronzer, took the second race in 34.64, with Shinhama second (34.69) and Stolz third (34.94).

Masaya Yamada (JPN) impressed with a double at 1,000 m (1:08.35) and 1,500 m (1:45.57), with Stolz third in the 1,000 m (1:08.78) and second in the 1,500 m (1:45.59).

In the Mass Start, Worlds runner-up Bart Hoolwerf (NED) beat Olympic champ Bart Swings (BEL) by 7:45.78 to 7:45.80. American Ethan Cepuran was seventh in 7:52.65. At 5,000 m, World Champion Patrick Roest (NED) was a clear winner in 6:10,.99, beating Worlds runner-up Davide Ghiotto (ITA: 6:12.90); Stolz also competed in this race and finished 14th in 6:25.44.

The circuit moves to Beijing (CHN) for round two next week.

● Triathlon ● The Gwen Jorgensen comeback story continued with a strange victory at the Vina del Mar Sprint World Cup in Chile.

Jorgensen actually was the third to cross the finish line in the women’s race, but four women – including the two ahead of her – were disqualified for taking a wrong turn on the route, leaving her as the winner!

Katie Zaferes (USA), the 2019 World Champion, and Teresa Zimovjanova (CZE) were 1-2, but both ran through the finish line instead of around it during the 5 km run phase and were disqualified, along with Anna Godoy (ESP) and Mathilde Gautier (FRA), who finished fourth and fifth. Jorgensen’s charge later in the run brought her in third, eventually being named the winner!

Jorgensen led a 1-2 for the U.S. with Gina Sereno second, 57:28 to 58:00, and Britain’s Vicky Holland, the Rio 2016 Olympic bronze winner, third in 58:10. Zaferes originally won in 57:22, with Zimovjanova second in 57:25.

It’s Jorgensen’s fourth World Cup win of the season and continues to move her up the ITU’s Olympic rankings.

You can receive our exclusive TSX Report by e-mail by clicking here. You can also refer a friend by clicking here, and can donate here to keep this site going.

For our updated, 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: Valieva hearing resumes Thursday; RUSADA reports a lot of doping positives; Shiffrin headlines reindeer races in Finland!

The Court of Arbitration for Sport

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Olympic Pairs star: need to “lie better about Valieva”
2. RUSADA reports heavy sanctions numbers for 2023
3. French bid for 2030 Winter Games submitted
4. Reindeer slalom races in Levi return this weekend
5. Swiss open inquiry into new ski track on the Matterhorn

● The added hearing in the endless Kamila Valieva doping case from the 2022 Beijing Olympic Winter Games commences Thursday at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne. In Russia, three-time Olympic Pairs champ Irina Rodnina said in an interview, “We should have learned to lie better about Valieva.” Wow.

● Those who don’t believe that reform has come to the doping culture in Russia can be concerned about the latest doping sanction numbers, with 127 violations reported so far for 2023. That’s on pace to surpass 2022 (135 total) and compares with 40 sanctions announced this year by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.

● The French bid for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games has been submitted to the International Olympic Committee, with four clusters in two French regions and using mostly existing venues. A new arena appears necessary and a temporary or out-of-country solution to speed skating is still needed.

● One of the truly fun features of the early-season FIS Alpine World Cup are the “reindeer races” at Levi ski resort in Finland. The winners of each of the women’s Slalom races on Saturday and Sunday will “win” a baby reindeer, but actually just get to name it. American star Mikaela Shiffrin won both races last year and has the largest “herd” at six!

● Controversy ahead of this weekend’s unique FIS Alpine World Cup men’s Downhills on a new course at the Matterhorn, which begins in Switzerland and finishes in Italy. The “Matterhorn Cervino Speed Opening” will have men’s races this weekend, and then the women will compete their on 18-19 November. But Swiss and Italian authorities are making inquiries about possibly unauthorized construction work to create the 3.7 km course.

Panorama: Paris 2024 (organizers trying to settle concerns over surfing venue in Tahiti) = Parapan Am Games (USOPC names 240-member team for Santiago) = On Screen (pretty good viewership for skating, not so much for the NYC Marathon) = Figure Skating (famed Canadian Pairs coach sentenced for abuse) = Skiing (USSS raises $2 million at pre-season gala) ●

Podcast: TSX editor-in-chief Rich Perelman explored the status of the Olympic Movement and today’s challenges on the “Sports Business Podcast with Prof. C,” produced by the Fordham Gabelli School of Business, with Professor Mark Conrad. You can hear it here. ●

1.
Olympic Pairs star: need to “lie better about Valieva”

The long-running doping case concerning Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva will resume at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne (SUI) on Thursday and Friday with the two additional days of hearings requested by the arbitration panel in September.

More information was asked for, but without any details about the subject matter as the process is closed.

In Russia, some frank comments were reported from State Duma Deputy Irina Rodnina, now 74, the three-time Olympic Pairs Champion from 1972-76-80, skating with Alexei Ulmanov (1972 only) and then with Alexander Zaitsev. She told Sport 24:

“I don’t understand when they say that they specifically want to destroy Valieva.

“We need to wake up and understand that we have mistakes and blunders. We should have learned to lie better about Valieva. Who will believe the fairy tale that she accidentally drank the wrong glass? Well, what kind of nonsense is this?!”

She blamed Russia’s communications on the case for putting Valieva in a negative light, seized on by “countries that do not like Russia.” She added:

“They shouldn’t do that. But you must always know that Russia is a country of the strongest athletes, and the attention to us will always be triple; they will remember every mistake.”

Rodnina’s comments were quickly criticized by the Russian Sports Minister, Oleg Matytsin:

“It’s strange to hear such statements from a State Duma deputy, a three-time Olympic champion. Such public assessments, based on one’s own conjectures, not supported by knowledge of the details of the process, are unacceptable, this is a violation of the ethics and culture of the sports community.

“We must treat our victories with care and respect, our coaches and athletes, to unite Russian society through sports, and not to create provocative news feeds for circulation in the media.”

Valieva, then 15, was a member of the winning Russian squad in the 2022 Beijing Winter Games in the Team Event, but disclosure of a doping positive from 25 December 2021 was not made until after the event was over.

The results have never been confirmed and no medal ceremony has ever taken place. The World Anti-Doping Agency, the International Skating Union and the Russian Anti-Doping Agency have appealed the holding of the independent Russian anti-doping appeal board, which found that she had committed an unintentional doping violation, and gave her a one-day suspension.

WADA is asking for a four-year ban.

One of the defenses made for Valieva’s doping positive is that she drank from a glass used by a elderly family member to take a medication which included the prohibited substance trimetazidine. Rodnina was not impressed. 

2.
RUSADA reports heavy sanctions numbers for 2023

There are those who have continuing doubts that doping has been effectively controlled in Russia. The latest statistics reported from the Russian Anti-Doping Agency indicate they may be right.

A Wednesday report noted that a total of 127 doping violations have been recorded – some not confirmed as yet – by RUSADA, including 13 in October. During the first three quarters:

● 1st quarter: 48
● 2nd quarter: 43
● 3rd quarter: 23

The story explained that “RUSADA General Director Veronika Loginova told TASS that anabolic steroids, diuretics and masking agents, as well as meldonium are most often found in athletes’ samples.

In 2022, there were 135 case reports of violations, so 2023 will apparently show an increase.

“Whereabouts” violations continue to be a problem, with “33 cases of athletes violating the rules of accessibility for testing.” For 2023 so far, 163 “whereabouts” issues have been reported, but that is down from 375 in 2022. These are apparently being reported separately from the sanctions, since it takes three “whereabouts” failures to create a sanctionable offense.

By comparison, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency has announced 40 sanctions in calendar year 2023 so far, against 7,807 total tests conducted from January through September. A total of 44 new sanctions were registered in 2022.

3.
French bid for 2030 Winter Games submitted

The race for the Olympic Winter Games in 2030 is between Sweden, Switzerland and France, with the French bid detailed this week as it was submitted to the International Olympic Committee on Tuesday.

The proposal is to host the event in two regions: Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region (AURA) and Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur (PACA), with two venue clusters in each (four total):

AURA/Savoie: bobsleigh, luge and skeleton at La Plagne; alpine skiing at Courchevel and Meribel; ski jumping in Courchevel.

AURA/Haute-Savoie: cross-country at La Clusaz; biathlon at Grand Bornand, alpine skiing at Val d’Isere.

PACA/Nice: curling, figure skating, ice hockey, short track.

PACA/Brianconnais: freestyle skiing and snowboard at Isola 2000.

The athlete village and media centers would be in Nice, with the opening in AURA and the closing in Nice.

The ice events in Nice could be in a new arena, and there is no venue for speed skating, which could be held in a temporary facility such as a convention center – as Milan Cortina is doing for 2026 – or held somewhere else.

No budget projection was included by French National Olympic Committee (CNOSF) President David Lappartient, but he told reporters that it would be no more than Milan Cortina 2026, about €1.5 billion (about $1.606 billion U.S. today). This is expected to be funded privately; said Lappartient, “The Games must finance the Games.”

A meeting with the IOC Future Host Commission for the Winter Games is scheduled for 21 November, and the decision on the 2030 host is expected in 2024. The CNOSF bid release noted that the award may not be made at the IOC Session prior to the Paris 2024 Games, with the “decision planned during the IOC Session which will be held at the start of the Paris 2024 Games or in the fall of 2024.”

A delayed award would get around the Olympic Charter requirement that a Games cannot be awarded at a Session held in a country which is a candidate.

4.
Reindeer slalom races in Levi return this weekend

The international winter sports season is opening up, with alpine skiing, figure skating, curling, ice hockey and speed skating events all on the schedule this week, especially featuring one event with a wild tradition.

The winner “gets” a baby reindeer.

The event is the annual women’s Slalom races at the Levi resort in tiny Sirkka, Finland, located in the Finnish Lapland, about 110 miles north of the Arctic Circle. Famed for its year-round ski resorts and reindeer safaris, the race organizers came up with a crazy idea beginning in 2013: the winners of the FIS Alpine World Cup Slalom races would “win” a reindeer.

Well, they don’t actually get the animal, but they get to permanently name one, a ceremony which has become a tradition. The animals are raised on a nearby farm, and are very familiar with two stars: American Mikaela Shiffrin and Slovakian Petra Vlhova.

The two have dominated the reindeer races, with Shiffrin winning both last year to take a 6-5 lead over Vlhova for the most victories (and namings). Shiffrin’s six wins and her pack names:

2013: Rudolph
2016: Sven
2018: Mr. Gru
2019: Ingemar, in honor of Swedish skiing legend Ingemar Stenmark
2022: Lorax, in honor of her late father, Jeff Shiffrin
2022: Sunny

Shiffrin finished sixth in the season-opening Giant Slalom in Soelden (AUT) two weeks ago and pronounced herself satisfied with her skiing. She is not only the two-time defending Alpine World Cup champion and the record-holder – men or women – for the most World Cup wins in history with 88, she has rewritten the Slalom record lists. She has 53 career Slalom wins, by far the most of any skier in any discipline; the closest is Stenmark with 46 wins in the men’s Giant Slalom.

Vlhova already has a 2023-24 seasonal medal after a bronze finish in Soelden. She owns 28 career World Cup wins, 19 of them in Slalom, ranking her no. 6 all-time. And she has those five wins in Levi, in 2017-2020 (2)-2021 (2).

Watching the Levi races, or any others on the FIS Alpine World Cup is a chore for American fans, with U.S.-based events streaming on Outside, but also on NBC or CNBC and streaming on Peacock.

World Cups held in Austria are streamed on Peacock, but sometimes also on NBC.

All other events – like Levi – are streamed on a different site, skiandsnowboard.live, on a subscription basis. Outside also has delayed coverage, on a subscription basis.

5.
Swiss open inquiry into new ski track on the Matterhorn

This weekend also brings a new concept in alpine skiing: a race which begins in one country and finishes in another. But not without controversy.

The “Matterhorn Cervino Speed Opening” race will be held on a new track called the “Gran Becca,” designed to begin in Zermatt in Switzerland and finish in Cervinia in Italy, a long ride of 3.7 km (about 2.3 miles) that starts at an altitude of 3,720 m (12,205 feet)!

Creating the route required construction in what is apparently a protected area in Switzerland, and reported to be shut down in mid-October by Swiss authorities. Most of the track is on the Italian side, however,

But Italian prosecutors are also involved and have asked for documentation of the permits procured and the process to obtain them.

The concept was supposed to have become reality last year, but a lack of snow required cancellation. The snow control in 2023, however, was positive and the show is on.

Training runs on the new course have begun, ahead of downhill races for men this weekend on Saturday and Sunday. Women’s downhill races will be held on the 18th and 19th. The legal proceedings will carry on from there.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● The tempest over the construction and modifications needed for the surfing competition in Tahiti at Teahupo’o, but the Paris 2024 organizers are pressing on with the preparations. The BBC was told:

“Our ambition has remained unchanged. We are studying every possible scenario to enable the surfing competitions to take place on this site, which we want to preserve, respect and enhance for the Games.

“All of our efforts are centered on finding the best solution collectively, in conjunction with the Polynesian government, for the exceptional site of Teahupo’o. …

“Where the Games adapt to Teahupo’o and not the other way round, and to showcase the mythical Teahupo’o wave to the world and ensure that the Games are a success for Tahiti and its people.”

The issue has primarily centered on the impact of the construction of a large aluminum judging and scoring tower to replace the wooden facility now used, but considered too small and unsafe for Olympic purposes. The discussions are continuing on many sides, even a possible move of the venue to another location, on Tahiti’s west coast.

● Parapan American Games ● The United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee announced a 240-member team for the VII Parapan American Games in Santiago (CHI), to be held from 17-26 November.

The squad has 148 men and 92 women, with swimmer Chloe Cederholm the youngest at 13 years old and table tennis player Michael Godfrey the oldest at 59. The team includes 91 Paralympians and 23 athletes with ties to the military.

The U.S. will compete in 16 of the 17 sports on the program, all excepting blind soccer.

● On Screen ● Pretty good TV audiences for the ISU Grand Prix highlight shows on NBC, competing with college football on Saturday and the NFL on Sunday:

Nov. 4 (Sat.): 622,000 for Skate Canada International on NBC at 12:00 p.m. Eastern (delayed one week).

Nov. 5 (Sun.): 551,000 for the Grand Prix of France on NBC at 12:30 p.m. Eastern (delayed, but same week).

These were both delayed-broadcast highlights programs, which did fairly well compared with the Skate America telecasts in October:

Oct. 21 (Sat.): 191.000 on E! for Skate America: live
Oct. 22 (Sun.): 699,000 on NBC for Skate America: delayed

The New York City Marathon, held early on Sunday, drew modest interest both live and on delay:

Nov. 5 (Sun.): 176,000 on ESPN2 at 8:30 a.m.
Nov. 5 (Sun.): 411,000 on ABC at 3:00 p.m. (replay)

The biggest show of the week was the late-window NFL games on Fox, mostly showing Dallas at Philadelphia, which averaged 27.14 million viewers.

● Figure Skating ● Richard Gauthier, 61, who coached some of Canada’s great Pairs teams, was sentenced to 12 months in prison for his sexual assault and gross indecency conviction in January, for actions which took place in the 1980s.

Gauthier had helped form the eventual Olympic champion team of Jamie Sale and David Pelletier, winners at the 2001 World Championships and elevated to a co-gold medal at the 2002 Olympic Winter Games, and coached two-time World Champions Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford.

Skate Canada suspended Gauthier in October 2020, when the charges against him were filed. He had been inducted into the Canadian Skating Hall of Fame in 2015, but removed following his conviction.

He was found guilty on two charges, and acquitted on a third, all stemming from conduct in 1984 or 1985.

● Skiing ● Impressive fund-raiser for the 57th U.S. Ski & Snowboard “Gold Medal Gala” in New York on 30 October, in front of more than 600 attendees, with more than $2 million raised to support the federation.

The fund-raising total almost equaled the 2022 take, the most ever, and was well ahead of the $1.7 million raised in 2021.

You can receive our exclusive TSX Report by e-mail by clicking here. You can also refer a friend by clicking here, and can donate here to keep this site going.

For our updated, 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: Bach says no plans to cancel Paris over conflicts; Semenya case to be heard at Euro Court of Human Rights; why is squash in LA28?

IOC President Thomas Bach at the 139th IOC Session in Lausanne (Photo: IOC/Christophe Moratal)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

To get The Sports Examiner by e-mail: sign up here!

≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Bach: Paris 2024 is not being canceled due to the wars
2. Semenya case to be heard by European Court of Human Rights
3. Why squash for LA28? Excitement in a glass box.
4. U.S. leads track & field in top-10 performers in 2023
5. Athletics Fair Play Award finalists confirmed

● International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach of Germany appeared at a German sports forum and said no thought has been given to canceling the Paris 2024 Games in view of the wars in Ukraine and Israel and Gaza. He also said that the people urging him to extend his term in office are the ones who have to make the needed rule changes.

● South African Olympic 800 m star Caster Semenya’s win at the European Court of Human Rights to force a more thorough review by the Swiss Federal Tribunal of her appeal from the Court of Arbitration for Sport will be reconsidered by a 17-member panel, after a request from Switzerland. The new hearing will not rule on the World Athletics regulations, but what standard the Swiss Federal Tribunal must bring.

● Why did squash finally make it into the Olympic Games, in Los Angeles for 2028. The chief executive of World Squash cited the sport’s organization, ease of set-up and the excitement of matches inside a glass cage!

● An analysis of the top-10 performers in each event in track & field in 2023 showed the U.S. with a very good year, fully reflecting its lead in the medal table at the World Championships. Most impressive: the Americans placed at least one athlete in the world top-10 for 2023 in 30 of the 44 individual events.

● World Athletic revealed its finalists for the annual Fair Play Award to be announced in December, with all three from either the 10,000 m or the Half Marathon!

Podcast: TSX editor-in-chief Rich Perelman explored the status of the Olympic Movement and today’s challenges on the “Sports Business Podcast with Prof. C,” produced by the Fordham Gabelli School of Business, with Professor Mark Conrad. You can hear it here. ●

1.
Bach: Paris 2024 is not being canceled due to the wars

“We have a very strong geopolitical tension. To say that we are sacrificing the Games, that would be completely the wrong approach.”

That’s from an hour-long interview by International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER), appearing at the “Stuttgarter Sportgesprach” (“Stuttgart Sport Talk”) forum on Monday (6th), in which Bach was asked about a range of issues in play now and in the future.

On the conflicts in Ukraine and Israel and Gaza, Bach said that a cancellation of the 2024 Paris Games, a la the 1916, 1940 and 1944 events, is not being discussed (computer translation from the original German):

“We have had many wars between governments and countries, but the athletes have always taken part in the Games. This is in line with the Olympic mission.

“I don’t know that we’re having a world war. To betray the basic idea of sport is not something that can be done with the International Olympic Committee.

“According to the U.N. definition, we have 28 wars in the world at the moment. Our mission is a humanitarian mission for athletes and sport. We try to take that into account. People also need something that connects them.”

The situation with Russia and Ukraine continues to vex the IOC, and Bach noted, “Relations between the IOC and Russia have cooled down considerably since the doping scandal,” but on the question of admitting Russian and Belarusian athletes as neutrals for Paris, over the objection of the Ukrainian government and many others, he admitted, “It’s a dilemma.”

Bach reiterated the IOC’s stance on sport and politics, but with a slightly different twist: “Sport cannot and must not be apolitical, but it must be politically neutral. … If [sport] takes on the role of referee in every conflict, it will be the end of international sport.”

The question of Bach’s term as IOC President being extended beyond the term limit of 12 years in 2025 was explored, with Bach insisting that he was not behind this concept:

“It is typical that it is assumed that this was staged. That’s what I find unacceptable, that people judge it like that without knowledge.

“One argument is that a certain election campaign by some members [for 2025] has already started in Tokyo [in 2021]. That the majority of members found this disturbing. They don’t want all important decisions to be influenced by candidacies.

“Others say we live in such turbulent times that it is difficult to change teams now. You need a certain continuity here in order to survive. That is the basis on which we advise.”

And while not tipping his hand on whether he would accept to serve longer, he said again that it’s a people thing:

“I’m only human, I was happy about the response that came from different continents. If members make a suggestion to change the statutes, then they have to do it. Respect that you deal with these people.”

2.
Semenya case to be heard by European Court of Human Rights

An expected Swiss appeal against a close, 4-3 judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in July will send the case of Semenya vs. Switzerland for a hearing before a 17-member Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights.

The case was the only one of 14 submissions accepted for a Grand Chamber hearing on Monday and none of the judges who participated in the original decision will be included.

The hearing, on a date to be determined, will not decide whether the World Athletics rules on participation by women with “differences in sex development” in elite competition will be upheld or repealed. Instead, the case was a last-chance attack by two-time Olympic women’s 800 m gold medalist Caster Semenya of South Africa on the review by the Swiss Federal Tribunal – on appeal from the Court of Arbitration for Sport – that she deemed inadequate.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport rejected Semenya’s challenge to the World Athletics DSD rules, and the Swiss Federal Tribunal did not overrule.

However, in the ECHR opinion issued on 11 July, the divided court ruled:

“The Court found in particular that the applicant had not been afforded sufficient institutional and procedural safeguards in Switzerland to allow her to have her complaints examined effectively, especially since her complaints concerned substantiated and credible claims of discrimination as a result of her increased testosterone level caused by differences of sex development (DSD).

“It followed, particularly with regard to the high personal stakes involved for the applicant – namely, participating in athletics competitions at international level, and therefore practising her profession – that Switzerland had overstepped the narrow margin of appreciation afforded to it in the present case, which concerned discrimination on grounds of sex and sexual characteristics requiring ‘very weighty reasons’ by way of justification.

“The high stakes of the case for the applicant and the narrow margin of appreciation afforded to the respondent State should have led to a thorough institutional and procedural review, but the applicant had not been able to obtain such a review.”

The Swiss Federal Tribunal has steadfastly maintained that it is not an all-purpose court of review of Court of Arbitration for Sport decision, but can only intervene due to specific errors or circumstances. Its request for a heating before the ECHR Grand Chamber is to enforce its limited review role and not make it an automatic last-resort venue.

If Semenya were to win before the Grand Chamber, the presumed remedy would be for the Swiss Federal Tribunal to implement a deeper review of the CAS decision on the World Athletics DSD regulations, and establish a precedent for the level of review required for all appeals from CAS.

World Athletics told Reuters, “World Athletics has only ever been interested in protecting the female category. If we don’t, then women and young girls will not choose sport.

“That is, and has always been, the federation’s sole motivation (for the regulations).”

3.
Why squash for LA28? Excitement in a glass box

Of the five added sports admitted for the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games, four were high-end team sports with significant collegiate or professional sports organizations behind then: baseball and softball, cricket, flag football and lacrosse.

So why squash?

The sport had been a candidate for inclusion at London 2012, Rio 2016, Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024, but lost out each time. From the standpoint of low cost and complexity, favored attributes for the IOC these days, squash is attractive. Courts – glass boxes – can be built up in a couple of days and be plunked into a 5,000-seat arena with no difficulty.

The French-language site FrancsJeux.com posted an interview with World Squash chief executive William Louis-Marie (FRA), who explained some of the factors which worked in their favor this time:

“We tried to understand what they expected from a new sport, which is not yet at the Games, but has been present for a long time in the Olympic movement and in a large number of multi-sport events, such as the Commonwealth Games, the Asian Games and the Pan American Games. We showed our expertise and knowledge of these multi-sport events.

“We also insisted on our ability to bring the best players in the world, thanks to our collaboration with the professional association (PSA). The LA 2028 people came to see us at the last Commonwealth Games, last year in Birmingham. They saw the exceptional spectacle of two players competing in a glass cage for 30 minutes or an hour. Los Angeles is the capital of entertainment , the spectacle of squash corresponds well to their values.”

Although no 2028 venue has been specified, Louis-Marie explained the basic idea:

“We don’t have all the details yet, but we have ideas for an indoor theater, where squash could be beautifully showcased in a glass court, with an exceptional number of cameras.”

And he believes that with the showcase at LA28 ahead, the prospects for inclusion again at Brisbane in 2032 are good. In the short term:

“Athletes know today that they will have the opportunity to take their place on the most beautiful sporting platform in the world. It’s a great motivation.”

4.
U.S. leads track & field in top-10 performers in 2023

Now that the Pan American Games and the New York City Marathon have been completed, essentially all of the top performances of the 2023 outdoor track & field season are in the books.

While the medal standings of the World Athletics Championships are well known, let’s take a look at the breakdown by country of athletes ranked by mark in the top 10 (with ties) of the 44 individual Olympic events – track, field and walks – this year.

Men (22 events):
1. United States, 39 top-10 performers
2. Kenya, 20
3. Ethiopia, 14
4. Jamaica, 13
5. France, 9
6. tie, Canada and Spain, 7
8. tie, Italy, Norway and Russia, 6

On the track, the U.S. led with 25 top-10 placers, followed by Kenya with 19, Ethiopia with 14, Jamaica (8) and France (7). In the field, the U.S. had 14 placers, with Italy a distant second with six, then Jamaica and Russia with five each.

The biggest domination of any event was in the marathon, where the Kenyans had eight of the top 10 this year. The U.S. men had top-10 performers in 13 events, with Jamaica totaling seven and Kenya, France, Spain and Canada with six each.

● Women (22 events):
1. United States, 48 top-10 performers
2. Ethiopia, 23
3. Jamaica, 15
4. Kenya, 14
5. China, 12 (nine in walks!)
6. tie, Great Britain and Netherlands, 10
8. tie, Australia, Germany and Russia, 5

On the track, the U.S. women scored 30 places, followed by Ethiopia with 23 and Kenya with 14. Jamaica had 11. On the infield, the American women took 18 places and no one else had more than five (Germany)!

Further, the U.S. scored in 17 different events; next was the Netherlands (9), then Jamaica (8).

The combined totals (44 events):

1. United States, 87
2. Ethiopia, 37
3. Kenya, 34
4. Jamaica, 28
5. China, 16
6. Great Britain, 15
7. Netherlands, 12
8. tie, France and Russia, 11
10. tie, Australia and Germany, 10

That’s a pretty amazing year for the U.S., which led the medal table at the Worlds in Budapest with 29 total medals, to 12 for Jamaica and 10 each for Great Britain and Kenya and nine for Ethiopia.

How about swimming? Coming up soon …

5.
Athletics Fair Play Award finalists confirmed

The finalists for the International Fair Play Award were announced on Tuesday, with all three related to world-championship competitions and all involving the long distances:

● Kenyan Daniel Ebenyo, who waved his support for teammate Sebastian Sawe as he was being passed at the World Road Running Championships Half Marathon. Sawe won in 59:10, with Ebenyo taking the silver in 59:14.

● Ethiopia’s Letsenbet Gidey, the women’s World Championships 10,000 m silver medalist, who went back to console Dutch star Sifan Hassan, who fell just before the finish. Gidey was in the middle of wat turned out to be an Ethiopian sweep (31:28.16), with Hassan appearing ready to overtake winner Gudaf Tsegay (31:27.18) in the final meters, but fell and finished 11th in 31:53.35.

Jessica Warner-Judd (GBR), who finished eighth in the same women’s Worlds 10,000 m race in 31:35.38, then was the only one to wait for Brazil’s Maria Lucineida da Silva to finish, in 21st at 35:54.18, more than two and a half minutes after everyone else.

The winner will be announced as a part of the World Athletics Awards in 11 December.

You can receive our exclusive TSX Report by e-mail by clicking here. You can also refer a friend by clicking here, and can donate here to keep this site going.

For our updated, 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: Panam Sports head gives gold medal to Santiago 2023; Russia files suspension appeal vs. IOC; amazing 51,402 finishers at NYC Marathon

A new tradition? Panam Sports President Neven Ilic of Chile presents the final gold medal of the 2023 Pan Am Games to the mascot Fiu during the closing ceremonies (Photo: Marcelo Hernandez/Santiago 2023 vía Photosport).

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Santiago’s Pan Am Games saluted as “a tremendous success”
2. Russian appeal against IOC suspension accepted at Court of Arbitration
3. New York Marathon has 51,402 finishers; Hug finishes majors sweep!
4. African Games could be rendered irrelevant by new qualifier
5. Norway and Switzerland bid for 2028 FIS Games

● The head of Panam Sports and the Chilean Sports Minister lauded the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago during the closing ceremonies on Sunday, calling the event “a tremendous success.” A record 34 delegations won medals, the most ever in a Pan Am Games.

● The Russian Olympic Committee filed its appeal at the Court of Arbitration for Sport against the International Olympic Committee over its suspension for absorbing sports organization in occupied areas of Ukraine. Even the Russian Foreign Ministry chimed in with a new blast at the IOC.

● A historic New York City Marathon on Sunday saw not only a course record of 2:04:58 in the men’s race, but the fourth-most finishers in history at 51,402 and the first-ever sweep of all six Marathon Majors by men’s Wheelchair star Marcel Hug.

● The African Games, the continent’s multi-sport showcase since 1965 is at risk of being sidelined in favor of a new, Olympic qualifying event to be developed by the Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA). Why? Because of money, of course.

● The International Ski & Snowboard Federation (FIS) announced that bids from Norway and Switzerland were received for the first-ever FIS Games in 2028, a 16-day mega-event with dozens of events across almost all of the federation’s disciplines.

Panorama: Athletics (10 more doping suspensions announced by AIU) = Football (Brazil formally enters bid for Women’s World Cup 2027) = Tennis (Swiatek sweeps aside Pergula to win WTA Final in Cancun) = Weightlifting (no doping positives at IWF Worlds) ●

Podcast: TSX editor-in-chief Rich Perelman explored the status of the Olympic Movement and today’s challenges on the “Sports Business Podcast with Prof. C,” produced by the Fordham Gabelli School of Business, with Professor Mark Conrad. You can hear it here; click on Episode 4! ●

1.
Santiago’s Pan Am Games saluted as “a tremendous success”

As the curtain came down on the XIX Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, the closing ceremony included the remarks from the organizations which staged the event, and they were quite pleased.

Panam Sports President Neven Ilic, himself from Chile, shared his pride in the Games:

“Today, as we reach the conclusion, I feel a sense of sadness as a Chilean because the celebration is ending, but I also feel tremendous pride in these fantastic Pan American Games. Many times I was asked what I dreamt of for this event, and I replied that I hoped for many things, but above all, I wanted to raise Chile’s name to the highest level, and I believe we were able to create the most significant celebration in the Americas here in Chile.

“All the visitors we had left with the image of how beautiful Chile is, how beautiful the Chilean people are, and that should fill us all with pride. We greatly appreciate the organizing committee, when we started I told them that it was very easy to plan but very difficult to execute, but they did it fantastic.

“What we lived was shocking: we welcomed the greatest continental sports festival for the first time in Chile. We managed to gather almost seven thousand athletes. We were visited by over 200 thousand people, including tourists, delegations, and communication media, who basked in an atmosphere of community, respect, and joy that made the Pan American Games an unforgettable event.

“These Games are an effort of the state, of the government of Chile. Be very proud. We faced challenges, overcame a pandemic, and we can tell the world: We succeeded. The Games were a tremendous success.”

The Chilean Sports Minister, Jaime Pizarro, told the crowd at the Estadio Bicentenario de La Florida:

“Today, we feel proud to have fulfilled a historic responsibility. President Gabriel Boric tasked us with organizing games to international standards, and with satisfaction, we can say that we did it.”

Ilic scored a hit with the crowd by awarding the final gold medal of the Games to the popular mascot, Fiu, a gesture that may well be picked up by other events in the future.

The Games mostly succeeded, but had some gaffes, including an embarrassing mis-measurement of the women’s 20 km Walk, won by World Champion Kimberly Garcia of Peru, but without any times, depriving her and others of qualifying marks for other events. And there were the usual issues of last-minute construction and transportation issues early in the event.

The 2023 Pan Ams celebrated the highest number of nations winning at least one medal, with 34. That’s two up on the 32 – out of 41 competing teams – from the Rio 2007 Pan American Games and 31 at Toronto (CAN) in 2015 and Lima (PER) in 2019.

Pan Am Sports also shared an organizing committee report that the events were attended by 1.3 million spectators, a significant increase in the 517,000 reported to have been at the 2019 Pan Ams in Lima. The 1.3 million total surpassed the organizing committee target of 1.0 million.

The event reportedly had 2,000 staff and used 13,000 volunteers.

2.
Russian appeal against IOC suspension accepted at Court of Arbitration

The promised appeal by the Russian Olympic Committee against its suspension by the International Olympic Committee was registered by the Court of Arbitration for Sport on Monday:

“In the Challenged Decision, the IOC [Executive Board] suspended the ROC with immediate effect until further notice following the ROC decision to unilaterally include as its members some regional sports organisations which are under the authority of the National Olympic Committee (NOC) of Ukraine (namely Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia).

“The IOC EB found that such action constituted a breach of the Olympic Charter because it violated the territorial integrity of the NOC of Ukraine, as recognised by the IOC in accordance with the Olympic Charter.”

The Russian Olympic Committee is asking for the IOC’s decision to be annulled. A panel of arbitrators will be appointed and that panel will determine the procedure for the exchange of written arguments, a hearing and a decision. No timetable was provided.

The Russian Foreign Ministry previewed its appeal with a statement that included:

“[The sanctions] are an example of double standards and destroy the legal non-discrimination regime for the admission of athletes to international competitions. The Committee’s approach cannot be regarded as anything other than segregation based on nationality, and therefore must be reviewed in accordance with the norms of international legal documents in the sports field and the spirit of the international Olympic movement.

“Once again we are forced to remind you that the term ‘Olympic Truce’ is not mentioned in the Olympic Charter. This category is used exclusively in resolutions of the UN General Assembly, is addressed to subjects of international law, UN member states, and cannot be used as a pretext for discrimination against athletes from a particular country by international sports organizations.”

3.
New York Marathon has 51,402 finishers;
Hug finishes majors sweep!

Sunday’s New York City Marathon was historic for multiple reasons, starting with the men’s race record of 2:04:58 by Ethiopia’s Tamirat Tola. But there were lots of other special moments to celebrate:

● Switzerland’s Marcel Hug won the men’s Wheelchair division for the third time in a row in 1:25:29, just three seconds off of his own course record. Even more amazing, the four-time Tokyo Paralympic gold medalist, won all six World Marathon Majors races in 2023: Tokyo, Boston, London, Berlin, Chicago and New York! He’s the only one to ever do that, and said afterwards:

“It’s really an incredible year with these six wins in the Majors Series. Honestly, I tried not having this in my mind that it could be the sixth win here.

“Now slowly I am realizing what happened and I’m so, so happy for this season and for this race today. In the end, it hurts a little bit to be only 3 seconds from the course record, but I tried everything, so I’m happy.”

● The race was the largest marathon in the world for 2023, with 51,933 starters and 51,402 finishers (98.98%), from 148 countries.

That’s a lot of runners and a lot of finishers, and ranks fourth all-time among NYC finishers. Only 2019 (53,639), 2018 (52,813) and 2016 (51,394) had more.

● Tola, the 2022 World Champion in the marathon, smashed the race record at 2:04:58, and won the $100,000 first prize, plus a bonus of $50,000 for his record performance. He said:

“I am happy to win New York City Marathon for the first time. It’s the third time for me to participate, two times no. four. The course is very difficult. Everything is nice for my training, my body, everything is okay. So I win.”

● Kenya’s Hellen Obiri won the women’s race in 2:27:23, becoming the first women to win both the Boston Marathon and New York City Marathon since 1989, and won the $100,000 first prize. She won New York in her second try after finishing sixth in 2022 and has won two of her three career marathons. She said afterwards:

“My first debut here was terrible for me, and I say like I don’t want to come back here next year. … Sometimes you learn from your mistakes, so I did a lot of mistakes last year, so I said I want to try to do my best. I was ready.”

Behind her were other remarkable performances. Seventh in 2:29:40 was the two-time World Champion Edna Kiplagat, now 43, who won in New York in 2010, finishing her sixth career New York City Marathon,

In eighth and ninth were Americans Kellyn Taylor (2:29:48) and Molly Huddle (2:32:02), both returning from maternity. Taylor, 37, raced in her first marathon just 10 months after delivering her second child last December (she and her husband have adopted two others as well). Huddle, 39, returned to the marathon after delivering a daughter in April of 2022.

4.
African Games could be rendered irrelevant by new qualifier

In what International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER) has called our “aggressively divisive” times, a fight over who owns what could end up creating a new event in Africa, focused on Olympic qualifying.

The Kenyan newspaper, The Nation, reported Sunday on discussions by the Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA) to create an African Olympic qualifier, separate and apart from the African Games:

“The move could see ANOCA parting ways with the African Games that are owned from the [African Union], thus reducing the continental games to a mere festival.

“But as ANOCA told of its challenges, delegates attending the 40th ANOCA Secretaries General Seminar at Sarova Whitesands [in Mombasa, Kenya], took issue with the organisers of the African Games scheduled from March 8 to 23 in Accra, Ghana, for lack of organisation and communication.”

The use of the African Games as an Olympic qualifier was done in 2019 after an 11-year hiatus, but the African Union, African Sports Confederation and ANOCA continue to squabble over television sales, sponsorships and other rights.

ANOCA Secretary Ahmed Hashim (SUD) told the delegates, “Africa must have its own fully fledged Olympic qualifying games that we shall make it marketable to get prime interest from companies and the media. We must know to bring the best of Africa athletes to compete on African soil rather than seek the most difficult qualifying path to the Olympics elsewhere.”

5.
Norway and Switzerland bid for 2028 FIS Games

The International Ski & Snowboard Federation (FIS) announced that two bids have been confirmed for the first FIS Games, to be held in 2028:

“St. Moritz/Engadine (SUI) and Lillehammer/Hafjell (NOR) are the two confirmed candidates. …

“The FIS Games will see multiple FIS disciplines being staged during a 16-day period in the same region as a highlight event during the non-Olympic and non-World Championship season. The aim of the FIS Games is to feature the six FIS Olympic disciplines with the additional opportunity to highlight select non-Olympic disciplines such as Telemark, Speed Skiing and Freeride in addition to showcasing Para SnowSports competitions.”

Both regions are legendary winter-sport destinations, with Lillehammer hosting the brilliant Olympic Winter Games in 1994 and the 2016 Youth Olympic Games in addition to multiple World Cup events in various disciplines.

St. Moritz hosted the World Alpine Championships as recently as 2017 and will hold the Freestyle and Snowboard Worlds in 2025, along with multiple World Cups.

An evaluation group will review the initial plans, with a final program due by the end of March in 2024. A recommendation will be made to the FIS Council, which will finalize the selection, to be announced on 4 June 2024.

This is a major new undertaking by FIS, creating a mega-event at the mid-point between Olympic Winter Games, trying to create a major new athletic, fan and broadcast marker that is hoped to be more than the sum of its parts.

A third bid from Slovenia, featuring the facilities at Planica and Kranjska Gora, had been reported, but was not announced by FIS on Monday.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Athletics ● The Athletics Integrity Unit announced nine more provisional suspensions for doping, including four more Kenyans, from as far back as July, explaining that “Public disclosure of the back-dated suspensions was delayed due to prolonged investigations in those cases.”

Russian Yelena Korobkina, the 2015 European Indoor 3,000 m champ, was found to be doping on the basis of the Moscow Laboratory (“LIMS”) database and information from the McLaren investigations into the Russian state-sponsored doping program from 2011-15. She was banned for four years from 27 September 2023 and her results from 2 July 2013 through 24 July 2016 – including her European Indoor win – are disqualified.

● Football ● Brazil submitted its letter of intent to FIFA for the hosting of the 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup on Saturday, including the necessary government guarantees.

The tournament has never been hosted in South America this far, and is one of four bids for the event. A combined bid by Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany, a combined bid by Mexico and the U.S., and by South Africa are also live.

The decision is expected in May of 2024.

● Tennis ● Poland’s Iga Swiatek, ranked no. 2 worldwide, cruised to a 6-1, 6-0 victory over no. 5-ranked American Jessica Pergula at the weather-delayed WTA Finals in Cancun (MEX). With the victory, Swiatek will regain the world no. 1 ranking through the end of the year with an 11-match winning streak and six wins on tour this season, and has a 6-3 lifetime record against Pergula.

In the Doubles final, German Laura Siegemund and Russian Vera Zvonareva swept aside Nicole Melichar-Martini (USA) and Ellen Perez (AUS), 6-4, 6-4.

● Weightlifting ● Good news for the sport as all of the doping tests for the recent IWF Worlds in Saudi Arabia came back negative. In a sport which has been plagued by doping for decades, 213 athletes from 61 countries were tested, with no positives.

A total of 692 athletes attended the event, with both urine and some blood samples collected. The International Olympic Committee agreed last month to reinstate weightlifting on the program of the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

You can receive our exclusive TSX Report by e-mail by clicking here. You can also refer a friend by clicking here, and can donate here to keep this site going.

For our updated, 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: U.S. tops with 286 medals, 124 golds at Pan American Games; Tola, Obiri sensational in New York; Brazilian streamer to show Paris 2024!

Colorful closing of the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile. (Photo by Andres Pina/Santiago 2023 vía Photosport).

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

To get The Sports Examiner by e-mail: sign up here!

≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. U.S. tops the table with 286 medals at Pan American Games
2. Tola gets course record, Obiri sprints to win at NYC Marathon
3. IOC reaches beyond TV to Brazilian streamer CazeTV for 2024
4. IOC says 2026 sliding venue will be outside Italy
5. WTA acknowledges player unrest over Cancun Finals

● The XIX Pan American Games concluded in Santiago, Chile, with the United States leading the medal table at 286 total and 124 golds all together. American entries won 34 golds over the final three days, with the men’s water polo team winning its eighth straight Pan Am title and the women taking their sixth straight; the wins qualified both for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

● Ethiopia’s Tamirat Tola shook off his last challenger after 30 km and raced to an impressive course record of 2:04:58 at the New York City Marathon on Sunday, while Kenya’s Hellen Obiri out-dueled her frequent track foe, Ethiopia’s Letsenbet Gidey in the final 300 m to win the women’s race in 2:27:23, with Gidey at 2:27:29 and defending champ Sharon Lokedi of Kenya third in 2:27:33.

● The International Olympic Committee made a strike to go beyond broadcast television for the Paris 2024 Games, approving a deal by the Brazilian rights holder, Grupo Globo, to stream some events on the massively-popular CazeTV on YouTube, featuring online sensation Casimiro. It’s a look into the future.

● The IOC told the Milan-Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games organizers that the bobsled, luge and skeleton events must be held outside the country for cost and sustainability reasons. After a new track could not be built in Cortina, the idea was floated to renovate the 2006 Turin track, which has been abandoned since 2012. The IOC’s reply: no, and don’t ask again.

● Multiple players criticized the playing conditions at the Women’s Tennis Association final in Cancun (MEX), led by no. 1-ranked Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus, who wrote, “This not the level of organization we expect for the Finals.” WTA chief Steve Simon said in a letter to the players that “It is not a perfect event.”

Panorama: International Olympic Committee (Paris thieves steal jewels from IOC member) = Athletics (3: Beadlescomb and Rodenfels win USATF 5 km titles; Jamaica’s Levy fails doping test; AIU imposes two sanctions, but Jeruto cleared in hearing) = Badminton (U.S.’s Zhang wins at Hylo Open!) = Curling (Gushue, Gim take Pan Continental titles) = Cycling (Lavreysen, Bibic, Andrews, Archibald lead in Champions League) = Fencing (McDowald suspended by SafeSport) = Figure Skating (Siao Him Fa and Levito get first Grand Prix wins) = Football (3: Hayes to be hired as U.S. women’s coach; UEFA to co-promote Ballon d’Or awards; Iranian club penalized for Soleimani statute in venue) = Short Track (Santos-Griswold sweeps Four Continents for first U.S. golds!) = Table Tennis (Lin and Wang take WTT Champions titles) ●

Errata: Some readers of Friday’s post saw a reference to former USATF staff member Jim Estes working for the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials bid for Charlotte. Nope, it was Chattanooga, with the correction made on the site. Thanks to reader Karen Rosen for the sharp eyes! ●

1.
U.S. tops the table with 286 medals at Pan American Games

The XIX Pan American Games closed in Santiago, Chile on Sunday, with the U.S. once again leading the medal table with 286 in total, including 124 golds, 75 silvers and 87 bronzes.

The 2023 PAG finished with 40 events on Friday, 71 on Saturday and 24 on Sunday and the American squad won 79 medals across those 135 events, including 34 golds:

Friday, 3 November (10):
Athletics: Isai Rodriguez, men’s 10,000 m
Fencing: Men’s Team Foil
Fencing: Women’s Team Sabre
Karate: Ariel Torres, men’s Kata
Karate: Sakura Kokumai, women’s Kata
Sailing: Ian Barrows and Hans Henken, men’s 49er
Sailing: Daniela Moroz, women’s Kite
Squash: Timothy Brownell and Olivia Clyne, Mixed Doubles
Wrestling: Ildar Hafizov, men’s Greco 60 kg
Wrestling: Kamal Bey, men’s Greco 77 kg

Saturday, 4 November (16):
Archery: men’s Team Recurve
Archery: women’s Team Recurve
Archery: Olivia Dean and Alexis Ruiz, women’s Team Compound
Athletics: Matt Ludwig, men’s vault
Athletics: Curtis Thompson, men’s javelin
Athletics: Rachel McCoy, women’s high jump
Breaking: Grace “Sunny” Choi, women
Gymnastics: Jessica Stevens, women’s trampoline
Gymnastics: Ruben Padilla and Aliaksei Shostak, men’s synchro trampoline
Gymnastics: Nicole Ahsinger and Jessica Stevens, women’s synchro trampoline
Rugby Sevens: Women
Sailing: Erika Reineke, women’s Laser Radial
Sailing: Mixed Lightning
Softball: Women
Water Polo: Men
Water Polo: Women

Sunday, 5 November (8):
Archery: Jackson Mirich, men’s Recurve
Archery: Brady Ellison & Casey Kaufhold, Recurve Mixed Team
Bowling: A.J. Johnson, men’s Singles
Cycling: Hannah Roberts, women’s BMX Freestyle
Karate: Thomas Scott, men’s 75 kg
Roller: Erin Jackson, women’s 500 m
Squash: Women’s Team
Table Tennis: Women’s Team

The U.S. men’s and women’s water polo titles continued long Pan Am winning streaks, with the men taking their eighth gold in a row in a 17-7 win over Brazil in the final, as Hannes Daube and Alexander Bowen each scored five goals. The women blasted Canada, 20-11, in the final for a sixth straight PAG gold, with Rachel Fattal and Jenna Flynn each getting five goals. Both teams are now qualified for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

In track & field, the U.S. finished with 25 medals (8-5-12), just ahead of Brazil (23) and Cuba (18). Isai Rodriguez and Sam Chelanga went 1-2 in the men’s 10,000 m in 28:17.84 and 29:01.21; Matt Ludwig won the vault at 5.55 m (18-2 1/2) and Curtis Thompson won his first international medal by winning the javelin at 79.65 m (261-4). Canada’s Ethan Katzberg, the surprise World Champion in the hammer, won at 80.96 m (265-7), followed by Americans Daniel Haugh (77.82 m/255-4) and Rudy Winkler (76.65 m/251-5).

Rachel McCoy won the women’s high jump for the U.S. at 1.87 m (6-1 1/2), but the normally powerful U.S. women did not win a single gold on the track and claimed only four medals in total (0-1-3). The men were shut out in the normally-strong sprints: 100-200-400 m and both relays.

The U.S. dominated the fencing competition, winning eight golds in 12 events and 11 medals overall, but Canada scored 12 medals in all (2-6-4). Nick Itkin (men’s Foil), Lee Kiefer (women’s Foil) and Magda Skarbonkiewicz (women’s Sabre) won two golds each, in the individual and team events.

Brazil won the men’s football tournament, with U-22 players that will be eligible for the Paris 2024 Games, by beating Chile in the final on penalties (4-2) after a 1-1 tie. Mexico won the women’s final, 1-0 over Chile, with the U.S. U-19 squad placing third, beating Argentina by 2-0.

Brazil dominated rhythmic gymnastics, winning all eight events, with Barbara Domingos winning the All-Around, Ball and Ribbon, and Maria Alexandre taking the Clubs and Hoop golds. America Evita Griskenas won the All-Around silver and a bronze in all four apparatus finals.

In the overall medal table, the U.S.’s 286 was followed by an impressive 205 – an all-time record – for Brazil (66-73-66), then Canada with 164 (46-55-63), Mexico with 142 (52-38-52), and Colombia at 101 (29-38-34), its first time over the 100 mark.

Despite the 2023 Games being held in the very late fall, the U.S. had an excellent showing by historical standards. Discounting the 1959 and 1987 Pan Ams held in the U.S., the 2023 output compares favorably:

● 425 in 1995 (Mar de Plata/ARG)
● 352 in 1991 (Havana/CUB)
● 304 in 1999 (Winnipeg/CAN)
● 302 in 1983 (Caracas/VEN)
● 293 in 2019 (Lima/PER)
● 286 in 2023 (Santiago/CHI)

That’s no. 6 all-time for Pan Ams outside the U.S. and well ahead of the medal totals in 2003-07-11-15. The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee reported that 403 out of the 631 members of the U.S. team won at least one medal and 96 won multiple medals. By team, the swimmers led with 48 total medals, followed by track & field (25), gymnastics (23) and shooting (18).

The 2027 Pan American Games are scheduled to be held in Barranquilla, Colombia, but in the summer from 2-15 July.

2.
Tola gets course record, Obiri sprints to win at NYC Marathon

Very impressive racing by two of the favorites turned into noteworthy victories for Ethiopia’s Tamirat Tola and Kenyan Hellen Obiri at the 2023 New York City Marathon on Sunday morning.

The men’s race saw 18 running in the lead pack at the 10 km mark, but only five by the half, with Tola leading at 62:45 next to countryman Jemal Yimer, the 2018 African 10,000 m champ. By the 25 km mark, the race had broken up, with Tola and Yimer and 2021 New York winner Albert Korir (KEN) together, with a nine-second lead on the field.

Then came the race-breaker, a sensational 4:28 17th mile (27.4 km mark) that narrowed the race to Tola and Yimer and put Kenyan Geoffrey Mutai’s 2:05:06 course record from 2011 in jeopardy.

Tola, 32, was only added to the field on 13 October, despite being the 2022 World Champion, with two good finishes in New York, in fourth in 2018 and 2019. He ran away from Yimer after 30 km and had a 33-second lead by the 35 km mark. From there, it was a question of time and Tola was steady, running a 15:17 from 35-40 km and finishing in a race record of 2:04:58 for a 4:36 per mile average.

Yimer faded badly to ninth and Korir moved back up to finish second in 2:06:57, followed by last year’s runner-up, Shura Kitata (ETH: 2:07:11), Abdi Nageeye (NED: 2:10:21) and Belgian Koen Naert (2:10:25).

Futsum Zienasellassie was the top American in 10th (2:12:09), followed by Elkanah Kibet in 11th (2:12:23).

Tola has now run 17 career marathons and won his fourth, and made the podium eight times. He has been getting better and better: in his last seven races, he’s won three times with two thirds.

The women’s race was much more competitive, with 11 women in the lead pack by the half, and eight running together by the 35 km mark and five by 40 km. Then, defending champ Sharon Lokedi (KEN) made a push into the lead, followed closely by Obiri and Ethiopia’s Letsenbet Gidey, the 2022 World 10,000 m champ.

Obiri and Gidey, old rivals on the track at 5,000 m and 10,000 m, dropped Lokedi as the race moved into Central Park and the two track stars battled it out, with Obiri’s final sprint in the last 300 m the best, to win in 2:27:23 (5:38 per mile), with Gidey at 2:27:29 and Lokedi third in 2:27:33.

Kenyan Brigid Kosgei, the former world-record holder was fourth (2:27:45) and Mary Ngugi-Cooper (KEN) was fifth in 2:27:53. The top Americans included Kellyn Taylor, 37, eighth in 2:29:48 and Molly Huddle, 39, in ninth at 2:32:02.

Obiri’s move to the roads is just spectacular, as she was sixth in New York in 2022, won Boston in April and now New York in November, finishing with a 4:52 mile! Obiri became the first to win the Boston-New York double since Norwegian star Ingrid Kristiansen in 1989, and won eight of her nine races this year, all but one on the roads.

3.
IOC reaches beyond TV to Brazilian streamer CazeTV for 2024

The International Olympic Committee has a long-term broadcast partner in Brazil in Grupo Globo, which has held exclusive rights from 2018, and now through the 2032 Olympic Games in a deal announced in 2015.

But SportBusiness reported last week indicate that the IOC is looking beyond broadcast as President Thomas Bach (GER) insists that the Olympic Games must be brought to the people, wherever they are:

The channel of Brazilian influencer Casimiro, a joint venture with LiveMode, will stream 500 hours of live action from next year’s Olympics. The agreement supplements existing linear free-to-air, pay-television and digital coverage on Globo.”

CazeTV, by Casimiro Miguel, is a sensation in Brazil, and the agreement was developed in conjunction with the LiveMode Agency, which has brought CazeTV together with the 2022 FIFA World Cup – showing 22 games – and reaching an audience of 3.8 million on his YouTube Channel for the Brazil-Serbia group-stage match last November.

The CazeTV channel has also shown matches from the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup and the 2023 World Judo Championships, among other events.

What is this about? Hunting for a specific, younger audience. Edgar Diniz of LiveMode explained the thinking behind the tie-up with CazeTV for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, primarily as a way to find added visibility in Brazil for the event. But there was no rights fee involved, as the World Cup rights already belonged to Globo (computer translation from the original Portuguese):

“There were people who even liked football less and who were there watching in a different way. Trying to compete with Globo in its game is practically impossible, so we offer a different, humorous alternative, with those people, almost watching the game with friends. We thought it was a complementary alternative. And looking at the audiences we see that it is a complement, obviously with incomparable numbers, the size of the Globo audience with the Casimiro audience, but it increases and provides a cool, fun alternative, which has no ambition, neither today nor tomorrow, to compete with Globo in any respect.”

Diniz explained the model with CazeTV going forward:

“The vocation of CazéTV and the LiveMode project do not include entering into disputes over rights. This is an important point. We think that CazéTV is a distribution and monetization solution, which we present to clients whoever makes sense at that moment. I’ll give an example.

“We just closed an agreement with the COB [Brazilian Olympic Committee] for competitions that do not have access to distribution, and we are going to work to bring a good audience to sports, which today have difficulty connecting with young people, and monetize through sponsors. In some cases, we pay a fixed amount for the rights. In many cases, we use a revenue sharing model. Go to the market, share the revenue, possibly with a minimum guarantee, because we are confident that we will monetize.” (Emphasis added)

And Diniz made a prediction for the future about television rights and mega-events, which could very well be part of American television broadcasts of the Olympic Games in the future (meaning beyond 2032):

“I can’t see a model with one player buying everything, because it’s difficult to make economic sense, and I think that whoever will lead this process, the way it will be sold, will always be looking to maximize value. The tendency is to have this combination of two or three players sharing the products, and an accommodation will be sought to solve the fan’s life [to find what is being shown where].”

4.
IOC says 2026 sliding venue will be outside Italy

Amid internal Italian political pressures to fund a renovation of the Cesana Pariol sliding track used for the 2006 Turin Olympic Winter Games instead of using a venue outside of the country, the International Olympic Committee has decided the issue.

The Associated Press reported a statement from the IOC that included:

● “The IOC has been very clear over the last years that no permanent venue should be built if there is not a clear and viable legacy plan.”

● “The IOC has also already clarified that it believes that the current number of sliding centers is sufficient for the current number of athletes and competitions.”

The statement further noted that the Cesana track was abandoned just six years after the Turin 2006 Winter Games and that given the limited time remaining, “only existing and already operating tracks must be considered.”

Milan Cortina 2026’s bid foresaw a new track to replace the historic Eugenio Monti track used for the 1956 Olympic Winter Games in Cortina d’Ampezzo. The IOC was against from the beginning, but the concept was insisted on by the Veneto region. However, projected costs ballooned to as much as €124 million (€1 = $1.07 U.S.), and with a budget of about €83.8 million, no construction company bid on the project.

The obvious choices for the 2026 Winter Games would be the existing tracks in Austria (Igls) or Switzerland (St. Moritz), but Italian politicians argued that spending money outside the country for the Games was wrong and that the Turin track could be used. However, the cost of getting that facility working again is estimated by the Piedmont Region at €33.8 million, with no plan for future use beyond 2026.

Milan Cortina 2026 chair Giovanni Milago (ITA) told the IOC Session in India last month that the government and the organizing committee had agreed that the sliding track venue would be outside of Italy, and the IOC is holding them to it.

5.
WTA acknowledges player unrest over Cancun Finals

Staging high-profile events is not easy, as the Women’s Tennis Association found out this past week at the WTA Finals in Cancun (MEX).

The tournament site was only agreed to a couple of months before the tournament, after discussions about putting it in Saudi Arabia were never completed. The temporary court at the Estadio Paradisus, installed on a golf course, was only completed a few days prior to the start of the tournament. Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka, the world’s no. 1-ranked player, reflected on Instagram what several other players have said, after a first-round win:

“I have to say though that I am very disappointed with the WTA and the experience so far at the WTA Finals. As I said in my press conference tonight, as a player I really feel disrespected by the WTA. I think most of us do. This is not the level of organization we expect for the Finals.

“To be honest, I don’t feel safe moving on this court a lot of the time, the bounce is not consistent at all, and we weren’t able to practice on this court until yesterday for the first time. It’s just not acceptable to me with so much on the line and so much at stake.”

At her pre-tournament interview, she also explained:

“Well, I’m not happy that we couldn’t practice on the match court, meaning like on the stadium. I think this is not the level for the WTA Finals. We literally have one hour today, like 45 minutes, to try the stadium. This is something what I’m not happy with. I’m pretty sure the rest of the players also not happy.”

Sabalenka also expressed some sympathy with the local organizers in her Instagram post:

“I definitely want to show my appreciation for the local tournament organizers, everyone that built the court at the last minute, and everyone that’s working here at the event. I know it’s not their fault and I want them to know, as well as all the Mexican fans, that I love them and appreciate them. I’m very happy to be in Mexico, I’m just upset with the WTA and this situation.”

The WTA initially defended the set-up as meeting its performance standards, but a letter to the players from WTA chief executive Steve Simon to the players was leaked last week and included:

“First and foremost, it is clear that you are not happy with the decision to be here in Cancun. I understand that and you have been heard. As I have reflected to you, this is not where we expected to be and the decision for this location was based on a number of complicated factors.

“It is not a perfect event, we understand the conditions are a challenge and the WTA will of course accept responsibility for that. I am appreciative that you have reflected in the media your recognition of the significant support from Cancun and all of the people that are working so hard to put on this event.”

Simon also referenced a long list of other issues the players have raised about Tour conditions, scheduling and player support, promising to work with them.

The weather has also been uncooperative, with the Sabalenka vs. second-ranked Iga Swiatek (POL) semifinal rained out, as well as the double semifinals, meaning the tournament will have to be concluded – barring other weather issues – on Monday.

American Jessica Pergula won her Singles semi against countrywoman Coco Gauff, 6-2, 6-1, on Saturday. Swiatek finished off her 6-3, 6-2 win over Sabalenka on Sunday and will face Pergula on Monday for the championship. The Doubles final will have Nicole Melichar-Martini (USA) and Ellen Perez (AUS), facing Sunday semifinal winners German Laura Siegemund and Vera Zvonareva (RUS), in Monday’s final.

Nothing is easy, or as the locals in Cancun put it, nada es facil.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● International Olympic Committee ● Agence France Presse reported Friday:

“French police have arrested three men for robbing the head of the Mongolian Olympic delegation during a visit to Paris, making off with a bag containing almost 600,000 euros worth of jewels in a drive-by heist.”

The Mongolian official was not named, but the story added:

“France is preparing to host the Summer Olympics in 2024 and the member of the International Olympic Committee arrived in Paris to attend a security committee meeting ahead of the Games.”

Mongolia has only one active IOC member, Battushig Batbold, 37, elected in 2020, who is the chair of multiple large companies in the country, including in telecommunications. He and his wife suffered a smash-and-grab robbery in the Landy Tunnel in Paris, with the loss of €570,000 in property (about $612,000 U.S.).

While three suspects have been arrested, the jewelry has not yet been recovered.

● Athletics ● Held a day before the New York City Marathon, the USATF 5 km Championships was also held in New York. The men’s race almost blew up early, with the runners moving west on 42nd Street and a bus continuing into the intersection and stopping just a few feet away!

Once past that, the race finally broke up in Central Park with about 1,500 m to go with four men in the lead and then Morgan Beadlescomb and Ahmed Muhumed raced ahead in the final 400 m, with Beadlescomb – 13th at the U.S. nationals 5,000 m in July – winning his first national title (and $12,000) in 13:44. Muhumed held off late charges by Tai Dinger and Daniel Schaffer to maintain second, with all three timed in 13:47.

Two-time defending champion Weini Kelati went to the front right away in the women’s race, and she, former American marathon record holder Keira D’Amato and Annie Rodenfels, 12th at the U.S. nationals 5,000 m in Eugene this year.

Inside of the final mile, in Central Park, Rodenfels pushed away from the others to win in 15:22. Behind her, Rachel Smith and Bethany Hasz moved up on D’Amato and Kelati and Smith claimed second in 15:26, with Hasz in 15:27, with D’Amato fourth in 15:28 and Kelati sixth in 15:30. It was also the first-ever national title for Rodenfels.

Jamaican hurdler Ronald Levy, the Tokyo Olympic bronze medalist in the men’s 110 m hurdles, was notified that he failed a doping test in October. He is waiting for the results of the B-sample test and wrote on Instagram, “I intend to defend my integrity during this process because I am certain I did not knowingly breach the rules.”

The Athletics Integrity Unit posted more doping sanctions. The first is against Kenyan Michael Kunyuga, 36, a 2:06:43 marathoner from 2020, for the use of the steroid Norandrosterone at the Riga Marathon in May 2022, with an eight-year ban from 1 August 2022 for usage and failing to cooperate with the inquiry.

Ethiopia’s Zerfe Wondemagegn, 21, the Worlds fourth-placer in the men’s Steeplechase this year, has been provisionally suspended for the use of the prohibited hormone Erythropoietin (EPO)

The AIU’s ban on 2022 women’s Steeple World Champion Norah Jeruto (KAZ) was overturned by a hearing panel. Her case revolved around abnormalities with readings in comparison to her Athlete Biological Passport in 2020 and 2021. The AIU alleged EPO usage and provisionally suspended her, but the hearing panel found that her readings could have been caused by Covid-19 issues and the poor treatment she received in Kenya. The AIU has not announced whether it will appeal the decision.

● Badminton ● A big win for American Beiwen Zhang at the BWF World Tour Hylo Open, in Saarbrucken (GER).

Second-seed Zhang defeated Dane Line Kjaersfeldt in the women’s Singles final, 21-18, 16-21, 21-16, for her third career BWF World Tour title and second this year. It was the fourth World Tour final that Zhang has made this season – her best ever – and second victory, after the Australian Open in August.

This has been a good two weeks for Zhang, as she also won the Pan American Games title in Santiago on 25 October, then got on a plane to Saarbrucken!

China scored two wins in Doubles, with Yu Chen Liu and Xuan Yi Ou defeating Yang Lee and Chi-Lin Wang (TPE), 24-22, 21-13, and Shu Xian Zhang and Yu Zheng winning over second-seeds Apriyani Rahayu and Siti Ramadhanti (INA), when the Indonesians had to retire due to injury after winning the first set, 21-18.

Top-seeded Tien Chen Chou (TPE) won the men’s Singles by 21-23, 21-17, 21-10 over Cheuk Yiu Lee (HKG), but Hong Kong got a win in the Mixed Doubles as Chun Man Tang and Ying Suet Tse came from behind to win over Rehan Kusharjanto and Lisa Lusumawati (INA), 15-21, 21-15, 21-14.

● Curling ● Re-matches were key to the second World Curling Pan Continental Championships, held in Kelowna, British Columbia (CAN), with all four medal matches between the same countries as in 2022!

The men’s gold-medal final was again 2006 Olympic champ Brad Gushue’s Canadian squad facing South Korea, after winning, 11-3 in 2022. Korea fielded an all-new team, skipped by Jong-duk Park, and had a 2-1 lead after four ends. But Gushue’s squad scored one in the fifth and two each in the sixth and seventh to take a 6-2 lead and after a single point for Park in the eight, scored two more in the ninth and won, 8-3. Gushue was the only 2022 winner to also win in their 2023 re-runs.

The men’s third-place re-match from 2022 had U.S. squad of Andrew Stopera, Korey Dropkin, Mark Fenner and Thomas Howell facing Japan and skip Riku Yanagisawa. Last year’s bronze match was an 8-7 win for the U.S., but Yanagisawa got out in front quickly this time with two points reach in the first two ends.

The U.S. closed to 4-3 after four ends, but Japan got two more points in the fifth and seventh for an 8-4 lead and cruised in with a 9-6 win and the bronze medal.

The women’s championship re-match saw Olympic silver winners Japan (Satsuki Fujiwara) and South Korea (Eun-ji Gim this time), with Fujiwara’s rink winning last year. This match went back and forth, with Korea up 2-0 after one end, then tied, then up by 4-2 after three and down, 5-4, after four. But then Gim’s squad turned up the pressure, scoring two in the fifth, three in the seventh and single points in the eighth and ninth and cruised to an 11-6 victory and the championship.

The women’s bronze-medal re-match was between Canada’s Kerri Einarson, a two-time Worlds bronze medalist, and American Tabitha Peterson, with Cory Thiesse, sister Tara Peterson and Becca Hamilton. The Americans scored first, with two points in the opening end, but the match was tied at the end of three. The U.S. got two out of the fourth and fifth, but Canada tied it in the sixth at 4-4. Two points in the eighth put the U.S. up, 6-4, but Einarson stole three points in the ninth for a 7-6 lead. Tabitha Peterson managed a point in the 10th to go to an extra end, and with the final shot, nudged the Canadian stone enough to score the decisive point for an 8-7 win and the bronze medal. Einarson had won, 7-5, last year.

● Cycling ● No changes at the top of the leaderboard after the third stage of the UCI Track Champions League, this time in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (FRA), but – flash – Dutch star Harrie Lavreysen lost a race!

The Tokyo 2020 Sprint gold medalist, Lavreysen had won the Sprint and Keirin races in the Sprint group in each of the first two legs, but this time could not solve 2022 Worlds Sprint runner-up Matthew Richardson of Australia, who won the final in 9.775, with Lavreysen just 0.040 seconds behind.

But Lavreysen rebounded to win the Keirin with a final lap of 9.720, ahead of Pole Mateusz Rudyk (+0.10) and Richardson (+0.15) and now has a 117-93-83 series lead over Richardson and Rudyk with two stages remaining.

In the men’s Endurance division, Canada’s Dylan Bibic – the 2022 Worlds Scratch winner – was unstoppable, taking the Scratch and Elimination races for his fourth win in six League races so far. He beat Canadian teammate Mathias Guillemette and Belgian Tuur Dans in the Scratch, and Jules Hester (BEL) and Sebastian Mora (ESP) in the Elimination. Bibic’s series lead is now 96-70 over Hesters, with Japan’s Eiya Hashimoto third (69).

The women’s Sprint leader, New Zealand’s 2023 Worlds Keirin champ, Ellesse Andrews, won the Sprint from Canada’s Kelsey Mitchell in 11.109 (Mitchell +0.71), but German Alessa Catriona-Propster won the Keirin this time in 10.855, with Nicky Degrendele (BEL) second (+0.169) and Andrews third (+0.362).

However, on the strength of winning four races out of six thus far, Andrews maintains a 105-96 edge on Catriona-Propster, with Emma Finucane (GBR: 63) a distant third.

Endurance leader Katie Archibald (GBR), the two-time Omnium world champ, was third in the Scratch this time, but won the Elimination race for the third straight time, beating Anita Stenberg (NOR) in Saint-Quentin to hold on to a 102-90 lead in the overall standings. Canada’s Sarah van Dam won the Scratch race, ahead of teammate Maggie Coles-Lyster; Coles-Lyster is third in the overall standings at 82 points, one ahead of American Lily Williams.

The League will conclude for 2023 with two race days in London (GBR) next week.

● Fencing ● The U.S. Center for SafeSport has suspended Pan American Games gold medalist Curtis McDowald, amid unspecified allegations of misconduct.

The suspension began on Friday, a day after McDowald was a key contributor to the U.S.’s win in the men’s Team Epee competition at the 2023 Pan American Games. According to USA Fencing:

“Once we became aware of the allegations, we immediately informed the U.S. Center for SafeSport, who exercised their ability to take jurisdictional control of the case and upheld our temporary measures.

“We take the safety and integrity of our sport seriously and will cooperate fully with the inquiry while maintaining the confidentiality of the involved parties. We also encourage anyone who has been harmed in sport to come forward, and we will support them to the fullest extent of our abilities.”

McDowald has been disciplined before, including for an angry reaction and a red card at the Pan American Championships during the summer.

● Figure Skating ● The third of seven stages of the ISU Grand Prix, the Grand Prix de France in Angers saw a first title for American Isabeau Levito and a silver medal for men’s star Ilia Malinin.

Levito, still just 16 and the 2023 U.S. champion, dominated the Short Program, scoring 71.83 to forge a five-point lead on Anastasiia Gubanova (GEO) and Hae-in Lee of Korea (66.30). She needed that edge as she had a stumble and finished third in the Free Skate (131.39), behind Japan’s Rion Sumiyoshi (136.04) and Belgian Nina Pinzarrone (133.06). Added together, Levito scored 203.22 to edge Pinzarrone (198.80) and Sumiyoshi (197.76) with Lee fourth (190.96). Said Levito:

“I guess we’ll call this screwing up the second half of my spin a dramatic finish. I’m just glad that I did the first half very nicely. I’m glad I got through this, and I will definitely be working on this a lot more once I get back to training.”

The men’s competition was a showdown between Skate America winner Malinin (18) of the U.S. and France’s home favorite, European Champion Adam Siao Him Fa. Malinin led the Short Program at 101.58, with Siao Him Fa right behind at 101.07. Then the Frenchman won the Free Skate, 201.71 to 203.10 to take the win by 306.78 to 304.68, with Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama third (273.14) and American Cam Pulkinen fifth (230.84).

The Canadian pair of Lia Pereira and Trennt Michaud won their first ISU Grand Prix gold in the Pairs, scoring 194.67 and winning both the Short Program and Free Skate over Italy’s Sara Conti and Niccolo Macii (189.46). Americans Valentina Plazas and Maximiliano Fernandez finished fourth (168.20) and Ellie Kam and Danny O’Shea withdrew after the Short Program due to an injury.

Worlds silver medalists Charlene Guignard and Marco Fabbri (ITA) were clear winners in the Ice Dance, taking both segments and scoring 214.54 for their third career Grand Prix win, comfortably ahead of Canada’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Nikolaj Soerensen (205.15). Americans Christina Carreira and Anthony Ponomarenko finished fourth (186.70) and Lorraine McNamara and Anton Spiridonov were ninth (164.25).

The show continues next week in Chongqing (CHN) with the Cup of China and then back to Europe for the Grand Prix of Espoo in Finland.

● Football ● Multiple reports confirmed that the U.S. Soccer Federation will hire Emma Hayes (GBR), the manager of the Chelsea women’s team, as its next head coach of the Women’s National Team.

Hayes, 47, managed the Chicago Red Stars of Women’s Professional Soccer from 2008-10, was fired, after a 6-6-14 (W-L-T) record, then moved on to Chelsea in August 2012 and has compiled a 236-58-39 record, winning the Women’s F.A. Cup five times and the F.A. Women’s Super League six times. She was named as the FIFA “Best Football Coach” in 2021.

UEFA and France’s Groupe Amaury, owner of the all-sports newspaper L’Equipe, announced a co-promotion of the famed Ballon d’Or awards program beginning in 2024.

France Football, also owned by Groupe Amaury, originated the Ballon d’Or in 1956 and it has been the most prestigious football awards program worldwide. According to the announcement:

“Groupe Amaury remains the owner of the Ballon d’Or® brand and will continue to oversee the voting system, which will remain unchanged and independent. UEFA will contribute its football expertise, market the global commercial rights and organise the annual awards gala.”

New awards will be added for men’s and women’s coach of the year.

Another provocative political statement at a sporting event caused the cancellation of an Asian Football Confederation Champions League match between Saudi club Al-Ittihad and Iranian host club Sepahan on 2 October.

A statute of the Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani, killed in 2020 by a U.S. drone strike, was displayed at the Naghsh-e Jahan Stadium in Isfahan, angering the Saudis, who consider Soleimani to have been a terrorist leader on behalf of the Iranian government.

The Saudis refused to take the field with the statute standing and the home team refused a referee’s directive to remove it. The AFC directed that the game be forfeited by Sepahan by a 3-0 score and fined the club $200,000, banned from playing any of its next three matches there and was instructed “to remove the relevant statue and banners” for all future AFC matches.

The club said it would appeal.

● Short Track ● After two legs of the ISU World Cup circuit in Montreal (CAN), action shifted to Laval in Quebec for the ISU Four Continents Championships, an event for the rest of the world outside of the European Championships. And American star Kristen Santos-Griswold was happy to keep skating in Canada.

After winning four individual medals (1-1-2) on the first two stops, she expanded her medal collection with a sensational performance, sweeping the three individual events, the first-ever individual wins for the U.S. at the Four Continents!

Her first gold came in the 1,500 m, winning in 2:26.191 over Canada’s seven-time Worlds medal winner Courtney Sauralt (2:26.657). Then she won the 500 m, in 42.760, ahead of Korean Jiwon Park (44.192), with American Julie Letai in position for the bronze, but was disqualified.

On Sunday, Santos-Griswold completed her sweep with a 1:28.706 to 1:29.208 win over Sauralt for three golds in three races.

Santos-Griswold won a fourth medal – silver – in the Mixed Relay, with Andrew Heo, Marcus Howard and Letai in 2:40.243, behind Canada’s 2:39.752. The U.S. star said a mental adjustment has helped her:

“I’m trying not to be so hard on myself sometimes, which is something I did in the past, and that I think is helping. I’m just doing one race at a time, one thing at a time, and that gets me out of my head. I feel pretty strong, and during the races I’m just staying calm throughout.

“When we practice, sometimes I used to think ‘tomorrow we have a hard practice, so today I need to be not that tired.’ I’ve tried to stop that. Now, I just give it my all.”

Canada won two of the three men’s individual events, with three-time Olympic medal winner Steven Dubois winning the 500 m in 40.149, ahead of teammate Jordan Pierre-Giles (40.183) and Heo of the U.S. (40.299). William Dandjinou took the 1,000 m in 1:28.338, ahead of Korea’s 2023 World Champion Ji-won Park (1:28.664), with Dubois disqualified.

Park won the 1,500 m – where he is also the reigning World Champion – in 2:33.158, with Dubois second in 2:33.228.

● Table Tennis ● The third WTT Champions tournament of 2023 was in Frankfurt (GER), with Taiwan’s Yun-ju Lin creating upset after upset to win an unexpected men’s title.

Best known as a doubles star, with a Tokyo Olympic bronze medal, Lin, 22, sawed his way through two prior WTT Champions winners in the quarters and semis, defeating Japan’s Tomokazu Harimoto (WTT Champions Europe 2021) by 3-1, and then China’s Chuqin Wang, the 2023 Worlds runner-up, by 4-2. In the final, he faced China’s 2016-20 Olympic champ, Long Ma, and won by 4-1 (7-11, 11-7, 13-11, 12-10, 12-10).

It was the first win by a Taiwanese player in the five WTT Champions tournaments held so far. Pretty impressive!

In the all-China women’s final, Yidi Wang, the 2021 Worlds bronze winner, swept aside 2021 World Champion Manyu Wang, 4-0 (11-3, 13-11, 12-10, 13-11), after disposing of Tokyo Olympic silver winner Yingsha Sun, 4-2, in her semifinal.

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TSX REPORT: U.S. cruises past 200 Pan Am medals; U.S. marathon trials race directors blame USATF; Kremlin blasts IOC for “double standard” on Israel

Erin Marsh (left) and Jordan Gray of the U.S. celebrate a 1-3 finish in the women's heptathlon at the Pan American Games in Santiago. (Photo by Alejandro Pagni/Santiago 2023 via Photosport)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Six U.S. golds Thursday, now 207 medals at Pan American Games
2. Orlando marathon trials operators decry “misinformation”
3. Kremlin blasts IOC for double standard on Israel!
4. Famed coach says Russia must retain 2022 Beijing Team gold
5. World champ Tola, Olympic winner Jepchirchir lead NYC Marathon

● The United States team passed the 200-medal mark at the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, winning six golds on Thursday, including two more in fencing and in track & field, and one each in bowling and wrestling. The Games will wrap up on Sunday.

● The race directors of the 2024 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in Orlando, Florida, released a lengthy reply to the USA Track & Field Athletes Advisory Committee’s letter, saying it was USATF which insisted on the noon start time and then changed its mind without telling them. They suggest an 8 a.m. start time could be possible, if everyone agrees, including on revised financial terms.

● Russia’s Foreign Ministry harshly criticized the International Olympic Committee for a “double standard” against – for invading Ukraine – vis-a-vis Israel, which was attacked by Hamas, the elected government of Gaza. This is all for internal consumption, of course, as the Russian government seeks to mollify its internal audiences for the sanctions against it.

● Famed Russian figure skating coach Eteri Tutberidze said in an interview that Russia should retain its gold medal in the 2022 Olympic Winter Games figure skating Team Event because even if Kamila Valieva had not skated, one of the other Russian women skaters would have performed and won anyway. Tutberidze also said that Valieva had a clean doping test at the European Championships and that should have been enough.

● The New York City Marathon comes on Sunday, with 2022 World Champion Tamirat Tola heading the men’s field and an excellent women’s line-up, with former world-record holder Brigid Kosgei of Kenya, Tokyo Olympic champ Peres Jepchirchir of Kenya, Ethiopia’s Letsenbet Gidey and others.

Panorama: Paris 2024 (INTERPOL in agreement with France on security) = European Games 2023 (no positives in 1,286 tests in ITA) = Basketball (iconic men’s coach Bob Knight passes at 83) = Boxing (2: Seignolle explains why she wants to be World Boxing chief; IBA vs. IOC hearing coming on 16 November) = Curling (2: Japan to face Korea in Pan Continental Championships women’s final; Gushue upset at the conditions) = Hockey (FIH creates new, almost-worldwide viewing app and site to expand audience) = Rowing (athletes of the year candidates revealed) = Sailing (want to host the ‘26 World Sailing Championships?) = Skiing (three in running for new, 2028 FIS Games) = Water Polo (European Champs moved from Israel) ●

1.
Six U.S. golds Thursday, now 207 medals at Pan American Games

The United States team cruised past the 200-medal mark at the XIX Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, taking gold medals in six more events, including two more in fencing:

Athletics: Bridget Williams, women’s vault
Athletics: Erin Marsh, women’s heptathlon
Bowling: Bryanna Cote and Shannon O’Keefe, women’s Doubles
Fencing: men’s Team Epee
Fencing: women’s Team Foil
Wrestling: Forrest Molinari, women’s Freestyle 68 kg

The American fencing squad has now won six golds out of eight events held, with Curtis McDowald, Samuel Imrek and Samuel Larson winning the men’s Team Epee final over Canada, 42-41, with McDowald coming from behind and winning the final bout by 10-7 over Nicholas Zhang to clinch the title.

The women’s Foil squad of Pan Am gold winner Lee Kiefer, Jacqueline Dubrovich and and Zander Rhodes also defeated Canada in the final, but by a more comfortable 44-33.

In track & field, Williams took the women’s vault at 4.60 m(15-1), ahead of Robeilys Peinado of Venezuela (4.55 m/14-11) and Marsh was a big winner in the heptathlon, scoring 5,882 points with Alysbeth Felix (PUR: 5,665) second and American Jordan Gray (5,494) third.

The U.S. was shut out in the men’s and women’s 200 m, with Renan Correa of Brazil winning the men’s race in 20.37 (wind: +0.4 m/s), and Dominican star Marileidy Paulino winning the women’s gold in 22.74 (0.0). There were no U.S. finalists.

The Americans also failed to win a medal in either 4×100 m relay, failing to finish in the men’s race as Brazil won over Cuba, 38.68 to 39.26, and dropping the baton and finishing seventh in the women’s final in 1:01.30. Cuba won in 43.72, with Chile second in 44.19.

The U.S. did better in the men’s 1,500 m, with Casey Comber grabbing bronze in 3:39.90. Canada’s Charles Philibert-Thiboutot, the 5,000 m silver winner, won in 3:39.74. Kasey Knevelbaard, the 5,000 m winner, finished fifth in 3:40.31. The women’s 5,000 m was a win for Joselyn Brea (VEN: 16:04.12), with Taylor Weber of the U.S. second (16:06.48) and Emily Infeld fourth (16:09.53).

On the infield, Cuba went 1-2 in the women’s triple jump, with Leyanis Perez winning at 14.75 m (48-4 3/4) and Liadagmis Povea taking silver at 14.41 m (47-3 1/2); Mylana Hearn of the U.S. was fifth at 13.32 m (43-8 1/2) and Euphenie Andre was eighth (12.14 m/39-10).

Canada’s Sarah Mitton, the Worlds silver medalist, won the women’s shot at 19.19 m (62-11 1/2), with American Adelaide Aquilla taking bronze (17.73 m/58-2).

The U.S. medal march in wrestling continued, with Molinari, the 2021 Worlds bronze medalist, squeezing by Soleymi Caraballo of Venezuela, 3-2, in the women’s 68 kg final. The men won a silver from Nashon Garrett at 65 kg, losing to Cuba’s two-time Worlds bronze winner Alejandro Valdes, 9-0, in the final. Cuban Yurieski Torreblanca defended his title from Lima in 2019 with a 3-1 win over Mark Hall of the U.S. in the 86 kg final.

In the Rhythmic Gymnastics All-Around that concluded on Wednesday, American Evita Griskenas finished second and qualified for Paris 2024, scoring 127.400 to 129.550 for Brazil’s Barbara Domingos. Lili Mizuno of the U.S. was fifth (121.850).

Overall, the U.S. now has 207 medals (90-55-62), ahead of Brazil (145: 46-53-46), Canada (126: 37-39-50) and Mexico (101: 37-24-40). The American team finished with 293 medals in Lima in 2019 and does not appear ready to approach that total.

The Pan Ams continue through Sunday, with 40 finals on Friday, 71 (!) on Saturday and 24 on Sunday to complete the 425-event program. The event is being shown on the Panam Sports Channel (sign-in required).

2.
Orlando marathon trials operators decry “misinformation”

In the wake of the stern letter sent by the USATF Athletes Advisory Committee to the Greater Orlando Sports Commission on Tuesday (31st), decrying the noon start time of next February’s U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials, a reply came back from Track Shack Events, the Orlando race organizers.

Posted by Sarah Lorge Butler of Runner’s World, the tone from company owners Jon and Betsy Hughes is conciliatory:

● “The circulating narrative regarding the U.S. Olympic Team Trials – Marathon is filled with misinformation. … We are sharing the following information with you because we have prioritized the athlete experience and safety from day one and you deserve to know the entire truth.”

● “The Orlando Local Organizing Committee (‘LOC’), a partnership between the Greater Orlando Sports Commission, Track Shack, the City of Orlando, and Orange County, was open to moving the start time of the event. That said, USA Track & Field (USATF) made it clear on multiple occasions that changing the Noon start time was ‘non-negotiable.’”

● “In September, we were blindsided by the suggestion that USATF was considering a new start time. Without our knowledge, USATF’s ‘non-negotiable’ Noon start time was suddenly being negotiated by USATF. Unfortunately, we were not looped into any of these discussions until October 13, ten weeks after our August 1st press conference. The lack of cooperative communication and transparency has forced the LOC to cancel attendance and hospitality agreements, which crippled sponsorship and ticket sales due to a lack of clarity on what we can offer to our local stakeholders.”

The message notes that the local organizers are not requesting a reduction in prize money or athlete travel assistance, but:

“Our only request is for USATF and USOPC to come to the table to negotiate the massive loss of revenue that a new start time and tape delayed broadcast create. … Their response has been to circulate a one-sided narrative while ignoring our concerns.”

The Hughes’s note states that “we have proposed an 8:00am start time,” and asks to meet with the governing bodies in the next week or so to iron out the details.

Observed: The Athletes Advisory Committee letter blames the Greater Orlando Sports Commission for intransigence on the noon start time. The Track Shack letter blames USATF. In the meantime, the USOPC is in Santiago for the Pan American Games that end Sunday, and the Para Pan American Games to take place from 17-26 November.

So, getting everyone together isn’t going to be easy to arrange. As usual, it appears the issues are about money. And at the same time, a defamation lawsuit against USATF by former staff member Jim Estes, who was helping the unsuccessful Chattanooga bid for the 2024 Olympic Marathon Trials, is continuing.

And there are 113 days to go. Can’t everybody get along?

3.
Kremlin blasts IOC for double standard on Israel!

The Russian Foreign Ministry lashed out at the International Olympic Committee on Thursday, decrying what it sees as a “double standard” between its treatment and the IOC’s Wednesday comment that no action should be taken against Israeli athletes or teams in the wake of the country’s response to the 7 October attacks by Hamas, the elected governmental authority of Gaza.

Said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova:

“We demand from the International Olympic Committee a clear and unequivocal rejection of the double standards practice, the strict application of equal treatment of all athletes without any exceptions and without discrimination on any grounds whatsoever.

“We strongly insist on the full reinstatement of all Russian and Belarusian athletes, who have suffered from the [International Olympic] Committee’s targeted politicization of the sports agenda.”

And Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in an television interview:

“Not only have I seen and read this [IOC] statement, we have already reacted, our ministry. This is, of course, outrageous. Once again we see an example of the bias and ineptitude of the International Olympic Committee, which time and again proves its political bent.

“It actively supports everything that meets the interests of Western countries, primarily the United States, and tries to find wordings that generally props up this policy.

“[The IOC is] trying in every possible way to palm off the actions against Russia and Belarus as restrictions that do not violate the Olympic Charter. It’s a shame.

“Of course, the Olympic Committee has discredited itself greatly. And I think it’s not for nothing that at the initiative of President [Vladimir Putin], we will organize a host of sporting events that will be truly international, universal and show respect for those principles enshrined in the Olympic Charter, which the IOC is grossly violating.”

Observed: What is important about these statements is that they demonstrate the consistent position of the Russian government that its continuing invasion of Ukraine since February 2022 is nothing for the rest of the world to be concerned about.

Nobody should treat Russians or Belarusian any differently, and that anyone is upset about the invasion is an outrage against the Russian people. That’s what Moscow is selling to its own people. That it can compare its outright aggression against Ukraine to Israel’s response to the Hamas attacks of 7 October is ridiculous, but that’s not the point.

The point – for Lavrov and the Russian government is – Russia is right and everyone else is wrong. This would be comical if not so incredibly tragic.

4.
Famed coach says Russia must retain 2022 Beijing Team gold

Legendary Russian figure skating coach Eteri Tutberidze made some interesting comments in a Russian-language YouTube interview, including her view of the Kamila Valieva case regarding the Team Event now being discussed at the Court of Arbitration for Sport:

“I would like to put all the participants in the process on a lie detector, because I want to know the truth. But we know for sure that if athletes are admitted to the Olympics, they are clean, they get an Olympian’s passport, which means they are all clean. At the European Championships, she passed – the analysis was clean, then she passed it again – clean. If they had this analysis, it means they had to do anything to make it ready.

“I believe that there should be no consideration of the team medal at all. At this start, the athlete was clean, the medal should not be reviewed. If they had told us about the results earlier, then Anya [Anna Shcherbakova] and Sasha [Alexandra Trusova] would have skated. And the result of the team would be exactly the same.”

Russia won the Team Event with Valieva winning both the Short Program and the Free Skate, and winning the scoring by 74-65 over the U.S.

She also said that, in Beijing, Olympic silver winner Trusova threw her skates at the coach, after moving from fourth in the Short Program to second after winning the Free Skate:

“She had a fixed idea: if she put together her free program, she won. She thought she had to bring [her second-place competitor] 20 points. But the athlete probably doesn’t realize that somewhere a step-out, somewhere a level came off. Plus the reduced value of the quadruple.

“She thought that the short program is not important, and if she recoils like that, she is an Olympic champion. I didn’t expect such a reaction? Well, it’s just like Sasha. She was shoving and pushing me, and then in the locker room she will toss her skates at me … and I will dodge. That’s just how Sasha is.”

Teammate Shcherbakova won by 255.95 to 251.73, with Japan’s Kaori Sakamoto third (233.13) and Short Program leader Valieva getting fourth (224.09). As for Shcherbakova’s victory, Tutberidze added:

“In general, I couldn’t be happy. Not because I’m not happy for Anya. The events that happened before overshadowed it all.”

A second session of the hearing in the Valieva case will take place later this month.

5.
World champ Tola, Olympic winner Jepchirchir lead NYC Marathon

The final Marathon Majors race of 2023, the New York City Marathon, takes place on Sunday across the city’s five boroughs, with strong fields, but not as deep as in some years. Still, there are plenty of stars, especially in the women’s elite field. The top entries, by lifetime best:

Men:
● 2:03:39 (‘21): Tamirat Tola (ETH) ~ 2022 World Champion, 2017 Worlds silver
● 2:04:49 (‘18): Shura Kitata (ETH) ~ 2022 NYC silver; 2020 London champ
● 2:04:56 (‘22): Abdi Nageeye (NED) ~ 2022 NYC bronze; Tokyo Olympic silver
● 2:05:36 (‘23): Cam Levins (CAN) ~ 2022 Worlds fourth, Tokyo ‘23 fifth
● 2:06:43 (‘22): Maru Teferi (ISR) ~ 2023 Worlds silver; 2022 European silver
● 2:06:56 (‘23): Koen Naert (BEL) ~ 2018 European champ; Tokyo Olympic 10th
● 2:07:16 (‘23): Iliass Aouani (ITA) ~ Barcelona ninth in national record

Tola has been a solid marathoner for a decade, but has three wins in his 16 career races, including the 2022 Worlds gold. He was third at Tokyo in 2022 and fourth at Valencia and third at London this year, but did not finish at the 2023 World Championships. Kitata has been second at New York in 2018 and 2022 and fifth in 2019 in his three races there.

The top American entries by time are Elkanah Kibet (2:09:07 ‘22), who was fourth at the 2021 New York City Marathon and a four-time World Championships marathoner for the U.S., and Futsum Zienasellassie (2:09:40 ‘23) who got his best in 11th at the Rotterdam Marathon this year.

Making debuts are Britain’s Andrew Butchart, sixth at the Rio 2016 Olympic 5,000 m, and former Oregon star Edward Cheserek (KEN), the 12-time NCAA champ at 3,000-5,000-10,000 m who ran 59:11 to win the Copenhagen Half in September.

Women:
● 2:14:04 (‘19): Brigid Kosgei (KEN) ~ Five major marathon wins; former WR holder
● 2:16:49 (‘22): Letsenbet Gidey (ETH) ~ 2022 World 10,000 m gold; 2022 Valencia silver
● 2:17:16 (‘20): Peres Jepchirchir (KEN) ~ 2021 NYC champ; Tokyo Olympic champ
● 2:19:50 (‘12): Edna Kiplagat (KEN) ~ 2010 NYC champ; 2011-13 World Champion
● 2:20:22 (‘22): Mary Ngugi-Cooper (KEN) ~ 2021 Boston silver, 2022 Boston bronze
● 2:21:38 (‘23): Hellen Obiri (KEN) ~ 2023 Boston champ; 2017-19 World 5,000 m golds
● 2:22:44 (‘21): Viola Cheptoo (KEN) ~ 2021 NYC runner-up, fifth in 2022
● 2:23:23 (‘22): Sharon Lokedi (KEN) ~ 2022 NYC champ in marathon debut!

Kosgei set her world record of 2:14:04 in winning the 2019 Chicago Marathon, but now ranks this all-time behind Tigist Assefa (ETH: 2:11:53 in Berlin) and Sifan Hassan (NED: 2:13.44 in Chicago) this year. The Tokyo Olympic silver winner, she has run 16 career marathons, winning nine, but did not finish at London in April. This is her NYC debut.

Gidey ran the fastest debut marathon ever in Valencia last year and has gone silver-gold-silver in the last three Worlds 10,000 m finals, plus the Tokyo Olympic bronze. It’s her second career marathon. Jepchirchir has run eight career marathons and had won five in a row before her third in Boston in April this year. She won the Worlds Half Marathon in October.

Kiplagat, now 40, had finished in the top five in 12 of 13 marathons from 2015-22, but was 30th in Boston this year. Countrywoman Obiri, the two-time Worlds 5,000 m gold medalist, was sixth at New York in her debut in 2022, then won in Boston in April in 2:21:38. She is dangerous and a definite contender.

The top U.S. entries are Kellyn Taylor (2:24:29 in 2018), sixth at New York in 2021, and 39-year-old two-time distance Olympian Molly Huddle (2:26:33 in 2019), both back from maternity in 2022. Huddle’s distinguished career includes 25 U.S. titles and multiple American records, but she has run just five career marathons, placing third at New York in 2016 and fourth in 2018, but dropping out at the Olympic Trials race in her last marathon try in 2020.

The NYC Marathon is not an especially fast course, with records of 2:05.06 by Geoffrey Mutai (KEN) in 2011 in the men’s division, and 2:22:31 by Kenyan Margaret Okayo in 2003 the best in the women’s race.

Prize money of $100,000-60,000-40,000-25,000-15,000-10,000-7,500-5,000-2,500-2,000 is available to the top ten finishers in both the men’s and women’s races.

The 2023 race will be shown nationally on ESPN2 on Sunday from 8:00 to 11:30 a.m. Eastern time.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● The intergovernmental crime police organization INTERPOL announced an agreement with the French government to assist with security and international cooperation for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

As part of the agreement, the INTERPOL Major Event Support Team will be activated once again to “facilitate real-time exchange of messages and vital police data between countries. This data includes fingerprints, photos, wanted person notices, and data relating to stolen and lost travel documents and stolen motor vehicles.” This group has been involved in Olympic security since the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City.

● European Games 2023 ● The International Testing Agency filed its report on the 2023 European Games in Krakow and Malopolska (POL), with no positives reported across 1,286 samples taken from 981 athletes from the 48 participating countries.

That represents 14.3% of the 6,857 athletes reported to compete, with 65% samples collected in-competition and 35% out of competition.

The top countries in terms of athletes tested were Ukraine, Italy, Spain, Poland and France. The top sports tested were athletics, canoeing, boxing, rugby and kickboxing.

● Basketball ● Bob Knight, coach of three NCAA men’s championship teams at Indiana in 1976-81-87 and the iconic 1984 men’s Olympic basketball gold medalists, passed away at age 83 on Wednesday after a long illness.

He was often angry, crude and obstreperous, infamously throwing a chair onto the Assembly Hall floor during a 1985 game against Purdue to protest the officiating. He was accused and convicted in absentia for assaulting a police officer during the 1979 Pan American Games in San Juan (PUR), but was not extradited; his team won the gold medal.

But he was a great coach, winning 902 games against 371 losses as a college coach at Army (1965-71), Indiana (1971-2000) and Texas Tech (2001-08). He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1991 and the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006.

● Boxing ● In a feature on the USA Boxing site, former boxer, USA Boxing Foundation athlete trustee and financial manager Elise Seignolle explained why she is running to be the first President of the new World Boxing federation.

“While this position might appear intimating to others, I see it as an amazing opportunity for boxing. We have the chance and the opportunity to all contribute to building a sustainable, ethical, and scalable future for boxing. We have a unique opportunity to build an International Federation from scratch that follows good governance principles and establishing best practices.”

Seignolle has been what happened to the International Boxing Association as a former independent member of its board, but she resigned after a year while seeing that federation barrel toward de-recognition by the International Olympic Committee. As for World Boxing, “It is time to put aside egos and agendas and instead fight to unite and grow our sport together.”

She is running against former Dutch boxing federation chief Boris van der Vorst, who unsuccessfully tried to be elected IBA president and was controversially prevented from running in a second vote against eventual winner Umar Kremlev of Russia. The World Boxing Congress will be held on 24-25 November in Frankfurt (GER).

The Court of Arbitration for Sport hearing calendar shows that the International Boxing Association’s appeal of its de-recognition by the International Olympic Committee will be heard on 16 November.

The IOC withdrew its recognition of the IBA as the international federation governing Olympic boxing in a special session on 22 June 2023, apparently the first-ever federation to be dismissed.

● Curling ● Defending champion Japan will face a re-match with South Korea in the women’s final of the second edition of the World Curling Pan Continental Curling Championships in Kelowna, British Columbia (CAN).

Three women’s teams were 6-1 in round-robin: South Korea (skip: Eun-ji Gim), Japan (Satsuki Fujisawa) and the U.S., with Tabitha Peterson as skip. Canada, with Kerri Einarson as skip, finished at 4-3 and also advanced. In the semis, the Koreans raced out to a 4-1 lead over the Canadians, but Einarson’s squad got three in the seventh end to get even, but Gim scored two points in the eighth and ninth ends to ice an 8-4 victory.

The U.S. – fourth last year – and defending champion Japan were 2-2 after two ends, 3-3 after four and two points for Japan in the fifth was followed by three for Peterson’s rink in the sixth in their semi! Fujisawa equalized in the seventh, Peterson scored two for an 8-6 lead in the ninth, but Fujisawa’s final shot ensured a two-point 10th to tie the score, and then scored two in the 11th for a 10-8 victory. The gold-medal match will be on Saturday; the U.S. and Canada will play for bronze on Friday

The men’s semis will be held on Friday, with the U.S., Canada, South Korea and Japan still in it. All four of these teams also made it to the semifinals of the first event, held in 2022, with Brad Gushue’s Canadian rink winning the men’s title over Korea, 11-3.

In 2023, Gushue’s team led the round-robin play at 6-1, with Japan (Riku Yanagisawa) also at 6-1. South Korea, with skip Jong-duk Park, was 5-2 and the U.S., led by Andrew Stopera, was 4-3. Friday’s semis will have Canada, the defending champs, will face the U.S. and South Korea will play Japan, with the championship match on Saturday.

Gushue sounded off on Wednesday, objecting to holding the event in a curling club rather than in an arena, and a lot more:

“This is an embarrassment. There’s a level of incompetence there that needs to be corrected.

“The way the WCF has run this week, it’s a joke. It’s a big step back from the event we had last year. I don’t understand why they’ve gone this route. I understand you have to give teams a chance to qualify for worlds and what not, I understand that. But I think there’s different ways it could be done. …

“None of us are getting paid to be here and they’re selling tickets. There are hundreds of people coming here and paying and none of the curlers are making a dime. And we’re being told to go outside and warm up for a game. I’m a little angry.

“It’s absolute silliness, the stuff that’s happening here this week. There is more care about everyone else than the players. Not being able to have any area to warm up. We were told to go outside. We’re sharing change rooms with the women. We’re not allowed to view practices. We’re now allowed to have one player there.”

Gushue also complained the Canadian broadcaster TSN is only streaming the event online and not showing it on broadcast or cable. World Curling communications chief Chris Hamilton (SCO) told the CBC:

“We are trying a number of things with our championships. For example, both the Pan Continental and European championships are being hosted in curling clubs this season.

“Once those events have been completed, we will look at the successes and challenges to evaluate whether it’s a viable model for future championships of this size.”

● Hockey ● A major new initiative from the International Hockey Federation (FIH) was unveiled Tuesday with the launch of an FIH+ pass to allow near-worldwide viewing of full games and highlights. The new Watch.Hockey program:

“With the FIH+ subscription pass, you’ll gain access to thrilling FIH events (FIH Hockey Olympic Qualifiers for Paris 2024, FIH Hockey Pro League Season 5, FIH Hockey5s World Cup, FIH Hockey Junior World Cups, FIH Hockey Nations Cup) , all in one place!”

News coverage in English and Spanish will be available, as well as training videos. However, geo-blocking will remain in place on the Indian sub-continent.

● Rowing ● World Rowing revealed its candidates for the World Rowing Awards, with three choices each for men and women:

Men:
● Oliver Zeidler (GER), Single Sculls
● Oliver Wilkes, David Ambler, Matthew Aldridge, Freddie Davidson (GBR), Fours
● Roman Roeoesli, Andrin Gulich (SUI), Pairs

Women:
● Emily Craig, Imogen Grant (GBR), Lightweight Double Sculls
● Karolien Florijn (NED), Single Sculls
● Magdalena Rusu, Roxana Anghel, Adriana Adam, Iuliana Buhus, Madalina Beres, Maria Tivodariu, Ioana Vrinceanu, Amalia Beres, Victoria-Stefania Petreanu (ROU), Eights

Four other awards are also up, for Para crews, coach, distinguished service and the Thomas Keller Medal. The winners will be announced on 11 December.

● Sailing ● A 67-page invitation to bid for the quadrennial World Sailing Championships in 2026 and 2027 has been issued, inviting replies by 30 November.

The event brings about 1,200 sailors together, in the Olympic classes, but will now also feature four Paralympic classes, split into two parts:

2026: Fourth quarter
● Windsurfing (IQ Foil: men and women)
● Kite (Formula Kite: men and women)
● Dinghy (men: ILCA7; women: ILCA6)
● Two para events; one added event

2027: Third quarter
● Mixed Dinghy (470)
● Skiff (Men: 49er; Women: 49er FX)
● Mixed Multihull (Nacra 17)
● Two para events; one added event

The selected host will have to pay a rights fee (not specified), an international broadcasting fee, a competition technology fee, a digital media fee and an Olympic Classes fee. On-shore spaces for 40-foot containers (or equivalent) with electrical power are needed, along with mooring spaces for 300 support vessels, office space and a lot more.

It’s a big undertaking, but the bid instructions ask: “It is very important that the Host minimises the costs and maximises the use of competition and non-competition venues and guarantee an efficient usage in terms of time, space and services, while taking into consideration the needs of the sailors.”

“Expressions of interest” are due by 30 November, and final bids by 30 March 2024. A decision will be made by the World Sailing Board in May 2024.

● Skiing ● FrancsJeux.com reported that three candidates for the first all-discipline FIS Games in 2028 have signaled interest:

“For the inaugural edition in 2028, the FIS will have to choose between Switzerland, where Saint-Moritz would be the main venue, Norway with Lillehammer, host city of the Winter Games in 1994 and the Winter YOG in 2016 , and Slovenia, where the project is based on the Planica and Kranjska Gora stations. The international body will soon begin a phase of dialogue and inspection with the three applicants. The final decision will be announced at the FIS Annual Congress in June 2024.”

● Water Polo ● To the surprise of absolutely no one, European Aquatics has removed its January 2024 European Water Polo Championships out of Israel in view of the continuing response to the attacks by Hamas and other Palestinian fighters. A statement included:

“Both institutions (European Aquatics and Israeli Water Polo Association) have agreed that it will be impossible to host the European Water Polo Championships in Netanya, Israel, as planned in January 2024.

“Different options are currently being investigated regarding the proper qualification procedure for the next World Aquatics Water Polo Championships in Doha, and further information on the topic will be communicated as soon as possible.”

“European Aquatics would like to take this opportunity once again to strongly condemn those responsible for the terrorist atrocities against Israeli citizens and to express our support and sympathy with them at this difficult time.”

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TSX REPORT: U.S. wins half of Wednesday’s Pan Am events; athletes demand earlier marathon trials start time; Russia explodes over IOC’s Israel statement

Kyle Snyder of the U.S. (in red) on the way to his third straight Pan Am Games gold in the men's Freestyle 97 kg division, over Cuba's Arturo Silot (Photo: Cristian Soto/Santiago 2023 via Photosport)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. U.S. wins half of all Pan Am finals on Wednesday!
2. USATF Athletes Advisory demands marathon trials time change
3. IOC says no discrimination vs. Israel; Russian official erupts
4. U.S. qualifies all four basketball squads at Paris 2024
5. Eight lacrosse organizations form “ELEVATE28”

● Amazing day for the U.S. at the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, winning half of the 16 events with finals on Wednesday! The American grabbed a Paris 2024 quota spot with a win in the Equestrian Team Jumping gold and won all four men’s wrestling Freestyle classes. Wow.

● A letter from the USA Track & Field Athletes Advisory Committee ripped the Greater Orlando Sports Commission for continuing to be only one insisting on a noon start time for next February’s U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials, and promises to make more noise about it in the future.

● An International Olympic Committee comment that discrimination against Israeli athletes in the midst of the Hamas attack on 7 October and Israel’s response is prohibited drew an angry reaction from the Russian Deputy Prime Minister that blames the U.S. for the conflict!

● The International Basketball Federation (FIBA) announced that both the U.S. men’s and women’s 3×3 teams are qualified for Paris 2024 by virtue of being among the top-three-ranked teams in the FIBA world rankings as of 31 October. This means that all four U.S. teams – 3×3 and 5×5 – are qualified for 2024.

● In the aftermath of being included as a medal sport for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, eight lacrosse organizations, including World Lacrosse, have joined to form “ELEVATE28,” with the goal of doubling the number of players in the U.S. to four million by 2030.

Panorama: Winter Games 2030 (Sweden announces venue agreements with three cities) = Athletics (AIU list shows 18 doping sanctions for October) = Cycling (Dutch star Hoogland sets kilometer record) = Swimming (USA Swimming membership down almost 4% for 2023, deepens annual loss) ●

1.
U.S. wins half of all Pan Am finals on Wednesday!

There were 16 finals on Wednesday at the XIX Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile. Amazingly, the U.S. won half of them:

Athletics: DeAnna Price, women’s hammer
Equestrian: Team Jumping
Fencing: Andrew Doddo, men’s Sabre
Squash: Olivia Fletcher, women’s Singles
Wrestling: Zane Richards, men’s Freestyle 57 kg
Wrestling: Tyler Berger, men’s Freestyle 74 kg
Wrestling: Kyle Snyder, men’s Freestyle 97 kg
Wrestling: Mason Parris, men’s Freestyle 125 kg

Price, the 2019 World Champion, won the first women’s gold for the U.S. with her first throw of 72.34 m (237-4), matched on her sixth toss as well. She moved up from fourth at the 2019 Pan Ams. Teammate Brooke Andersen, the 2022 World Champion, had no legal mark; the silver went to Rosa Rodriguez (VEN) at 65.10 m (213-7).

American medals also came in the hurdles, with De’Vion Wilson finishing second, 13.67-13.78 (wind: -0.5 m/s), to Eduardo de Deus (BRA) in the men’s 110 m highs, and Alaysha Johnson winning bronze in the women’s 100 m hurdles in 13.19. Costa Rica’s Andrea Vargas was the winner in 13.06 (+0.2).

The men’s 400 m was won by Lucas Conceicao (BRA) in 45.77, with American Richard Kuykendoll sixth in 48.66. Chile’s Martina Weil took the women’s 400 m in 51.48, with no American finalists.

The U.S. earned a Paris 2024 quota spot as the winner of the Equestrian Team Jumping final, with McLain Ward, Laura Kraut, Kent Farrington and Karl Cook scoring just 12.37 to 17.62 for Canada and 20.32 for defending champion Brazil.

In fencing, the U.S. won its fourth event out of six contested with Doddo defeating Venezuela’s Eliecer Jose Romero, 15-11 in the men’s Sabre final for the third straight Pan Am Games win in this event.

The wrestling sweep for the U.S. was impressive. Richards took the 57 kg gold via a forfeit and then an 8-2 semi win and a 10-0 technical fall in the final against Oscar Tigreros of Colombia. Berger won his 74 kg matches by 5-2, 17-3 and the gold with a 3-0 win over Franklin Maren Castillo of Cuba. Snyder won his third Pan Ams gold at 97 kg with 10-0, 10-0 and 14-4 wins in his three matches, defeating Cuban Arturo Silot in the final. Parris cruised through 12-0 and 10-0 wins at 125 kg before a taut, 2-0 win for the gold against Jose Diaz of Venezuela.

In football, the U.S. U-22 men’s team lost in the semifinals to host Chile, 1-0, and will face Mexico in the bronze-medal match. Brazil also scored a 1-0 win against the Mexicans.

Overall, the U.S. leads the medal count with 191 in total, with 84 golds, 49 silvers and 58 bronzes. Brazil is a solid second at 136 (40-53-43) and Canada is third (116: 35-34-47). Mexico is fourth at 94: 35-23-36.

The Pan Ams continue through Sunday, with more action coming: 25 finals on Thursday, 40 on Friday, 71 (!) on Saturday and 24 on Sunday to complete the 425-event program. The event is being shown on the Panam Sports Channel (sign-in required).

2.
USATF Athletes Advisory demands marathon trials time change

A 31 October letter from the USA Track & Field Athletes Advisory Committee to Jason Siegel, head of the Greater Orlando Sports Commission, expressed disappointment and anger that GO Sports is the organization which will not change the start time of the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials next February.

The letter, published on X (ex-Twitter) by Kyle Merber, a recently-retired 3:34.54 1,500 m runner who represented the U.S. at the 2015 Pan American Games, included:

● “When the start time of 12:00p ET was announced along with the location of the Trials race, the Athletes were advised to not panic. Acting in good faith, we waited, patiently. In an era plagued with fake news and misinformation, the Athletes were led to believe this start time was dictated by our network television partners and USATF. Errantly so, the Athletes believed this. One of the key partners in GO Sports is an events organization in charge of hundreds of races in Florida, all with start times before 8:00a.”

● “In an attempt to act both professionally and somewhat discreetly, a path encouraged by all parties involved in organizing the Trials, the Athletes engaged in closed-door, productive conversations with USATF voicing our concerns of a historically hot Olympic Trials. Performance aside, which would obviously be negatively affected, starting a marathon at noon in Florida puts the health and safety of all participants at risk.”

A compromise of a 10 a.m. start time was reached with the discussants, including NBC, which the athletes were willing to accept. But then:

● “On October 26, 2023, GO Sports delivered the shocking news of firmly standing behind a 12:00p ET start time, adding an impossible caveat that any deviation from the current start time would amount to a combination of unexplained projected damages, fines and waived fee rights fees totaling $700,000. It is difficult to find words capable of expressing how angry and disappointed the Athletes are to hear the ultimate hurdle they face is with the Great [sic] Orlando Sports Commission, a group who so grossly misrepresented the type of experience they were to provide.”

The letter explained that “the Athletes feel no other option than to proceed outwardly with this case.”

No mention of the letter by the Greater Orlando Sports Commission on its Web site, or on X (ex-Twitter) on Wednesday. Much more to come, no doubt.

3.
IOC says no discrimination vs. Israel; Russian official erupts

The German news agency DPA reported an International Olympic Committee warning to athletes, officials or countries which show discriminatory actions against Israeli athletes. According to the statement of an IOC spokesperson:

“Athletes cannot be held responsible for the actions of their governments. If discriminatory behavior by an athlete or official occurs, the IOC will work with the relevant National Olympic Committee and International Federation to ensure prompt action is taken.”

Israeli athletes have routinely seen athletes from Arab or Muslim countries – especially Iran, but also others – refuse to compete against them in international events, sometimes even losing in earlier rounds to avoid the possibility of a direct match-up.

The statement enraged Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko, blaming the Hamas-Israeli conflict on the U.S. He stated, as reported by the Russian news agency TASS:

“With the military conflict unleashed by the U.S. in the Middle East, the IOC has changed its mind in the air. And today we hear that athletes should not be held responsible for the actions of governments. Unfortunately, we are only talking about athletes from Israel, but not from Russia. Without shyness, the IOC supports athletes of only those countries that are under the wing of the United States.

“The IOC was afraid that the Olympic Movement would collapse finally and irrevocably on the eve of the Olympic Games. Addressing its functionaries, I emphasize: there is nothing to fear, the system is already rotten, it’s time to accept it as a fact. Let me remind you that Russia has always stood on the position of equality and non-discrimination against athletes from any country. Sport should be out of politics. Our position, unlike the IOC, is unchanged.”

The Russian Olympic Committee has been suspended by the IOC and has not been invited to the Paris 2024 Games. If its athletes compete at all, it will be as neutrals, but no decision has yet been made. The IOC has taken no action against the Palestine National Olympic Committee, despite Hamas being the elected government of Gaza and instigator of surprise attacks on Israel on 7 October.

4.
U.S. qualifies all four basketball squads at Paris 2024

The International Basketball Federation (FIBA) confirmed the first four qualifiers for Paris 2024 in 3×3 Basketball, with the U.S. qualifying both a men’s and women’s team, to go along with the already-qualified men’s and women’s 5×5 teams. Per FIBA:

“The selection process for these teams was based on the FIBA 3×3 Federation Ranking as of November 1, 2023. In a thrilling culmination of qualifying events, the top three countries per gender secured their places for the Olympic stage.”

In the men’s division, Serbia, the U.S. and China were the top three teams in the rankings, with China, the U.S. (gold medalists in Tokyo) and France the top three on the women’s side. Five other teams will qualify in tournaments to be held in early 2024.

The U.S. is the first country to have all four of its basketball teams qualified for Paris. The men and women’s teams are defending Olympic champs from Tokyo and both the men’s and women’s 3×3 teams won gold at the Pan American Games ongoing in Chile.

5.
Eight lacrosse organizations form “ELEVATE28″

The return of lacrosse as a medal sport on the Olympic program for 2028 was widely celebrated in the sport, but the major players aren’t wasting any more time in trying to make the most of the opportunity.

On Tuesday, eight groups announced the formation of “ELEVATE28” with the announced goal “to double the country’s participation in the sport to 4 million annual players by the end of the decade.”

The participating organizations include Athletes Unlimited, the Intercollegiate Men’s Lacrosse Coaches Association, the Intercollegiate Women’s Lacrosse Coaches Association, J Tsai Sports, the National Lacrosse League, Premier Lacrosse League, USA Lacrosse and World Lacrosse.

According to the announcement:

“This group commits to strategic initiatives and platforms, primarily for kids, under the unified ELEVATE28 banner to ensure every community across the country has equal access to the sport.”

Lacrosse was a medal sport at the 1904 St. Louis Games and in 1908 in London and was a demonstration sport in 1928, 1932 and 1948. It’s a popular sport in the U.S. at the collegiate level, with 395 NCAA men’s teams across all divisions (72 in Division I), and 522 NCAA women’s teams (122 in Division I). Among women, it’s the 11th most popular sport by number of teams in the 2022-23 season and the total number of teams is at or near the all-time high.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2030 ● The Swedish bid for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games has confirmed venue agreements with three key cities – Are, Falun and Oestersund – as the Swedish Olympic Committee tries to button its project for presentation to the International Olympic Committee’s Future Host Commission.

The current plan is for Are to host alpine skiing, Falun to stage nordic events and Oestersund to handle biathlon, as it does on the IBU World Cup. More agreements are needed, and are expected to be announced soon.

● Athletics ● The Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) published its October summary of sanctions, with 18 individuals on the list for the month, led by:

● 4: Kenya
● 3: Russia
● 3: Pakistan
● 2: Ethiopia
● 2: United States

There were single sanctions against athletes from Belarus, Italy, Iran and South Africa. The U.S. sanctions were against apparently-retired hammer star Gwen Berry for 16 months and a warning (no ineligibility) against hammer thrower Alyssa Wilson, both previously announced.

● Cycling ● Dutch star Jeffrey Hoogland, the Tokyo Olympic Sprint silver medalist and a four-time World Champion in the 1 km Time Trial, smashed the world record in the men’s kilometer on Tuesday (31st).

Riding at the altitude-aided Aguascalientes Velodrome in Mexico, he completed the four laps in 55.433, blasting the 2013 mark by France’s Francois Pervis of 56.303.

Hoogland said afterwards, “I can’t really enjoy it yet. It hurts everywhere but I’m very happy with the world record; that’s why I came here.”

● Swimming ● SwimSwam.com reported on a USA Swimming disclosure at the September board of directors meeting that membership revenue is projected at 3.8% less than expected, at about $926,000.

This will, in turn, lead to a projected annual deficit of $1.732 million, more than the $1.369 million projected in the 2023 budget.

Membership fees are by far the largest revenue source for the federation, bringing in $23.234 million in 2022. As of the end of 2022, USA Swimming had assets of $67.870 million and reserves of $41.279 million.

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TSX REPORT: U.S. wins four more at Pan American Games; Saudi sole bidder for FIFA World Cup 2034; MLB urged to play at LA28

Mexico's Fernando Martinez won the men's 5,000 m at the Pan American Games, but was disqualified, leaving Kasey Knevelbaard of the U.S. as the winner! (Photo: Alejandro Pagni/Santiago 2023 via Photosport)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. U.S. goes gold-silver in Foil and Sabre fencing at Pan Ams
2. Saudi Arabia only bidder for 2034 FIFA World Cup
3. Shaikin: Major leaguers need to participate in 2028 Olympics
4. Wasserman forecasts LA28 success on Sunday Night Football
5. Report: Paris 2024 opening to allow 400,000 spectators

● Day 12 of the 2023 Pan American Games had only 10 finals, but the U.S. won four golds, including 1-2 finishes in the men’s Foil and women’s Sabre fencing events.

● FIFA announced the bidders for the 2030 and 2034 World Cups, with the Portugal-Spain-Morocco bid (with South American openers) the only option for 2030 and Saudi Arabia the controversial sole bidder for 2034. For good measure, the Saudis are also the most for the 12,000-athlete Asian Games that year!

● Los Angeles Times baseball columnist Bill Shaikin urged Major League Baseball not to make a “blunder” by skipping the 2028 Olympic baseball tournament in Los Angeles. Shaikin suggests that the All-Star Game be replaced by an eight-team Olympic tournament instead.

● LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman told NBC’s Mike Tirico in a pre-game segment on Sunday Night Football that the Los Angeles Games will have the most sports in the history of the Olympic Games (already true) and will sell more tickets than any Games ever.

● A French media report says that the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Games will have 400,000 spectators, down from the initial projection of 600,000, in order to best manage security and transportation.

Panorama: Special Olympics (Chile to bid for 2027 World Games) = On screen (modest TV interest in U.S. women’s matches vs, Colombia) ●

1.
U.S. goes gold-silver in Foil and Sabre fencing at Pan Ams

American athletes won four golds and seven medals in all on a slow day at the XIX Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, with just 10 finals across all sports. The U.S. winners:

Athletics: Kasey Knevelbaard, men’s 5,000 m
Fencing: Nick Itkin, men’s Foil
Fencing: Magda Skarbonkiewicz, women’s Sabre
Table Tennis: Rachel Sung and Amy Wang, women’s Doubles

Worlds silver medalist Itkin and Skarbonkiewicz swept the fencing finals on Tuesday in 1-2 finishes for the U.S. and brought the American medal total to five in the four events contested, including three golds. In the men’s Foil, Itkin sailed through his elimination matches with wins by 15-3, 15-7, 15-4 and then 15-6 in the final against fellow U.S. star Miles Chamley-Watson, the 2013 World Champion.

Skarbonkiewicz, 17, crushed her five pool opponents by a combined 25-6, then won her elimination matches by 15-7, 15-6, then 15-14 over Cuba’s Leidis Veranes Mustelier, and finally a 15-13 gold-medal victory over fellow American Maia Chamberlain.

It’s the sixth straight Pan American Games win for the U.S. in the men’s Foil, and fourth straight in women’s Sabre.

In Table Tennis, Wang and Sung defeated Brazil’s Bruna and Giulia Takahashi in the final, 4-3 (11-7, 5-11, 7-11, 12-10, 11-8, 4-11, 11-6).

Knevelbaard, 11th at the U.S. Nationals in Eugene, won the men’s 5,000 m in a slow 14:47.69, but only after defending champion Fernando Martinez (MEX) was disqualified for interference. Both finished ahead of Charles Philibert-Thiboutot (CAN: 14:48.02), who was awarded the silver, with Emmanuel Bor of the U.S. sixth in 14:55.53. However, the U.S. did not have even a single finalist in the men’s 100 m, won by Jose Gonzalez (DOM) in 10.30 (wind: 0.0 m/s), or in the women’s 100 m, with Yunisleidy Garcia of Cuba winning in 11.36 (-0.2).

Arnovis Dalmero of Colombia won the men’s long jump at 8.08 m (26-6 1/4), with the two Americans, Damarcus Simpson (7.55 m/24-9 1/4) and Jermel Jones (7.32 m/24-0 1/4) in eighth and ninth.

In the decathlon, Santiago Ford (CHI) won with 7,834 points, ahead of Jose Ferreira (BRA: 7,748) and American Ryan Talbot (7,742) third.

In the women’s football tournament, the U.S. U-19 team lost to Chile, 2-1, in the semifinals and will play Argentina in the third-place match. Mexico and Chile will play for the gold. Chile’s men will play the U.S. men on Wednesday in another semifinal match.

Of special note was the triumph of Cuban judoka Idalys Ortiz – the London 2012 Olympic champ – in the women’s +78 kg class, defeating Brigitte Carabali (COL) in the final for her fourth straight Pan American Games gold, just as American Lee Kiefer did in women’s Foil fencing.

The U.S. continues to lead the medal table with 178 in total: 76 golds, 47 silvers and 55 bronzes. Brazil continued in second with 130 (37-52-41), Canada third with 106 (35-33-38) and Mexico fourth at 90 (35-22-33).

The competitions continue through 5 November; after just 10 finals on Tuesday, there will be 15 on Wednesday, 25 on Thursday, 40 on Friday and a staggering 71 on Saturday! The event is being shown on the Panam Sports Channel (sign-in required).

2.
Saudi Arabia only bidder for 2034 FIFA World Cup

FIFA announced the bidders for the 2030 and 2034 World Cups and as expected, only one bid for each was submitted:

● “Morocco, Portugal and Spain confirm interest in hosting FIFA World Cup 2030, with Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay confirming interest in hosting celebratory games”

● “Declaration of interest from Saudi Arabian Football Federation received for FIFA World Cup 2034″

The sole bid for 2034 from Saudi Arabia became obvious when Football Australia issued a statement on Monday which included:

“We have explored the opportunity to bid to host the FIFA World Cup and – having taken all factors into consideration – we have reached the conclusion not to do so for the 2034 competition.

“Instead, we believe we are in a strong position to host the oldest women’s international competition in the world, the AFC Women’s Asian Cup 2026, and then welcome the greatest teams in world football for the 2029 FIFA Club World Cup. Achieving this – following the FIFA Women’s World Cup Australia and New Zealand 2023 and with the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games – would represent a truly golden decade for Australian football.”

FIFA’s next steps:

“As established in the Bidding Regulations approved by the FIFA Council, the FIFA administration will conduct thorough bidding and evaluation processes for the 2030 and 2034 editions of the FIFA World Cup, with the hosts to be appointed by FIFA Congresses expected to take place by Q4 2024.”

As for the requirements, the 2030 requirements for the 48-team, 104-match tournament include:

● Minimum of 14 stadiums, of which at least seven must be existing.
● Capacity for most matches of at least 40,000 seats.
● Semifinal capacity of 60,000 and opening and final capacity of 80,000.
● Team base training sites (72) and four training sites per stadium.
● Two sites per venue city suitable for a fan festival.
● Fan Festival capacities of 15,000 for all except the final (40,000).
● Fan accommodations capacity: 4,000 rooms for most matches; 6,000 for semifinals; 8,000 for the opening match and final.

For 2034, the bid requirements are mostly the same, but the number of existing stadia has been lowered to four, which helps the Saudis in their current situation. But a lot of building will be needed.

The Saudi Football Federation was planning to bid for 2030 in a joint effort with Egypt and Greece; it is possible that some of the 2034 matches could be played elsewhere. And as with the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar, tournament will have to be played at the end of the year to avoid the hot weather.

Moreover, Saudi Arabia is already the host for the massive 2034 Asian Games, to take place in Riyadh from 29 November to 14 December; the 2023 edition in Hangzhou (CHN) hosted 11,909 athletes from 45 countries, competing in 481 events in 40 sports.

The FIFA World Cup bid requirements also include:

“Each stadium is subject to an exclusive use period. This period runs from 30 calendar days prior to the first match in the venue until seven calendar days after the last use in connection with the competition. During this period, the stadium shall not be used for purposes other than the tournament.”

This is going to be interesting.

3.
Shaikin: Major leaguers need to participate in 2028 Olympics

The highly-respected and widely-read Bill Shaikin, the award-winning baseball columnist for the Los Angeles Times, urged Major League Baseball to allow its players to participate in the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

Baseball and softball were added, along with cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash, as medal sports for 2028 by the LA28 organizers and approved by the International Olympic Committee. A six-team baseball tournament was played at the Tokyo Games in 2021, but an eight-team format is also a possibility.

Reporting from the World Series in Phoenix, Shaikin pulled no punches, opening with:

“No priorities might be more important for Major League Baseball than marketing its players and growing the game internationally.

“The league has just been handed a golden ticket to do both. The league is about to crumple it up and throw it out.”

Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred has been enthusiastic about the return of baseball to the Olympics, as it will not be held in Paris next year. But he had also been cautious not to promise major league players.

Shaikin says it can be done, re-assigning the annual All-Star Game break to the Olympic tournament:

“MLB could shut down for one week — and it would be the week of the All-Star Game, so only three games of the regular season would be impacted. The season could be extended by three days to accommodate those games, so owners would not lose any revenue. The All-Star Game could be sacrificed for one year.

“The tournament could be played in six days. Eight nations would compete, split into two pools.”

Shaikin sees pool play across three days, with day-night doubleheaders at Dodger Stadium and Angel Stadium, with the pool winners playing for the Olympic championship and the pool runners-up playing for bronze.

And then everyone goes back to their clubs and starts up with the second half of the season.

In the meantime, television audiences for the World Series keep shrinking, with 9.17 million viewers for the Diamondbacks at Rangers opener last Friday and 8.15 million for Game 2 on Saturday, the smallest national TV rating in World Series history.

4.
Wasserman forecasts LA28 success on Sunday Night Football

If you were among the 15.7 million who watched NBC’s Sunday Night Football telecast of the Bears and Chargers at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, you might have caught Mike Tirico’s pre-game chat with LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman about the five-years-away Olympics.

Tirico opened by asking Wasserman about the addition of flag football to the Olympic program, a move backed strongly by the National Football League, and which has created interest from some NFL stars about exploring participation. Said Wasserman:

“It’s a huge deal. Our opportunity is to make this the most important Games in this country, and to have the opportunity to add our country’s biggest and one of the biggest sports in the world to the program was amazing, and the accessibility of American Football to kids around the world, with LA28 as a launching pad.”

Asked about the impact of having flag football, Wasserman explained:

“It’s the accessibility. You can play in a park, with a football. It makes it like soccer. It’s not expensive to play. It’s not dangerous to play. Boys and girls can play. And we can play it in a park, anywhere there is a field of grass. And that makes the sport open to everybody, which is not always the case with tackle football.”

And what about the 2028 Games as a whole? Wasserman could not have been more enthusiastic:

“Seventeen hundred and twenty days from today, you and I will be in this building, pretty close to now, lighting the torch. So, it’s an incredible journey. We’re going to have the biggest sports program in the history of the Olympics, more tickets sold than in the history of the Olympics and we’re excited to welcome the world to L.A. It’s a great stage.”

The LA28 program now includes 35 sports, the most in Olympic history, with a possible 36th sport in boxing, which has no international federation recognized by the IOC at present. That will help to allow the most tickets to be sold; the Guinness World Records folks have Atlanta 1996 as the all-time leader at 8.3 million tickets sold.

5.
Report: Paris 2024 opening to allow 400,000 spectators

A report from the French television channel RMC Sport has fixed the total spectator count for the 26 July 2024 opening of the 2024 Olympic Games at 400,000:

“According to our information, the government is counting on 300,000 spectators on the upper platforms, in addition to the 100,000 people on the lower platforms who have already purchased a place via the official Paris 2024 ticket office. This would therefore bring the number to 400,000. of spectators in total along the Seine on July 26, 2024. ‘This is the last number in the running,’ a ministerial source confirms to RMC.”

The original projection was for 600,000 spectators, with the same 100,000 paid places on the lower quays and 500,000 above. But there has been continuing concerns from government agencies responsible for security and transport.

Ile-de-France transport officials, especially, have said that the number of spectators allowed cannot be more than 500,000 in total as there will be insufficient capacity to carry more.

All spectators at the opening, even if using the free higher quays, will be required to obtain a ticket. Free tickets for the upper areas will be distributed by the French Interior Ministry next year.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Special Olympics World Games 2027 ● Chilean President Gabriel Boric, attending the beach volleyball third-place match at the ongoing Pan American Games in Santiago, said last weekend that Chile will bid for the Special Olympics World Games 2027.

Boric told reporters, “We are going to start applying for the Paralympic World Championship which will be in 2027. We are going to send the application letter soon, we are looking at it with the [Sports Minister Jaime Pizarro] and the Undersecretary of Sports [Antonia Illanes].”

Multiple reports noted his reference was to the Special Olympics World Games and not to either the Paralympic World Championships in individual sports, or to the Paralympic Games, which are held in conjunction with the Olympic Games.

The Santiago Pan Ams, the largest sporting event ever held in Chile, has generally gone well, but with some notable issues including a mis-measurement of the women 20 km walk course and a roof leak that impacted the women’s handball semifinals and bronze-medal match.

Boric told reporters that as a follow-up to the Pan Ams, “Little by little we are moving forward, but we want to dream. We want to dream high.”

The Special Olympics World Games is also a massive event, with 6,500 athletes from 190 countries attending the 2023 Berlin Games held in June. The World Games will head to Dubai (UAE) in 2025, and according to the Special Olympics Web site, “Special Olympics International is currently engaged in dialogue with multiple potential bidders for the 2027 World Games. The host will be announced in 2024.”

Special Olympics Australia has made a bid for Perth, submitting its documentation in 2022.

● On Screen ● Pretty low interest in last week’s two U.S. Women’s National Team matches against Colombia, with 274,000 taking in the Thursday match in Sandy, Utah on TBS. That game ended in a 0-0 tie.

However, the Nielsen ratings data showed that the pre-game show – also on TBS – had an average audience of 311,000!

Sunday’s rematch in San Diego, a 3-0 U.S. win, on at 5:30 p.m. Eastern against the late-window NFL games, had 235,000 viewers on TNT, but 439,000 viewers on Spanish-language Telemundo.

NBC showed Saturday’s Rugby World Cup final delayed on Sunday at noon Eastern and drew 496,000 viewers. The CBS and Fox NFL pre-game shows drew 3.39 million and 5.26 million in the same time slot, respectively.

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TSX REPORT: Kiefer wins fourth straight Pan Am fencing gold; stunning error in Pan Am walk course; FIFA bans Rubiales for three years

American Lee Kiefer celebrating a fourth straight women's Foil gold medal at the Pan American Games (Photo: Felipe Quintana/Santiago 2023 via Photosport)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Kiefer wins fourth straight Pan Am fencing gold
2. Measuring error spoils “world record” walk by Garcia
3. Activists target Paris 2024 office for protest
4. FIFA bans Rubiales for three years; appeal coming
5. Jeux de la Francophonie: success, disaster or both?

● Olympic women’s Foil champ Lee Kiefer of the U.S. won her fourth straight Pan American Games gold medal on Monday, rolling undefeated through nine straight matches to add to her 2011, 2015, 2019 victories. She led a four-gold day for the U.S., which now has 171 total medals and 72 golds.

● A bad error by the contracted course measurer left the Pan American Games women’s 20 km Walk route some 3,000 m short and caused all of the times for the event to be annulled, depriving the athletes of possible world-ranking points and Olympic qualifying times. The course was changed to the right length for the men’s event, and the organizing committee said it was not responsible. A roof leak at a municipally-owned arena caused a semifinal match to be stopped and the next-day bronze-medal match to start late, and once again the organizers said it was not their fault. The fault was in quality assurance, which is assuredly up to the organizing committee.

● Activists trying to get the local and regional governments to do more for refugees and the homeless protested Sunday night with a projection on the Paris 2024 offices and with posters mocking the Olympic motto. On Monday, the French Interior Minister praised the work of the security services during the just-completed Rugby World Cup and said the effort for the Olympic Games would be 10 times as big.

● The FIFA Disciplinary Committee banned former Royal Spanish Football Federation chief Luis Rubiales for three years for his antics after Spain won the FIFA Women’s World Cup in August. He promises to appeal.

● The staging of the 2023 Jeux de la Francophonie – the Games of French-speaking countries – was considered a great success in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, but now the country’s finance minister says that the event was supposed to cost $48 million, but actually cost $324 million! An audit team is in Kinshasa now.

Panorama: Winter Games 2030 (French survey shows 70%-plus support for 2030 bid) = World Combat Games (Ukraine leads the medal table in Riyadh) = Athletics (shortlist for Fair Play awardees announced) = Football (Messi and Bonmati lead Ballon d’Or winners) = Gymnastics (Retton posts first message since coming home from hospital) = Ice Hockey (former NHL player dies in freak skate-cut accident) ●

1.
Kiefer wins fourth straight Pan Am fencing gold

Tokyo Olympic champion Lee Kiefer continued her dominance at the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, winning her fourth straight women’s Foil gold on Monday as part of a four-gold day for the Americans:

Fencing: Lee Kiefer, women’s Foil
Surfing: Zane Schweitzer, men’s Stand-Up Paddleboard racing
Surfing: Connor Baxter, men’s Stand-Up Paddleboard surfing
Surfing: Candice Appleby, women’s Stand-Up Paddleboard racing

Kiefer won all five matches in her group, then cruised through the elimination rounds by 15-6, 15-8, 15-8 over Canada’s Jessica Guo and then 15-6 against another Canadian, Eleanor Harvey. Kiefer, now 29, won her first Pan Am gold in 2011 at age 17 and topped the podium again in 2015, 2019 and now in 2023. No other American fencer has won more than twice in the Pan American Games.

The U.S. won three golds on Monday in the Stand-Up Paddling events in surfing, matching Peru, which took three golds in the men’s Shortboard – an Olympic event – with Lucca Mesinas winning his second Pan Am gold (also in 2019), and taking both Longboard events, with Benoit Clemente and Maria Fernanda Reyes.

The U.S. football teams are also progressing well. The men’s U-22 squad – in line with the U-23 requirements for almost all players at Paris 2024 – has reached Wednesday’s semifinals against Chile in Valparaiso after finishing 2-1 in its group, losing only to Brazil by 1-0.

The women’s squad, the U.S. U-19 team, won all three of its group games and is in Tuesday’s semifinals against Chile in Vina del Mar.

The in-stadium track & field events started Monday, with Peru’s Luz Rojas taking the women’s 10,000 m in 33:12.19, ahead of Laura Galvin (MEX: 3:15.85) and American Ednah Kurgat (33:16.61).

The Dominican Republic won the Mixed 4×400 m in 3:16.05, with Marileidy Paulino anchoring in 49.83, beating Brazil (3:18.55) and the U.S. squad of Demarius Smith, Honour Finley, Richard Kuykendoll and Jada Griffin (3:19.41).

Chile’s Lucas Nervi scored an upset win in the men’s discus at 63.39 m (207-11), with two-time defending champ Fedrick Dacres (JAM) finishing third at 61.25 m (200-11). Americans Joseph Brown (60.14 m/197-4) in fifth and Dallin Shurts seventh (57.00 m/187-0).

Brazil’s Isabela Rodrigues won the women’s discus at 59.63 m (195-7); American Elena Bruckner was sixth at 57.61 m (189-0) and Veronica Fraley had no legal mark.

Tiffany Flynn of the U.S. won a bronze in the women’s long jump (6.40 m/21-0), which was won by Natalia Linares of Colombia at 6.66 m (21-10 1/4).

Overall, the U.S. continues to lead with an eight-medal day (4-0-4) and has 171 medals in all (72-45-54), with Brazil – thanks to 14 medals (7-2-6) in Judo – charging into second place with 123 medals (37-47-39), followed by Canada (105: 35-32-38) and Mexico (89: 35-22-32).

The competitions continue through 5 November; the event is being shown on the Panam Sports Channel (sign-in required).

2.
Measuring error spoils “world record” walk by Garcia

There was very little surprise in seeing Peru’s 2022 World Champion Kimberly Garcia breeze to victory in the women’s 20 km Walk at the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile.

But her posted time was a ridiculous 1:12:26, which would not only be a women’s world record, but would have shattered the men’s 20 km mark of 1:16:36, set in 2015 by Japan’s Yusuke Suzuki!

The walkers knew something was wrong right away. Said Garcia afterwards:

“We realized it since the first kilometer. The time did not coincide with the distance. It was more about us focusing on our feelings, not to lose control.

“It didn’t affect myself alone, I wanted the Pan American record. Other girls wanted a spot in the Olympic Games. It is a shame that will not happen because the weather, everything was fit for good timings.”

So, the course was obviously short and officials determined that the route was actually about 3,000 m light and the men’s race that followed was delayed for more than an hour while an adjustment to the route was made to ensure the proper distance.

The Santiago 2023 organizers were compelled to issue a statement:

“In relation to the Women’s Race Walk event held today in Parque O’Higgins, we inform that the official race times are null and void due to a measurement problem that is the exclusive responsibility of the Pan American Athletics Association (APA).

“The expert commissioned by APA, Mr. Marcelo Ithurralde, did not take accurate measurements of the route the athletes took during the race.

“As established by international regulations, APA is the only organization authorized to carry out measurements and therefore is responsible for the official distance of the competition.

“For its part, the Santiago 2023 Corporation is in charge of hiring the expert designated by APA and facilitating his work in the field of competitions.

“We deeply regret the inconvenience for the athletes, their coaches, the public and the attending press, but this situation cannot be attributed to the Organizing Committee.”

The Pan American Athletics Association posted its statement on Instagram (computer translation from the original Spanish):

“Although the medals of the Peruvian Kimberly García, who won the gold, of the Ecuadorian Glenda Morejón, who was silver and the bronze of the also Peruvian Evelyn Inga, will remain, the times will not be homologated nor will they be officially validated so they will not be counted in the athlete rankings.

“The above happened due to problems of the organization of the race with the measurement of the route, which ended with the triumph of the Peruvian Kimberly García, who reached the finish with a time of 1h12:26, a record that surprised for this type of race, because it was almost 12 minutes faster than the world record of the race, which is 1h23:49 and belongs to the Chinese Jiayu Yang.

“Behind García came the Ecuadorian Glenda Morejón (1h12:43) and the Peruvian Evelyn Inga (1h14:16), whose times are part of a total of 12 runners who completed the race with a time below the world record, due to the measurement error.”

The men’s race, apparently contested at the full 20 km distance, saw David Hurtado (ECU) win in 1:19:20.

Observed: This is a bad error, as it directly impacts the integrity of the competition and ruins the opportunity for the athletes to obtain world-ranking points or Olympic qualifying marks in a championship race.

The process was right: hire the approved course measurer. But there was no check on the course after the survey was done, so no check on the accuracy of the measurer. That’s unacceptable in a championship event, and while the marathons went on last week without incident, losing results in a race like this – with good, cool conditions – is tragic for the athletes concerned.

Reuters noted other issues at the Games, such as leaks at the handball arena on Saturday that cut short the Brazil-Chile women’s semifinal. Santiago 2023 issued a statement which again refused responsibility:

“[T]he Santiago 2023 Corporation wishes to clarify categorically that it bears no responsibility for the poor quality and deficiencies in the venue’s roof. … Among the obligations and commitments assumed by the Municipality is: Repair of the roof of the venue, mainly addressing leaks from rainfall. Carried out by the infrastructure department of the Municipality.”

The women’s handball bronze-medal match on Sunday was held up for more than two hours due to the leaks, but was eventually played.

This speaks to quality control by the Santiago 2023 organizers, and a shortage of time, money and people. There are issues in every mega-event like this, but a mis-measured course (which could have been determined by an odometer check in a car) and a leaky roof are pretty obvious things to miss. But with short staffing, the quality assurance from double-checking and triple-checking isn’t available. And Garcia and the other women’s walkers paid for it.

3.
Activists target Paris 2024 office for protest

The Paris 2024 organizing committee became the backdrop for Sunday evening protests and a coordinated promotion by a reported 70 non-governmental organizations, urging the City of Paris and other authorities about homeless and others on the streets in advance of the 2024 Games.

Agence France Presse reported that posters parodying the Olympic motto were slapped on walls, stating, “FASTER to empty Ile-de-France of precarious populations,” “HIGHER towards the exploitation of undocumented workers,” “STRONGER in the security response against people on the street,” “TOGETHER let us demand that excluded people are taken into account.”

A projection of the words, “The Other Side of the Medal” was shown on the Paris 2024 office building for a short time on Sunday evening, and the organizations issued a joint letter asking for “an ambitious and concerted policy … to guarantee continuity of care of people in situations of precariousness and exclusion, before, during and after the Games.”

The Associated Press report noted “Paris police routinely clear out tent camps housing migrants from around the world, citing public health and safety, but the French capital remains a magnet for people fleeing conflict or poverty, and camps routinely resurface.”

The Paris 2024 organizers said they would meet with the activists next week.

Observed: Expect more of this as the Games get closer. Amid the Covid-19 pandemic, a petition in Japan to cancel the Tokyo 2020 Games drew more than 200,000 signatures in the first 48 hours it was posted in May of 2021, but had no impact.

FrancsJeux.com reported that French Interior Minister Gerard Darmanin spoke about the security measures taken for the just-concluded Rugby World Cup, which included 11,000 national police officers and 3,000 municipal officers, who made 781 arrests across the seven weeks of the tournament.

Darmanin said the Olympic effort would “tenfold” compared to the Rugby World Cup: “The Ministry of the Interior will be ready to organize the opening ceremony, to ensure the safety of spectators and teams. We will be perfectly there.”

4.
FIFA bans Rubiales for three years; appeal coming

The FIFA Disciplinary Committee announced Monday that it has banned “Luis Rubiales, the former president of the Spanish Football Association (RFEF), from all football-related activities at national and international levels for three years, having found that he acted in breach of article 13 of the FIFA Disciplinary Code.”

This is the follow-up to FIFA’s 90-day suspension of Rubiales on 26 August that was ongoing until 26 November. Now, Rubiales, who resigned as the President of the Royal Spanish Football Federation on 11 September, is out of football until late 2026.

Article 13 describes “Offensive behaviour and violations of the principles of fair play” and states that disciplinary measures can be imposed for:

● “a) violating the basic rules of decent conduct;

● “b) insulting a natural or legal person in any way, especially by using offensive gestures, signs or language;

● “c) using a sports event for demonstrations of a non-sporting nature;

● “d) behaving in a way that brings the sport of football and/or FIFA into disrepute”

This is the latest turn in the post-Women’s World Cup Final behavior of Rubiales from 20 August, who most notably forcibly kissed midfielder Jenni Hermoso in the medal presentation ceremony. The issue exploded in Spain and worldwide, forcing Rubiales to resign after he initially pledged to fight any disciplinary actions against him.

The Spanish women’s team – the Women’s World Cup winners – have continued to push for better conditions for the team from the RFEF, with the federation pledging to do better.

Rubiales said he would appeal the decision to the FIFA Appeals Committee.

5.
Jeux de la Francophonie: success, disaster or both?

Confusion reigns in the aftermath of the 2023 Jeux de la Francophonie, a multi-sport event which unites French-speaking countries and began in 1989, and which was held in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo from 28 July to 6 August for about 2,000 athletes from 37 countries in eight sports and a host of cultural competitions.

That the event came off at all was considered a great success, but now there is widespread concern over how much it cost.

International Organisation of La Francophonie (IOF), the governing body of the Games, has sent an audit team to Kinshasa, amid reports from Congo Finance Minister Nicolas Kazadi that the event – which was supposed to cost $48 million U.S. – instead cost $324 million!

The IOF had approved a Games budget of €66.9 million or about $70.0 million U.S.

Kazadi explained:

“The operations budget increased from 12 to 78 million dollars, while investment expenses increased from 36 to 246 million dollars. The time needed to organize these Games increased from a few months to around three years, revealing planning and management errors.”

But the organizing committee chief, Isidore Kwandja, tells a different story:

“We are surprised to learn on social networks that the cost of the Games would have reached 324 million dollars, while the initial budget was 66.9 million euros, which we have not yet received in full.

“Where did these funds go and who managed them? If the budget exceeded forecasts, the reasons must be sought elsewhere, and not within the national Games management, which maintained rigorous management.”

Kwandja also noted that there were expenses that turned out to be wasteful, but only to try and meet the needs of the athletes:

“At the request of France and Wallonia-Brussels, we flew in a new covering for the athletics track. It cost us $2.3 million. All this to finally learn that France and Wallonia-Brussels would not send athletes [in athletics].”

What a mess.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2030 ● A modest survey in one of the French regions bidding for the 2030 Winter Games showed 73% in favor of the Games bid, in Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur. An earlier poll in the Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes showed 81% in favor.

The new poll had a small response group of 806 people, but also showed more enthusiasm among younger respondents. The French bid is expected to be submitted by 7 November.

● World Combat Games ● The third World Combat Games concluded in Riyadh (KSA) on Monday, finishing an 11-day program that included 16 mostly non-Olympic sports and 207 total events.

Ukraine was the big winner, with 53 total medals and 21 golds (21-17-15), ahead of host Saudi Arabia (51: 12-20-19) and Kazakhstan (48: 12-13-23).

“Independent Neutral Athletes” from Russia and Belarus won 18 medals, as did the U.S. (1-4-13) for equal-seventh overall. A total of 87 countries won medals.

The event was clouded by the implosion of the Global Association of International Sports Federations (GAISF), but now continues under the sponsorship of SportAccord, which absorbed GAISF. Future editions are expected in 2025 and 2027, with the next host expected to be announced next spring.

● Athletics ● The nominees for the International Fair Play Award were announced on Monday:

● Daniel Ebenyo (KEN), men’s half marathon
● Letsenbet Gidey (ETH), women’s 10,000 m
● Sifan Hassan (NED), women’s 5,000-10,000 m
● Shericka Jackson (JAM) and Sha’Carri Richardson (USA), women’s 200 m
● Nina Kennedy (AUS) and Katie Moon (USA), women’s vault
● Jessica Warner-Judd (GBR), women’s 10,000 m

Voting includes fan input on the World Athletics social-media sites through 5 November, with the finalists to be announced on 7 November and the winner on 11 December.

● Football ● Argentina’s Lionel Messi won the Ballon d’Or for the eighth time as the world’s top men’s player, while Spanish midfielder Aitana Bonmati won the women’s prize, in a live awards ceremony in Paris.

Messi, 36, previously won the trophy in 2009-10-11-12-15-19-21; no one else has won it more than five times. Messi was selected over Norwegian striker Erling Haaland (Manchester City).

Fellow Argentina star Emiliano Martinez was honored as the top goalkeeper, Haaland won for best striker and England’s Jude Bellingham was selected as the top under-21 player.

Bonmati won the women’s award ahead of Australia striker Sam Kerr and Spanish forward Salma Paralluelo.

The Socrates Award for off-the-field contributions, went to Brazilian striker Vinicius Junior for his work against racism, especially in Spain.

● Gymnastics ● Mary Lou Retton, the gymnastics icon from the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, shared a short Instagram post on Monday with her first message since being hospitalized with a rare form of pneumonia, which included:

“I am overwhelmed with the love and support from the world as I fight. I am forever grateful to you all!

“I’m with family continuing to slowly recover and staying very positive as I know this recovery is a long and slow process. …

“When the time is right, I will be sharing more information about my health issues and hope I can help others who may face the same battle as me.”

Retton, now 55, is recovering at home after being unable to breathe on her own and admitted to a Houston hospital for treatment.

● Ice Hockey ● Tragedy in Britain, where former NHL player Adam Johnson (USA) died after a freak accident in which he suffered cuts to the neck and throat from an opponent’s skate during the Nottingham-Sheffield EIHA Challenge Cup match in Sheffield on Saturday evening.

Johnson, 29, who played with the NHL’s Pittsburgh Penguins during the 2019-20 season, was taken to a local hospital and died there. Originally from Minnesota, he moved to Europe to play in Sweden during the Covid-19 pandemic, then back to the American Hockey League, to Germany last season and with Nottingham this season.

The English Ice Hockey Association immediately mandated that players wear neck guards beginning on 1 January 2024.

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TSX REPORT: Seven golds, 163 total medals for U.S. at Pan Ams; South Africa repeats Rugby World Cup win; Lyles recruiting world-record relay?

Brennan Gravley touches first in the men's 10 km open-water at the Pan Am Games (Photo: Javier Valdés Larrondo/ Santiago 2023 via Photosport)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. U.S. scores seven golds, has 163 total Pan Am Games medals
2. South Africa defends Rugby World Cup title, beats New Zealand
3. Manfred: Major leaguers in Olympics will be difficult
4. Lyles recruiting teammates for 4×200 m record attempt!
5. Olympic-response Friendship Games to offer prize money

● American athletes won seven golds Sunday and have 163 total medals at the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile at the end of the first week of competition. The U.S. swept the two open-water 10 km races with Brennan Gravley and Ashley Twichell and scored three golds in the Canoe Slalom finals. In shooting, 60-year-old Venezuelan Leonel Martinez, a competitor at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, qualified for his second Olympics in 2024 (!) with a silver medal in men’s Trap.

● A thrilling championship match at the Rugby World Cup in France saw defending champion South Africa squeak past New Zealand, 12-11. The tournament was a hit at the gate, with 2.36 million total attendance, the second-most ever.

● Baseball Commission Rob Manfred said he was very happy that baseball was again to be included at the Olympic Games in Los Angeles in 2028, but gave no indication that any kind of deal was being considered to allow major league player to play.

● Triple World Champion Noah Lyles of the U.S. went to X (ex-Twitter) to recruit fellow Olympic and Worlds medal winners Kenny Bednarek and Erriyon Knighton to form a team to break the world record in the men’s 4×200 m relay at the 2024 World Relays!

● Russia’s 2024 Olympic-response “Friendship Games” announced that prize money will be awarded to the top three finishers in another poke at the Olympics, which does not pay prize money. The amounts quoted were in U.S. dollars, by the way, not in rubles.

Panorama: Alpine Skiing (2: Gut-Behrami wins season opener in Soelden; Norway’s Braathen suddenly retires at 23) = Archery (Wiljer wins Lausanne Indoor World Series opener) = Athletics (2: Astana in, Birmingham out in World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold; Nwokocha suspended three years for doping) = Badminton (Three wins for China in French Open) = Boxing (Van der Vorst and Seignolle candidates for World Boxing President) = Cycling (Lavreysen continues dominance at Track Champions League) = Figure Skating (Yamamoto and Sakamoto take titles at Skate Canada) = Football (Fishel and Shaw spark U.S. women to 3-0 win over Colombia) = Short Track (Santos-Griswold claims three more medals at Montreal World Cup) = Speed Skating (Stolz and Jackson shine bright at U.S. Nationals) = Triathlon (Jorgensen second in Miyazaki World Triathlon Cup) = Wrestling (Elor completes double-triple at U-23 Worlds, but Olympic options still cloudy) ●

Errata: Some readers of Friday’s post saw references to two-time FIS Alpine World Cup champion Marco Odermatt as Austrian. He’s Swiss, and the corrections have been made. Thanks to Andrew Craig and Michal Kisielewicz for being the first to spot it. ●

1.
U.S. scores seven golds, has 163 total Pan Am Games medals

After three days of comparatively few finals, the XIX Pan American Games revved back up on Sunday with 24 finals and now 221 events completed out of 425 in total. The U.S. won seven golds on Sunday to bring its total to 68. Over the weekend:

27 Oct.: Boxing: Jahmal Harvey, men’s 57 kg
27 Oct.: Boxing: Joshua Edwards, men’s +92 kg

29 Oct.: Canoeing: Zach Lokken, men’s Slalom C-1
29 Oct.: Canoeing: Josephua Joseph, men’s Slalom K-1
29 Oct.: Canoeing: Evy Leibfarth, women’s Slalom C-1
29 Oct.: Cycling: Lauren Stephens, women’s road race
29 Oct.: Equestrian: Caroline Pamukcu, eventing
29 Oct.: Swimming: Brennan Gravley, men’s 10 km open water
29 Oct.: Swimming: Ashley Twichell, women’s 10 km open water

The boxing finals were all held on Friday, with the Americans winning five quota places for Paris 2024, with silver medals for Jennifer Lozano in the women’s 50 kg class and Morelle McCane at 66 kg. Jajaira Gonzalez won a bronze at 60 kg and won a quota place with four spots allowed from that weight class. Brazil totaled 12 medals and four wins in the ring to lead the medal table; the U.S., Canada and Colombia all won six medals.

Only nine finals were held on Saturday and the U.S. scored only a couple of bronzes, but with 24 event finals on Sunday, the American squad claimed seven golds. Among those was 36-year-old Lauren Stephens in road cycling, the 2021 U.S. national road champion, who rode away with a 1:24 win in the 105 km road race, on a hilly loop course. Ecuador’s Miryam Nunez won silver and Agua Espinola (PAR) took the bronze, both 1:24 behind; American Kristen Faulkner finished sixth (+2:30).

U.S. swimmers continued to dominate, even when not in the pool, sweeping the 10 km open-water races. Brennan Gavley led for much of the men’s 10 km race, but was then pressed on the final lap and barely touched first in 1:50:23.4 over Argentina’s Franco Cassini (1:50:23.6) and Mexico’s Paulo Strehlke (1:50:23.8). Brother Dylan Gravley was fourth in 1:50:26.8.

Tokyo Olympian Twichell was her second Pan American Games by winning the women’s 10 km swim, dominating an excellent field and winning by 13 seconds over Brazil’s Olympic champ Ana Marcela Cunha, 1:57:16.4 to 1:57:29.4. Fellow American Leah DeGeorge finished fifth in 1:58:54.7.

Twichell won a Pan Am silver in the 800 m Freestyle way back in 2011 (!), but won her first international gold at age 34.

The U.S. and Brazil both won three events in the Canoe Slalom races, but only Brazil’s Ana Satila won two events – and women’s C-1 and Kayak Cross – and now owns five Pan Am golds across 2015-19-23, including the C-1 in all three. The U.S.’s Leibfarth won the women’s C-1 and also took a bronze in the Kayak Cross final as the only American double medalist.

The in-stadium track & field competitions will start on Monday, along with most of the finals in judo and surfing.

With 52% of the events now concluded, the U.S. total has reached 163 (68-45-50), ahead of Brazil (105: 33-39-33), Canada (98: 33-30-35) and Mexico (88: 35-21-32). The competitions continue through 5 November; the event is being shown on the Panam Sports Channel (sign-in required).

A pretty amazing story in shooting, where Venezuela’s Leonel Martinez, 60, won the men’s Trap silver and qualified for Paris 2024. That will be 40 years since his first Olympic appearance in 1984 in Los Angeles, where he tied for 41st in men’s Trap!

NBC Sports consulted Olympedia.org co-founder Dr. Bill Mallon (USA), who said that the 40-year gap between Olympic starts for Martinez will be the second-most ever, behind Japan equestrian Hiroshi Hoketsu, who competed in Tokyo in 1964 and then again in Beijing in 2008 (at age 67)!

The Panam Sports Channel, the primary vehicle to watch the Santiago action, has offered nine live feeds and now has more than 750,000 subscribers. Said Panam Sports President Neven Ilic (CHI), of the event so far:

“We are halfway through the Pan American Games, and we are very happy with what is happening at Santiago 2023. The athletes are happy, the response from the public that has packed the venues has been spectacular, and the numbers from the Panam Sports Channel and of our multimedia in general, are surprising.”

2.
South Africa defends Rugby World Cup title, beats New Zealand

A bruising battle between the nos. 1-2 ranked teams in the world saw South Africa win its fourth Rugby World Cup title with a 12-11 win over New Zealand at the Stade de France in the Paris area in the final game of the 2023 Rugby World Cup.

Handre Pollard scored all of South Africa’s points on penalties, converting in the 3rd, 13th, 19th and 34th minutes for a 12-6 lead at the half. For New Zealand, Richie Mo’unga converted a penalty in the 17th and 38th minutes. New Zealand captain Sam Cane was dismissed with a red card in the 27th minute for a high tackle, leaving the All Blacks with 14 men for the last 53 minutes.

The only try of the match was scored by New Zealand’s Beauden Barrett in the 58th to close to 12-11, but Mo’unga missed the conversion and the score remained 12-11. Jordie Barrett missed a long penalty try that could have won it for the All Blacks late in the match.

The defensive effort by South Africa was outstanding, as the All Blacks had scored 71, 96, 73, 28 and 44 points since an opening loss to France, 27-13. The Springboks specialized in winning tight matches, winning their third straight one-point win in the playoffs: 29-28 over France in the quarters and 16-15 against England in the semis.

With the victory, South Africa became the first country to win the World Cup four times, now taking three of the last five with victories from 1995-2007-2019-2023. Amazingly, the 2023 almost mirrored the tight 1995 final, where the Springboks beat New Zealand, 15-12, in extra time.

England, the 2019 finalist, won the third-place match with Argentina, 26-23, for its fourth medal in the 10 World Cup tournaments (0-3-1). The Argentines had won the bronze in 2007, but lost in the third-place match in 2015 and now in 2023.

Will Jordan (NZL) finished with the most tries, with eight. England’s Owen Farrell ended as the top scorers with 75 points, with Thomas Ramos (FRA) with 74 and Argentina’s Emiliano Boffelli third at 67.

Attendance at the medal matches was excellent, with 77,674 for the Argentina-England match and 80,065 for the final. In all, attendance was 2,357,143 or 49,107 per match, second-best all-time to the 2,477,805 from the 2015 tournament.

3.
Manfred: Major leaguers in Olympics will be difficult

To the surprise of absolutely no one, Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred told reporters on the eve of the 2023 World Series that the concept of a National Hockey League-style break during the 2028 season for the Olympic Games is a difficult issue.

“Everyone appreciates the challenges associated with major league players playing in a tournament that is in the middle of our season.

“We’re an everyday game. We’re kind of big on the integrity of that regular season. It’s an important thing for us.”

The International Olympic Committee approved the LA28 organizing committee’s request for five added sports on the 2028 program, including baseball and softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash. Baseball was in the Olympic Games in 1992-96-2000-04-08, then came back as an added sport for the Tokyo Games held in 2021. In all cases, major league players did not take part.

LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman said that he has been in contact with the MLB office and with the Players Association, and Manfred noted:

“Casey Wasserman has been supportive of getting baseball back in the Olympics, which we appreciate.

“We think it’s a great thing and we will continue to listen as to whether there’s some arrangement that could be worked out – I’m not saying one word about major league players – some arrangement that could be worked out to make it the best possible tournament.”

Major League players do participate in the World Baseball Classic, co-owned by Major League Baseball and the Players Association, held quadrennially during spring training.

When the NHL has agreed to have its players participate in the Winter Olympics, beginning in 1998, an accommodation was made, with the season put on hold to allow players to compete for their national teams. But the NHL did not allow its players to compete at the 2018 or 2022 Winter Games, and discussions are continuing for 2026.

4.
Lyles recruiting teammates for 4×200 m record attempt!

How about this from triple World Champion Noah Lyles of the U.S.:

“Yo @ErriyonK @kenny_bednarek we should go break that 4x200m world record”

That was the message underneath the logo of the World Athletics Relays, back in The Bahamas on 4-5 May 2024, for the fourth time in Nassau, but first since 2017. Lyles is asking Worlds silver winner Erriyon Knighton and Tokyo Olympic silver medalist Kenny Bednarek to join him on a potential U.S. “dream team.”

Jamaica set the world men’s 4×200 m mark in the first World Relays back in 2014 at 1:18.63, with a team of Nickel Ashmeade, Warren Weir, Jermaine Brown and Yohan Blake. Jamaica won again in 2015 and the U.S. teams were disqualified in both years.

Canada won in 2017 in 1:19.42, beating the U.S. (1:19.88), which had Lyles as the lead-off leg! The U.S. finally won the event in 2019 in 1:20.12 with Chris Belcher, Bryce Robinson, Vernon Norwood and Remontay McClain. The U.S. did not contest the event in 2021.

If Lyles is able to recruit his fellow 200 m stars, consider the line-up from their 2023 bests:

● 19.47 (no. 1 in 2023) Noah Lyles
● 19.72 (no. 3 in 2023) Erriyon Knighton
● 19.79 (no. 7 in 2023) Kenny Bednarek

And how about these choices for the fourth leg:

● 19.85 (no. 9) Courtney Lindsey
● 19.86 (no. 10) Fred Kerley
● 19.89 (no. 12) Robert Gregory
● 19.93 (no. 13) Christian Coleman
● 19.98 (no. 17) Javonte Harding

In the world top 20 for 2023, there were the eight listed Americans, and a couple more with wind-aided sub-20 times.

The Jamaican record from 2014 is hardly soft; the average is a swift 19.66.

5.
Olympic-response Friendship Games to offer prize money

One of the constant complaints of athlete activist groups is that Olympic medal winners do not receive prize money directly from the International Olympic Committee. Instead, any athlete prizes are provided by the National Olympic Committees, which send the athletes to the Games, much as the ancient Greek city-states did.

But for the 2024 Friendship Games that Russia is organizing a month after the Paris Olympic Games, prize money will be paid, with a Friday announcement that $40,000 to be provided to gold medalists, $30,000 to silver medalists and $20,000 for the bronze winners.

The Friendship Games will be held in Moscow and Yekaterinburg from 15-29 September 2024, with some events possibly to be held in Minsk, Belarus, as well. Details of the program – sports and events – have not been released.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Alpine Skiing ● The FIS Alpine World Cup season opened in Soelden, Austria, with a big win for Swiss Lara Gut-Behrami, and one for the weather on Sunday.

Gut-Behrami, the 2021 World Champion in the Giant Slalom, came from behind to win the women’s season opener on Saturday She was fourth after the first run, 0.73 behind Italy’s Federica Brignone, the Beijing Olympic silver medalist (1:08.77). American star Mikaela Shiffrin was fifth in 1:09.52.

On the second run, Gut-Behrami was unsurpassed, clocking 1:09.44, the fastest run in field and enough for the win in 2:18.94. Brignone managed the ninth-fastest run (1:10.19) and finished second (2:18.96), with Petra Vlhova, the 2019 Giant Slalom World Champion, moving up to third overall with the third-fastest second run (2:19.08 total).

Shiffrin was all-in on the second run, but clocked 1:10.82, the 25th-best second run and ended up finishing sixth in 2:20.34. For Gut-Behrami, it was her 39th career World Cup win and seventh in a Giant Slalom. It was also her third win Soelden – also in 2013 and 2016 – equaling the record of Slovenia’s Tina Maze for the most wins in this race.

The men’s race on Sunday never got going; FIS posted on X (ex-Twitter):

“Due to the extreme wind and with the forecast of even increasing wind for the rest of the day, for safety and fairness reasons, it has been decided to cancel today’s Giant Slalom race in Sölden.”

No word on whether or when the race may be made up.

The Alpine World Cup will take a week off, then resume in November with the two-country men’s Downhills in Zermatt (SUI) and Cervinia (ITA). The women will be in Levi (FIN) for the famous “reindeer” Slaloms from 11-12 November.

A sponsorship clash contributed to the sudden retirement of Norwegian star Lucas Braathen, 23, announced on his Instagram channel on Friday.

“I am done. … “For the first time in at least half a year I’m happy, after making this decision. For the first time in years I feel free. …

“Up until the point where I debuted, the [2018] World Cup race in Val d’Isere, with skis that my dad tuned in his garage back home, that is the day where I lost my freedom. I came to find that I’m locked. I cannot do my difference, whatever I do is wrong.”

Braathen, who won the World Cup men’s Slalom title in 2023 and scored five wins and 12 medals in five season on the World Cup circuit, was refused permission by the Norwegian ski federation to promote the J. Lindeberg company, a competitor of the federation’s Helly Hansen apparel brand. The Associated Press reported, “The skier had not paid the fine imposed by the federation for breaching the rules in his athlete’s contract.”

● Archery ● Dutch star Steve Wijler won the World Archery Indoor World Series opener, the Lausanne Excellence Challenge on Sunday. Shooting from 18 m, Wijler – a Tokyo Olympic silver medalist in the Mixed Team event – shut down Jerome Bidault (FRA) by 6-0 (30-29, 29-27, 30-29) in the final. The all-Italian bronze-medal match had Alessandro Paoli winning an extra-end battle with David Pasqualucci, 6-5 (9-8).

Slovakia’s Denisa Barankova won a tense women’s Recurve final over Laura van der Winkel (NED), also in a shoot-off, 6-5 (10-9) after a 5-5 tie after five ends. Estonia’s Reena Parnat won the bronze medal, 6-0, against Sarah Russell (GBR).

● Athletics ● World Athletics announced a seventh meet in its World Indoor Tour Gold series, to be the series opener in Astana, Kazakhstan on 29 January 2024. This brings the gold-meet total to seven, with the other six in Europe (4) and the U.S. (2).

Gold-level meets are required to offer “at least USD $7000 in prize money for each individual discipline on the programme, including USD $3000 to the winner.”

The 24 February 2024 Gold-level meet in Birmingham (GBR) was canceled over a potential city bankruptcy following a €760 million (about $920.4 million U.S.) tab due for equal-pay abuses over multiple years.

The Athletics Integrity Unit announced another doping suspension, this time by Nigeria sprinter Grace Nwokocha, for three years for the use of the prohibited muscle-building drugs Ostarine and Ligandrol.

She tested positive at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham (GBR), where she finished fifth in the 100 m; she also competed in the 2022 World Athletics Championships in Eugene, reaching the semifinals in the women’s 100 and 200 m and anchoring the 4×100 m relay to the gold medal (42.10), which will now be forfeited. Still just 22, she will be ineligible until 2 August 2025; she has bests of 10.97 and 22.44, both from 2022.

Nwokocha was sixth for North Carolina State in both the 100 and 200 m at the 2022 NCAA meet, but has not competed since the end of the 2022 season.

● Badminton ● Another strong performance for China, with four finalists in five events at the BWF World Tour French Open in Rennes, and three wins.

Tokyo Olympic champion Yu Fei Chen (CHN) defeated Tokyo runner-up Tzu Ying Tai (TPE) in the women’s Singles final, 21-17, 22-20 for her 13th career World Tour title. Chen is now 4-3 against Tai in World Tour finals match-ups.

Sheng Shu Liu and Nang Tan (CHN) took the women’s Doubles title from Jongkolphan Lititharakul and Rawinda Prajongjai (THA), 26-24, 21-19, and eighth-seeds Zhen Bang Jiang and Ya Xin Wei (CHN) won the Mixed Doubles against Chun Man Tang and Ying Suet Tse (HKG), 21-17, 15-21, 21-12.

Fifth-seed Jonatan Christie (INA) won the men’s Singles, 16-21, 21-15, 21-14 over Shi Feng Li (CHN), and the seventh-seeded Kim Astrup and Anders Rasmussen (DEN) won the men’s Doubles against Muhammad Fikri and Bagas Maulana (INA), 21-14, 10-21, 21-18.

● Boxing ● Former Dutch Boxing Federation President Boris van der Vorst and American Elise Seignolle, a former boxer and a financial management expert, are the candidates for President of World Boxing.

A total of 27 candidates from 10 countries were announced for six different offices at the World Boxing congress, to be held in Frankfurt (GER) from 24-25 November.

● Cycling ● Tokyo Olympic Sprint gold medalist Harrie Lavreysen (NED) continued his domination of the UCI Track Champions League with another win in the Sprint Division in the second stop, in Berlin (GER).

Lavreysen won the Sprint final over Poland’s Mateusz Rudyk by 0.113 seconds, then took the Keirin to remain undefeated in the league, beating Australia’s 2022 Commonwealth Games gold winner Matthew Richardson to the line by 0.47 seconds. After two of five rounds, Lavreysen now leads Richardson in the overall standings by 80-58.

The women’s Sprint title went to Ellesse Andrews (NZL) – the 2022 Commonwealth Games Sprint and Keirin champ – who also swept both races, winning the Sprint over Katy Marchant (GBR) by 0.082, and then winning the Keirin by 0.203 over Germany’s Alessa-Catriona Propster. Andrews now has the seasonal lead by 70-65 over the German.

In the men’s Distance division, Canada’s Dylan Bibic won the 5,000 m Scratch race, with Maximilian Schmidbauer second, then Jules Hesters (BEL) took the Elimination final over seasonal leader Eiya Hashimoto (JPN). Hashimoto’s overall lead is now just 59-56 over Bibic.

Lily Williams of the U.S. won the women’s Scratch race over Sarah Van Dam (CAN), but British star (and five-time Worlds gold medalist) Katie Archibald dominated the Elimination final, winning against Maggie Coles-Lyster (CAN), with Williams fading to 10th. Archibald continues to lead Williams for the season, 67-61.

● Figure Skating ● Japan and Canada swept the honors at the Skate Canada Internationale in Vancouver (CAN), with World Champion Kaori Sakamoto winning the women’s Short Program and Free Skate and piling up 226.13 points.

Korea’s Chaeyeon Kim was second in 201.15, finishing second in the Short Program and fourth in the Free Skate. Japan’s Rino Matsuike was third (198.62), with Americans Lindsay Thorngren, Audrey Shin and Starr Andrews finished fifth (189.52), seventh (177.14) and eighth (174.82).

Sota Yamamoto, the 2023 Grand Prix Final runner–up, won the men’s Singles in a tight competition over countryman and 2023 World Junior Champion Kao Miura, 258.42 to 257.89. Yamamoto won the Short Program, with Miura fourth, but then Miura won the Free Skate on Sunday, with Yamamoto third, but could not catch the leader. American Liam Kapeikis was eighth at 220.15.

It’s Yamamoto’s first career Grand Prix win.

Canada was the big winner in both Pairs and Ice Dance. Worlds fourth-placers Deanna Stellato-Dudek and Maxime Deschamps took the Pairs title with a 214.64 to 187.78 win over Maria Pavlova and Alexei Sviatchenko of Hungary. Italy’s Lucrezia Beccari and Matteo Guarise finished third (181.42).

In Ice Dance, the two-time Worlds bronze medalists Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier won both segments to win their third straight Skate Canada Internationale, 219.01 to 209.55 over European silver winners Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson (GBR). Lithuanians Allison Reed and Saulius Ambrulevicius finished third (192.01), with the U.S. finished 4-5-6, with Oona Brown and Gage Brown (187.62), Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik (184.96) and Eva Pate and Logan Bye (181.46).

The circuit heads to Europe now, with the Grand Prix de France coming up next week in Angers.

● Football ● The U.S. women raised their energy level vs. Colombia in their second straight friendly, this time in San Diego, and came away with a dominant, 3-0 victory.

After the 0-0 tie on Thursday in Sandy, Utah, the U.S. started out with a much more determined offensive push in this game, with 57% of possession in the first 15 minutes and headers from midfield star Lindsey Horan in the 11th and 14th minutes that first went over the goal and then was saved by keeper Natalia Girado.

American striker Alex Morgan had a great chance in the 21st, but her left-footed shot from the middle of the box was saved by Girado with her right hand, and pushed to the side. Girado’s right arm was injured on the play and she had to be replaced in the 25th by veteran Sandra Sepulveda.

The U.S. was in almost total control, but could not score in the half even with 58% of possession – and it seemed like a lot more – and a 8-1 advantage on shots. There were 22 fouls in the first half alone.

The energy remained high in the second half and Colombia finally got a quality chance in the 48th, as midfielder Marcela Restrepo rifled a shot from the left of goal that U.S. keeper Casey Murphy was able to push over the net.

American interim coach Twila Kilgore substituted Mia Fishel, 22, for Morgan at striker to start the second half and she made her presence felt right away. She sent a centering pass from sub forward Jaedyn Shaw over the top of the net in the 49th, then changed the game seven minutes later.

The U.S. finally got a goal in the 56th, as Fishel headed in a perfect strike from midfielder Emily Sonnett from the right side of the field for the 1-0 lead. Fishel headed the ball down in the middle of the box and past Sepulveda; it’s her first goal for the U.S., in her second international appearance.

Then, in the 62nd, Horan settled under a long cross from the right side all the way to the left side from defender Emily Fox and volleyed the ball into the net on a line, whistling past Sepulveda for a 2-0 edge. That decided the issue.

The Americans got a final goal in the 83rd as substitute forward Alyssa Thompson, 18, forwarded a pass from the top of the box to a charging Shaw, whose powerful, right-footed shot went through the hands of Sepulveda for a final score. The U.S. ended with 56% of possession and a 20-3 advantage on shots; the unrelentingly physical nature of the match was underlined by 48 total fouls and five yellow cards (four on Colombia).

The U.S. women are now 3-0-1 (8-0 on goals) since returning from the Women’s World Cup and will face China in two friendlies in December to close out the year.

● Short Track ● Canada and Korea took three individual wins each at the ISU World Cup II in Montreal (CAN), and American Kristen Santos-Griswold scored two more medals.

Canada’s Jordan Pierre-Giles won the men’s 500 m final over 2016 World Champion Shaolin Liu, now of China, 40.349 to 40.420 and William Dandjinou took the men’s 1,500 m over 2022 Olympic Champion Dae-heon Hwang (KOR), 2:21.780 to 2:21.809.

Hwang also claimed a silver in the 1,000 m, with European silver medalist Jens van’t Wout (NED) winning in 2:21.780 to 2:21.809. The Koreans did get one men’s win with Gun-woo Kim taking the 1,500 m title over 2023 World Champion – and teammate – Ji-won Park, in 2:20.294 to 2:20.406.

The Korean squad won two women’s races, with Gil-li Kim taking the 1,500 m over Santos-Griswold, 2:34.588 to 2:34.829, with Corinne Stoddard of the U.S. sixth (3:32.912). Whi-min Seo was the 1,000 m winning by 1:31.288 to 1:31.471 over Canada’s Danae Blais. Kim also won a silver in the 1,500 m (2:24.770), won by Belgian Hanne Desmet – the Olympic 1,000 m bronze winner – in 2:24.672, with Santos-Griswold third in 2:24.851.

The Canadian women’s win was in the 500 m, with Rikki Doak beating Olympic relay gold medalist Selma Poutsma (NED), by 42.408 to 42.734.

The Korean women took charge in the final four laps and won the 3,000 m relay in 4:12.133, well ahead of the Dutch (4:20.607) and the U.S. (4:21.594).

Eunice Lee, Julie Letai, Santos-Griswold and Stoddard raced for the American team, which scored a silver last week and now a bronze, so Santos-Griswold has six medals in all in the first two weeks of the World Cup season. She took gold and bronze in the two 1,000 m races in the first World Cup in Montreal last week.

The World Cup series will take a break and resume on 8 December in Bejing (CHN).

● Speed Skating ● The amazing Jordan Stolz continued to dominate at the 2023 U.S. Long Track Championships in Milwaukee, taking four more races, while Olympic 500 m champ Erin Jackson showed she is still to be reckoned with.

Stolz, still just 19, won the World Championships golds in the 500 m, 1,000 m and 1,500 m last season, and won the national titles in the same events, plus a bronze in the 5,000 m.

He did even a little better this time.

Stolz repeated in the 500 m, in 34.66 to 34.84 for Cooper McLeod on Friday, then won the 1,500 m in 1:42.31 to 1:44.45 for Emery Lehman. On Saturday, he skipped the second 500 m race (won by McLeod in 35.27), then won a silver in the 5,000 m in a lifetime best of 6:20.76, behind Casey Dawson’s 6:17.10.

On Sunday, he repeated in the 1,000 m, winning in 1:07.85, over McLeod (1:08.56) and then contested both of the 16-lap Mass Start races. He was second in the first race, with 40 points to 61 for Connor McDermott-Mostowy, then won the second race with 60 points to 40 for Ethan Cepuran.

So, six races, four wins and a 5,000 m silver in a lifetime best. Wow.

Jackson, now 31, won both of the 500 m races, taking Friday’s race over Kimi Goetz – a five-time medalist on the World Cup circuit last season – by 38.00 to 38.01, with four-time Worlds gold medalist Brittany Bowe third in 38.31. The same three finished in that order in Saturday’s 500 m, with Jackson at 37.38, Goetz at 37.64 and Bowe third in 38.33.

Bowe, 35, won the 1,500 m on Friday in 1:54.76, ahead of Goetz (1:55.68) and Mia Kilburg (1:57.18), but Kilburg came back to win the 3,000 m in 4:10.97, over Greta Myers (4:11.62).

On Sunday, Goetz upset Bowe in the 1,000 m, 1:13.85 to 1:15.51, with Jackson third in 1:16.08. Kilburg won the first Mass Start with 61 points and Piper Yde finished up with a win in the second Mass Start race, also with 61.

● Triathlon ● Another strong finish for comebacking Rio Olympic champ Gwen Jorgensen on the World Triathlon Cup circuit, finishing second in the Miyazaki, Japan event in 2:00:01 to Italy’s Bianca Seregni (1:59:43).

Seregni had an 11-second lead out of the bike phase and transition to the run and posted a 34:00 post for the 10 km run, with Jorgensen coming up from fourth, running 34:13 for the second-best run time. Jorgensen continues to pile up points to get into contention for a spot on the Paris Mixed Relay team.

She’s now 44th in the ITU Olympic Rankings list and the no. 7 among American athletes.

● Wrestling ● The United World Wresting World U-23 Championships concluded in Tirana (ALB), with another amazing tournament win for 19-year-old emerging American superstar Amit Elor.

Elor competed a second straight Worlds triple in 2023, winning the World Junior, World U-23 and World Championships gold in the same year! And she now has eight World titles as a teenager:

● 2 World Championships (2022: 72 kg, 2023: 72 kg)
● 2 World U-23 Championships (2022: 72 kg, 2023: 72 kg)
● 3 World U-20 Championships (2021: 68 kg, 2022: 72 kg, 2023: 72 kg)
● 1 World Cadet Championship (2021: 69 kg)

Elor won a bronze at the 2019 World Cadet Champs, so she owns a stellar World Championships record – at all levels – of 32-1. Wow!

In Tirana, Elor crushed her four foes, winning by pinfalls in 17 seconds, then 18 seconds, a 5-0 decision against 2022 World U-23 finalist Wiktoria Choluj of Poland and a 10-0 technical fall in the gold-medal match against India’s Jyoti Berwal.

She’ll be 20 on New Year’s Day, but her path to Paris in 2024 is hardly straightforward. The 72 kg class is not included on the Olympic program, so she will have to drop to 68 kg and the U.S. has yet to land a spot in the women’s 68 kg field. That effort will start in February. But for now, she’s an eight-time World Champion.

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TSX REPORT: U.S. skiing star Shiffrin begins season in Austria; American team wins five more medals at Pan Ams; Rugby World Cup final Saturday

American skiing superstar Mikaela Shiffrin (USA)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Ski superstar Shiffrin returns to slopes at Soelden opener
2. U.S. up to 139 medals, earns five Paris boxing spots in Santiago
3. World Cup final has Rugby titans New Zealand and South Africa
4. U.S. women, Colombia struggle to scoreless draw in Utah
5. Queensland Premier not interested in Commonwealth Games rescue

● The FIS Alpine World Cup season begins with the Soelden Giant Slaloms in Austria on Saturday and Sunday, with American star Mikaela Shiffrin looking for a third straight World Cup overall title and more records. Swiss Marco Odermatt has also won two World Cup titles in a row and wants to start on a third.

● The U.S. added five medals to its total on a light day at the Pan American Games in Chile, bringing its total to 139. In boxing, the Pan Am Games is a major Olympic qualifier and the American fighters earned five quota places for Paris, with four U.S. boxers in Friday’s finals.

● Saturday brings the final of the Rugby World Cup in France, with three-time winners South Africa and New Zealand meeting for the 106th time and the second time in a World Cup final. Both teams are 5-1 in the tournament, with New Zealand’s All Blacks having routed four of their six foes, while the Springboks have had four of their matches decided by five points or less.

● The U.S. women’s national team played to a 0-0 tie with no. 22 Colombia in a friendly in a very cold Sandy, Utah on Thursday night. The game was mostly played in the middle of the field, although the Americans had some chances, with Alex Morgan missing a first-half penalty. The two teams will play again in San Diego on Sunday.

● Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk informed Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate that the state is not interested in a rescue operation for the 2026 Commonwealth Games, abandoned by Victoria in July. The focus is on the 2032 Olympic Games in Brisbane.

Panorama: Winter Games 2030 (French bid file moving right along) = Athletics (2: no change so far in Olympic Marathon Trials start time; what would a perfect track facility include?) = Football (2: Belgium, Germany and Netherlands bid for 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup confirmed; Infantino completely cleared by Swiss prosecutors) = Judo (Russian “neutrals” win four at Abi Dhabi Grand Slam) ●

1.
Ski superstar Shiffrin returns to slopes at Soelden opener

The annual season-opener of the FIS Alpine World Cup, the giant slalom races on the Rettenbach Glacier at Soelden, Austria, comes this weekend, with defending World Cup champions Mikaela Shiffrin (USA) and Marco Odermatt (SUI) in action.

The amazing Shiffrin, now 28, set the all-time record for most career World Cup wins last season with 88 in all, passing Swede Ingemar Stenmark (86), and has won the last two seasonal World Cup titles and five in all. Moreover, she is the all-time leader for the most wins in the women’s Slalom (53) and Giant Slalom (21). She won 14 races last season; 12 more will get her to an astonishing 100.

But she has another impressive record ahead of her this season, for career World Cup medals won. Shiffrin sits in a tie for second with 138 total World Cup podiums (88-25-25) with Austria’s Marcel Hirscher (138 from 2007-19). But Stenmark is still on top with his career total of 155 (86-43-26) from 1973-89.

Shiffrin could also tie Austrian star Annemarie Moser-Proell (1969-80) for the most women’s seasonal title with six if she can win again this season; Hirscher is the all-time leader with eight. Of Moser-Proell, Shiffrin said, “She’s a complete trailblazer in ski racing and I would say that If I am able to match that title, or the six overalls, that would be probably the biggest accomplishment (of my career).”

Even with all these achievements, Shiffrin will face substantial challengers in Soelden, where she has won twice – in 2014 and 2021 – and won three silvers and one bronze.

Swede Sara Hector surprised with the Olympic gold in Beijing in 2022, trailed by Italian star Federica Brignone and Swiss Lara Gut-Behrami; Gut-Behrami was runner-up to Shiffrin in the World Cup Giant Slalom standings last season, ahead of Italy’s Marta Bassino and Slalom star Petra Vlhova (SVK).

Odermatt has won the last two seasonal titles, as well as the last two races at Soelden and was second in 2020, so he’s looking for his fourth race in a row there with a medal.

He will be challenged by familiar foes Henrik Kristoffersen (NOR). Slovenia’s Zan Kranjec and Alexis Pinturault (FRA). Kristoffersen finished second to Odermatt in the Giant Slalom standings the last two seasons, with 2022 Olympic silver medalist Kranjec third and Pinturault fifth. Pinturault is well familiar with Soelden, having won this race in 2016 and 2019. Kranjec has been second and third in the last two races in Soelden as well.

Norway’s Lucas Braathen won at Soelden in 2020 and was fourth in the 2021-22 Giant Slalom standings.

U.S. television coverage is only on the NBC Peacock streaming service, with the first run at 4 a.m. Eastern and second run at 7 a.m. Eastern on Saturday (women) and Sunday (men).

2.
U.S. up to 139 medals, earns five Paris boxing spots in Santiago

A very light finals day at the XIX Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, with just 12 finals, and the first day at which the U.S. did not win an event.

The American squad did win five more medals (0-2-3) to increase its medal total to 139 (59-40-40), with the silvers in shooting from James Hall in the men’s 10 m Air Pistol and Lexi Lagan in the women’s 10 m Air Pistol. Rachel Tozier won the women’s Trap bronze.

There is a lot of interest in the boxing competition, which is a major Paris 2024 qualifier, with 30 total quota places available. Brazil was the big winner with eight and the U.S. obtained five, and Cuba three. The American finalists and quota winners – with the championship bouts on Friday – include

Men/57 kg: Jahmal Harvey (the 2021 World Champion)
Men/+92 kg: Joshua Edwards
Women/50 kg: Jennifer Lozano
Women/60 kg: Jajaira Gonzalez (bronze medal)
Women/66 kg: Morelle McCane

The U.S. also got a bronze from Roscoe Hill in the men’s 51 kg class. (The women’s 60 kg class had four quota places available, so the bronze medalists earned a Paris 2024 slot.)

The medal table shows the U.S. with 139 in all, followed by Canada (83: 29-24-30), Mexico (70: 30-15-25) and Brazil (66: 14-25-27).

Friday’s schedule has the 13 gold-medal matches in boxing and only nine other events, and there are just nine finals on Saturday. The track & field competition begins on Sunday; there are 71 event finals coming on Saturday, 4 November!

Super-statistician Dr. Bill Mallon, co-founder of the authoritative Olympedia.org, contributed some more highlights about Canadian swim star Maggie Mac Neil, who won seven medals in swimming (5-1-1):

“‘Mac Neil’ is the proper spelling of her name, even though it’s unusual; we’ve confirmed it several ways. …

“On her 7 medals: it only ties her for 31st place at the PAG for most medals at a single Games, but mostly because back in the day both Gymnastics and Shooting had team events in almost all the various events.

“However, among swimmers, she is equal-4th all-time at the PAG for a single edition – behind Thiago Pereira (BRA) who won 8 in 2007 and 2011 (oddly both years he was 6-1-1), and Sylvia Poll (CRC), who won 8 in 1987.”

3.
World Cup final has Rugby titans New Zealand and South Africa

The 2023 Rugby World Cup in France began way back on 8 September and after 47 matches, it will come down to the only two teams which have won the tournament three times: South Africa and New Zealand, at 3 p.m. Eastern time on Saturday.

The teams are ranked first and second, with defending Rugby World Cup champion, top-ranked South Africa, trying to defeat no. 2 New Zealand, which won the prior two World Cup trophies in 2011 and 2015. Amazingly, neither won their groups, but here they are playing for the championship:

New Zealand (5-1):
● lost to France, 27-13 (Pool A)
● defeated Namibia, 71-3 (Pool A)
● defeated Italy, 96-17 (Pool A)
● defeated Uruguay, 73-0 (Pool A)
● defeated Ireland, 28-24 (quarterfinals)
● defeated Argentina, 44-6 (semifinals)

South Africa (5-1):
● defeated Scotland, 18-3 (Pool B)
● defeated Romania, 76-0 (Pool B)
● lost to Ireland, 13-8 (Pool B)
● defeated Tonga, 49-18 (Pool B)
● defeated France, 29-28 (quarterfinals)
● defeated England, 16-15 (semifinals)

The game will be played at the 80,698-capacity Stade de France, which will also be the main stadium for the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, and televised in the U.S. on CNBC and Peacock. The game will be replayed on NBC on Sunday at noon Eastern.

These two teams are old foes, with 105 prior matches and New Zealand’s All-Blacks leading the Springboks, 62-39, with four ties. They met once before in the Rugby World Cup final, in 1995, in Johannesburg (RSA), with the home team winning, 15-12 in extra time.

New Zealand’s Will Jordan is the tournament lead in tries with eight, with teammates Leicester Fainga’anuku and Damian McKenzie tied for third with five each. Cobus Reinach leads South Africa with four.

McKenzie and Richie Mo’unga are the top two overall scorers for the All Blacks, with 57 and 53 points. Manie Libbok leads South Africa with 22 total points and Handre Pollard has scored 21.

In the third-place game on Friday (3 p.m. Eastern time on Peacock), Argentina will meet England, with the English trying to win their fifth medal in the 10 editions of the World Cup (1-3-0 so far). Argentina was third in 2007 and lost the 2015 bronze-medal match to South Africa.

The tournament has been a winner at the gate, with 2,279,469 attendees through 46 matches, an average of 49,554. It’s already the second-most-attended World Cup ever, and will finish close behind the all-time record of 2,477,805 for the 2015 tournament in England. The 2027 edition will be played in Australia, and in the U.S. in 2031.

4.
U.S. women, Colombia struggle to scoreless draw in Utah

Colombia’s women’s team, one of the darlings of the FIFA Women’s World Cup that was barely eliminated in the quarterfinals, held the U.S. women to a 0-0 tie in a friendly on a cold Thursday night in Sandy, Utah.

The no. 3-ranked U.S. came in having won two post-World Cup matches against South Africa in September, while 22nd-ranked Colombia – with many of their World Cup players – was playing its first match since their World Cup exit.

The first half saw lots of action between the boxes, but no serious chances in the first 20 minutes, and then a shot by U.S. striker Alex Morgan in the 25th from the middle of the box was saved by Colombian keeper Natalia Girado.

But off a corner kick in the 43rd minute, Colombia was called for a defender Daniela Arias foul in the box, sending Morgan to the penalty spot, but her shot hit the right post and she kicked the rebound over the goal. The game was scoreless at the half, with the U.S. taking four shots to one for Colombia, with possession even.

More of the same in the second half, but with more U.S. play in the Colombian half and a couple of Morgan shots in the first 20 minutes. In the 74th, U.S. substitute striker Ashley Hatch outran a defender to a ball in the box and launched a tricky, left-footed shot from the corner of the penalty area that had to be saved by Girado.

Colombia’s speed got to the U.S. lead passes and crosses to keep the game scoreless and its offense made only occasional forays into the U.S. end and did not threaten American keeper Alyssa Naeher seriously. The U.S. had a final chance as substitute forward Sophia Smith slammed a left-footed shot from close to the endline near the left side of the Colombian goal that was stopped by Girado, then got by her, hit the post, but rolled away at 95+1.

The game finished with the U.S. in 53% of possession and a 9-3 edge on shots, but was the third game this year where the Americans failed to score, including their last two matches at the FIFA Women’s World Cup. The U.S. women are now 9-0-2 all-time vs. Colombia.

The teams will meet again on Sunday in San Diego, California at 5:30 p.m. Eastern (2:30 p.m. Pacific), to be shown on TNT, Max, Telemundo, Universo, Peacock and FDP Radio.

5.
Queensland Premier not interested in Commonwealth Games rescue

“I’ve told him we do not have the time to do all the security arrangements that will be needed for his bid. Our priority, and we’ve got a long lead time, is in relation to the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

“And I’ve told Tom this, that I don’t think that bid can go forward without state and commonwealth approval because all the security arrangement are joint… there’s also all the planning and transport – it takes years, it doesn’t just happen overnight.”

That’s Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, speaking this week of a conversation with Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate, who has been pushing for a rescue of the 2026 Commonwealth Games by Gold Coast, the successful host of the 2018 Commonwealth Games.

The 2026 Commonwealth Games was abandoned by July by Victoria, which had agreed to host the Games, and later agreed to pay a withdrawal fee of A$380 million (about $240 million U.S.). No other host has come forward, with Commonwealth Games Australia looking for another host there and saying a delay to 2027 would be acceptable.

Tate, the promotion-minded Mayor of Gold Coast, noted that the facilities used for 2018 are available and that the event could create a significant injection of tourism spending. But his efforts to get government support in Queensland appear to have failed, with the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games on the horizon.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2030 ● David Lappartient, the head of the French National Olympic Committee (CNOSF) told the FrancsJeux.com site that the bid by two French regions, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (AURA) and Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur ( PACA), is proceeding well.

Although late into the game, a preliminary bid file was sent to the International Olympic Committee on 13 October, an updated proposal is due on 7 November and a meeting with the IOC Future Host Commission for the Winter Games could come on 21 November. That’s in advance of the next IOC Executive Board meeting, in Paris, beginning on 29 November. Said Lappartient, who is also the President of the Union Cycliste Internationale, “We are on time.”

No venue construction is expected and all of the sites except for long-track speed skating have been identified. No budget has been announced and Lappartient wants to be well prepared before saying anything:

“Candidates sometimes tend to minimize the cost in the application phase, and then people say that the Games cost more than expected. I am more in line with planning Games that cost as little as possible, but also announcing the most realistic budget possible.”

Sweden and Switzerland are also looking at a 2030 bid in earnest; a choice for “targeted dialogue” could come from the IOC Executive Board meeting in Paris.

● Athletics ● U.S. marathon star Sara Hall, fifth at the 2022 Worlds, posted the first notice about the 12 October discussions over the start time for the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in Orlando, Florida on 3 February 2024 on X (formerly Twitter):

“Everyone is willing to move earlier except [local organizing committee], [Greater Orlando Sports Commission]. Even @nbc is willing to broadcast live earlier.

“Counting on Orlando to protect the integrity of the event and put athletes’ safety first!”

The start time of noon Eastern is being criticized by athletes as being too late in the day due to expected hot and humid weather, and have asked for a 6 a.m. start time instead.

European Athletics chief executive Christian Milz (SUI) was asked about a perfect track & field facility at a conference on field surfaces and offered this dream scenario:

“Well, if this is for a ‘magic wand’ type of answer, I would like to see a rotating field-of-play so that spectators could see all field events irrespective of where they would be seated, or equipment such as high jump [standards] to be retractable from the floor, and a new system for the discus and hammer cages to be more ‘transparent.’

“Secondly, I’d love to see a long/triple jump take-off board with a red or green LED light that gives immediate feedback on whether the jump was valid or a foul.

“Finally, I’d like to see more of the technology already used in track construction to enhance the event production with lights shows and video-mapping that’s not currently affordable for all – and new technology that can also be used in daylight.”

Possible? When?

● Football ●The Royal Belgian Football Federation (RBFA), Royal Netherlands Football Association (KNVB) and German Football Association (DFB) are excited to announce the official launch of their joint bid to host the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2027. This announcement comes following many months of visible activity in laying the groundwork in preparation around today’s formal launch.”

Wednesday’s announcement confirms the leading European bid for the next Women’s World Cup. The U.S. and Mexico are jointly bidding for the event, as are Brazil and South Africa. Among the bidders, the U.S. and Germany have previously hosted the tournament.

Bid documents are due in December, with the final award to be made on 17 May 2024 by the FIFA Congress.

FIFA was notified that the Swiss Federal inquiry into meetings between President Gianni Infantino (SUI) and former Swiss Attorney General Michael Lauber in 2016 has been closed.

A triumphal announcement included:

“Now it is official: FIFA President Gianni Infantino has always acted absolutely correctly and lawfully in his relations with the Swiss public prosecutors who were investigating the ‘old FIFA’! The new FIFA is today a clean, well run and robust organisation which operates in accordance with the highest ethical and governance standards. …

“The outcome of this investigation is obviously entirely unsurprising. The only surprising element is only the long time taken to reach such an obvious conclusion.”

Said Infantino: “This is a full and clear victory for me, for the new FIFA and for justice!

“It is now clear that the accusations against me were mere attempts by poor, envious and corrupt people to attack my reputation. If these people have some dignity left, they should at least have the decency and apologise for their actions and the damage caused.”

● Judo ● The Abu Dhabi Grand Slam stop on the IJF World Tour concluded in the UAE on Thursday, and while the official medal table showed Italy (3) and Canada (2) with the most wins, in fact, Russian fighters – competing as so-called “neutrals” – won four classes.

Co-World Champion Inal Tasoev won his eighth career Grand Slam gold in the +100 kg class; reigning World Champion Arman Adamian won the 100 kg class over 2021 Worlds silver medalist Aleksander Kukolj (SRB); David Karapetyan, 23, took his first Grand Slam title at 81 kg, and Marina Taimazova won the women’s 70 kg division for her third career Grand Slam title.

Russian “neutrals” also won five bronze medals.

The Italian and Canadian wins all came in the women’s classes, with Worlds bronze medalist Assunta Scutto winning at 48 kg, Tokyo Olympic bronze medalist Odette Giuffrida taking the 52 kg gold, and Alice Bellandi, the Worlds bronze winner in 2023, taking the 78 kg class.

Canada got wins from 2021 World Champion Jessica Klimkait at 57 kg (over fellow Canadian and 2023 World Champion Christa Deguchi), and Tokyo Olympic bronze medalist Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard at 63 kg.

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TSX REPORT: Lots of different ways to “uniform” the U.S. track & field team; 25 more U. S. Pan Am medals; angst in Tahiti over Paris ‘24

Americans Grant Holloway (c) and Freddie Crittenden (r) finishing 1-4 at the World Athletics Championships; why aren't their uniforms the same? (Photo courtesy USATF)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Uniforming the U.S. track & field team is anything but uniform
2. U.S. wins 25 medals, MacNeil has seven at Pan Am Games
3. Paris 2024 tower plan for Tahiti being protested
4. Bob-luge-skeleton site for 2026 now more confused
5. Feisty FIS slaps back at “Protect Our Winters” petition

● Outfitting the U.S. track and field team is a big task, with as many as 20 national teams competing each year. International team logistics chief Brad Birling explained the process, the enormous number of items involved and the choices each athlete gets to make, explaining why there is so little uniformity in the American uniforms.

● The American team continued its medal-winning ways at the Pan American Games in Chile, collecting 25 more on Wednesday, including eight golds. The biggest winner at the Games has been Canadian swim star Maggie MacNeil, with seven total medals and five golds.

● The Paris 2024 plan for the surfing events in Tahiti has run into protests from the community, principally concerning the installation of a 46-foot-high aluminum tower for judges and technical support that will require sinking rods into a coral reef.

● The continuing discussion over where to hold the bobsled, luge and skeleton events at the 2026 Olympic Winter Games went sideways with a meeting in Milan, with the head of the organizing committee saying he still supports a new track in Cortina. It appears to be about Italian politics.

● The International Ski & Snowboard Federation (FIS) has taken a remarkably aggressive stance toward its detractors since the ascension of Swedish billionaire Johan Eliasch to its Presidency, with public statements pushing back against environmental activists and news media!

Panorama: International Olympic Committee (Paris Qualifier TV rights explored for future sales) = Russia (Russian Wushu fed refuses to attend 2023 Worlds in Ft. Worth) = Aquatics (World Aquatics says no pressure to remove 2024 Worlds from Doha) = Athletics (2: AIU Road Running Report says testing program to return to normal in 2023; Massat gives up winner’s purse to runner sent on the wrong route) = Basketball (record number of international players on opening-day NBA rosters) = Boxing (IBA provisionally admits two, World Boxing adds five) = Cycling (2024 Tour de France route revealed, will not finish in Paris) = Rowing (2025 European Champs withdrawn from Serbia due to 2023 elections!) = Ski & Snowboard (FIS says three candidates for 2028 FIS Games) ●

Errata: Some readers saw a version of Wednesday’s post where the topic summary noted an Uruguayan stamp that honored IOC President “Beach.” Of course, it’s “Bach,” as in Thomas Bach. Sorry about that; now corrected. ●

1.
Uniforming the U.S. track & field team is anything but uniform

A photo of the finish of the men’s 110 m hurdles at the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Hungary shows American stars Grant Holloway – the winner in 12.96 – and Freddie Crittenden – fourth in 13.16 – both running in U.S. uniforms.

Except they weren’t the same uniforms at all.

Sure, both had a red-and-blue striped top that said “USA” on the chest and blue bottoms. But look closer.

Holloway has a tank top and traditional athletic shorts. Crittenden has a half-zip top and compression shorts. Aren’t they supposed to be the same?

No, says Brad Birling, the USA Track & Field International Teams Manager:

“For a World Championship, every athlete gets the full training and travel uniform selection and then they get to pick out four different uniforms that they would want to compete in for their rounds, their semifinals and their finals.

“So we basically just have a list-out of ‘these are the pieces that are available,’ and we try to direct them to what pieces are designed for what disciplines, so we have pieces that are more for jumps, more for sprints, more for distance, but we really leave it up to the athletes to select what pieces are going to work for them and what works best: what’s going to give them the best opportunity for success when it comes to at least that uniform piece.

“When they go through team processing, they are able to try on pieces and everything, get the right fit to find whether or not they prefer to have a Boy Short or a Sprint Brief or a Half Tight vs. a Field Short, or whatever the case is. So they have the opportunity to try stuff on – if they want to – and we leave it up to the athletes to select what works out best for them when it comes to uniforms.”

Birling says he goes through more than 20,000 pieces of gear every year to outfit the roughly 20 teams USATF fields on an annual basis. Most of the outfitting takes place at whatever the selection meet is, like the USATF Nationals:

“We will do the best we can to kit them on-site [at the selection meet]. That way they have everything right when they leave, they have the opportunity to try stuff on, so it minimizes the issue of having to send back sizes and switch that out. The major events like where we have a selection event that decides the team, we try to get them kitted on-site and give them their stuff right then and there, so they already have it in hand.

“It all goes into a suitcase; we give them a suitcase, and backpack and whatnot.”

And that suitcase is full. Birling listed the uniform items for selection and the added items distributed to a World Championships team member this year:

Men/Uniform options for selection:
● Singlet
● Short Sleeve Race Top
● Muscle Tank
● Short Sleeve Unitard
● Tank Unitard
● Short Sleeve Throw Top
● Tank Throw Top
● Race Short
● Half Tight
● Field Short

Women/Uniform items for selection:
● Singlet
● Airborne Top
● Sprint Cover
● FK Sprint Cover
● Tank Unitard
● Short Sleeve Throw Top
● Tank Throw Top
● Race Short
● Half Tight
● Distance Brief
● Boy Short
● FK Sprint Boy Short
● Sprint Brief
● Field Short

All athletes (29-32 pieces):
● Warm Up Full Tight
● Warm Up Tee
● Long Sleeve Half Zip Top
● Podium Jacket
● Podium Pant
● Rain Jacket
● Rain Pant
● Woven Jacket
● Woven Pant
● Fleece Hoodie
● Fleece Pant
● T-Shirt (x2)
● Long Sleeve Tee
● Tank Top
● Socks (x4)
● Arm Sleeves
● Leg Sleeves
● Roller Suitcase
● Gymsack
● Backpack
● Beanie
● Rain Hat
● Aeorbill Cap
● Aerobill Visor
● Legacy 91 Cap
● Warm Up Capri Tight (women only)
● Crop Tee (women only)
● Fierce Bra (women only)

USATF is outfitted by Nike, so some of the item names reflect Nike’s nomenclature. And Nike had an idea for an additional uniform for the Worlds, just for the relay teams. Birling explained:

“Nike just kind of brought up the idea of having something different to kind of set us apart a little bit, and set the relays apart. They came up with a different design, specifically for the relay teams for the U.S. Essentially, they are the same pieces; for the men’s, for instance, it’s still a Half Tight, it’s still a Muscle Tank. They are the same material, construction, that kind of thing as the regular kit, just a different color way. Same thing with the women, the unitards and whatnot.”

The relay uniforms had a more dramatic red-white-blue motion-line scheme, as shown on the men’s and women’s 4×100 m gold-medal winners (Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images for World Athletics):

Said Birling, “All the relay uniforms are issued on-site, so I bring those. Once the rosters are named, I have the list of the relay pools, obviously the men’s and women’s 100 and 400 and then I always add a little extra in there. But I bring all the relay uniforms with me and issue those to athletes on-site, because at the end of the day, our relay coaches can still make changes up to the last minute, and that might mean a different athlete needs a different uniform and they might be a slightly different size, so I try to be prepared for that athlete to have what they need right then and there for any possible changes that happen.”

Birling, a five-year USATF veteran, also noted the uniform design cycle:

“Every four years, Nike will design a new uniform kit for us that essentially starts with each Olympic team. So, for instance, next year we have a brand new kit for the Paris team and that kit will be available only to the Olympic team during the 2024 year, and then we will transition that to all of our international teams through 2028 and the same thing will repeat again. In 2028, the Olympic team will have the new quad uniform, and so on.

“For this one, out of this assortment, I think it’s fair to say that Nike is very much a company that like to kind of push innovation and whatnot, so a lot of times, when it comes to track & field, USA tends to be kind of the testing ground for some new, innovative uniform pieces and that kind of thing.”

And there is a special moment in the uniforming program he always enjoys:

“One of the best parts of this job is when you’re at processing, and an athlete comes up for the first time to make a USA Track & Field team, and you can just see the excitement in their face and everything when you open up that suitcase and their uniform is pressed and ready to go for them to take away. Definitely a rewarding part of the job for sure.

“That’s when it hits them.”

2.
U.S. wins 25 medals, MacNeil has seven at Pan Am Games

Through five days at the XIX Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, the United States has won 134 medals, including 25 on Wednesday, of which eight were golds:

Badminton: Beiwen Zhang, women’s Singles
Gymnastics: Curran Phillips, men’s Parallel Bars
Gymnastics: Kaliya Lincoln, women’s Floor Exercise
Rowing: Madeleine Focht and Veronica Nicacio, women’s Double Sculls
Rowing: Mixed Eights
Shooting: Mary Tucker, women’s 20 m Rifle/3 Positions
Swimming: Men’s 4×100 m Medley
Swimming: Rachel Stege, women’s 1,500 m Free

The pool swimming events concluded with the U.S. squad winning a staggering 46 medals in 36 events, including 19 golds, 17 silvers and 10 bronzes. The final-day swims included the men’s 4×100 m relay, with emerging sprint star Jonny Kulow anchoring in a speedy 47.32, his best of the meet and winning his sixth medal overall (2-4-0).

Not to be overlooked, however, was 20-year-old Brazilian star Gui Caribe, a sophomore at Tennessee, who split 46.94 to bring his team the silver medal over Canada.

Canada’s Maggie MacNeil, the Tokyo Olympic 100 m Butterfly champ was the biggest winner, with seven total medals (5-1-1), three individual wins in the women’s 50-100 m Frees and 100 m Fly and four more medals on relays. She helped Canada with the Fly leg in their 0.63-second win over the U.S. in the women’s 4×100 m Medley on Wednesday, 3:58.76 to 3:59.39.

Diving concluded with Mexico taking eight golds in 10 events and winning 11 medals overall. Canada’s Pamela Ware won the women’s 1 m and 3 m Springboard events, while Osmar Olvera won three golds for Mexico in the 1 m-3 m and 3, Synchro events.

In gymnastics, Brazil topped the medal count with 14 (3-9-2), although the U.S. won seven out of the 14 events. Canada’s Felix Dolci won five medals, with wins in the men’s All-Around and Floor, the Team silver and bronzes on Rings and Vault. The U.S.’s Donnell Whittenburg won three medals, with the Team gold, Rings gold and All-Around bronze; he now has seven career Pan American Games medals.

Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade, the 2023 Worlds All-Around silver winner, was everywhere in the women’s competition, winning a Team silver, golds on Vault and Beam and a silver on the Uneven Bars. The U.S. women won the Team title for the sixth straight time and All-Around winner Kayla DiCello also won a Floor silver for three medals in all; Jordan Chiles also won three, with a Vault silver and All-Around bronze.

The U.S. and Chile both won 10 medals in rowing, with the Americans taking five golds and Hannah Paynter winning four medals herself, in Pairs (gold, with Isabela Darvin), Mixed Eights (gold), women’s Fours (silver) and women’s Eights (silver). Veronica Nicacio and Madeleine Focht won golds in the women’s Double Sculls, women’s Quadruple Sculls and the women’s Eights.

Overall, the U.S. has 134 total medals (59-38-37), ahead of Canada (76: 28-23-25), Mexico (64: 26-15-23) and Brazil (61: 14-24-23). The competitions continue through 5 November; the event is being shown on the Panam Sports Channel (sign-in required).

3.
Paris 2024 tower plan for Tahiti being protested

Nothing is easy, especially when it comes to the Olympic Games. For the Paris 2024 organizers, the staging of the surfing competition in far-away Tahiti now includes friction with the local community of Teahupo’o, where the event will be staged.

The plans call for the installation of a 14 m aluminum tower (about 46 feet) for the judges and technical team, built 800 m from shore, which has drawn protests from a local heritage group. Atihau association vice president Milton Parker told Agence France Presse:

“As soon as they start breaking the coral, we’re going to have to step in. It’s going to be a disaster.”

The installation is projected to cost €4.4 million (about $4.65 million U.S.), far more than what is used for other surfing events at the site, where a temporary, covered wooden platform is used and then removed. The 2024 tower plan includes an air-conditioned room for computer servers supported by a 20 cm-wide (7.9 inch) undersea cable and a restroom with a drainage system.

The French Polynesian government is in favor of the project, but an online petition against the project has received 70,000 supporters. The aluminum tower was designed over concerns that a wooden platform would not meet safety standards.

Paris 2024 President Tony Estanguet told reporters at a Paris event, that “The objective is to continue to move forward, to listen. This project can still be changed to make sure it responds even better to the concerns of the local population. We want to preserve this site absolutely.”

4.
Bob-luge-skeleton site for 2026 now more confused

A meeting on Tuesday of the major players in the ongoing saga of the Milan Cortina 2026 sliding track produced no results other than confusion.

According to a report in the Italian newspaper Il Fatto Quotidario, organizing committee Chair Giovanni Milago himself said that he still supports a track in Cortina, despite not a single company bidding on the project specified by the government’s Olympic construction arm, Simico.

Now the governor of the Veneto region, which includes Cortina d’Ampezzo, Luca Zaia, is angry because his region will now only host curling and women’s alpine skiing, and is asking for some of the men’s alpine races to be moved from Bormio, in Lombardy.

The discussion about the Cesana Pariol site, built for the Turin 2006 Winter Games, but which has not been in use for years and would require extension renovations, continued, apparently in part due to political considerations.

In the meantime, whichever track is to be used is expected to be available for testing during the winter of 2024-25, just about a year away. The existing World Cup tracks in Innsbruck (AUT), St. Moritz (SUI) and elsewhere are standing by.

5.
Feisty FIS slaps back at “Protect Our Winters” petition

The International Ski & Snowboard Federation, better known as FIS, has taken a decidedly more aggressive turn since Swedish billionaire Johan Eliasch was elected as President in 2021.

The federation is collecting all of its broadcasting rights with the belief that it can make a much better deal for all of its events than for only some. It is creating a giant, essentially all-discipline “FIS Games” in 2028 to showcase its sports between Olympic Winter Games and its single-sport championships held in odd years.

And it is taking no abuse from critics it believes are grandstanding at its expense. The latest slap came on Monday, in a direct reply to an Instagram post by Protect Our Winters Switzerland on 19 October that included: “When we saw photos of excavators digging into the Theodul glacier in Zermatt and bulldozers destroying glacier ice in Solden, it became crystal clear. This cannot continue.”

The FIS reply ripped into the Protect Our Winters Switzerland post:

● “Instead of shallow and attention-grabbing campaigns, we support long-term, practical projects that will make a meaningful difference both to the future of our planet and to our athletes.”

● “For your petition you used a picture that was not taken in recent times but in the year 2019 from WWF Austria. This picture doesn’t even show the Rettenbach Glacier/Sölden or the Theodul Glacier/Zermatt but the Pitztal Glacier and therefore has absolutely no connection to the FIS Alpine World Cup. In this case there is no doubt that you are trying to incite hostility towards FIS by deliberately misleading the public using false information. We must inform you that such conduct is unethical and we ask you to correct that with immediate effect.”

“Your campaign is highly unattractive. Your actions do not only harm the reputation of FIS but the future of skiing and snowboarding and the credibility of everyone who is genuinely trying to fight for climate action.”

This is hardly the first such post from FIS. On 28 April of this year, Eliasch responded to a letter from Greenpeace – which accused FIS of “greenwashing” – noting:

“Climate protection is a cause I have been personally passionate about for thirty years. Progress will be made through practical actions that are rooted in climate justice and research on what works. Let me repeat: I share your anxieties about the effect that climate change is having – and will have – on us all. I am determined that we at FIS will do our part to help avert climate disaster.

“Equally, Greenpeace should do its part in engaging constructively in an educated and fact-based manner with those seeking to affect genuine change and respecting the rights of indigenous people.”

An athlete petition in February asked FIS to do more on climate change and FIS replied two days later on its Web site, stating:

“There is also a call for FIS to be carbon neutral; in fact, we are going further. In 2022, FIS became the first Climate Positive international sports federation. This began with a detailed carbon footprint estimate of all competitions staged during a full season, carried out by industry leader Planet Mark. Then FIS established a mechanism through which we can invest to offset those annual emissions many times over: the FIS Rainforest Initiative.”

And FIS has pushed back – hard – against news media it believes are grandstanding. Consider this notice from 7 February of this year:

“In recent days, FIS received requests for information from journalists writing for Sueddeutsche Zeitung, Kleine Zeitung and Salzburger Nachrichten. These journalists were particularly keen to ask questions about the fact that Head provided the FIS official outfits for the 22-23 season; FIS President Johan Eliasch is the Chairman of Head.

“Keen to assist the journalists with their enquiries, FIS promptly provided the timeline of events set out in a statement, showing that (a) there was no conflict of interests (b) Head did the job as a favour to FIS, at a financial loss, (c) Head did not brand the products and therefore (d) neither President Eliasch nor Head made any gain from this move, directly or indirectly.

“It seems the straightforwardness of the FIS response has prompted a change of heart from these journalists, who have now requested that their original questions – and the FIS answers – be removed from the website.

“Considering that journalists’ prime motive should be to expose the truth and shine a light on the facts, the eagerness to have their own questions – and the factual answers provided – taken off the website and out of the public domain is interesting. It may even lead objective observers to conclude that the facts did not suit the journalists’ agenda.”

On 28 February, the FIS site featured this:

“FIS refers to various articles in Finnish media concerning the future participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes in international competitions. In these articles, the statements of FIS President Johan Eliasch are used in a misleading way to draw fabricated and unfounded conclusions.

“The FIS position on this topic has not changed: FIS, together with other International Federations, has been following the IOC recommendations and is fully supportive of the IOC’s initiative to seek the adoption of the UN Resolution ‘Sport as an enabler of sustainable development’ by the United Nations General Assembly on 1 December 2022.

“Any further decisions with regards to the participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes at FIS competitions will be taken by the FIS Council taking into account all points of view and implications.”

On Wednesday (25th), the FIS Council continued its ban on Russian and Belarusian participation in its events.

Observed: This is a fascinating study in aggressive public relations from FIS, and from Eliasch, one whose impact will not be known for some time. But it showcases an often-unseen willingness to demand as much rectitude from its critics as the critics demand from FIS. Very few other federations have been as bold.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● International Olympic Committee ● Sport Business reported that the IOC is exploring the packaging of Olympic qualifying events for sale to broadcasters in an attempt to expand interest outside of the Games period.

A first Olympic Qualifier Series will take place for BMX Freestyle, breaking, skateboarding, and sport climbing in two stages in 20204, in Shanghai (CHN) on May 16-19 and in Budapest (CHN) on June 20-23. If interest is shown, the concept could be significantly expanded for the 2028 Games in Los Angeles.

● Russia ● The Russian Wushu Federation has refused to compete at the World Wushu Championship, to be held in Ft. Worth, Texas, from 16-20 November because of sanctions.

RWF Executive Secretary Mikhail Kozhemyakin told the Russian news agency TASS:

“Representatives of the Russian Wushu team will not take part in the World Championship due to discriminatory restrictions.

“It is unacceptable for us to compete at international competitions without the flag and anthem of our country. This is a decision of both the presidium of our federation and the athletes themselves.

“We learned in advance that the federations of the European Union countries agreed to boycott the World Championship if Russian athletes come to these competitions even without a flag and anthem. Everything is similar to the [2022] Paralympic Games in China. Therefore, we intend to wait until the international federation begins to act in strict accordance with its charter and the Olympic Charter, renouncing discrimination on political grounds.

“The International Wushu Federation is now led by people who are, let’s say, under American influence. An elective congress will be held as part of the World Championship, and one of the candidates for the post of leader is the Minister of Sports of China. We hope that if the government changes, the situation will improve.

“Our federation is working on new alternative formats for competitions with those countries that do not support the discriminatory policies of international sports organizations, primarily the BRICS and SCO countries. The Russian Wushu team participates in international competitions only under the flag and anthem of their country.”

● Aquatics ● World Aquatics said that it has not received requests from national federations to remove the 2024 World Aquatics Championships from Doha (QAT).

World Aquatics chief executive Brent Nowicki (USA) said in an e-mail message to SwimSwam.com: “World Aquatics is not facing any pressure to move the event in Doha and not a single country has contacted us in this respect.”

The Israeli daily Haaretz reported last week that multiple national federations had asked about moving the 2024 Worlds in view of Qatar’s support of Hamas in Gaza.

● Athletics ● The Athletics Integrity Unit released its 2022 Road Running Report, showing that testing was returning to normal after the pandemic.

The most encouraging part of the report was in the introduction from Chair David Howman (NZL):

“In 2022, the programme operated within a budget of $1.43 million – less than half of the normal projected budget of $3 million annually – and with actual expenditure of $1.35 million. The number of athletes in the road runners’ Registered Testing Pool (RTP) rose to 91 athletes (from 40) with another 116 athletes in the Monitoring Pool. Meanwhile, the World Athletics Label Road Race calendar jumped to nearly 200 races in more than 40 countries, from 88 races in 2021.

“However, in 2023, the RTP is at full capacity, with an estimated 150 elite men and women athletes each – totalling at least 300 road runners in a well-controlled testing environment – from which race organisers can choose athletes to compete in their events.”

The testing volume is expected to reach 1,450 in-competition and 2,000 out-of-competition tests in 2023, vs. 1,878 total tests in 2022 from 903 athletes from 68 countries.

The Registered Testing Pool athletes underwent an average of six tests each during 2022, up from four in 2021. The total testing pool in 2022 was 206 athletes with 90 from Kenya and 91 from Ethiopia – that’s 87.4% – with Bahrain and Uganda next with four each (the U.S. had two).

The report showed 19 cases of sanctions, with penalties from three months to six years; of these, 14 were Kenyan and one each from Argentina, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Lebanon and Turkey.

Morocco’s Mohamed Massat won the 2023 Quijote Half Marathon in Ciudad Real, Spain in 67:08 last Sunday, but refused to accept the winner’s prize of €500.

Instead, he insisted it go to second-place finisher Peter Kariuki (KEN: 67:56), who was leading, but was sent by a race official on a detour that ended up with Kariuki running an extra 1,000 m before rejoining the leaders. Said Massat:

“I finished first, but for me the winner is Peter Kariuki. He was well ahead of me and because of a mistake at the end of the circuit he went the other way. The winner is him, he was going to arrive before me.”

Massat took the second-place prize of €300 instead. Wow.

● Basketball ● The International Basketball Federation (FIBA) noted that a record number of international players – 125 – were on the opening-night rosters of NBA teams as the season opens. That’s about 28% of the total of approximately 450 opening-night players on the 30 NBA teams.

The 125 total is slightly higher than the previous record of 121 from 2017-18 and 2021-22. Every NBA team has at least one international, with Canada – as usual, for the 10th season in a row – having the most, with 26. France has 14 and Australia has nine.

● Boxing ● The International Boxing Association provisionally re-admitted Switzerland, subject to the vote at a Congress later this year, and added the Norfolk Island Boxing Association for the first time. The Swiss federation leadership voted to move to World Boxing, but the membership reversed the decision and a new board was elected.

Meanwhile, World Boxing announced five new members – Philippines, Scotland, Wales, Suriname and the U.S. Virgin Islands – to bring its total to 27. This is in advance of its founding Congress on 25 November in Frankfurt (GER).

● Cycling ● The route for the 111th Tour de France in 2024 was announced Wednesday, with the race to finish in Nice on 21 July, due to the preparations for the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.

It will be the first time that the famous race will not be finishing in Paris. Moreover, the usual non-competitive, final-day ride for the Tour leaders will be replaced with a 34 km Individual Time Trial from Monaco to Nice, in which anything could happen. It’s the first Tour to finish with a Time Trial since 1989.

The 2023 route promises to be punishing, with two different stage groups in the Alps, plus two stages in the Pyrenees:

● 8 Flat stages: 3-5-6-8-10-12-13-16
● 2 Time Trials: 7-21
● 4 Hilly stages: 1-2-9-18
● 7 Mountain stages: 4-11-14-15-17-19-20

The race will start in Italy – for the first time ever – on 29 June in Florence, with the fourth stage being the first in France. There will be four uphill finishes, with 52,230 m of climbing (about 32.5 miles) in all.

● Rowing ● A further, sad commentary on the state of sport vis-a-vis governments came from World Rowing’s announcement on Monday:

“Due to parliamentary and local elections planned in Serbia towards the end of 2023 – encompassing the Serbian parliament, the Mayor of Belgrade and the Belgrade Assembly – and considering the risk of a delay in the funding and establishment of a Local Organizing Committee for the 2025 European Rowing Championships, World Rowing, European Rowing and the Serbian Rowing Federation have jointly agreed on a postponement of the Event to a later year.

“The decision regarding the year when the European Rowing Championships will be held in Belgrade will be communicated by the parties in due time.”

The award of the event to Belgrade was made in February of this year.

● Ski and Snowboard ● The International Ski & Snowboard Federation (FIS) Council met on Wednesday and reported that three countries have expressed interest in the new, all-discipline FIS Games planned for 2028. The deadline for filing expressions of interest is 1 November. Also:

“The current FIS policy, which does not allow the participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes and officials at FIS events, will remain in effect until further notice.”

You can receive our exclusive TSX Report by e-mail by clicking here. You can also refer a friend by clicking here, and can donate here to keep this site going.

For our updated, 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: Government respect for sport is fading fast; U.S. zips past 100 Pan Am medals; single-day tickets for U.S. swimming trials now available!

American Natalia Grossman celebrates her win in the women's Sport Climbing Boulder + lead event at the Pan Am Games (Photo: Sebastian Nanco/ Santiago 2023 vía Photosport)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. LANE ONE: Governments care less and less about the “autonomy of sport”
2. U.S. passes 100 medals, adds 10 golds at Pan Am Games
3. Renovation of the Turin 2006 track for 2026 being explored
4. Single-day tickets for 2024 U.S. Olympic Swim Trials available
5. Modest U.S. TV interest in Skate America, or U.S. men’s soccer

● The International Olympic Committee insists on the autonomy of sport, away from government interference, but the reality is now quite different. From just this summer forward, China has twice refused standard entry visas to Indian athletes and Albania just refused to allow Iranian wrestlers to come to the U-23 World Championships. This is on top of all of the tumult over Russian and Belarusian participation in international competitions or in Paris next year. The implications are grave.

● At the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, the U.S. medal machine roared past the 100-medal mark after four days and has 109 in total. Three U.S. stars have won three golds each and the sport-climbing team went 1-2 in all four events and won nine medals out of 12 available! Some organizational issues have been reported, but no sports sessions have been canceled or postponed.

● The question of where the bobsled, luge and skeleton events for the 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Italy appears to still be up for grabs. The IOC Session was told that a track outside of Italy would be used, but now the question of whether the Turin 2006 track could be used – and it will require costly renovations – has been raised once again.

● Single-day tickets for the massive 2024 U.S. Olympic Swimming Trials are now on sale, with pricing from $55.99 to $393.40 for the double-session days and $28.00 to $196.70 for the final, single-session day. Up to 30,000 can be seated at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

● Competing against college and pro football, the U.S. television audience for Skate American was small, but the highlights show on NBC did 699,000 in the hour before NFL games started lat Sunday. The Mexico-Germany football friendly far outdrew the U.S. men’s win over Ghana.

Panorama: International Olympic Committee (Bach featured on Uruguayan stamp) = Rugby (World Rugby to expand World Cup to 24 teams in 2027) = Swimming (Boston College answers swim team lawsuit over hazing suspension) = Tennis (Romania’s Halep files appeal against doping suspension) ●

1.
LANE ONE:
Governments care less and less about the “autonomy of sport”

If the International Olympic Committee thought things were difficult a month ago, they are much worse now.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine that began in February 2022 is continuing with no end in sight, and the IOC is embroiled in a bitter argument with Western governments that see no reason to allow any athletes from Russia or its ally Belarus to appear at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.

The IOC has gathered all kinds of support from various corners, from friendly United Nations human rights rapporteurs, declarations of various multi-government conferences, and, departing from its usual ultra-diplomatic language, expressed its view in its “Q&A regarding the participation of athletes with a Russian or Belarusian passport in international competitions”:

“It is deplorable to see that some governments do not want to respect the majority within the Olympic Movement or the autonomy of sport which they are requesting from other countries, and are praising in countless speeches and UN and European Union resolutions. …

“We have not seen a single comment from them about their attitude towards the participation of athletes whose countries are involved in the other 70 wars, armed conflicts and crises in the world.”

Things have changed.

With the Hamas attacks on Israel beginning on 7 October, a new and dangerous war has broken out. It’s the second real shooting war in the world today; everything else is conflicts on paper and diplomatic talks.

And the Hamas attacks, widely understood to be masterminded by Iran, have had immediate consequences in sport. On Sunday, United World Wrestling posted this:

“United World Wrestling expresses its deep disappointment to announce that Team Iran after sudden diplomatic crisis has been denied visas by Albania for the U23 World Championships in Tirana, scheduled to take place from October 23 to 29.

“Both the Albanian Wrestling Federation and UWW worked tirelessly to facilitate the necessary visa issuance for all participating teams, including the Iranian wrestlers. Despite the efforts, the authorities denied Team Iran its right to participate in the tournament.

“UWW stands with all wrestlers and remains committed to making the sport inclusive to every country and will take a more in-depth look at the matter going forward.”

Albania is a Muslim-majority country of 2.8 million people that has had diplomatic relations with Israel since 1949, but broke off relations with Iran in September 2022, alleging a major cyberattack by the Iranians.

So Albania, a country of 2.8 million, thumbed its nose at Iran, with a population of 88 million.

The autonomy of sport didn’t mean much to the Albanians.

And there is the behavior of China at the recent Asian Games in Hangzhou, a showcase for the host country, with 383 medals and more gold medals (201) than any other country won in total medals.

But the Chinese refused to issue standard entry visas for three Indian Wushu participants from Arunachal Pradesh, a state in northeast India, which China claims is part of Tibet. Instead, temporary visas were issued which are not considered valid by the Indian government.

It was reported by the Indian site RevSportz that IOC Director of National Olympic Committee Relations and Olympic Solidarity James MacLeod (GBR) told reporters:

“Our principle, and this is a principle that doesn’t only apply now at the Asian Games but it applies every day, everywhere, across the world, is that all athletes should have a free and unfettered access to sports competitions regardless of their nationality and regardless of the passport that they hold.

“That is a principle that we as the IOC continuously uphold and we will talk to all different parties within the Olympic Movement but also Governments to ensure that that principle is upheld. In this case we are aware of the situation.

“It is a matter for the Olympic Council of Asia, and we know that there are discussions between the OCA and the hosts of the Asian Games to hopefully try and resolve this situation.”

The issue was hardly new, as Inside The Games reported that the same three Wushu athletes were denied standard visas in exactly the same manner for the World University Games held in Chengdu (CHN) in July.

MacLeod’s reference to the OCA, as the owner of the Asian Games, points out the complete power imbalance between sports organizations and countries at events of all sizes.

At the Asian Games, the North Koreans re-appeared at a multi-sport Games for the first time since before the pandemic and won 39 medals, including 11 golds. Despite its status as non-compliant with the World Anti-Doping Agency for not making its athletes available for testing during the pandemic, the North Korean flag was flown at the Opening Ceremony, and at victory ceremonies.

India’s Randhir Singh, the Olympic Council of Asia’s interim head, told reporters:

“North Korea also has written to WADA as well, explaining their position. We are explaining it from our side as well. At present the North Korea flag is flying, and we will look into it and see what the future says.”

Is there any doubt that China desired to let the North Korean flags be displayed? WADA issued a statement that included:

“WADA takes this matter extremely seriously and has written to the OCA on several occasions before and after the opening ceremony of the Games, explaining in clear terms the possible consequences that could arise for the OCA if this matter is ignored.”

But in fact, when events are held in countries that don’t care what the IOC or WADA or United World Wrestling thinks, their requirements don’t apply any more. And that’s dangerous, from multiple angles.

And lest we forget, the Australian state of Victoria walked away from a signed contract to host the 2026 Commonwealth Games in July, saying the costs had risen too high. True, they paid a negotiated exit fee of A$380 million (about $242.13 million U.S.), but with less than three years to go, the Commonwealth Games – nearing its centennial in 2030 – has no host and leaner and leaner prospects.

IOC President Thomas Bach of Germany has called this period of history “aggressively divisive,” and he’s quite right. He and the IOC, WADA and every other sports governing body now face the question of in which countries – if any – will their rules and regulations be followed when they are determined not to be in the interest of the host government, sometimes years down the road.

2.
U.S. passes 100 medals, adds 10 golds at Pan Am Games

The American medal machine continued rolling at the XIX Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, with 26 medals on Tuesday and now more than 100 total medals after four days of competition.

The U.S. won 10 more golds to bring its total to 51:

Gymnastics: Donnell Whittenburg, men’s Rings
Gymnastics: Zoe Miller, women’s Uneven Bars
Racquetball: Adam Manilla and Erika Manilla, Mixed Doubles
Sport Climbing: Natalia Grossman, women’s Boulder & Lead
Swimming: David Curtiss, men’s 50 m Free
Swimming: Jay Litherland, men’s 400 m Medley
Swimming: Gabi Albiero, women’s 50 m Free (tie)
Swimming: Women’s 4×200 m Freestyle
Water Skiing: Regina Jaquess, women’s overall
Weightlifting: Mary Theisen-Larsen, women’s +87 kg

The U.S. swimmers have now won an astonishing 40 medals in swimming (17-14-9 in 30 events!) with a day to go, 10 medals in shooting (4-1-5) with three days left, and nine in water skiing. Jaquess won her third gold medal in water skiing on Tuesday, joining Paige Madden (400-800 m Free, 4×200 m Free) and Jacob Foster (100-200 m Breast, Mixed Medley relay) in swimming.

Canada’s Maggie MacNeil won her fourth swimming gold on Tuesday with a first-place tie in the women’s 50 m Free with Albiero in 24.84. MacNeil has won six medals overall, with four golds and a relay silver and bronze.

Mexico has dominated the diving events, with eight medals and a triple-gold performance for Osmar Olvera in the men’s 1 m, 3 m and 3 m Synchro.

The U.S. dominated in Sport Climbing, going 1-2 in all four events, winning nine medals in all and maxing out on qualifying for Paris with four quota places. Sam Watson and Piper Kelly won the men’s and women’s Speed events and Jesse Grupper and 2021 World Bouldering Champion Natalia Grossman took the men’s and women’s Boulder + Lead combo. Wow!

The overall totals through Tuesday showed the American team with 109 medals (51-28-30), trailed by Canada (58: 20-20-18), Mexico (50: 22-13-15) and Brazil (45: 10-16-19).

The Associated Press reported on various organizational issues at the Games so far, including continuing construction debris, poor signage, and inconsistent security procedures. The Athlete Village has had some plumbing problems, reportedly requiring some members of the Argentine, Brazilian and American teams to move to a hotel temporarily.

However, all of the sports sessions have been held as planned, with competitions continuing through 5 November.

3.
Renovation of the Turin 2006 track for 2026 being explored

Although Milan-Cortina 2026 organizing committee chair Giovanni Malago confirmed at the IOC Session in India that the bobsled, luge and skeleton events for the 2026 Olympic Winter Games needed to be held outside of Italy, the issue will not die.

The Italian news agency ANSA reported last week that Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani insisted that the renovation of the track from the 2006 Turin Winter Games be considered so that the events are still held in Italy.

On Tuesday, it was further reported that specifications of the situation with the Cesana Pariol venue are now being presented. Alberto Cirio, President of the Piedmont Region explained:

“Today, the government gave us the opportunity to reopen the Cesana plant to use and we were asked for the timing and necessary resources. We sent the dossier at 7.58 which contains the study carried out and which demonstrates that the reuse of the facility is possible with an expense that is less than half of those hypothesized for Cortina.”

The Mayor of Turin, Stefano Lo Rosso, endorsed the idea, adding, “The presentation of the dossier is with a view to making a serious proposal to the government, it would be a shame if the money of Italian taxpayers were used to finance works abroad.

“We worked to ensure that Turin gets back into the game and puts a stop to a mess committed in the past. It can be done in Italy.”

However, others in the Italian government are quite convinced that the renovations needed to bring the 2006 track back to Olympic quality are underestimated, just as the Cortina replacement track costs were.

The Milan Cortina organizers have multiple options not far away, including accredited World Cup tracks in Innsbruck (AUT), St. Moritz (SUI) and Konigssee (GER), with a selection to be made by the end of the year.

4.
Single-day tickets for 2024 U.S. Olympic Swim Trials available

USA Swimming announced the start of single-day ticket sales for the 2024 U.S. Olympic Trials in Indianapolis, Indiana, at the Lucas Oil Stadium.

The competitions will run for nine days, with two sessions per day from 15-22 June (11 a.m. and 7 p.m.) and a single session on 23 June. Pricing as shown on the Web site:

Saturday, 15 June to Saturday, 22 June:
● Floor: $393.40
● Level 100: $268.17
● Level 200: $206.58
● Level 300: $152.25
● Level 400: $72.55 and $107.74
● Level 500: $72.55 and $107.74
● Level 600: $55.99

Sunday, 23 June (single session):
● Floor: $196.70
● Level 100: $134.09
● Level 200: $103.29
● Level 300: $76.13
● Level 400: $36.28 and $53.87
● Level 500: $36.28
● Level 600: $28.00

The Trials is expected to be quite a spectacle, with seating for 30,000 available, which would make the event the largest swim meet in history! In addition, the stadium is connected to the Indianapolis Convention Center and will be the site for the Toyota Aqua Zone fan festival.

There are also hospitality and accommodations packages offered at a premium by the USA Swimming Foundation, with multi-person programs from $10,000 to $30,000.

5.
Modest U.S. TV interest in Skate America, or U.S. men’s soccer

Football, whether college or the NFL, continues to dominate the American television audience, with modest numbers for Skate America and even less for the U.S. men’s football (soccer) team.

The NBC highlights show on Sunday at noon Eastern, going against the NFL pre-game shows, drew a respectable 699,000 viewers, far better than the live coverage on E!:

21 Oct. (Sat., 8:00 p.m.): 191,000 on E! for the men’s Free Skate, Pairs Free Skate, women’s Short Program and Rhythm Dance.

22 Oct. (Sun.: 3:00 p.m.): 157,000 on E! for the women’s Free Skate and Free Dance.

Friday’s session on E! with the men’s and Pairs Short Programs, did not reach the 150,000 reporting threshold.

Last week’s soccer action featured the U.S. men shutting down Ghana, 4-0, on Tuesday (17th), with 378,000 watching on TNT at 8:30 p.m. Eastern; 155,000 watched the pre-game show.

This was overwhelmed by the 2-2 tie between Mexico and Germany in Philadelphia on the same night and which began an hour earlier. The match drew 1.187 million on UniMas and another 390,000 on TUDN (1.577 million total), with 283,000 watching the half-hour pre-game show on UniMas at 7:00 p.m. Eastern.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● International Olympic Committee ● Now he’s immortal. IOC President Bach, and modern Olympic founder Pierre de Coubertin (FRA) are pictured in a new Uruguayan postage stamp commemorating the centennial of the Uruguay National Olympic Committee.

De Coubertin was the IOC chief when the Uruguay NOC was founded in 1923 and Bach is in charge now, in 2023.

● Rugby ● The success of the 2023 Rugby World Cup in France, with 2.28 million attending through the first 46 matches and an average of 49,554, has helped World Rugby to decide to expand the tournament.

The federation announced Tuesday that the 2027 edition, to be held in Australia, will expand to 24 teams from 20, also impacting the 2031 Rugby World Cup to be held in the U.S.

● Swimming ● WCVB Television in Boston reported on the hazing allegations at Boston College that resulted in the suspension of its swimming and diving programs on 20 September of this year.

A group of 37 team members filed suit in Middlesex County Superior Court to reinstate the program, with Boston College responding that it was satisfied that hazing had occurred and that it had the authority to sanction the team:

“It is beyond dispute that the suspension decision was not arbitrary and capricious. To the contrary, it was made only after an extensive, initial investigation, which included interviews of 20 team members. The investigation confirmed hazing activity involving the initiation of freshmen to the team had occurred over the Labor Day. Moreover, findings of hazing involving several team members had been made just last year. In light of these facts, no member of the Swim and Dive Team reasonably could expect that Boston College Athletics lacked authority to suspend team activities.”

The filing requests that the plaintiff’s request for an injunction be denied.

● Tennis ● Romanian star and two-time Grand Slam champ Simona Halep filed her appeal of a doping positive and four-year ban with the Court of Arbitration for Sport. As for the process, no timeline was provided; now:

“[T]he parties are exchanging written submissions and the Panel of arbitrators that will decide the matter is being constituted.

“Once constituted, the Panel will issue procedural directions for the next phase of the procedure, including the holding of a hearing.”

Halep, 32, tested positive for the anti-anemia drug roxadustat, a banned substance, at the 2022 U.S. Open and was suspended by the International Tennis Integrity Agency for four years, through 7 October 2026.

You can receive our exclusive TSX Report by e-mail by clicking here. You can also refer a friend by clicking here, and can donate here to keep this site going.

For our updated, 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: NBC ad sales for Paris way ahead of Tokyo, nearing $1 billion; U.S. storms to 37 Pan Am medals; gym star Eaker quits over abuse

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

To get The Sports Examiner by e-mail: sign up here!

≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. NBC nearing $1 billion in Paris 2024 ad sales
2. U.S. roars to 21 gold, 37-medal day at Pan Am Games
3. U.S. star Eaker retires from gymnastics due to abuse
4. World Boxing adds six more member federations
5. Sapporo Mayor now looking at 2038 Winter Games

● NBC’s sales chief reported that the network is way ahead on ad sales for Paris 2024 vs. Tokyo for 2020 and is close to $1 billion in gross sales already.

● The American team won an impressive 37 medals – including 21 golds – at the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile. Shooter Vincent Hancock won his second gold of the Games and fourth career Pan Am gold in the Mixed Skeet Team event.

● American gymnastics star Kara Eaker, a two-time Worlds Team gold medalist, has quit her Utah gymnastics team and the sport in response to abuse she received while competing for the Utes. She detailed the issues in a long Instagram post.

● World Boxing announced the addition of six more national federations, including Nigeria, its first African member, bringing its membership to 22 with a month still remaining before its founding Congress.

● The mayor of Sapporo, Japan, indicated that a 2034 Olympic Winter Games bid may be difficult and that a 2038 bid should be considered. That’s continued good news for Salt Lake City, which has a ready-to-go bid waiting for approval.

Panorama: Paris 2024 (3: French financial investigators asking about ceremonies contracts; worries on construction costs; Salnikov says Russia prospects nearing zero) = Los Angeles 2028 (Long Beach approves Belmont pool design project) = Milan Cortina 2026 (abandoned sliding track in Cortina cost €5 million for planning) = Russia (3: Russia led BRICS Games medal table; Russia ready to help India with 2036 Olympic bid = Belarus teams to be integrated into Russian leagues) = Athletics (USATF opens Athlete of the Year voting) = Gymnastics (2: Retton back home from hospital after pneumonia scare; FIG developing athlete world rankings) = Swimming (3: Countries reported to ask World Aquatics to move 2024 Worlds from Doha; McKeown and Qin lead World Cup money lists; Swimming Australia passes new rules to comply with World Aquatics) = Triathlon (Jorgensen wins third World Cup in seven weeks!) = Wrestling (2: NCAA ready to approve women’s wrestling; Albania refuses Iranians visas for World U-23 Champs) ●

1.
NBC nearing $1 billion in Paris 2024 ad sales

Rebounding from the worst U.S. television viewership in Olympic history, Dan Lovinger, NBCUniversal’s President of Olympic and Paralympic Partnerships, told reporters last week that sales for the Paris 2024 Games was trending far ahead of that for Tokyo 2020.

“We’re probably double where we were at this point,” he explained, adding “With just about 10 months ago, we’re further ahead than we’ve ever been before, for summer or winter games,” and “darn close” to the $1 billion in sales mark, compared with a total ad take of $1.25 billion for Tokyo.

“The Olympic and Paralympic Games is the great aggregator of viewership bringing cultures and communities together to celebrate the pinnacle of athletic achievement and root for their favorite athletes and team.” He called Paris 2024, “a premium environment to reach dedicated and engaged consumers anywhere and everywhere they are and builds long-lasting impacts for brands within and beyond the Games.

“In the past when everything was linear…only a handful of advertisers could literally afford the out of pocket, and so we would do somewhere in the neighborhood of 100 different advertising deals for the Olympics. But with Peacock and digital and social, we can now extend the mid-tail and the long-tail. So 100 [advertisers] might become 200.

“We still have that big mass reach vehicle, if that’s what you’re trying to do through linear, but Peacock is likely make up 20 to 25 percent of our total consumption.”

The Paris 2024 audience size will be closely watched, as the 2018-2021-2022 Games in Asia were all difficult from a U.S. viewer perspective. NBC has seen viewership recede significantly since the last European-hosted Games in 2012:

2012/London: 217 million total viewers, or 69.1% of the total U.S. audience, with a primetime show average of 31.1 million.

2016/Rio: 198 million total viewers, or 61.3% of the total U.S. audience, with a primetime show average of 27.5 million.

2021/Tokyo: 150 million total viewers, or 45.3% of the total U.S. audience, with a primetime show average of 15.1 million.

NBCUniversal has the U.S. rights to the 2024-26-28-30-32 Olympic and Winter Games.

2.
U.S. roars to 21 gold, 37-medal day at Pan Am Games

Another monster day for the United States at the XIX Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, with 37 medals, including 21 golds on Monday alone, plus seven silvers and nine bronzes. The gold winners included:

Basketball 3×3: Men’s Team
Basketball 3×3: Women’s Team
Equestrian: Team Dressage
Gymnastics: Kayla DiCello, women’s All-Around
Rowing: Ezra Carlson & Alex Hedge, men’s Pairs
Rowing: Isabela Darvin & Hannah Paynter, women’s Pairs
Rowing: Women’s Quadruple Sculls
Shooting: Rylan Kissel & Mary Tucker, Mixed Air Rifle
Shooting: Vincent Hancock & Dania Jo Vizzi, Mixed Skeet
Sport Climbing: Jesse Grupper, men’s Boulder & Lead
Swimming: Adam Chaney, men’s 100 m Back
Swimming: Jacob Foster, men’s 200 m Breast
Swimming: Paige Madden, women’s 400 m Free
Swimming: Josephine Fuller, women’s 100 m Back
Swimming: Mixed 4×100 m Medley
Taekwondo: Madelynn Gorman-Shore, women’s +67 kg
Water Skiing: Nate Smith, men’s Slalom
Water Skiing: Regina Jaquess, women’s Slalom
Water Skiing: Regina Jaquess, women’s Jump
Water Skiing: Erika Lang, women’s Tricks
Weightlifting: Olivia Reeves, women’s 81 kg

For Hancock, it’s his fourth career Pan American Games gold in Skeet, to go along with his three Olympic golds (2008-12-20) and seven World Championships golds, including the 2023 Mixed Team, won with Austen Smith.

Even with the U.S. dominating the swimming, Canada’s Maggie MacNeil has been the individual star with three golds, including Pan Am Games records in the women’s 100 m Free (53.64) and 100 m Fly (56.94) and a 53.14 leg on the winning women’s 4×100 m Free.

With two days remaining, the American swimmers now have 32 medals across 24 events (13-11-8). Interestingly, China – which unlike the U.S. here, sent its first-line team – won 58 medals (28-21-9) in 41 events at the recent Asian Games held before a home audience in Hangzhou.

A revelation for the U.S. men has been the break-out performance of Freestyle sprinter Jonny Kulow of Arizona State. Still just 19, he blitzed the second leg of the Mixed 4×100 m Freestyle in 47.44 (!), and came back to tie for second in the men’s 100 m Free in 48.38 – a lifetime best – with fellow American Brooks Curry.

Overall, the U.S. has earned 83 medals (41-18-24) through the first three days of the Games (92 events), with Canada next at 40 (12-15-13), then Brazil (35: 7-13-15) and Mexico (32: 16-9-7). Competition continues through 5 November and can be seen in the U.S. via the Panam Sports Channel (sign-in required).

3.
U.S. star Eaker retires from gymnastics due to abuse

Kara Eaker, a World Championships Team gold medalist for the U.S. in 2018 and 2019 and a member of the elite Utah gymnastics team that finished third at the 2022 and 2023 NCAA women’s national championships, announced her retirement on Friday, citing verbal and emotional abuse from a coach and lack of support from the administration. Her Instagram post included:

“For two years, while training with the Utah Gymnastics Team, I was a victim of verbal and emotional abuse. As a result, my physical, mental, and emotional health has rapidly declined. I had been seeing a university athletics psychologist for a year and a half and I’m now seeing a new provider twice a week because of suicidal and self-harm ideation and being unable to care for myself properly. I have recently been diagnosed with severe anxiety and depression, anxiety induced insomnia, and I suffer from panic attacks, PTSD, and night terrors.

“During my recruiting process, I was promised a ‘family’ within this program and a ‘sisterhood’ with my teammates, who would accept me, care for me, and support me. But instead, after I entered as a freshman, I was heartbroken to find the opposite in that I was training in an unhealthy, unsafe, and toxic environment.

“I have now reached a turning point and I’m speaking out for all of the women who can’t because they are mentally debilitated and paralyzed by fear. I, too, find myself frozen in moments when fear takes over. But I can no longer stand by while perpetrators are still allowed in sports and are causing young girls and women to suffer.

“I’ve learned that verbal and emotional abuse is difficult to identify, especially when they are covert and passive-aggressive. The abuse often happened in individual coach-athlete meetings. I would be isolated in an office with an overpowering coach, door closed, sitting quietly, hardly able to speak because of condescending, sarcastic and manipulative tactics.

“The cruelty was compounded because I thought I’d be safe, both mentally and physically, at the University of Utah, but instead I was personally attacked, humiliated, degraded and yelled at to the point of tears in front of the whole team.”

The post continues on and includes this passage:

“[I]n sports, it is still accepted for a coach to manipulate, bully, and berate an athlete for being late to practice, taking extra steps on drills or dismounts, or being the cause of losing a meet. Where is the autonomy to discuss issues respectfully?”

Eaker, 20, competed for two seasons for Utah and competed in four U.S. national championships, with a best of third in the All-Around in 2017. She won three medals on Beam in 2017 (gold), 2018 (silver) and 2019 (silver).

4.
World Boxing adds six more member federations

With its founding Congress coming on 24-25 November 2023, World Boxing announced the addition of six member federations:

“The National Federations for boxing in Finland, Iceland, Jamaica, Nigeria, Norway and the Czech Republic have become the latest six organisations to have their membership applications approved by World Boxing …

“Nigeria is the first National Federation from Africa to join World Boxing and means the new international federation now has 22 members covering all five continents that compete in Olympic-style boxing.”

This is the fourth group of federations to join World Boxing, formed in April 2023 as a new organization focused on maintaining boxing in the Olympic Games. In the aftermath of the de-recognition of the International Boxing Association by the International Olympic Committee in June, the sport has no International Federation representing it at the Olympic level.

The Paris 2024 boxing tournament is being organized directly by the IOC, and boxing has not been confirmed on the program for Los Angeles 2028 due to the lack of a governing body acceptable to the IOC.

There was some confusion about Nigeria’s membership in World Boxing, as Vice President Azania Omo-Agege said the federation had not left the IBA. But Nigeria Boxing President Kenneth Minimah confirmed:

“The NBF, under my leadership, applied and joined World Boxing on October 20, 2023. The decision to join World Boxing was also validated during an executive council meeting.”

5.
Sapporo Mayor now looking at 2038 Winter Games

Having decided to abandon a bid for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games after consultations with the Japanese Olympic Committee, and with a strong bid from Salt Lake City now ready to go for 2034, Sapporo Mayor Katsuhiro Akimoto is now thinking about 2038.

He told the City Assembly last week:

“If our bid for the 2034 Games falls through, I would like to reconvene with the concerned parties for further discussions. The significance of bidding for the Olympics will remain unchanged.”

Sapporo’s bid for 2030, in which it appeared to be the front-runner, was damaged by increases in the projected costs for the Games, the cost expansion of the Tokyo 2020 Games and the continuing scandals in sponsorship sales and bid rigging within the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee. Akimoto added:

“We need to examine what was lacking in our bidding activities. From now on, we will engage in dialogue, not just considering things based on the schedule.”

The IOC approved a potential double allocation for 2030 and 2034 at its recent Session, at the discretion of the Future Host Commission for the Olympic Winter Games to make such a recommendation. A vote for an actual award of the 2030 and 2034 Winter Games is expected to come in Paris in 2024.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● According to FrancsJeux.com, the visit by the Parquet national financier (PNF), the French federal financial prosecutions office visited not only the Paris 2024 organizing committee offices last week (18th), but also the event production companies Double 2, Ubi Bene, Obo and Paname 24:

“This time, the suspicions concern the contracts awarded by the OCOG for the opening ceremonies of the Olympic Games, on the Seine, and then the Paralympic Games, on Place de la Concorde. They concern Double 2, Ubi Bene and Obo, associated within the Paname 24 consortium for the production of the Games ceremonies. Several other contracts, including those for the Olympic Torch Relay, are also under investigation.”

These searches were related to new inquiries which were opened after the prior search of the organizing committee headquarters in June. This second search is also looking at specific contracts for favoritism and conflicts of interest. Thus far, no arrests have been made.

French Senator Eric Jeansannetas voiced some concerns about the cost of constructions for the Paris Games, noting that facilities projected to be delivered in 2023 will now be turned over in 2024.

After a meeting of the Senate Finance Committee that examined a report from the government’s Olympic construction arm, Solideo, he noted:

“As overseer, I am simply pointing out that when there are delays, there can be budgetary slippages. But I’m not expressing any concerns, I’m simply saying that there is a risk that the budget will slip.”

Solideo officials said they are on schedule and that there is a delay between the end of construction and the turnover to the organizing committee, which accounts for some of the “delays.”

Vladimir Salnikov, the head of the Russian Swimming Federation and a four-time Olympic gold medalist at Moscow 1980 and Seoul 1988, told Russia’s Sport-Express the outlook for Paris is grim:

“I think this is a humiliation, but the International Olympic Committee continues to insist that there is no discrimination; this is puzzling. I am even more surprised by something else, but if you invite someone to visit for pies, you also want to enjoy the meeting, and if you don’t want to communicate, then you start coming up with reasons so that guests don’t come to you. This is what they are doing now: they come up with reasons; it’s pointless to climb through a closed door, they don’t want to see us.

“As [rhythmic gymnastics federation head] Irina Viner said, they need us to surrender with a white flag, this is unacceptable for me and I think that for most athletes who have felt all this discrimination, too. But I cannot and will not decide for others, I will only say that for me state attributes are important values, without which I cannot imagine performing at competitions.

“Now the parameters that we consider unacceptable have been determined, perhaps something will change tomorrow. Then we will get together with you and the athletes and discuss where we end up. I’m not saying that the Olympic Games are completely closed for us, but based on what is happening now, including the invasion of bedbugs in Paris, the chances are approaching zero. Nevertheless, I don’t want to rule out that someone may be at the Olympics at their own risk.”

● Olympic Games 2028: Los Angeles ● Although not directly related to the 2028 Olympic Games, the Long Beach City Council unanimously approved (9-0) a $6.0 million expansion of the contract to design a new Belmont Beach and Aquatics Center on the site of the now-demolished Belmont Plaza Pool.

The new funding will allow architectural firm Harley Ellis Devereaux to complete the drawings set and ready the project for bidding. A 50 m pool with a side instructional and recreational pool is now planned at an estimated cost of $74.4 million, with $7.7 million still not accounted for. Construction could commence in late 2024, with a completion date in 2027 if all goes as planned. If completed, it could be a training site for the 2028 Games.

● Olympic Winter Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● The Italian newspaper Il Fatto QuotidianoThe Daily Fact – explained on Friday that the now-abandoned new sliding track for the 2026 Winter Games in Cortina d’Ampezzo has cost about €5 million (€1 = $1.07 U.S.) so far.

Most of this – about 90% – has gone for architectural and engineering studies, plus additional amounts for environmental monitoring, scale models of the project, a promotional video and so on, for the governmental building arm, Simico.

The story asks about another €2.5 million, which was set aside for a museum of the 1956 “Eugenio Monti” track used for the 1956 Winter Games. Prediction: “Probably nothing will happen again.”

● Russia ● What was apparently the fourth BRICS Games – standing for Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa – took place from 18-21 October in Durban (RSA), with Russian entries leading the medal table with 59 total medals (35-12-12), followed by China (55) and South Africa (51).

There were six sports on the program and 450 total athletes. Kazan (RUS) will host in 2024 from 12-23 June, just prior to the start of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

Continuing its use of sports as opportunities in foreign policy, Russian Sports Minister Oleg Matytsin said attendees at a Russian sports conference last week that his ministry to ready to help India with its 2036 Olympic ambitions:

“If our colleagues from India contact us, we are ready to share our experience, as part of interaction with the Indian Ministry of Sports and other organizations.”

Matytsin also said that Belarusian teams could soon be incorporated into Russian sports leagues:

“It is proposed to include Belarusian teams in [Russian] professional leagues in almost all team sports.

“Some experience has been accumulated; we will resolve regulatory issues. The most important thing is to determine which teams in Belarus are showing interest.”

● Athletics ● USA Track & Field has opened voting for its Jesse Owens and Jackie Joyner-Kersee athlete of the year awards, through 6 November. The nominees:

Men:
● Rai Benjamin (400 m hurdles) ~ Worlds silver, Diamond League champ
● Ryan Crouser (shot put) ~ World Champion, world record
● JuVaughn Harrison (high jump) ~ Worlds silver medalist
● Grant Holloway (110 m hurdles) ~ World Champion
● Noah Lyles (sprints) ~ World 100/200/4×100 m Champion
● Yared Nuguse (1,500 m) ~ American mile record of 3:43.97

Women:
● Chase Ealey (shot put) ~ World Champion
● Anna Hall (heptathlon) ~ Worlds silver medalist
● Alicia Monson (distances) ~ American records at 5,000-10,000 m
● Katie Moon (vault) ~ World Co-Champion
● Sha’Carri Richardson (sprints) ~ Worlds 100/4×100 m gold, 200 m bronze
● Lagi Tausaga-Collins (discus) ~ World Champion

Voting is also open for the top U.S. performer at the 2023 U.S. Nationals (one award) and at the 2023 World Championships (track and field awards).

● Gymnastics ● Good news for Olympic gymnastics star Mary Lou Retton, now at home amid her recovery from a rare form of pneumonia. Her daughter McKenna Kelley wrote on Instagram:

“Mom is HOME and in recovery mode. We still have a long road of recovery ahead of us, but baby steps.

“We are overwhelmed with the love and support from everyone. Grateful doesn’t scrape the surface of the posture of our hearts. Thank you Jesus, thank you doctors and nurses, thank you to this loving community of support.”

Retton, now 55, was hospitalized early this month; a crowdfunding site was set up with a goal to raise $50,000 in medical support funds, but has reached past $459,000 so far, from 8,319 donors.

Look for a world ranking system to come to artistic gymnastics in the near future. The FIG’s Competition Innovation Commission said as much after its mid-October meeting and last week’s announcement:

“Building on the work of the previous meetings and after receiving feedback from different stakeholders, the Commission has continued with the development of a proposal that considers the main FIG events in a global ranking and classification system.

“The Commission seeks, together with the Marketing Commission, to offer a product that will enhance the media exposure of gymnastics and simplify the information available to the general public.”

Gymnastics as a sport is one of the top three in Olympic interest, but has largely failed to generate any continuing interest between Games except for its annual World Championships.

● Swimming ● The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported last week that World Aquatics has been approached about moving the February 2024 World Aquatics Championships from Doha in view of Qatar’s multi-year support for Hamas in the wake of its attacks on Israel:

“Officials from Luxembourg, Czechia, Slovakia, Azerbaijan, the United Kingdom, Germany, and the Scandinavian countries are among those urging the World Aquatic Federation to relocate the tournament.”

Slovakian officials said its federation supports World Aquatics and its decision on the 2024 Worlds, already controversially placed in an Olympic year.

SwimSwam.com calculated the payouts for the now-completed, three-stage World Aquatics World Cup, with Backstroke world-record setter Kaylee McKeown (AUS) taking away $186,000:

● $100,000 as the top-ranked women’s swimmer
● $50,000 for world-record bonuses
● $36,000 for meet prize earnings

She was trailed in the women’s list by Freestyle star Siobhan Haughey (HKG) with $116,000, then Yufei Zhang (CHN) at $72,000. Katie Grimes was the top American at $10,800, in 12th position.

The men’s winner was China’s Haiyang Qin, who dominated the Breaststroke events, and won $166,000, including $100,000 for his top ranking, $30,000 for sweeping his events and $36,000 in meet prize money.

Next best was Italy’s versatile Thomas Ceccon ($116,000), then Matt Sates (RSA: $75,500) and American Michael Andrew ($43,000).

The total payment was listed as $1.416 million.

World Aquatics announced that McKeown and Qin were named as the federation’s Swimming Athletes of the Year.

Swimming Australia approved by 8-1 a new constitution on Friday that formally included an athlete commission and modified voting requirements and other governance issues mandated by World Aquatics:

“Importantly the new constitution brings Swimming Australia into line with [World Aquatics]’s constitutional requirements and the [Australia Sports Commission]’s good governance requirements and guidelines, while also creating an Athletes’ Commission which will, in an ongoing capacity, nominate candidates to be appointed to the Swimming Australia Board as the Athlete Director.”

Swimming Australia has been in turmoil, with four Presidents in the last three years and looking for a fourth chief executive since 2017. Australian mining billionaire Gina Rinehart was reported to have stopped her support for the federation in view of late payments to athletes and is now funding as many as 92 athletes directly.

● Triathlon ● The comeback saga of Rio 2016 Olympic champ Gwen Jorgensen to make the U.S. mixed-relay team for Paris received another boost with her win at the World Triathlon Cup Sprint race in Tongyeong (KOR).

Jorgensen, now 37, was 25 seconds behind out of the water, but with the leaders at the end of the bike phase. On the run, however, she stormed to the lead in the 5 km run and finished in 58:16 with the fastest run-time in the field by 17 seconds (16:30 to 16:47). She crossed four seconds up on Japan’s Yuko Takahashi (58:20).

This was Jorgensen’s 14th race of 2023 (!), with more coming, and her third World Cup win in the last two months. From nowhere, she is now ranked 45th in the World Triathlon standings, 53rd in its Olympic rankings and seventh among American women.

● Wrestling ● With 51 NCAA schools now sponsoring women’s wrestling teams and 45 more intending to create them, the sport is close to being approved as an NCAA championship sport:

“Women’s wrestling is on track to become the NCAA’s 91st NCAA championship, based on the latest sports sponsorship data released this month. …

“Women’s wrestling highlighted the six sports in the Emerging Sports for Women program, meeting the requirements to be considered for an NCAA championship. Specifically, more than 40 schools sponsored women’s wrestling at the varsity level and met the sport’s minimum competition and participant requirements in the 2022-23 academic year. The sport’s growth puts it on track to become the sixth sport to earn NCAA championship status through the Emerging Sports for Women program, joining rowing (1996), ice hockey (2000), water polo (2000), bowling (2003) and beach volleyball (2015).”

Adding wrestling has been a long-term project for USA Wrestling, already fielding the no. 2 women’s program in the world, behind only Japan, and allied organizations, with the initial efforts in 2017. Said Ragean Hill, Committee on Women’s Athletics Chair and Executive Associate Athletics Director at Charlotte:

“What women’s wrestling has accomplished in a short period of time is exceptional. They are a model practice on how to move the needle forward.”

United World Wrestling announced that the government of Albania refused to grant entry visas to the Iranian team for the UWW U-23 World Championships which started Monday:

“United World Wrestling expresses its deep disappointment to announce that Team Iran after sudden diplomatic crisis has been denied visas by Albania for the U23 World Championships in Tirana, scheduled to take place from October 23 to 29.

“Both the Albanian Wrestling Federation and UWW worked tirelessly to facilitate the necessary visa issuance for all participating teams, including the Iranian wrestlers. Despite the efforts, the authorities denied Team Iran its right to participate in the tournament.”

Albania, a Muslim-majority country, has had diplomatic relations with Israel since 1949, but severed its relations with Iran in September 2022. The Worlds U-23 tournament is going on as scheduled.

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TSX REPORT: Pan American Games open with U.S. gold rush; two swimming world records for McKeown; Olympic pin cartoon tie-ins coming!

Opening of the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago, with Olympic tennis champions Fernando Gonzales (l) and Nicolas Massu, and 1951 Pan Ams silver medalist Lucy Lopez (c) lighting the cauldron! (Photo: Panam Sports via Xpress Media)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Pan Am Games opens, with U.S. piling up the medals
2. McKeown claims two world records at World Cup
3. IOC rejects Putin’s “ethnic discrimination” slap
4. Commonwealth Games 2026 cost explosion was real
5. Olympic pin maker reveals tie-in with Looney Tunes, Peanuts

● The 19th Pan American Games opened in Santiago, Chile, with the cauldron lit by Chile’s first Olympic gold medalists and a silver medalist from the first Pan Ams in 1951! The U.S. immediately started earning medals, with 46 won in the first 55 events through Sunday.

● Australia’s Kaylee McKeown, winner of two Olympic Backstroke golds, set world records in the 50 m and 100 m Backstrokes at the final World Aquatics Swimming World Cup, in Budapest, Hungary. She now owns the world marks in all three Backstroke events.

● The International Olympic Committee slapped back at Russian President Vladimir Putin’s accusation of “ethnic discrimination” last week, and pointed out other glaring errors in his hostile remarks to a sports conference held in Russia.

● Testimony at an Australian Senate hearing explained that the cost explosion which led to the withdrawal of Victoria as the host of the 2026 Commonwealth Games was real, centered mostly in construction costs for the athlete village and the creation of temporary sites for some of the other events. The issue came to a head about a month before the withdrawal last July.

● The owner of Honav USA, the Olympic pin-making giant, told the Olympin Collectors Club Festival in California that new designs are coming that will include characters from new licensing agreements with Warner Bros. for its “Looney Tunes” characters and with “Peanuts.”

World Championships: Curling (Sweden wins Mixed Worlds title) = Rugby (Perennial powers New Zealand and South Africa in World Cup final) ●

Panorama: Athletics (Kandie runs fourth-fastest Half ever in Valencia) = Badminton (China wins four at Denmark Open) = Curling (Jones and Retornaz win at Grand Slam opener in Niagara Falls) = Cycling (Lavreysen sweeps Champions League men’s Sprint) = Figure Skating (Malinin, Chock & Bates star at Skate America) = Freestyle & Snowboard (2: Chur Big Air opener sees Japan sweep in snowboard) = Football (2: Reggae Girlz strike against federation for back pay and more; Canada’s Sinclair retires) = Gymnastics (Retton recovering, but with a setback last week) = Short Track (Santos-Griswold wins at World Cup opener) ●

1.
Pan Am Games opens, with U.S. piling up the medals

The XIX Pan American Games opened in Santiago, Chile on Friday, with a crowd of 35,000-plus watching 41 national delegations march into the Estadio Nacional.

Chilean cyclist Catalina Soto took the Athlete Oath and the Pan American Flame was brought into the stadium on a cold night by five-time Pan Am women’s swimming medalist Kristel Kobrich, who handed to footballer Ivan Zamorano, who handed to Olympic shooting medalist Alfonso de Iruarrizaga. He passed the torch to 2004 Olympic tennis Doubles champions Nicolas Massu and Fernando Gonzalez, winners of Chile’s first-ever Olympic golds. They were joined by 93-year-old Lucy Lopez, the women’s high jump silver medalist at the first Pan American Games in 1951 and a volunteer at the 2023 Pan Am Games, and the trio lit the Pan American Cauldron together.

The first gold medal of the Games was awarded to Canada’s Gunnar Holmgren in the Mountain Bike race (1:17:59 for the seven-lap course), ahead of Chile’s Martin Vidaurre (+0:53). The first women’s gold went to American Kaitlyn Reclusado in the Taekwondo Poomsae event.

And the U.S. team started winning a lot more medals, 20 on the first day alone and 45 by the mid-point of the second full day on Sunday. The 20 American gold-medal winners through Sunday’s events:

Cycling: Kamren Larsen, men’s BMX
Cycling: Kristen Faulkner, women’s road Time Trial
Gymnastics: Men’s Team
Gymnastics: Women’s Team
Roller: Taylor Nye, Skateboard Park
Shooting: Sagen Maddalena, women’s 10 m Air Rifle
Shooting: Vincent Hancock, men’s Skeet
Sport Climbing: Piper Kelly, women’s Speed
Sport Climbing: Sam Watson, men’s Speed
Swimming: Coby Carrozza, men’s 200 m Free
Swimming: Jack Aikins, men’s 200 m Back
Swimming: Jacob Foster, men’s 100m Breast
Swimming: Lukas Miller, men’s 100 m Fly
Swimming: Mason Laur, men’s 200 m Fly
Swimming: Paige Madden, women’s 400 m Free
Swimming: Kennedy Noble, women’s 200 m Back
Swimming: Dakota Luther, women’s 200 m Fly
Taekwondo: Khalfani Harris, men’s 68 kg
Taekwondo: Carl Nickolas, men’s 80 kg
Taekwondo: Kaitlyn Reclusado, women’s Poomsae

Hancock, now 34, the three-time Olympic champ in Skeet in 2008-12-20, won his third PanAm gold in Skeet, after prior wins in 2007 and 2011.

Overall, the U.S. has 46 medals in 55 events (20-11-15), followed by Brazil (23: 5-9-9), Canada (21: 9-6-6), Mexico (18: 10-5-3) and Colombia (14: 3-5-6).

Gymnastics star Jordan Chiles and Hancock carried the flag for the U.S. delegation in the Opening Ceremony.

Diving, swimming, track cycling, shooting, taekwondo and wrestling are the busiest sports in the first week; track & field starts on the 29th.

The Pan Ams continue through 5 November and can be streamed live on the Panam Sports channel (sign-in required).

2.
McKeown claims two world records at World Cup

Backstroke star Kaylee McKeown of Australia has had a busy 2023. Already the Tokyo Olympic gold medalist in the 100 and 200 m Backstrokes, she tripled at the Fukuoka Worlds, taking the 50-100-200 m Back titles and also set the world record in the 200 m Back in March at 2:03.14.

But she closed her year with two bolts of lightning at the World Aquatics World Cup III in Budapest (HUN), setting world marks in the 50 and 100 m Back events on Friday and Saturday.

First up was the 50 m on Friday, and McKeown crushed the 2018 world mark of 26.98 by China’s Xiang Liu, touching in 26.86! McKeown was already no. 2 all-time coming in at 27.02, but grabbed her third career world record. Canadians Ingrid Wilm and Kylie Masse tied for a distant second in 27.68.

The 100 m Back was on Saturday, with McKeown already the world-record holder at 57.45 from the 2021 Australian Olympic Trials. She crushed a good field, touching at 50 m just behind her world-record pace from 2021 in 28.15 (vs. 28.10), then came home in 29.18 to finish in a world record of 57.33, giving her the five fastest times in history.

Masse and Wilm were 2-3, finishing in 59.26 and 59.64, nowhere close.

McKeown now owns the world marks in all three Backstroke events and has four career individual world records to her credit. In Paris, however, only the 100 and 200 m events will be contested.

But she wasn’t done and won the 200 m Back on Sunday in a World Cup record of 2:04.81, the equal-16th fastest ever, and she has 10 of those.

There were more strong performers, including Tokyo 100-200 m Free silver medalist Siobhan Haughey of Hong Kong, who won the 100-200 m Frees; Benedetta Pilatto (ITA) took the 50-100 m Breast events; 100 m Fly World Champion Yufei Zhang (CHN) won the 100-200 m Flys, and only she has bettered her 100 m winning time of 56.13 this season.

Swedish sprint icon Sarah Sjostrom (SWE) won the 50 m Free and 50 m Fly, and only she has been faster this year that her 23.97 50 m Free winner.

Two men won three events each: China’s Haiyang Qin in the 50-100-200 m Breast events, and South African Matt Sates in the 200 m Fly and 200-400 m Medleys. American Michael Andrew won the only U.S. golds, in the 50 m Back and 50 m Fly. Italy’s Thomas Ceccon, the 2022 Worlds 100 m Back winner, won that event and the 100 m Free.

Two “neutral” athletes won medals, both from Belarus: Anastasiya Shkurdai, silver in the women’s 200 m Back, and Alina Zmushka, bronze in the 50 m Breast.

In the overall World Cup points race, McKeown won the women’s division (of course) with 177.4 points, ahead of Haughey (166.4) and China’s Zhang (166.2). Qin, the breaststroke star, took the men’s division with 175.4 points, followed by Ceccon (167.9) and Sates with 166.8.

3.
IOC rejects Putin’s “ethnic discrimination” slap

At last week’s “Russia: A Sports Power” conference in Perm, near the Ural Mountains, Russian President Vladimir Putin continued slamming the International Olympic Committee, telling the attendees:

“We learned that an invitation to the [Olympic] Games is not an unconditional right of the best athletes, but a kind of ‘privilege,’ and it can be earned not by sports results, but by some political gestures that have nothing to do with sports at all, and that the Games themselves can be used as a tool of political pressure against people who have nothing to do with politics, as gross and in fact racist, ethnic discrimination.”

And he continued his campaign against the West and sport:

“What is happening in modern international sports organizations are signs of degeneration. It is very commercialized, which means it is very dependent on business, and business depends on authorities at various levels, political structures of various countries. This is and there are signs of degeneration.”

While the IOC has generally ignored most Russian comments on sanctions, this one drew a sharp response. Reuters reported an IOC statement on Friday which included:

● “Participation in the Olympic Games is by no means a human right and the recent amendment of the Olympic Charter [at the IOC Session] is not related to it. … We firmly reject the accusations being made that these measures are an ‘ethnic discrimination’.”

● “The strict conditions the IOC has defined in its recommendations to the International Federations for the participation of individual neutral athletes with a Russian or Belarusian passport in international competitions are compliant with the Olympic Charter.

“They are a reaction to the breach of the Olympic Charter by the Russian and Belarusian governments.”

Under current chief Thomas Bach (GER), the IOC has made anti-discrimination a leading focus, hence its sensitivity on the issue. The recent changes to the Charter incorporated references to “internationally recognized human rights” in the “Fundamental Principles of Olympism.”

The IOC’s recommendations in March told the International Federations that the only Russian or Belarusian athletes who could be considered for neutral status cannot include those “contracted to the Russian or Belarusian military or national security agencies” or those “who actively support the war” against Ukraine. And all team entries are prohibited.

The Russian Olympic Committee was suspended by the IOC during its recent 141st Session in India for incorporating sports organizations in eastern Ukraine areas which have been overrun by Russia during the invasion.

This is only going to get nastier.

4.
Commonwealth Games 2026 cost explosion was real

An Australian Senate Select Committee hearing into the stunning July withdrawal of Victoria to host the 2026 Commonwealth Games was told that the A$2.6 billion government share of the cost was not even close to the actual need. (A$1 = $0.63 U.S.)

Jeremi Moule, the Secretary for the Department of Premier and Cabinet for Victoria told the committee:

“By April 2023, following extensive design and market consultation processes, it was emerging that costs were shaping up to be significantly higher than expected. The estimate of gross cost at this time exceeded $4.5 billion, not including transport and policing costs nor having fully costed other risks.

“The [Office of the Commonwealth Games] and Victoria 2026 were asked to report back to government in June with options to reduce costs and maintain legacy outcomes within the $2.6 billion net state budget envelope, or approximately $3.6 billion in gross costs.”

“This work was tracking towards a likely meeting in mid-June. This was a critical juncture because, although there had been considerable effort expended and some sunk costs, no major infrastructure contracts had been signed as the expanded budget requests had not been considered by government.

“My department was aware that the estimated cost from the OCG and Victoria 2026 as well as other costs, such as transport and policing, were close to $5 billion, without including risk factors and other pressures.

“[The Department of Premier and Cabinet] subsequently received further analysis from OCG and Vic 26 that included cost implications if the risks materialised. Essentially if the risks were weighted at 50 per cent, the costs would likely reach or exceed $6 billion. If they were weighted at 100 per cent, the cost would be closer to $7 billion.

“Independently both DPC and the Department of Treasury and Finance formed the view that there was a very high probability that the risks would be realised; in fact DTF formed the view that it was prudent to rate them all at 100 per cent.”

Moule testified that the first time a withdrawal was considered by the Victoria government was on 14 June, and a law firm was hired to determine the state’s options.

Tim Ada, the Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Regions Secretary explained the specific areas of risk:

● “It is clear now with the benefit of hindsight that the business case prepared in early 2022 did not reflect the true cost of delivering a sporting program spread across five cities or anticipate the significant cost escalation that has been experienced in the construction sector.”

“The main drivers of the additional costs related to villages and competition venues but also temporary overlays, which are, as the name suggests, physical requirements that are established just for the purpose of the games. They were the three main cost drivers of why we saw a significant increase in budget over the course of the last sort of 15 months.”

And Allen Garner, the former chief executive of the government’s Office of the Commonwealth Games, told the committee about the cost explosion:

“There are a lot of significant drivers that feed into it. You can start from the top down. The biggest areas that moved were the games villages – a significant cost increase. The major venues – there was a cost increase, which the government had announced previous even to me coming along, the cost of those. And the organising committee costs to run the games had gone up. So three big pockets. Then underneath that there are a lot of minor parts that make that up.”

The Victoria government announced its withdrawal on 14 July and negotiated an A$380 million exit fee with the Commonwealth Games Federation and Commonwealth Games Australia.

5.
Olympic pin maker reveals tie-in with Looney Tunes, Peanuts

The 2023 Olympin Club Festival, the annual meet-up of the most devoted Olympic pin collectors, traders and seller, was held in Marina del Rey, California on 13 October with 40 busy tables, including Honav USA, the Southern California-based company which holds the license to make today’s Olympic pins.

And the pin trade is about to explode way beyond organizing committees, National Olympic Committees and sponsors.

Mario Simonson, owner of Honav USA, addressed the Olympin Collector’s Club at the festival, with a look ahead to what’s coming.

“One thing we’ve all talked about, is trying to get the younger generation involved. … We just signed with Warner Bros. and with Peanuts, so in first quarter you’re going to be seeing all these pins coming out that are going to be collab’d with the Olympics and Warner Bros. ‘Looney Tunes.’ We’re really excited about that. We already have the designs with the IOC and the Olympics, so we’re getting those all approved now, they’ll go into production and they’ll be coming out first quarter.

“Same with Peanuts. So having Snoopy and Woodstock, it’ll be really cool. I have an original Charles Schulz in my house and I’m excited about that. … [It] does [get] the younger generation excited, so we’re going to be doing a lot more pin sets, numbered, collectibility pins with those.”

The “Looney Tunes” franchise includes more than a dozen characters, including Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Road Runner, Foghorn Leghorn and so on.

Simonson explained that Honav will be creating a pin-trading center for Paris in 2024, as Coca-Cola will not be organizing it. The location will be in or around the USA House at the massive Palais Brongniart, which served as the Paris Stock Exchange until 1987, with the details still being worked out.

And Honav has expanded its support of the Olympic Movement:

“We also became the global licensee for [IOC] sponsors and NOCs, so that’s something that I’m working on some more global retail with them.

“Also, we are the exclusive – all the way through ‘28, including Milan [2026] – and that’s going to be in the host country, so we’ll be a little different than Paris. For Paris, we’re not the licensee in the host country, but in Milan we will and, of course, ‘28.

“In LA28, we will be doing the official pin-trading center and also activation sites all over the area, that if you come here, you get a pin, you get a pin, you get a pin, you bring it back to the pin-trading center, you get another pin, for free. … We’re going to have mystery packs, we’re going to be doing stuff like that with Warner Bros. and Peanuts products, so that will be a lot of fun.”

Simonson also noted the importance of his relationship with the Olympin Club and the collectors: “I might own the company, I might make all the pins, but really knowing what you guys want in a pin is really valuable to us.”

Honav and Olympin are already working together; club members receive a discount on Honav’s pins, and Simonson said that the members will receive first crack at some of the new releases, including some limited-editions runs of only about 1,000.

The show itself was eclectic, with lots of pins, but also other memorabilia, including an impressive array of collectibles from multiple Olympic Games of the late Los Angeles County Superior Court Carlos Velarde, who passed away in 2018, but actually attended the 1932 Olympic Games in Los Angeles at age three!

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Curling ● Sweden won its first-ever title at the seventh World Curling Mixed Team Championship at Aberdeen (SCO) on Saturday, defeating Spain in the final by 8-2.

Sweden, Canada, Spain and Norway were all undefeated in pool play and advanced directly to the quarterfinals. The Swedes dispensed with Belgium (7-2), Canada (7-4) and moved into the final. The Spanish, with Sergio Vez as skip, defeated Japan (6-4) and edged Norway (4-3) to make it to the championship round.

The final was tight through four ends and tied, 2-2, but the Swedes came up with three points in the fifth and sixth ends to win easily.

It’s the first title for Sweden and skip Johan Nygren, with Jennie Wahlin, Fredrik Carlsen and Fanny Sjoberg. Sweden was the runner-up in the first two Worlds, in 2015 and 2016, and Wahlin was a member of the 2016 squad. Spain and Vez were runner-ups for the second time, losing to Canada in 2018.

Three-time defending champs Canada, with Felix Asselin as Skip, won the bronze by 4-3 over Norway, for a medal in their fifth straight Mixed Worlds. The U.S., skipped by Jed Brundidge, was second on its group, but lost in the qualification round to Australia, 8-7, and finished ninth.

● Rugby ● After almost seven weeks, the final of the 10th Rugby World Cup in France is set, with no. 1-ranked New Zealand (5-1) to face no. 2 South Africa (5-1) on 28 October at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis.

These traditional powers have, between them, won the last four Rugby World Cups – two each – with South Africa defending its title from 2019.

On Friday, the All-Blacks from New Zealand had no trouble in their semifinal, routing seventh-ranked Argentina by 44-6. Kiwi star forward Will Jordan scored a try in the 11th minute, followed by Jordan Barrett in the 17th for an 11-3 lead, which ballooned to 19-6 at halftime. Shannon Frizell got a second try in the 49th and Jordan scored in the 62nd and 73rd for a hat trick, with Argentina held scoreless.

Saturday’s match between no. 5 England – which came in 5-0 – and South Africa was exactly the opposite. No tries were scored in the first half, which saw Owen Farrell convert four penalties for England for 12 points, to six for the Springboks. Farrell added a drop kick in the 53rd to extend the lead to 15-6, but Rudy Snyman finally got loose for a try in the 69th, and the conversion closed the lead to 15-13. Handre Pollard’s penalty kick in the 78th was the difference in a 16-15 victory.

New Zealand has won the title three times (1987-2011-2015) as has South Africa in 1995-2007-2019. The two have met in the final once before, with South Africa winning, 15-12 in extra time, in 1995.

Argentina and England will play in the third-place match on Friday, also in Saint-Denis.

At the same time as the Rugby World Cup is heading toward the finish, the International Wheelchair Rugby World Cup was played from 18-22 October, also in Paris, at the Accor Arena. No. 2-ranked Australia won the title from Canada in the final, 53-48, while Japan defeated France, 50-49, in the bronze-medal game. It’s another demonstration of how the Paralympic world is becoming more closely attached to able-bodied sports events. 

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Athletics ● A brilliant win for Kenya’s 2020 Worlds silver medalist Kibiwott Kandie at the Valencia Half Marathon in Spain, winning in a world-leading 57:40, the fourth-fastest race in history, just ahead of Ethiopians Yomif Kejelcha (57:41) and World 5 km Champion Hagos Gebrhiwet (57:41).

The first 5km was covered in 13:43 and Kandie, Kejelcha, Gebrhiwet and Tokyo Olympic 10,000 m winner Selemon Barega (ETH) passed 10 km in a ridiculous 27:15, on world-record pace. The same four passed 15 km in 41:01. Barega fell back after 19 km, and Worlds 5 km runner-up Kejelcha took the lead, but Kandie surged with less than 400 m to go and won by a second.

Kandie ran a then-world record 57:32 in 2020, but his run is the fourth-fastest ever; Kejelcha and Gebrhiwet are now the nos. 3-4 performers in history with the fifth-fastest performances ever. Barega was fourth in 57:50, now the no. 6 performer ever.

Kenyan Margaret Chelimo broke away from countrywoman Irine Cheptai in the final kilometer and won in a lifetime best of 1:04:46, moving to equal-ninth on the all-time list and equal-second in 2023. Cheptai finished in 1:04:53, now no. 13.

● Badminton ● China placed finalists in four events in the BWF World Tour Denmark Open in Odense, and won them all, including a match-up of Olympic champions.

Hong Yang Weng (CHN) took the men’s Singles title by defeating Zii Ja Lee (MAS), 21-12, 21-6, and Tokyo 2020 Olympic winner Yu Fei Chen (CHN) won the women’s Singles in a match with Rio 2016 Olympic champ, Carolina Marin (ESP), 21-14, 21-19.

Top-seeded Qing Chen Chen and Yi Fan Jia (CHN) won the women’s Doubles with a 21-16, 21-13 sweep over Japan’s Nami Matsuyama and Chiharu Shida (JPN). In the all-China Mixed Doubles final, top-seeded Si Wei Zhang and Ya Qiong Huang needed three sets to overcome Yan Zhe Feng and Dong Ping Huang (CHN), 16-21, 21-15, 26-24.

The men’s Doubles final saw Aaron Chia and Wooi Yik Soh (MAS) sweep aside Muhammad Fikri and Bagas Maulana (INA), 21-13, 21-17.

Next up is the French Open in Rennes.

● Curling ● The opening tournament of the new Grand Slam of Curling season is the Tour Challenge in Niagara Falls, Ontario (CAN), with an impressive string of wins for Canadian star Jennifer Jones’ rink.

Jones, the 2014 Olympic gold medalist, came out a 7-4 winner over Kaitlyn Lawes‘ rink in the women’s final. Her squad had a tough road to the last match, beating four-time defending Swiss World Champion Silvana Tirinzoni‘s team in the quarters, 7-4, and then Anna Hasselborg (SWE) and her 2018 Olympic champs in the semis, 7-5. Jones got up early in the final on Lawes, 3-1, after two ends, but Lawes got close at 4-3 after four. But two points for Jones in the fifth was decisive on the way to the 7-4 final.

In the taut men’s final, it was 1-1 after four ends between Italian Joel Retornaz, the 2022 Worlds bronze medalist and five-time Grand Slam tournament winner Brendan Bottcher (CAN). Retornaz managed points in the fifth end and then in the seventh for a 3-1 edge, but Bottcher tied it in the eighth, requiring an extra end. But Retornaz managed a point in the ninth for the 4-3 win.

It’s Retornaz’s second career Grand Slam tournament win.

● Cycling ● The first leg of the UCI Track Champions League was in Mallorca (ESP), with Tokyo Olympic Sprint winner Harrie Lavreysen (NED) taking the men’s Sprint division, beating France’s Tom Derache in the Sprint final and then out-dueling 2023 World Champion Kevin Quintero (COL) and Commonwealth Games Sprint champ Matthew Richardson (AUS) in the Keirin.

Lavreysen finished with 40 points to 30 for Derache and 26 for Richardson.

The women’s Sprint class was tight, with German Alessa-Catriona Propster winning with 35 points, to 32 for Colombia’s two-time Worlds Keirin runner-up Martha Bayona and 30 for Keirin World Champion Ellesse Andrews (NZL). Propster surprised World Champion Emma Finucane (GBR) in the Sprint final, with Andrews beating Propster in the Keirin final.

The men’s Endurance class saw Japan’s Eiya Hashimoto win decisively with 31 points to 25 for Dylan Bibic (CAN). Hashimoto, competing in his first Champions League event, came from behind to win the Scratch race from Mark Stewart (GBR) in the final laps. After a crash of all seven finalists required a re-start in the Elimination race, Worlds silver medalist Bibic won over William Tidball (GBR), the 2023 Worlds Scratch gold medalist.

American Lily Williams won the women’s Scratch final over five-time Worlds gold medalist Katie Archibald (GBR), but Archibald winning the Elimination final over Anita Stenberg (NOR), with Williams third. That was enough to give Archibald the Endurance title by 37-35 over the American, with Stenberg third (30).

● Figure Skating ● Ilia Malinin and the Ice Dance pair of Madison Chock and Evan Bates scored impressive home wins at Skate America in Allen, Texas, in the first stage of the ISU Grand Prix.

Malinin, still just 18, scored a lifetime best of 310.47 to win the men’s title, and got a personal-best Free Skate score of 206.41 to defend his 2022 Skate America win. He included four quadruple jumps in his Free Skate routine (no quad-Axel, however), after scoring 104.06 in the Short Program that included two quadruple jumps. Said the winner:

“I was really not expecting this outcome. I’m still speechless.

“I have no words to explain how I really feel. It’s just a mix of emotions. I’ve put in so many hours, and I think that it really paid off that I took a lot of time to focus on everything, to try to improve everything, to try to have the least possible amount of mistakes in the program. And overall, I’m really happy with how I did today.”

A distant second was France’s Kevin Aymoz (279.09), with Shun Sato (JPN: 247.50) third. American Andrew Torgashev was seventh (219.67).

Malinin’s score was the eighth-highest in history, and he stands as the no. 4 performer ever, behind Nathan Chen of the U.S. and Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu and Shoma Uno.

Chock and Bates, the 2023 World Champions, won both the Rhythm Dance and Free Dance segments by 7.07 and 8.90 points to rack up a 212.96 to 196.99 win over Marjorie Lajoie and Zachary Lagha of Canada, with Evgeniia Lopareva and Geoffrey Brissaud (FRA: 193.47) third and Americans Caroline Green and Michael Parsons fourth (185.07).

It’s the third career win for Chock and Bates at Skate America, but their first since 2014 and 2015!

Belgium’s Worlds bronze medalist Leona Hendrickx led the women’s competition after the Short Program, 75.92 to 71.45 for Amber Glenn of the U.S. and 70.07 for American champ Isabeau Levito. She followed up by taking the Free Skate with 145.36 to 138.08 for Levito and a 221.28 to 208.15 overall win over Levito.

It’s Hendrickx’s second career Grand Prix win, after the Grand Prix de France in 2022. Levito repeated her runner-up finish at Skate America and got her third career Grand Prix medal. Glenn fell to fifth in the Free Skate and ended up fifth (189.63), with Niina Petrokina (EST) moving up to the bronze medal at 194.55.

In the Pairs, Germany’s 2023 European bronze medalists Annika Hocke and Robert Kunkel won both the Short Program and Free Skate to eke out a 184.23 to 182.59 victory over Lia Pereira and Trennt Michaud (CAN). The U.S. went 3-4-5 with Chelsea Liu and Balazs Nagy (177.66), Valentina Plazas and Maximiliano Fernandez (157.08) and Isabelle Martins and Ryan Bedard (154.66).

Next on the schedule is the Skate Canada International, in Vancouver.

● Football ●It is with great disappointment that we share that the 2023 World Cup roster will not be participating in the upcoming October international window for the first-ever Women’s Gold Cup Qualifiers.

“While this has been one of the hardest decisions we have had to make, we feel it is necessary to take such a drastic stance to put an end to the constant mistreatment we receive from the Jamaica Football Federation. …

“Due to the current circumstances the JFF has put us in, we would not be able to do our job. We take out stance in solidarity with hope to end this cycle of mistreatment.”

That’s from an Instagram post by Jamaican midfielder Drew Spence on behalf of the Reggae Girlz, who will not play against Panama on 26 October or Guatemala on 29 October. The post further notes that the players have not been paid for their Women’s World Cup qualification, received information about staff changes from outside the federation and a lack of organization and management.

The Jamaican federation has called up a less-experienced roster for the two upcoming games.

Canadian great Christine Sinclair said Friday that she will retire from national team play at the end of the year, but will continue to play one more season in the NWSL with the Portland Thorns.

Sinclair, now 40, has scored 190 goals in 327 national-team matches, the most by any player, and expects to play two more matches near the end of the year in the international match window. She began her national team career in 2000 and won an Olympic gold with Canada at the Tokyo Games in 2021.

She told Reuters, “Honestly, you can’t play forever. And this seems like a good time to be done.”

● Freestyle Skiing & Snowboard ● The weather played a major role in the season-opening Big Air competitions in Chur (SUI), with the Freestyle finals wiped out by heavy winds on Friday.

So, the results from Thursday’s qualifying round were used, with Canadian Dylan Deschamps, 20, getting his first career World Cup medal – and the win – scoring 93.66, ahead of Daniel Bacher (AUT: 92.66) and defending champ Birk Ruud (NOR: 92.00), the 2022 Olympic Champion.

American Troy Podmilsak, the 2023 World Champion, was fourth (91.66).

The women’s winner was home favorite Mathilde Grimaud (SUI: 95.50), the Beijing 2022 bronze winner, beating 2023 World Champion Tess Ledeux (FRA: 94.00) and fellow Swiss Sarah Hoefflin (91.75), the 2018 Olympic Slopestyle winner.

The situation was better for the snowboarders and Saturday’s Big Air event was able to be completed, with a men’s sweep for Japan, by 18-year-old Hiroto Ogiwara (171.50), Kira Kimura (168.00) and defending champion Takeru Otsuka (167.50). American Sean Fitzsimmons was fifth (145.75).

It’s also Ogiwara’s first career World Cup medal, and victory.

Japan nearly swept all the medals, with 18-year-old Kokomo Murase (179.25) and Reira Iwabuchi (175.50) going 1-2 in the women’s final, with Great Britain’s Mia Brookes third (169.75)! It’s Murase’s second career World Cup Big Air win, as she took the title in Chur in 2021; she also has two wins in Slopestyle. Iwabuchi, 21, won her 14th career World Cup medal.

● Gymnastics ● The last update from Mary Lou Retton’s family was on Wednesday, with an Instagram video from daughter Shayla Schrepfer, who explained that Retton’s recovery in a Houston hospital from a rare form of pneumonia was going well, but:

“But then yesterday we had a pretty scary setback. She is still in ICU and we’re just working through some things as far as her setback goes.

“She had a better day today, which is great, [she’s] just really, really exhausted.”

Retton, now 55, the 1984 Olympic gold medalist in the women’s gymnastics All-Around, has touched the public. Her family’s fund-raising appeal for $50,000 in support, has reached $459,304 by mid-day on Sunday, from 8,319 donors.

● Short Track ● American Kristin Santos-Griswold emerged as a force on the ISU World Cup circuit last season, winning seven medals in all, and picked up right where she left off in World Cup I in Montreal (CAN).

She picked up her first World Cup win since 31 October 2021 with a victory in the women’s 1,000 m in 1:31.288, ahead of Korea’s So-youn Lee (1:43.214), as the rest of the field crashed! Santos-Griswold said later:

“It was a crazy race, I’ve never been in one where everyone has crashed before. I don’t think most people have. I saw it and just thought, ‘no, don’t call it back’. I wish it was different and everyone had stayed on their feet, but I felt like I had the win either way. I’m really happy with how I skated.”

She wasn’t finished, winning a bronze in the second 1,000 m race in 1:31.168, behind Gil-li Kim (KOR: 1:30.998) and Belgian Hanne Desmet, the 2023 European 1,000 m gold medalist.

Teammate Corinne Stoddard won a third medal for the U.S. in the 1,500 m in 2:18.104, behind Desmet (2:27.863) and Kim (2:28.012). Reigning World Champion Xandra Velzeboer (NED) won the 500 m in 41.961, ahead of teammate Selma Poutsma (42.081).

Korea’s Ji-won Park, the 1,000 and 1,500 m Worlds winner in 2023, took the 1,000 m in 1:24.903, beating Canadian Worlds bronze medalist Steven Dubois (1:24.916). Teammate Gun-woo Kim won the second 1,000 m race in 1:26.712 with Park fourth, and Dae-heon Hwan, the Beijing 2022 Olympic gold medalist, won the 1,500 m in 2:23.666 ahead of Stijn Desmet (BEL, Hanne’s brother) at 2:23.789.

China’s Shaoang Liu, who won the Beijing Olympic 500 m in 2022 for Hungary, won his specialty in 40.875, ahead of Canadian Felix Roussel (40.895).

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TSX REPORT: Pan Am Games start in Chile today; Russia now focused on 2028 Olympics; Swiss committee unveils 2030 Winter Games plan

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Pan American Games start in Chile tomorrow
2. Russia focusing on 2028; “neutrals” called a disgrace
3. Swiss Olympic shares national “203X” Games plan
4. Winter season starts with Skate America in Texas
5. Gold Coast mayor trying to save 2026 Commonwealth Games

● The 19th edition of the Pan American Games opens in Santiago, Chile on Friday with a gala opening ceremony and then competition in 39 sports over two weeks. The U.S. will lead the medal count again and has a giant, 631-athlete team competing.

● The head of the Russian Olympic Committee told a conference audience in Russia that he is focusing on LA28 and now on Paris in view of sanctions. History says that the decision on whether any Russian athlete accepts “neutral” status for Paris could come from Vladimir Putin.

● The Swiss Olympic committee unveiled its feasibility study for a 2030 Winter Games bid, with events placed across the country and existing accommodations used instead of an Olympic Village. The decision on a formal bid will come in November.

● The winter sports season gets underway this weekend with the annual Skate America competition, this year in the Dallas area. Headliners include U.S. teen sensation Ilia Malinin and Ice Dance World Champions Madison Chock and Evan Bates.

● While the Australian state of Victoria gave back the Commonwealth Games in July, the mayor of Gold Coast – where the 2018 event was held – wants to take it over. But he faces an uphill fight with the Queensland government, more focused on the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games.

World Championships: Rugby (World Cup finishes in France this weekend) ●

Panorama: Paris 2024 (French financial prosecutors visit Paris 2024 offices again) = Israel (events being relocated away from Israel due to war) = Athletics (five more doping suspensions reported)

1.
Pan American Games start in Chile tomorrow

The XIX Pan American Games will start in and around Santiago, Chile on Friday (20th), with competitions in 39 sports, 425 events and 6,909 athletes from 41 countries expected, competing in 39 venues.

Swimming and Artistic Gymnastics will highlight the first week, with track and field and wrestling anchoring the second week. Olympic qualifying is a major focus of multiple sports on the Pan Am program:

● Direct qualification in nine sports or disciplines: artistic swimming, breaking, boxing, gymnastics (rhythmic and trampoline), hockey (men & women), modern pentathlon, sport climbing, team handball and water polo (men & women).

● Quota qualification in seven sports or disciplines: archery, diving, equestrian jumping, table tennis, sailing and shooting.

There is no doubt about the medal leader; it will be the U.S. For the Pan American Games in this century, it has been no contest:

2003: United States, 271; Cuba, 152; Canada, 128, in Santo Domingo (DOM).
2007: United States, 237; Brazil, 157; Canada, 138, in Rio de Janeiro (BRA).
2011: United States, 237; Brazil, 141; Cuba, 136, in Guadalajara (MEX).
2015: United States, 265; Canada, 219; Brazil, 141, in Toronto (CAN).
2019: United States, 293; Brazil, 169; Canada, 152, in Lima (PER).

The U.S. is sending a massive team to Santiago, with 631 total athletes in 43 disciplines out of 46, some 93 Olympians and 45 prior Pan American Games gold medalists. There are 13 Olympic gold medalists on the team, including Lee Kiefer (Tokyo: fencing), Vincent Hancock (Tokyo: shooting), Brooks Curry (Tokyo: swimming), Rio wrestling champs Helen Maroulis and Kyle Snyder, Beijing equestrians Laura Kraut and McClain Ward, and six members of the Tokyo women’s water polo champions: Maggie Steffens, Maddie Musselman, Ashleigh Johnson, Kaleigh Gilchrist, Rachel Fattal and Amanda Longan.

The Games will be shown in the U.S. on the PanAm Sports streaming channel live.

2.
Russia focusing on 2028; “neutrals” called a disgrace

“We have set the aim of competing in Los Angeles.

“I’m sure that the sanctions would be lifted by that time and the present-day approach would be altered. It is already being altered.”

That’s Russian Olympic Committee chief Stanislav Pozdnyakov, speaking at a sports conference in Perm (RUS) on Thursday. The ROC was suspended on 12 October by the International Olympic Committee for integrating sports organizations governing areas which are part of Ukraine, but overrun during the Russian invasion that began in February 2022. So now:

“We believe that this status is temporary,Pozdnyakov said. “And at the right time, relations between our organizations will take a positive path, so we do not break contacts with our colleagues. Now they are informal.”

Irina Viner, the high-profile head of the Russian Rhythmic Gymnastics Federation, is campaigning for a new sports structure altogether:

“I believe that amid external sanctions pressure and our country being disparaged by international federations it is crucial to create alternative organizations that will not be affiliated with international federations. There should be independent organizations that can invite athletes to compete. In rhythmic gymnastics, for example, there is the League of Sports Societies, an association of clubs.

“We won’t stop. Rhythmic gymnastics is a sport that was born in the Soviet Union. We are looking for new forms and have already found some. There are competitions and concerts, which we hold on such dates as Defender of the Fatherland Day and Children’s Day. They bolster the morale of our athletes. Children and families of our soldiers show up there as guests.”

Viner also repeated her view of the possibilities for Russians competing as “neutrals” at Paris 2024:

“We are all very worried since we keep hearing one and the same thing regarding the Olympic Games: lower, even lower, stay down. In a way, we are being ‘kept down’ all the time.

“Sometimes we are accused of doing something wrong, or our athletes are dressed in white uniforms, without the anthem, without fans. Our colleagues and children will not go to the Games under this status: it’s a disgrace.

“We are used to hearing our anthem when our flags are raised. The most popular song at the world championships is always the Russian anthem. And now, to compete at the Games is beneath the dignity of a country like Russia.”

Observed: Pozdnyakov made an important comment during his presentation at the ongoing “Russia: A Sports Power” conference:

“Today at the Council everyone was once again convinced of how attentive the President of Russia is to the problems of our sport. At the meeting, a variety of issues related to current challenges and prospects for the development of the industry were raised. Sport, including elite sport, remains a matter of national importance. This is probably one of the key results of the meeting.”

That says a lot about Russian sport and what will happen in 2024. Reporting since 1984 indicates that the decision to boycott the Games of the XXIIIrd Olympiad in Los Angeles came down to Soviet Premier Konstantin Chernenko, a 72-year-old bureaucrat who was a protégé of Leonid Brezhnev, the 18-year Premier from 1964-82.

Similarly, a decision on whether Russian athletes will simply not go to Paris under any circumstances will very much be up to current Russian autocrat Vladimir Putin. Whatever the IOC’s stance or requirements – which have not been specified as yet – it is likely that Putin will make a decision whether to allow Russians to compete as neutrals, or demand that they not go.

It’s worthwhile to remember that that’s the way it works in an autocracy.

Putin spoke to the conference and among his remarks:

“We learned that an invitation to the [Olympic] Games is not an unconditional right of the best athletes, but a kind of ‘privilege,’ and it can be earned not by sports results, but by some political gestures that have nothing to do with sports at all, and that the Games themselves can be used as a tool of political pressure against people who have nothing to do with politics, as gross and in fact racist, ethnic discrimination.”

And he continued his campaign against the West and sport:

“What is happening in modern international sports organizations are signs of degeneration. It is very commercialized, which means it is very dependent on business, and business depends on authorities at various levels, political structures of various countries. This is and there are signs of degeneration.”

3.
Swiss Olympic shares national “203X” Games plan

“Switzerland has the potential, the knowledge and the support of the population to hold the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games according to a new concept from 2030. Decentralized, on existing facilities, in all four language regions and largely privately financed. This is the conclusion reached by a feasibility study by Swiss Olympic, the Olympic winter sports associations and Swiss Paralympic. Now the sports parliament will decide on the next step at the end of November 2023.”

That’s the summary of the “Vision Switzerland 203X” plan revealed by Swiss Olympic – the national Olympic committee of Switzerland – with an eye on the 2030 Games now up for grabs. The 60-page feasibility study detailed the opportunities:

● 12 competition sites, all across Switzerland
● Opening in Lausanne, Closing in Bern
● Existing accommodations, no new Olympic Village

The “headquarters” city would be Bern, but existing, well-respected venues will be used for all sports, including St. Moritz for bobsled, luge and skeleton, and freestyle skiing and snowboard, Engelberg and Kandersteg for ski jumping, Lenzerheide for biathlon, Crans-Montana for alpine skiing, Lausanne for figure skating and short track and so on. A venue for curling is still to be identified

Perhaps most important is the financial projection, which has sunk Swiss bids in the past:

“The budget assessment shows that it seems possible to generate an organizational budget of around CHF 1.5 billion from largely private resources – also thanks to a direct financial contribution from the IOC of CHF 710 million. According to the financial analysis, this should make it possible Organizational costs of the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games in Switzerland, according to a decentralized format, without covering financial resources from the public sector. Instead, the public sector should financially support the Paralympics. The public sector would also invest in the areas of legacy and security.”

(CHF 710 million is about $796.5 million U.S.)

A poll taken in September showed 67% in favor, 26% against and seven percent not sure, an unusually strong support indicator in Switzerland. As for the target:

“The focus is on hosting the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2030. 2034 remains an option as an alternative year.”

The IOC is hoping to find a suitable candidate for 2030 from the Swiss, Sweden or France in time to be formally elected in mid-2024.

4.
Winter season starts with Skate America in Texas

Ready or not, the winter-sports season is here, with the annual opener of the International Skating Union’s Grand Prix circuit, Skate America. For 2023, the event is being held in Allen, Texas, in the Dallas area.

The skater invitations are made for the entire Grand Prix by the ISU, based on past performances, with American teen star Ilia Malinin, still 18, the headliner. The first man to perform the quadruple axel in competition, he won the Worlds bronze medal at the 2023 Worlds after winning the 2022 World Junior Championships gold.

The women’s competition will feature Worlds silver and bronze medalist Loena Hendrickx of Belgium, competing against U.S. champ Isabeau Levito and Amber Glenn, third at last year’s U.S. nationals and at Skate America.

The favorite in Pairs might be Germany’s Annika Hocke and Robert Kunkel, the 2023 European Championships bronze medalists.

In Ice Dance, American stars Madison Chock and Evan Bates, the 2023 World Champions, are in and will face competition from U.S. skaters Caroline Green and Michael Parsons, the 2022 Four Continents winners. The third U.S. entry could be the future: the brother-sister combo of Oona and Gage Brown, the 2022 World Junior Champions. French national champs Evgeniia Lopareva and Geoffrey Brissaud and Canada’s Marjorie Lajoie and Zachary Lagha are both national champions.

Malinin is the defending Skate America champion from 2022 and Chock and Bates have won this event three times, in 2014, 2015 and last year. Levito and Glenn were 2-3 in the women’s Singles in 2022.

The event is mostly on NBC’s Peacock streaming network, but the Friday’s evening session is on E! from 7:30-10:30 p.m. Eastern, Saturday evening session is on E! from 8-11 p.m. and Sunday’s 3-6 p.m. session will also be on E!. A highlights package of the first two days will be shown on NBC on Sunday from 12-2 p.m.

5.
Gold Coast mayor trying to save 2026 Commonwealth Games

Australia’s Gold Coast hosted a very successful Commonwealth Games in 2018, at a cost of about A$1.2 billion (about $757.8 million U.S.), and now Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate wants to do it again.

Tate sees an opportunity to run what he calls a “streamlined” version of the event in 2026 in the aftermath of the Victoria government withdrawing from its hosting agreement in July, with then-Premier Daniel Andrews saying that the event cost was too high, perhaps more than A$6 billion (~$3.8 billion U.S.).

He told reporters earlier this week:

“I’ve just concluded a very positive meeting with the [Commonwealth Games Federation]. Mr [Craig] Phillips [of Commonwealth Games Australia] agrees the Gold Coast is an excellent option for the Games. It is heartening for us to have a frank discussion regarding hosting the Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast.

“Of course there is a bit of a journey to do but the key point is this: we want to salvage Australia’s reputation. Because in future years, nobody will remember Daniel Andrews and the Victorian Government, they will say ‘the Aussies are the ones who cancelled the 2026 Commonwealth Games.’

“I showed them our preliminary business case which proves that a scaled down 2026 Games can be held on the coast for around $700 million [$442 million U.S.]. This is a $2 billion-plus gift to the [southeast Queensland] economy at no monetary cost to Queensland, apart from in-kind support at the time.”

The Queensland government has said it is not interested in the 2026 Commonwealth Games in view of the forthcoming 2032 Olympic Games in Brisbane, with Queensland Sports Minister Stirling Hinchliffe strongly opposed. Queensland Housing Minister and Member of Parliament Meaghan Scanlon said, “I can’t say I have had a single person raise with me their desire to have the Commonwealth Games again on the Gold Coast.”

But Tate is undeterred. He, along with the Commonwealth Games Federation, will pitch the idea further to the Queensland government and hopes to make a bid presentation to the CGF in November.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rugby ● The 10th Rugby World Cup is on to the semifinals on Friday and Saturday (with current world rankings):

20 October: (7) Argentina (4-1) vs. (2) New Zealand (4-1)
21 October: (5) England (5-0) vs. (1) South Africa (4-1)

Both games will be played at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis in the Paris area, with the championship final on the 28th.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● A terse announcement from the Paris 2024 organizers on Thursday explained:

“Paris 2024 confirms that the PNF (Parquet national financier) visited its headquarters on Wednesday Oct. 18 and obtained all the information it requested.”

This is the second search for information at the organizing committee’s headquarters by the national financial prosecutors, looking at specific contracts for favoritism and conflicts of interest. The head of the PNF, Jean-Francois Bohnert, said in September that “I don’t see any elements, at least not at this stage, that would lead the investigation towards the most serious cases of corruption or influence peddling.”

● Israel ● Multiple federations are postponing events involving Israel in view of the attack by Hamas and the continuing conflict. The International Basketball Federation (FIBA) said that Basketball Champions League matches involving Israeli club teams from Jerusalem and Hapoel have been rescheduled and games in Israel will be moved outside of the country.

The European Handball Federation said Thursday that two qualifying matches involving Israel against Luxembourg for 1 November and 5 November are being postponed. UEFA announced:

“After a thorough evaluation of the current safety and security situation in the whole territory of Israel, the UEFA Executive Committee decided that no UEFA competition matches shall be played in Israel until further notice.

“The Israel Football Association and its clubs Maccabi Haifa FC and Maccabi Tel-Aviv have been requested to propose alternative venues/stadiums (which must comply with all applicable UEFA regulations) outside the territory of Israel for their home matches to be used for as long as this decision remains in force.”

The Association of Tennis Professionals announced the ATP 250 men’s tournament scheduled for Tel Aviv from 5-11 November will be played on Sofia (BUL) instead.

● Athletics ● The Athletics Integrity Unit posted suspension notices this week on five more athletes this week, four of which are women and at least four are distance runners:

Jennifer Gonzalez (CHI), 33, a six-time national champion at 5,000 or 10,000 m, six years suspension from 7 November 2022, for excessive use over a five-month period of recombinant erythropoietin (EPO).

Zhang Xin (CHN), 34, a 2:31:19 marathoner from 2007, three years suspension from 21 April 2023 for the use of the steroid Metandienone.

Daisy Cherotich (KEN), 26, a 2:25:30 marathoner (2022), three years suspension from 21 February 2023 for use of recombinant erythropoietin (EPO).

Salina Jebet Kosgei (KEN), 46, a 2:23:22 marathoner from 2006, provisionally suspended from 17 August for the use of norandrosterone.

Wesram Nasser Alfarsi (KSA), for the use of Darbepoetin (no other details available).

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TSX REPORT: L.A.-area sports impact now $8.9 billion; LA28 “a car-free Games”? SoFi Stadium may be out for the 2026 FIFA World Cup

Marcel Porras, the L.A. Metro Deputy Innovation Officer, at the 2023 L.A. Sports Innovation Conference on Tuesday (TSX photo)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. L.A.-area sports economic impact explodes to $8.9 billion
2. “For the LA28 Olympics, it’s meant to be a car-free Games”
3. USOPP’s Koblin on how the 2028 Games will change Los Angeles
4. Way cleared for Saudi Arabia walkover for World Cup 2034 hosting
5. Sofi Stadium out of 2026 FIFA World Cup?

● A panel at Tuesday’s 2023 Los Angeles Sports Innovation Conference revealed that the economic impact of the L.A.-area professional and college teams expanded to $8.9 billion for 2022, including 83,430 direct and induced jobs. The economic impact total grew by 41.9 billion, year-over-year.

● The Deputy Chief Innovation Officer of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Transportation Authority told the conference attendees that the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games is “meant to be a car-free Games” and see the potential to change the way locals think about public transit.

● The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Properties chief operating officer explained the primary ways the Games is going to change Los Angeles, and how LA28 sponsors are using big data to aid the planning.

● Indonesia’s football federation said it would not bid for the 2034 FIFA World Cup, in a tie-up with Australia, clearing the way for Saudi Arabia to bid unopposed.

● An ESPN Deportes report said that SoFi Stadium may not be involved in the 2026 FIFA World Cup as the field width is too small and requires substantial modifications to the field-level seating and boxes. There are other options for FIFA in Southern California.

Panorama: IOC (2: eight new members elected; contracts for 2029-32 quad now $5.4 billion) = PanAm Sports (ex-USOPC Chair Lyon elected a Vice President) = Athletics (European Athletics agrees to prize money for Euro Champs in 2024) = Cycling (2: Pikulik wins Tour of Guangxi Women’s World Tour finale; Vader maintains lead and wins season-ending Gree-Tour of Guangxi) = Football (3: U.S. men swamp Ghana, 4-0; U.S.-Germany drew 1.15 million viewers against college football; CONCACAF Nations League quarterfinals announced) = Gymnastics (855,000 watched NBC’s Worlds highlights show!) ●

Errata: Tuesday’s post erroneously listed New Haven, Connecticut was one of the out-of-area football sites for the 1984 Olympic Games; actually, it was Harvard Stadium in Boston Massachusetts. Thanks to reader Todd Parker for the correction. ●

1.
L.A.-area sports economic impact explodes to $8.9 billion

Showing a considerable resilience since the Covid-19 pandemic, the impact of sports on the Los Angeles region expanded in 2022 to $8.9 billion in all, up a staggering 27% in just one year.

And nothing at all to do with the 2028 Olympic Games.

This finding was announced during Tuesday’s L.A. Sports Innovation held at the YouTube Theater at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California. Created by the Institute for Applied Economics of the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation (LAEDC) for the Los Angeles Sports Council, the report showed a remarkable recovery from the heavy pandemic restrictions in California, and specially in Los Angeles County:

● $8.9 billion total economic impact in 2022 vs. $7.0 billion in 2021 (+27%)
● $7.4 billion pro-sports impact in 2022 vs. $6.0 billion in 2021 (+23%)
● $1.5 billion collegiate-sports impact in 2022 vs. $964 million in 2021 (+56%)

Both the professional and college sports economic impacts were far ahead of the pre-pandemic report delivered on 2018, which had $5.3 billion in pro-sports impact and $1.2 billion for college sports (total: $6.5 billion).

The opening of SoFi Stadium provided a boost to the totals and the figures do not include one-time events such as the 2022 All-Star Game at Dodger Stadium or the February 2022 NFL Super Bowl LVI.

The employment numbers also showed marked increases, in part thanks to the opening of new facilities, but also the re-opening of facilities closed during the pandemic:

● 54,440 jobs directly created in 2022 vs. 20,850 in 2021
● 28,990 jobs indirectly created in 2022 vs. 18,840 in 2021
● 83,430 total sports-related jobs in 2022 vs. 37,690 in 2021 (+210%)

There also a calculation made on the amount of state and local taxes collected, at $365.1 million, only slightly ahead of $363.6 million in 2021 and 353.9 million in 2018.

The study was quite limited, and incorporated data from the 12 regional major professional teams in baseball (2), basketball (3), football (2), hockey (2) and soccer (3). The area’s college teams survey was limited to the eight largest, including UCLA, USC, Loyola Marymount, Pepperdine, UC Irvine and CSUN, Cal State Fullerton and Long Beach State.

The clear driver has been the opening of new facilities, which have been filled by existing and new team fan bases. With the Intuit Dome opening in Inglewood in 2024 as the home of the Los Angeles Clippers, another expansion is anticipated.

2.
“For the LA28 Olympics, it’s meant to be a car-free Games”

During the L.A. Sports Innovation Conference panel on the economic impact of sports in the region, Marcel Porras, Deputy Chief Innovation Officer of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) reminded the attendees again of his agency’s goals for impact at the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

“I don’t think it’s widely publicized, for the LA28 Olympics, it’s meant to be a car-free Games. And so, what does that mean?

“Well, I think it means first and foremost, there will not be parking at the venues. Now, someone may be able to park at Joe’s Parking down the street, but the venues themselves, they’re going to be using all of that parking for their operations; safety perimeters for the athletes, for the sports broadcasting, etc., and so when you think about where we’re going to be for the Olympics, you can start thinking about your travel and think about how you’re going to adapt to that.

“And we’re going to step up and meet the demand, because that’s what we do here in L.A., but we’ve been working on this now and we have 4 1/2 years to go, you know, we’re under the gun.”

He was seconded by Ron Frierson, the former Director of Economic Policy for Mayor Eric Garcetti (2018-22) and now Amazon’s Director of Economic Development for the western region:

“One of the things that the Olympics is going to do for us is it’s going to force us to upgrade and expedite all of our sustainability, right? … Also, in a way, for lack of a better term, force Metro to really connect our cities and places, so it’s going to be largely carless because of all the work that Metro is doing, connecting us to all of these major sports venues and convening hubs, and that in turn, after the Olympics leaves, we’ll be left with a better infrastructure so we can take cars off the road as we see them now. …

“It’s going to require a shift in our culture of L.A. being a car culture.”

Porras pointed to a significant, 17% increase in ridership for the lines related to attendance at the six nights of the Taylor Swift “The Eras Tour” concerts at SoFi Stadium from 3-9 August this year as a sign that massive increases in the use of public transit are possible. He also emphasized the coordination with the City of Inglewood for the creation of park-and-ride lots and bus-only lanes to make public transit more attractive to users:

“With the 2028 Olympics, we’re really using that as an opportunity to unlock a much more enhanced customer experience, so that it just becomes an easy choice for you to take Metro rather than driving your car and sitting in traffic and paying a ton of money for parking.”

3.
USOPP’s Koblin on how the 2028 Games will change Los Angeles

The final panel of the L.A. Sports Innovation Conference was on the “Global Impact of Sports: Unveiling Opportunities for Growth and Innovation in the Southern California Market.” Panelist Danny Koblin, the Chief Operating Officer of U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Properties, backed up Metro’s Porras, saying “We have some solutions for that during Games time.”

The USOPP is the joint venture formed to sell sponsorships for the LA28 Games and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee, and Koblin was asked about how the 2028 Games will change Los Angeles:

“As an organizing committee that has had an extra amount of time to plan our Games, thinking about how to help this city and how the Games can benefit this city has been a real focal point of our plans. And there’s really three areas that we’re focused on:

“The first one I’ll say is around youth sports. At the core, the Games are around sports, providing access to sport and showing kids and people who participate in sport all the benefits that sport can provide.

“And so one of the first things we did was create a relationship with the L.A. City Rec and Parks. We’re actually spending $160 million – we started this a couple years ago – and spending this through the end of our plan in 2028. We’re actually making sports more accessible for kids, and we’re helping subsidize the fees to participate in sports, we’re helping train coaches, we’re helping make fields safer, so the City has already enrolled over 500,000 kids in these programs.

“We’ve included adaptive sports for the first time ever in the City’s programming, so we’re really proud of that program, and how we’re ultimately going to extend that throughout the run of our Games, and with success, even beyond our Games.

“The second area is really around a healthy environment, and so when you think about the plan … we have so many amazing venues here that are already doing incredible things to be sustainable operations. We want to make sure that we continue to advance in the areas of sustainable energy, how we can do things responsibly for the partnership with our venues, so when we do host the world on this amazing, great stage, we’re doing so in a really responsible manner that creates an incredible healthy environment.

“When you think about all those areas that we’re really looking to advance in our Games, I think we have just this tremendous ability to really showcase to the world how these Games can really bring benefits to the community, and not ultimately be a burden.

“And the last area is really what we call economic empowerment. And when you think about the buying power, we have a $7 billion budget. That’s a balanced budget, we’ve got to make the revenues actually pay for the execution of these Games. But there’s going to be a tremendous amount of economic activity coming into this community, and so one of the things we want to make sure we do is utilize our buying power to help advance local businesses, and specifically minority and diverse businesses, businesses from underserved communities, the ability of these businesses to go out and compete to win business through our Games is really an area of focus for us.

“So those three things are really the areas in which we’re focused.”

He was also asked about the impact of the Paralympic Games:

“The Paralympics will be the first time here in L.A. And the Paralympics as a movement, it’s so incredible. I was at the Games in Rio in 2016 to see these athletes competing at this unbelievable high level, overcoming all these physical disabilities. It really is such an amazing experience to be able to see, and so for us, hosting the Games here in L.A. is all about Olympics and Paralympics.

“The Paralympics will happen about a couple of weeks after the Games are over. We’re going to be handling these Games in the same manner as we are the Olympic Games, and I’m just so excited for us to be able to showcase these incredible athletes on the field of play, because it really is what Olympic and Paralympic Games are all about. It’s really bringing this world together, creating a better world through sport, helping advance people with disabilities into opportunities that everybody should have in this life.

“So we’re really excited to showcase that to the world.”

Koblin also noted that several of the LA28 Athlete Fellows – Olympians and Paralympians who are now working in the organizing committee – were in attendance, enhancing their own experiences in a new way:

“I think about being here and having these Games come to L.A., to really think about all of the human legacy moments and the impact that we’re going to create on all these people that are going to experience, for the first time or second time or 10th time, but I guarantee you it’s going to be experienced in an entirely different way, and that feeling is going to permeate throughout the entire globe.”

Koblin was asked about how the LA28 commercial partners have helped advance the organization, he stressed big data as a new element:

“Salesforce is definitely a great example and I think Salesforce, being a California company, was really interested in partnering with LA28 to really help us get smarter about our fans. And the reality is, when you think about the Games going from city to city to city, the IOC being the international organization that oversees the Games, there wasn’t a lot of sophistication in the data sharing, in the data understanding of the fanbase. And so Salesforce, through us understanding what they can do and how they do it, we created an amazing partnership that is now giving us the tools to really get smarter about fans.”

On how brands are attracted to LA28, he noted how Delta is using the LA28 Games to help launch its new Terminal 3 at Los Angeles International Airport, a $2.3 billion joint investment with Los Angeles World Airports.

“You can just see the different interests of each of these brands and what’s important to them and really understanding how we can leverage what we bring, both as a property, as well as the city to these brands to really tell their stories more broadly.”

4.
Way cleared for Saudi Arabia walkover for World Cup 2034 hosting

After news of discussions between Indonesia and Australia about a possible FIFA World Cup 2034 bid surfaced last week, they were squashed by Wednesday announcement by Erick Thohir, the head of the Indonesian Football Federation (PSSI).

The headline read, “Supporting Saudi Arabia, Indonesia Aims to Host After the 2034 World Cup” with two short paragraphs following:

“Indonesia supports Saudi Arabia as a candidate to host the 2034 World Cup.

“’Indonesia supports Saudi Arabia as host of the 2034 World Cup. On the other hand, Indonesia continues to prepare itself for bidding for the next World Cup for the Asian zone after 2034 and other FIFA competitions,’ said Erick in a written statement.”

When FIFA announced that the 2030 World Cup would go to a tri-nation bid from Portugal, Spain and Morocco, this knocked Europe and Africa out of the continental rotation which FIFA favors for the World Cup. By placing three opening games in South America – Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay – recognizing the centennial of the World Cup, first played in Uruguay in 1930, a South American bid for 2034 was eliminated.

FIFA specified that only bids from Asia or Oceania would be received and the Saudi Football Federation immediately jumped in. With the derailing of an Australian bid, there is little doubt now that Saudi Arabia will be the only bidder to send an expression of interest by the 31 October 2023 deadline.

The Associated Press reported that a Wednesday videoconference of the Asian Football Confederation included an exhortation by FIFA President Gianni Infantino (SUI) for the regional association to “be united for the 2034 World Cup.”

Saudi Football Federation head Yasser al Misehal told the group:

“We have been overwhelmed by a huge number of supporting letters, announcements from all over the world. This puts a big responsibility on us to really deliver a successful bid.”

The 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar was marked by an enormous building program and dogged by questions over human rights issues and construction worker concerns. Saudi Arabia has also been pressured over decades with regard to human rights issues.

5.
Sofi Stadium out of 2026 FIFA World Cup?

A widely-circulated report by ESPN Deportes’ John Sutcliffe on Monday said that the state-of-the-art SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, may be removed as a venue for the 2026 FIFA World Cup due to its tight field size for American Football.

Sutcliffe explained:

● The SoFi Stadium field design is too tight for a full-sized 105-by-68 m (114.8 x 74.4 yards) football pitch, with a regulation American Football field measuring 120 yards long but only 53 yards wide, plus sideline spaces for the teams.

● Removing seats and field boxes to make room for a full-sized field would cost quite a bit, and owner Stan Kroenke was not enthusiastic about absorbing the expense. This might end up having SoFi not involved in the 2026 World Cup at all.

The stadium has hosted plenty of football matches, including the CONCACAF Gold Cup final in July between Mexico and Panama and multiple friendlies.

● The World Cup final now appears to be a choice between AT&T Stadium in Dallas and MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. Sutcliffe said he believes that Dallas is currently the choice.

● The opening game will likely be in Mexico City at the historic Estadio Azteca.

If the report turns out to be true and SoFi Stadium drops out, FIFA could decide to find a different venue in the Southern California area – the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and especially the Rose Bowl in Pasadena could be excellent choices – or go elsewhere. There were 11 U.S. stadia selected for the event, in Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, Miami, New York/New Jersey, Philadelphia, Santa Clara in northern California and Seattle.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● International Olympic Committee ● As the IOC Session in India closed, eight new members were elected, to bring the total membership to 107. These included five individual members: Yael Arad (ISR), Balazs Furjes (HUN), Cecilia Villacorta (PER) and two special cases, members not nominated by a National Olympic Committee, Oscar-winning actress Michelle Yeoh (MAS) and Michael Mronz from Germany, an entrepreneur in developing sporting events.

Two were elected as Presidents of International Federations, Petra Sorling (SWE) from the International Table Tennis Federation, and Jae-youl Kim (KOR), the head of the International Skating Union. Tunisian National Olympic Committee President Mehrez Boussayene was elected as an NOC chief.

During the first day of the Session, IOC Director General Christophe de Kepper (BEL) told the Session that the near-term financial situation of the IOC is excellent, noting “To date, we have already secured contracts worth $5.4 billion for the Olympiad 2029 to 2032.”

However, in the day two report from the IOC Audit Committee, member Pierre-Olivier Beckers (BEL) expressed concern over the longer-term future, telling the members, “One of five NOCs is fully dependent on the help of the IOC.”

● PanAm Sports ● At the PanAm Sports General Assembly in Santiago (CHI) in advance of the Pan American Games that begin on Friday, former U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee chair and chief executive Susanne Lyons was elected as the 3rd Vice President. According to the announcement, “Lyons was elected in a close and private vote against Juan Santiago Estrada from Nicaragua.”

Lyons moved up from Executive Committee member to a Vice President slot, maintaining the U.S. presence on the board.

● Athletics ● In a somewhat surprising development, European Athletics approved the payment of prize money for the European Championships for the first time, during its Council meeting in Vilnius (LTU) on Wednesday.

The Euros began in 1934 and were very successfully held in Munich (GER) in 2022; the next edition will be in Rome (ITA) next year.

● Cycling ● The final UCI Women’s World Cup race of 2023, the Tour of Guangxi in China, finished with Poland’s Daria Pikulik winning the final mass sprint in 3:39:45 for the mostly flat 144.6 km course.

She beat Italy’s Chiara Consonni – the Tour of Chongming Island winner – and Ireland’s Mia Griffin to the line for her second career Women’s World Cup victory and first in a one-day race.

Dutch rider Milan Vader held on to win the final UCI men’s World Tour race of the season, the Gree-Tour of Guangxi on Tuesday, finishing just six seconds up on France’s Remy Rochas and 11 seconds ahead of Ethan Hayter (GBR).

Vader took the lead after winning the fourth stage, then finished second to Colombia’s Juan Sebastian Molano in stage five in another mass sprint finish – maintaining his lead – and finished 31st in the final, sixth stage, but with the same time as the winner, Olav Kooij (NED), in the last mass sprint of the season.

● Football ● The U.S. Men’s National Team had no trouble with Ghana, winning Tuesday’s friendly in a 4-0 rout with all of the goals in the first half at Nashville, Tennessee.

Forward Gio Reyna scored in the 10th minute off a deflected shot on the box, forward Christian Pulisic converted a penalty kick in the 19th after a foul on forward Tim Weah for a 2-0 lead.

Striker Folarin Balogun scored in the 22nd, off a pass from Weah to the penalty spot for a 3-0 advantage and Reyna got the final score in the 39th off an assist by Pulisic following an indirect free kick.

Ghana actually had 56% of possession in the game, but the U.S. had the edge on shots, 13-7. Ghana managed only two shots on goal against U.S. keeper Matt Turner.

The U.S. vs. German men’s friendly on Saturday, competing against a strong college football schedule, drew an average of 594,000 viewers on TNT, after 158,000 tuned in for the pre-game show. The same game got 556,000 viewers on Telemundo for a quite-respectable combined total of 1.15 million.

The Mexico-Ghana match, also played on Saturday, did much better and got 1.493 million on Telemundo and another 329,000 on TUDN.

The U.S. men’s National Team is automatically qualified for the 2026 FIFA World Cup as a host country, and so will have many fewer meaningful games to play in the build-up. But the American men have an opportunity to qualify for the CONMEBOL Copa America 2024 in the now-scheduled quarterfinals of the CONCACAF Nations League quarterfinals in November.

CONCACAF revealed the quarterfinal pairings, with the winners of the home-and-home series – on aggregate score – to qualify for the Copa America:

Nov. 16: U.S. vs. Trinidad & Tobago and Costa Rica vs. Panama
Nov. 17: Jamaica vs. Canada and Honduras vs. Mexico

Nov. 20: U.S. vs. Trinidad & Tobago and Costa Rica vs. Panama
Nov. 21: Jamaica vs. Canada and Honduras vs. Mexico

The sites will be announced later; the four losing team will play in an elimination qualifier for two more spots on the Copa America next March. 

● Gymnastics ● Even though it was a week later, the NBC highlights package show last Saturday on the FIG Artistic World Championships – starring American icon Simone Biles – drew an average of 855,000 viewers. Pretty impressive given the football games against it.

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TSX REPORT: Bach says added-term discussions are personal; new LA28 sports to rely on pro leagues; Wasserman’s declaration for Ukraine and Israel

LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman addressing the IOC Session in Mumbai, India on Monday (Photo: IOC video screenshot)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Bach explains stance on possible term extension: it’s personal
2. LA28 added-sports program to rely on pro-league outreach
3. LA28’s Wasserman speaks out for Ukraine and Israel at the IOC Session
4. Milan Cortina 2026 sliding events to be outside Italy
5. WADA says RUSADA still not compliant

● Asked directly about his view of the request of some International Olympic Committee colleagues that he serve a third term, President Thomas Bach of Germany explained that he will speak with the members concerned and announce any decision later. It’s a matter of personal respect, he said.

● The expansion of the LA28 sports program to 35 – the most in Olympic history – also brings opportunities to work with some of the biggest U.S. sports leagues, especially Major League Baseball and the National Football League. But with 742 athletes added, it was noted that some of the events could be played at sites outside of Los Angeles, or even California!

● LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman gave an impassioned address in support of Ukraine and Israel, unusual at a Session, and in contrast to the IOC’s non-committal comments on Israel as opposed to its full-throated support of Ukraine.

● The drama over the building of a new sliding track in Cortina d’Ampezzo for the 2026 Olympic Winter Games is over, with the government agreeing that an existing site outside of Italy needs to be used. A selection is expected by the end of the year.

● The World Anti-Doping Agency stated that the Russian Anti-Doping Agency is still not compliant, but that RUSADA has challenged its ruling and will go to the Court of Arbitration for Sport to try and overturn it.

Panorama: Asian Games (Asiad doping total up to 12) = Pan American Games (WADA withdraws non-compliant tag from PanAm Sports) = Russia (Viner says Russian athletes should not go to Paris with ROC suspended) = Athletics (Kenyan marathoner Ekiru given 10-year ban) = Boxing (Asian confederation votes to stay with IBA for now) = Cycling (new women’s hour record for Italy’s Bussi) = Sailing (USOPC inquiry found misconduct by ex-U.S. Sailing execs) ●

Schedule: Due to a timing conflict, there will be no TSX post on Wednesday (18th), but back again on Thursday. ●

1.
Bach explains stance on possible term extension: it’s personal

The news conference with International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER) following the second day of the 141st IOC Session in Mumbai (IND) on Monday was primarily concerned with two topics: a possible third Bach term as requested by Algerian member Mustapha Berraf and three other speakers on Sunday, and cricket.

Bach was asked repeatedly about whether he will ask for, or agree to accept changes to the Olympic Charter that will allow him to serve beyond the end of his second term in 2025. To the opening question, he explained:

“Well, the situation was as follows: I had heard some rumors before that some members who wanted and want me to continue my mandate, but I did clearly not expect that this would come to the Session, that it would be brought up in the Session. Now, after yesterday, I had a number of conversations with a number of IOC colleagues and from this I can conclude that there were mainly two motivations for them, which are coming together.

“There are a number of these colleagues that think and feel that an election campaign, so early before the election would, or is, disrupting the preparations for the Olympic Games Paris, which are so important for the entire Olympic Movement and this is why they would like to avoid this, and then they all wanted to express their recognition for the work having been accomplished by the IOC in the last 10 years and they wanted to show their strong support for this.

“And as I said yesterday, I believe this is a human [thing], that I was really touched and I appreciate it very much this show of support and friendship for me. And for these reasons, it is a matter of mutual respect and personal relationship that you do not dismiss such a sign of support and of friendship out of hand.”

Bach was pressed about the appearance of a failure in good governance if he were to accept a third term, and specified how he will handle it:

“From what I have heard from these members is they are concerned about an early campaign at this moment, which would disrupt the preparations for the Games in Paris, and for the rest, you may understand that such an answer you don’t give out [to] offend and you don’t give out over the media.

“But this has to be discussed with the people concerned and then the media will be informed.”

And to a third question, he also threw some cold water on the plan, but did not reject the request outright, preferring a personal approach:

“Yesterday, I made it clear how loyal I am to the Olympic Charter, and having been a co-author of the Olympic Charter also speaks for the fact that I’m thinking term limits are making a lot of sense, and are necessary, and, again, at the same time it’s a matter of respect and mutual respect for these members that the answers are not given over the media, but in a direct context.”

So, it’s wait and see. Now that the request has been made, there will be jockeying to convince Bach to stay on or leave. What is even more unclear now, in a time of wars against Ukraine and Israel, is which IOC member makes the most sense to take over in 2025.

2.
LA28 added-sports program to rely on pro-league outreach

One of the most interesting aspects of the presentation by LA28 of its now-approved proposal to add five more sports to its program – baseball-softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash – was the tie in each case to an existing International Federation or professional sports league.

Said LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman:

“We are excited to embark on game-changing collaborations with major professional leagues that will unlock massive opportunities to amplify the Olympic and Paralympic story and captivate new audiences.”

This is important, with each of the five sports having a significant professional league that plays in the U.S.:

● Major League Baseball (USA)
● Major League Cricket (USA)
● National Football League (USA)
● Premier Lacrosse League (USA)
● Professional Squash Association (GBR)

At the top of the list, of course, is the National Football League, with LA28 Sports Director Niccolo Campriani (ITA) telling the Session:

“Flag Football is the future, and the tip of the spear for American Football’s international growth, with approximately 20 million flexible players across over 100 countries with gender balance in participation.

“Lastly, the inclusion of flag football opens the door to a game-changing partnership with the NFL, the world’s largest professional league. NFL commitment in this journey is total – not a one-and-done – reflecting its long-term determination to collaborate with the International Federation of American Football and the Olympic Movement in the interest of sports worldwide.”

Expect to see a commercial relationship between the NFL and LA28, with flag football being showcased in tournaments prior to 2028 to ramp up interest in the sport both in the U.S. and elsewhere.

The same can be true for cricket, but most likely with the International Cricket Council, the worldwide governing body of the sport. The fledgling Major League Cricket has franchises in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Dallas, Washington, D.C., and New York, but it’s worth noting that the ninth ICC Men’s T20 World Cup will be played in the West Indies (seven countries) and Dallas, Miami and New York in June 2024, with a U.S. team automatically included as a host country.

What is not clear is whether Major League Baseball players would participate in the 2028 Games. The World Baseball Classic is played during the spring training period, not during the regular MLB season, and while Commissioner Rob Manfred did not make any predictions on play availability, Wasserman told the Los Angeles Times, “We’ve had great conversations with MLB and the players union.”

The addition of all these sports and the approval of weightlifting and modern pentathlon (with boxing on hold) will surge the athlete total well beyond the Olympic Charter’s prescribed limit of 10,500. The IOC Program Commission’s report stated that 742 additional athletes can be expected, bringing the total to 11,242.

Where to put all these people? Is there room at the Olympic Village at UCLA?

There are some interesting ideas, and IOC Program Commission Chair Karl Stoss (AUT) explained:

“As a result of including a number of team sports, it was understood that approval of the package would be likely to take the athlete quota above the Olympic Charter specification of approximately 10,500. It was also highlighted that some of the sports, including team sports, may take place at existing and dedicated venues outside of Los Angeles and California.”

That opens many possibilities, some of which could be iconic.

Baseball games at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Fenway Park in Boston and Yankee Stadium in New York? Lacrosse at NCAA championship sites like Baltimore’s M&T Bank Stadium? Flag Football at AT&T Stadium in Dallas?

And the possibilities go further. There has been chatter that canoe slalom competitions could be moved from a temporary facility in Los Angeles to the world-class Riversports Rapids facility in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

And what about taking advantage of the world’s best waves for surfing, on the north shore of Oahu in Hawaii?

These are all possibilities, not to mention out-of-area matches for football preliminaries, as was done at the Los Angeles 1984 Games – at Stanford, California, Boston, Massachusetts and Annapolis, Maryland – and the possibility to “nationalize” the 2028 Games to a modest extent could be another game-changer for the Olympic Movement in the U.S.

What is sure is that the LA28 Games is now the largest in Olympic history with at least 35 sports and possibly a 36th if boxing is finally approved. Said Stoss:

“We have to start tomorrow to talk together with the IFs and also with the Olympic program in total how and in which way we could reduce in the different disciplines and to find here a good balance between the new sports – the five new ones – and the traditional ones we have to do.”

3.
LA28’s Wasserman speaks out for Ukraine and Israel at the IOC Session

In a remarkable address to begin the LA28 Olympic organizing committee’s presentation at the IOC Session in Mumbai, Wasserman gave an impassioned address in support of Ukraine and Israel, well beyond what the IOC’s official statements have said:

“From the moment we started our Olympic journey, LA28 has made celebrating the diversity of our city and region a cornerstone of our mission. We look forward to welcoming, respecting and celebrating all athletes and people of the world when the Games come to Los Angeles in 2028.

“Los Angeles is also home to one of the largest Jewish populations in the United States. And many of our Jewish families escaped persecution from other parts of the world. My own family fled to America from what is now Ukraine due to the pogroms that eliminated most of the Jewish population. Had they not, I would not be standing here today.

“Now, nearly 100 years later, I am deeply concerned about the people of Ukraine. We must help them in their time of need. They face an unfathomable path without us.

“I’m proud to be Jewish, as is the former Mayor of Los Angeles, now the American ambassador to India, Eric Garcetti, who is here with us today. There are no words that can fully capture the devastation and shock over the massacre in Israel on October 7th. The world is still reeling from the largest loss of Jewish life since the Holocaust. There is no justification for this organization’s taking of hostages and the slaughter of innocent lives. I unequivocally stand in solidarity with Israel.

“But let me clear. I also stand with the innocent civilians in Gaza who did not choose this war.

“Unfortunately, the Olympics are not immune to the times we live in. At its worst, it is a platform for hate to express itself on the world stage, and we will always remember the 11 members of the Israeli Olympic team who were taken hostage and murdered in Munich. But at its best, it is an opportunity for sport to show the world a better path, with peace and unity. And we will always remember the triumph of Jesse Owens in 1936 in the face of unspeakable evil.

“So as stewards of this Movement, let us all be relentless and show what is possible when we understand each other and our differences, and embrace those challenges of the times with respect and dignity. The world has never needed the Olympic Games more to be a beacon of light and hope and let us all rise to the challenge together.

“That is exactly why we started this journey more than eight years ago and we knew our city’s history with the Games would be the perfect foundation. And it is our city’s history with the Games that also serves as our inspiration for the sports program we are here to discuss.”

After the lengthy presentation of about 40 minutes, the questions period opened with a comment from Pakistani IOC member Syed Shahid Ali:

“I just have one minor observation. So in my humble opinion, the initial presentation and the preamble, I thought the political content tended to overshadow the sports part, which is the main object of the presentation of the preparedness of the host country for the next Olympics.”

But sitting to Ali’s right was 1976 Olympic high hurdles champion Guy Drut of France, who responded in French with his own view (per the simultaneous interpretation):

“I just wanted to subscribe to all the words said that are being expressed by Casey. In 1972, as you may know, I was in Munich. They were my first Olympic Games, so I was there, in the Village. I experienced that day, the 5th of September, when we were closed in in the Village. [Former IOC member] Walter Troger was the Mayor of the Village at the time.

“So I actually experienced it first hand, these sad events which cost the lives of 11 of our Israeli friends, as Casey was saying; our brothers from Israel, I should say.

“But since then, in spite of terrorism, in spite of wars, in spite of geopolitical developments of all sorts, in spite of pandemics, the Olympic Games, the Paralympic Games have always come out unvanquished in spite of these terrible events.

“And I do not doubt that in the future, Brisbane in 2032, Los Angeles in 2028, or next year in Paris 2024, that the whole world , but particularly the athletes, the Olympians, the Paralympians will maintain unforgettable memories in their minds and in their hearts of what they will experience at that time.”

Drut received applause from the room after his remarks.

Bach, at his news conference, was asked about the conflict and where he has been full-throated in support of Ukraine, stuck to his non-judgmental line on the attack on Israel:

“The IOC Executive Board members have, at the very beginning of our meeting here, already expressed their very strong feelings over this extremely tragic and regretful events in the recent days and expressed our sympathy with the innocent victims of this terrible violence.

“At this moment, we cannot see an effect yet on the participation in sport; you have of course the immediate reactions: some events which should have taken place in Israel had to be postponed, the athletes in Israel and Palestine are facing a war situation and there cannot, of course, continue their sports life as usual. But we don’t know how long this will take and which more long-term effects it may have.

“That’s beyond our knowledge and there we have to wait and keep monitoring.”

4.
Milan Cortina 2026 sliding events to be outside Italy

“We were informed two days ago by the Italian government that we had to find another solution using already existing equipment.

“We will therefore study different options for organizing the events outside Italy.”

That statement from Milan Cortina 2026 Chair Giovanni Malago, also the head of the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI), confirmed that the rebuilding project of the famed Eugenio Monti track built for the 1956 Olympic Winter Games in Cortina d’Ampezzo is dead.

The IOC had long moaned about the project, citing the cost and noting that alternate, existing facilities were available, for example at Innsbruck in Austria or St. Moritz in Switzerland, or Konigssee in Germany. Norwegian Kristin Kloster Aasen, the head of the IOC’s Coordination Commission for Milan Cortina 2026, told the Session, “we welcome this outcome.”

However, the new sliding track was being developed by the Veneto regional government as part of an amusement and sports center, but when requests were made for builders, none came forward. Malago took some pains during his presentation to the IOC Session in India that the responsibility for the provision of the track – or its movement elsewhere – is not with the organizing committee, but with the governmental infrastructure group for the Winter Games.

There will be costs to do bobsleigh, luge and skeleton competitions elsewhere, of course. At the Session, Karl Stoss, who among multiple offices is also the head of the Austrian Olympic Committee, was already lobbying to have the events in Innsbruck, and a selection is due by the end of the year.

The Milan Cortina 2026 organizers emphasized that its sponsorship program is gathering speed and that the overall budget for the event, targeted at €1.5 billion, is secure at €1.5 to 1.6 billion (about $1.58 to $1.69 billion U.S.) .

5.
WADA says RUSADA still not compliant

The World Anti-Doping Agency issued an update on the situation with the Russian Anti-Doping Agency, explaining that the agency is not even ready to be considered to be compliant:

“The non-compliance in this case was a result of a non-conformity relating to national legislation that was identified during a virtual audit in September 2022 and not addressed to date. …

“[S]ince the end of the two-year period of consequences imposed by CAS, WADA has been assessing and monitoring RUSADA to see whether it meets all the reinstatement conditions contained in the CAS decision. Until all the reinstatement conditions are met, RUSADA cannot be considered for reinstatement. In addition, RUSADA will not be eligible for reinstatement under the CAS Award until the non-conformity related to its national legislation (described above) is resolved.”

RUSADA, for its part, has challenged the WADA position and so the matter is headed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport for a hearing, meaning it will be more months before any decision is reached.

WADA noted that there are four non-compliant organizations at present, including the anti-doping organizations of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Gabon and Russia, as well as the International Fitness and Bodybuilding Federation.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Asian Games ● The International Testing Agency continues to post notices of new doping positives and provisional suspensions from the recently-concluded 19th Asian Games in Hangzhou (CHN). New announcements came Friday for boxer Chinzorig Baatarsukh (MGL) and kabbadi athlete Adil Hussain of Pakistan, bringing the total from the Games to 12 so far.

● Pan American Games ● The World Anti-Doping Agency has now ruled PanAm Sports to be compliant with the World Anti-Doping Code, with modifications to its anti-doping program satisfying the current requirements. This is good news with the Pan American Games in Santiago (CHI) beginning on Friday!

● Russia ● The head of the All-Russian Rhythmic Gymnastics Federation, Irina Viner, told he Russian news agency TASS that as the IOC has suspended the Russian Olympic Committee, Russian athletes should refuse participation at Paris 2024:

“I think that this was to be expected. As our president says, ‘if a fight is inevitable, you have to strike first.’ I think that we should be the first to refuse participation in the Olympic Games. We are being squeezed and humiliated so much that I don’t see a positive outcome here in which we can perform.”

● Athletics ● Another long suspension announced by the Athletics Integrity Unit, this time a 10-year ban of Kenyan marathoner Titus Ekiru, the sixth-fastest marathoner in history with his 2:02:57 win at the Milano Marathon in Italy in 2021. Well, not no. 6 any more:

“This sanction follows a comprehensive investigation which revealed Tampering by the 31-year-old to obstruct the AIU’s probe into two Adverse Analytical Findings (AAFs), using “false/misleading information and documentation”. Ekiru tested positive twice for the Presence of Prohibited Substances, or their metabolites or markers, in his in-competition urine samples at marathons which he won in 2021: the Generali Milano Marathon on 16 May 2021 (triamcinolone acetonide) and the Abu Dhabi Marathon on 26 November 2021 (pethidine and its marker norpethidine).

“In addition to the ban – which runs from 28 June 2022 (the date of Ekiru’s provisional suspension) until 27 June 2032 – Ekiru’s results on and since 16 May 2021 have been disqualified, resulting in the forfeiture of all prizes and money. Ekiru’s victory in the Generali Milano Marathon would have made him the sixth-fastest marathoner of all time.”

The investigation showed that, in collusion with a physician, medical-care documents were back-dated or forged, so Ekiru received a four-year ban for tampering, an additional two years for aggravating circumstances and another four years for a second tampering violation.

Ekiru’s best marathon time reverts to 2:04:46 from the 2019 Milano Marathon.

● Boxing ● The Asian Boxing Confederation voted to remain within the International Boxing Association until a new Olympic boxing federation is named by the IOC. The vote showed 31 of the 35 attending national federations present at the ASBC Congress in Thailand were in favor.

The IOC has been clear that the IBA will not be involved in Olympic boxing since it was de-recognized last June, but no new federation for boxing has yet been approved.

● Cycling ● A new record for the women’s hour in track cycling, with Italy’s Vittoria Bussi covering 50.267 km (31.23 miles) at the Velodromo Bicentenario in Aguascalientes, Mexico on Friday (13th).

That shattered the mark of 49.254 km by Dutch star Ellen van Dijk in 2022 in Grenchen (SUI). Bussi had previously held the hour record from 2018-21, set at the same track, at 48.007 km.

● Sailing ● The U.S. Sailing Association (USSA) made public the 16 October summary report prepared by the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee on retaliation accusations against athletes for raising issues about the governing body. In brief:

“Specifically, the USOPC found multiple instances of attempted retaliation or actual retaliation by members of USSA against athletes for raising concerns regarding staff and the Olympic Operations program and against an Athlete Representative based on their perception that the Athlete Representative was responsible for the former Executive Director of US Olympic Sailing’s departure.

“The USOPC also found that the USSA members retaliated in some instances based on their lack of understanding of the role of athlete voice and due to the absence of a formal process to collect and document concerns that fall outside USSA’s Grievance procedures, which hindered USSA’s ability to sufficiently protect the Athlete Representatives.

“Finally, the USOPC did not find evidence to support allegations that the Olympic Operations staff favored some athletes over others based on the athletes’ preferred method of training. Instead, the USOPC found that there was a lack of clarity surrounding the allocation of athlete resources, in the absence of which some athletes perceived the Olympic Operations staff as weaponizing the resource allocation process to favor certain athletes.”

The specific issues arose during the period from September 2022 to March 2023 and the USOPC inquiry included interviews of 29 individuals, including 11 athletes and 10 USSA staff members. There were findings against two individuals now departed from the USSA, but also a finding that the USSA was not “in violation of any of its obligations under the Ted Stevens Act or the USOPC’s Bylaws and related policies.”

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TSX REPORT: Four IOC members push for Bach to serve longer; IOC to explore Olympics for esports; LA28’s added-sports program approved

Algerian IOC member Mustapha Berraf at the IOC Session in India, asking for IOC President Thomas Bach to be extended to an extra term. (Photo: IOC video screenshot)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. IOC members ask to change rules to extend Bach
2. Bach electrifies Session opening with “Olympic Esports Games” idea
3. IOC undertakes safeguarding and human rights portfolios
4. Olympic power calculus shifting within IOC and Asia
5. Retton making “remarkable progress” against pneumonia

BULLETIN: The LA28 added-sports program was approved by the IOC Session on Monday, as was the return of weightlifting, and a stripped-down version of modern pentathlon, but boxing’s inclusion was put on hold.

● Four members at the International Olympic Committee’s Session in India asked for a change on the IOC’s election rules to allow two-term President Thomas Bach to serve an additional four-year term. He was non-committal, so far.

● Bach stunned the membership the day before at the formal opening of the Session, proposing the study of an “Olympic Esports Games,” building on the success of the IOC’s initial forays, including this year’s Olympic Esports Week in Singapore.

● The IOC Session approved a new safeguarding pilot project on three continents, and new language in the Olympic Charter referencing “internationally-recognized human rights.”

● Developments which speak directly to potential power shifts within the Olympic Movement include an IOC Ethics report which asks for new elections at the Olympic Council of Asia and the disqualification of Kuwaiti Sheikh Talal, who won in July, and the approval of two rising IOC stars from Jordan and Zimbabwe as the candidates for two Executive Board positions.

● Good news for Mary Lou Retton, with a report of “remarkable progress” against the rare strain of pneumonia she is fighting. The crowdfunding appeal to pay her medical bills has surpassed $430,000 as of Sunday evening.

World Championships: Beach Volleyball (U.S.’s Cheng and Hughes dethrone defending champs to take women’s Worlds gold!) = Rugby (World Cup final four now down to Argentina, New Zealand, England and South Africa) ●

Panorama: Los Angeles 1984 (passing of LAOOC senior executive Dick Sargent) = Olympic Winter Games 2020-34 (IOC approves double-hosting concept) = Olympic Games 2026 (Prime Minister Modi says India wants 2036) = Israel (British sports minister rips English FA for not offering the salute it gave to Ukraine) = Athletics (2: Oduduru hit with six-year suspension; Joshua Belet and Meseret Belete win Amsterdam Marathon) = Badminton (China wins three at Arctic Open) = Cycling (4: Vader leads Gree-Tour of Guangxi with two stages left; Consonni wins Tour of Chongming Island; Mathieu and Sakakibara take BMX Racing season titles; Martin and Deng win final BMX Freestyle World Cup) = Football (Germany out-classes U.S. men, 3-1, in friendly) = Swimming (McKeown wins three, nearly get two world records at Athens World Cup) ●

BULLETIN: During the Monday morning portion of the International Olympic Committee Session in Mumbai, India, the IOC membership approved the package of five added sports proposed by the LA28 organizing committee, including baseball-softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash. The vote, by a show of hands, was almost unanimous, with two against and 2-3 abstentions.

It was noted that these sports will add 742 athletes to the overall total, moving from 10,500 to 11,242, and IOC Program Commission Chair Karl Stoss (AUT) noted that this number will need to be reduced in cooperation with all of the other International Federations. He also explained that the crowding issues in Los Angeles will be reduced by having some of these added sports held outside of California.

A very detailed, 40-minute presentation by LA28 emphasized that all five of these added sports have vibrant professional leagues that can be worked with for promotion, especially emphasizing the enthusiasm and commitment of the NFL for Flag Football. The projection is that these sports will be cost-neutral to the organizing committee, if not revenue-positive.

A further set of votes was taken on the pending sports of boxing, weightlifting and modern pentathlon. On boxing, there was a surprise, as the decision was postponed, since there is no IOC-recognized International Federation for the sport at present; the IOC de-recognized the International Boxing Association in June. So, boxing’s status for LA28 is on hold for now.

Weightlifting was voted back in (none were against), but subject to enhanced monitoring of the federation’s doping program, now outsourced to the International Testing Agency.

Modern Pentathlon was also voted in, but in a completely new format, with riding removed, obstacle racing included and the fencing ranking round removed so that only one venue will be required in order to reduce costs. Further, the number of competition days will be reduced and the new format must be approved by the relevant stakeholders, including the Olympic Broadcasting Service. The sport survives, but now in a lightweight version compared to Pierre de Coubertin’s vision first implemented in 1912.

The LA28 presentation was opened by Chair Casey Wasserman, who made an unexpected, impassioned address about the importance of supporting Ukraine and of supporting Israel after its attack by Hamas, before transitioning to the LA28 sports program proposal.

In the question-and-answer session that followed the presentation, IOC member Syed Shahid Ali of Pakistan objected to Wasserman’s comments as political, but French member Guy Drut also spoke, recalling that he – as a high hurdler – was in the Olympic Village in Munich during the terrorist incident in 1972, and supported Wasserman’s remarks, and received applause in the room.

Much more to come on the LA28 presentation and the results of today’s votes.

1.
IOC members ask to change rules to extend Bach

It had been whispered for a while. Who can possibly replace International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER) in 2025? No one. So let’s change the rules and let him serve longer.

The idea is now out in the open. Near the beginning of Sunday’s first day of the 141st IOC Session, Algerian member Mustapha Berraf, the fourth to speak in an open-forum segment, and the President of the Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA) was recognized and read from lengthy prepared remarks, which included (quoting the simultaneous interpreter):

“I also listened to your speech yesterday with great attention and I must say I was very concerned listening to you about the future and particularly with regard with the measures that we need to take to ensure that our Movement will be able to maintain its solidarity [and] credibility. …

“The Covid-19 period and the dysfunction between certain parties at war are being the perfect illustration and thanks to our mobilization and thanks to our solidarity organized by you, our President, Thomas Bach, that we were able to save the Olympic and sports movement, and to allow all the athletes of the world to continue to allow them to divert their sports and their abilities.

“I want to bring to your attention the fact that questions which I asked to speak about have been the subject of a large discussion with the Executive Board in ANOCA, of which I am the representative and the majority of African members of the IOC, which approved them in a large majority.

“A number of the Olympic Charter provisions that were adopted in 2021 and which deal with the fact that there should be a secret ballot to elect our President for eight years, a period of office which could be renewed for a period of four years. You were elected on the 10th of September 1993 [actually 2013] and on 10th of March 2021, you were re-elected for a period of four years.

“There have been a number of changes and crises that you have had to deal with, which you have dealt with very well, thanks to the support of us all. The changes that you have to face, we have to face in the IOC, takes place at a time of great divisions in the world, and I think it is necessary, really, that we have this exceptional leadership which you have shown.

“Therefore, on behalf of the African National Olympic Committees, and the African members of the IOC, suggest that we make the necessary arrangements so that President Thomas Bach should be allowed to carry out an additional term of office, which would allow the IOC to go through this period of torment with a President who has proved his mettle, and which will allow the IOC to prepare a transition in a very much more serene manner. …

“Dear friends, in conclusion, let me just say that our demand to extend the term of office is being done on behalf of the entire Executive Board of ANOCA, and which takes into account the general interest of our Movement.

“On this occasion, I would like to extend to you the thank-you on behalf of the Executive Board and also I’d like to congratulate the illustrious members of the IOC. And I’d like to say that under your leadership, we have been able to deal with all the changes on the planet, and also having given to our continent, Africa, the possibility for the first time in its history to be able to organize an Olympic Games. Senegal and Africa will do their best to be up to the task which brings with it this exceptional responsibility.”

Africa has 16 members in the IOC, out of 99 in total. But among the next five speakers, three directly supported the added-term idea:

● Luis Mejia Oviedo (DOM; elected in 2017)
● Camilo Perez Lopez (PAR; elected in 2018)
● Aicha Garad Ali (DJI, elected in 2012)

In addition, Japan’s Morinari Watanabe, elected in 2018 and the head of the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique expressed warm appreciation for Bach, saying at the end of his remark “I love you,” but also mentioned the importance of good governance. Bach smiled back and replied, “Thank you for your love.”

Last to speak in the open forum was Australian John Coates, head of the IOC’s Legal Commission, who spoke while leafing through the Olympic Charter and noted:

“It is not an easy matter to change the Charter. It requires that the proposed modifications to the Charter are included on an agenda, our agenda, that is circulated 30 days in advance of the meeting. And there is also a requirement that in respect of any proposed change of rule or by-laws, the IOC Executive Board considers them and presents a report to the Session, the same Session where it will be proposed to consider them.”

So, any change would require approval of the IOC Executive Board and a ballot measure presented to the members by the middle of next June. Plenty of time.

Bach did reply, but was non-committal, saying in part:

“I think I can summarize these interventions and first of all, say thank you very, very much for your kind words of support, because I think these words of support are not only directed to me, there are directed to all of us, of what made us to overcome the challenges we had was exactly this unity, this support which you expressed with regard to many items over all the time. And we can only be credible if we are appealing to all these divisive forces in the world, if we are appealing to respect the unifying power of sport, if we ourselves are unified. Otherwise, we have no credibility. If we are divided, how can we teach others about unity and our unifying power.

“And I think I can interpret your words there also in this direction. And I will not hide that they went straight to my heart, because you know how much I always emphasize this unity, and how much I always appreciate this support, this friendship and even the love expressed by Mr. Watanabe.

“Having said this, you also know that I am very loyal to the Olympic Charter. Being a co-author of this Olympic Charter, it drives me to be even more loyal to the Olympic Charter. …

“So thank you very, very much again, and I am really touched by your support and your friendship, and in this spirit of support and friendship and unity, I hope we can also have this Session and take the decisions in this Session which we can take.”

There was no applause or cheering in the room during the statements; of the 99 IOC members eligible to come to Mumbai, 12 were absent, notably including the Russian members Shamil Tarpishchev and Yelena Isinbayeva.

Observed: This is a new – and not totally unexpected – development and the accusations will immediately begin that this was all planned in advance, with Berraf reading from a lengthy prepared script in French. But the real question is whether Bach will agree to serve and whether the IOC membership will go along with this. As Berraf said, Africa is already pledged. But it will take more votes than they have to make this work.

The only sure thing that can be said is that any of the members who have been touted as possible IOC President material for 2025 are sidelined until Bach – now 69 – announces whether he will accept an extra four-year term.

The current rules require that IOC members can serve through the end of the year in which they turn 70, but the Session can extend the age limit by four years by a majority vote. Bach, however, was elected in 1991 and members elected prior to 1999 may serve to age 80. The Presidential term is fixed at a first term of eight years and a second term of four years.

2.
Bach electrifies Session opening with “Olympic Esports Games” idea

“The younger generation has a completely new way of thinking. They are living digital lives right now. We must not ignore their thinking if we do not want to jeopardize our own future. We must empower them to guide us with their young mindset. We have to be in the driver’s seat.”

With that introduction in his remarks at the opening of the IOC Session in Mumbai, IOC President Bach explained that electronic sports are a part of the IOC’s future now, not later:

“Another dimension of this digital revolution is esports. There are 3 billion people playing esports and gaming around the world. It is estimated that over 500 million of them are interested specifically in esports which includes virtual sports and sport simulations. What is even more relevant to us: a majority of them are under the age of 34.

“This is why we took the strategic decision to engage with esports in a holistic way. We chose an approach that would allow us to be active in the esports space while staying true to our values that have guided us for over a century. With respect to esports, our values are and remain the red line that we will not cross. Our crystal-clear position is gaining more and more respect in the esports community. One of the leading publishers even adapted their popular game to conform fully with our Olympic values – so that players shot at targets, not at people. …

“This was a promising start. But it is just that: a start. It is like in any sport: after the promising start, the real race still lies ahead.

“To compete successfully in this race, I have asked our new IOC Esports Commission to study the creation of:

“Olympic Esports Games.”

“[Artificial Intelligence] and esports – these are our two opportunities. To seize these opportunities and to manage the risks, we need a new mindset. We need the mindset of the young people. We have to trust and to empower them, because the pace of change will be exponential.

“It is “change or be changed” once again.”

The Olympic Esports Commission is chaired by France’s David Lappartient, who is also the President of the Union Cycliste Internationale and the CNOSF, the French National Olympic Committee.

3.
IOC undertakes safeguarding and human rights portfolios

The IOC Session took a couple of remarkable actions, initiating a “safeguarding” program for athletes on three continents and agreeing to changes to the Olympic Charter that refer to human rights.

The safeguarding project is described as:

“[A] plan to establish two pilot regional safeguarding hubs in Southern Africa and the Pacific Islands. The plans build on existing initiatives in those regions. In addition, the IOC [Executive Board] supported the initial work for a European safeguarding hub.

“The new regional hubs will act as central coordination points, and will provide athletes with independent guidance, and help them access psychosocial support, legal aid and any other assistance that they may need. This will be delivered through existing services, available locally, in the athletes’ own language and with an understanding of their culture and local context.”

It’s rather amazing for a worldwide organization like the IOC to undertake an effort that has to be locally based within communities, certainly the work of National Olympic Committees and their national sport federations. But the announcement also clarified that, once again, only the IOC has the money, interest and is willing take some level of responsibility:

“In response to the request by Olympic Movement stakeholders and International Federations (IFs) in particular for the IOC to take the lead in addressing the critical challenges related to safeguarding in sport at local level, the IOC created a dedicated Safeguarding Working Group in March this year.

“Chaired by EB member and Deputy Chair of the IOC’s Gender Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Commission HRH Prince Feisal Al Hussein, the working group’s remit is to consider the best approach to establishing independent safeguarding systems and structures at national level, which will ensure that resources are directed to where they are most needed to support athletes and build safeguarding capacity in sports organisations.”

The IOC announced a $10 million fund to assist in this area earlier this year. The over-arching concept was also described:

“The pilot hubs in Southern Africa and the Pacific Islands will build on existing initiatives in the regions, and will have in-depth knowledge and understanding of local safeguarding measures, and the legal landscape and services available, so that they can guide anyone harmed in sport – from grassroots through to elite level – towards trusted services, particularly those designed to support their well-being.

“Where there are gaps in the available services, the hubs will seek to mobilise resources and partnerships to address them. The hubs’ primary focus will be on response, in order to ensure that any person who has been harmed in sport has a direct point of contact who can offer immediate assistance and access to local support.”

The IOC Session also approved changes to the Olympic Charter that incorporate references to human rights. The two key language changes are to the “Fundamental Principles of Olympism,” no. 1 and no. 4:

● Modification to no. 1, in pertinent part:

“Olympism seeks to create a way of life based on the joy of effort, the educational value of good example, social responsibility and respect for internationally recognised human rights and universal fundamental ethical principles within the remit of the Olympic Movement.”

● Modification to no. 4, in pertinent part:

“Every individual must have access to the practice of sport, without discrimination of any kind in respect of internationally recognised human rights within the remit of the Olympic Movement.”

The language is very carefully written so as not to apply to issues outside of sport, or to sports which are outside of the Olympic Movement. There is also no specific reference to what constitutes “internationally recognized human rights.” But this continues the IOC’s march, accelerated by Bach, to line the IOC up with the guidelines of the United Nations as a stamp of approval.

What these changes will mean in actual practice is anyone’s guess. And that was intentional.

4.
Olympic power calculus shifting within IOC and Asia

Beyond the now-raised question of whether the IOC’s Bach might serve beyond the current 12-year limit, watchers of the power intrigue inside the Olympic Movement were especially attentive to two actions in the last few days:

(1) The continuing drama over the 8 July elections at the Olympic Council of Asia, where Kuwaiti Sheikh Talal Fahad Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah was elected by 24-20 over World Aquatics President and fellow Kuwaiti Husain Al-Musallam, has escalated via a report from the IOC’s Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer Paquerette Girard Zappelli (FRA).

Reuters reported that her report to the OCA stated that the organization should “declare the elections held on 8 July 2023 as invalid, to review the OCA Constitution, in particular to make it compliant… with regard to the election process, transparency, and checks and balances.” She suggested that new elections be held.

The IOC Ethics Commission has ruled that the OCA election process was tainted by the appearance of the former, long-time OCA President Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, an IOC member who self-suspended himself in 2018 over a Swiss forgery case in which he was convicted in 2021 (the case is on appeal). Sheikh Ahmad was the President of the OCA from 1991-2021 and against direct instructions, flew to the OCA elections assembly in Bangkok (THA) to lobby for his younger brother, Sheikh Talal. Sheikh Ahmad was suspended from the IOC for three years, and Girard Zappelli said in a letter to the interim OCA President, Randhir Singh (IND), that Sheikh Talal should have been declared ineligible to stand for election.

The brothers have filed an action against the IOC over this issue with the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Sheikh Ahmad was a high-profile power broker within the IOC and at FIFA, but his actions inside and outside of sport have sidelined his influence in the Olympic Movement; it is worth noting that he is hardly inactive as he is the minister of defense in Kuwait.

(2) Not directly related to the Olympic Council of Asia election issues was the nomination and election of two highly-important IOC members to the Executive Board: Jordan’s Prince Feisal Al-Hussein and Zimbabwe’s Kirsty Coventry.

Al-Hussein was first elected to the IOC Executive Board in 2019 and will serve a second term. Now 56, he is also a board member of the OCA since 2007 and could be an IOC-approved nominee for President if and when a new election is held. As for the IOC, Al-Hussein was a member of the Coordination Commission for the Tokyo 2020 Games and is the Vice Chair of the Gender Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Commission since last year. Under Bach, he is clearly on the rise.

Coventry, the Zimbabwe Minister for Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation, had a high-profile role heading the IOC’s Athletes’ Commission from 2018-21 and served as an Executive Board member from 2018-21. She is the head of the IOC’s Games Optimisation Group and was just appointed to head the new IOC Safeguarding Working Group (see above). A seven-time Olympic swimming medalist (2-4-1) from 2004 and 2008, she has been consistently mentioned as a possible successor to Bach (if he does not agree to seek an additional term). She would be the first IOC President from Africa and the first woman, both of which would be in line with Bach’s emphasis on diversity.

Already on the Executive Board and whispered as possible Bach successors are Aruban attorney Nicole Hoevertsz, the head of the Coordination Commission for LA28, and Juan Antonio Samaranch, Jr. (ESP), who served as the Coordination Commission head for the Beijing 2022 Winter Games and the son of legendary IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch, who served from 1980-2001, among others.

Observed: These developments are completely in line with Bach’s plan for succession (if he does not serve an additional term). Now 69, he is already attentive to the future. But that does not mean that he will get what he wants in terms of a successor. But he is not letting the future – whenever that is – take its course without his input.

5.
Retton making “remarkable progress” against pneumonia

Los Angeles Olympic icon Mary Lou Retton is improving per daughter Shayla Schrepfer’s post on Saturday, which included:

“Mom’s progress is truly remarkable. Prayers have been felt and have been answered.

“Although she remains in ICU, her path to recovery is steadily unfolding. Her fighting spirit is truly shining.

“Her breathing is become stronger, and her reliance on machines is diminishing.

“Though it’s a lengthy journey, witnessing these improvements is incredibly heartening! She’s responding so well to treatments.”

Retton, 55, was hospitalized to treat a rare strain of pneumonia and her family opened a Spotfund.com crowd-funding site since she is uninsured. The site opened last Tuesday (17th) and as of the end of Sunday, had raised $434,870 against a $50,000 goal from 8,033 donors.

As a 16-year-old, Retton famously won the All-Around at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, winning by just 0.05 over favored Ecaterina Szabo from Romania. Retton won five medals in L.A. in all, including a team silver and won five medals in all (1-2-2).

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Beach Volleyball ● The FIVB World Championships concluded in Tlaxcala, Mexico, with the American duo of Kelly Cheng and Sara Hughes becoming the first U.S. gold medalists in 14 years.

They had to win over the defending champions, Brazil’s top-seeded Ana Patricia Ramos and Duda Lisboa (BRA), 21-16 and 24-22 for a sweep and the first World Championships medal for both U.S. stars.

This was the third meeting this season between the two teams in a championship final, with Cheng and Hughes winning the Tepic Elite 16 tournament in March and the Brazilians winning Gstaad Elite 16 in Switzerland in July.

Cheng (nee Claes) and Hughes were NCAA champs at USC in 2016 and 2017 then came to the professional ranks, but separated in 2018. They reunited in 2022 and made the two Beach Pro Tour finals this season before the Worlds. They won the first U.S. women’s title since Jen Kessy and April Ross. U.S. women’s pairs had lost three straight Worlds finals since, in 2011, 2017 and 2019.

In the third-place match, Americans Kristen Nuss and Taryn Kloth won their first Worlds medals with a 15-21, 21-19, 15-8 win over Australia’s Tokyo 2020 silver medalists Mariafe Artacho del Solar and Taliqua Clancy (AUS).

Nuss and Kloth are a relatively new pair, starting together in 2021, and have been quite successful, winning eight medals in 19 starts in Beach Pro Tour play (4-2-2) and now a Worlds medal! It’s only the second time that U.S. women won two medals in one Worlds; Annett Davis and Jenny Johnson Jordan won silver and Liz Masakayan and Elaine Youngs took bronze in 1999.

The men’s title match was another surprise, with 16-seed Ondrej Perusic and David Schweiner (CZE) defeating David Ahman and Jonatan Hellvig (SWE), the no. 2 seeds, by 21-15, 17-21 and 15-13. The Czech duo were the 2022 European runners-up, but won their first Worlds medals. They had won twice on the Beach Pro Tour this season and were hottest when it counted most.

In the third-place match, 11th-seeded Bartosz Losiak and Michal Bryl (POL) won their first Worlds medals with a 21-17, 21-18 win over Americans Trevor Crabb and Theo Brunner (USA). It’s the third time Brunner has finished fourth at a Worlds, also in 2015 with Nick Lucena and in 2022 with Chaim Schalk.

● Rugby ● The 10th Rugby World Cup is on to the semifinals, with Argentina to face three-time champion New Zealand next Friday, and undefeated England taking on defending champ South Africa. 

The quarterfinal matches were thrillers, starting with Argentina’s 29-17 win over Wales, with each side scoring two tries, but Emiliano Boffelli scoring 14 points himself on four penalties and two conversions. Wales led by 10-6 at half, but Boffelli scored 11 points in the second to lead the Argentine comeback.

New Zealand dislodged the top-ranked Irish in their quarterfinal by 28-24, taking a 13-0 lead in the first half, but saw almost all of it disappear by halftime, leading just 18-17. The second half was taut, with Will Jordan scoring a try in the 53rd (Jordie Barrett conversion) for a 25-17 lead and after a penalty try cut the lead to one again, Barrett kicked a penalty in the 69th minute for the 28-24 final.

England got up by 21-10 at half against Fiji, but then had to hold on as Peni Ravai and Vilimoni Botitu scored tries for a 24-24 tie in the 68th minute. But Owen Farrell scored on a drop in the 72nd and a penalty in the 78th to finish with 19 points and advance to the semis.

The last quarterfinal was a clash between second-ranked France and third-ranked South Africa, which turned into a classic. The French managed a 22-19 lead at the half, but points were hard to come by in the second half. France’s Thomas Ramos scored on a penalty for a 25-19 French lead in the 54th, then Eben Etzebeth scored a try for South Africa in the 67th with a Handre Polland conversion to take a 26-25 lead and then Polland added a penalty for a 29-25 edge. France managed only a 73rd-minute penalty from Ramos and could do no more and lost by a point before 79,386 at the Stade de France.

In the semis this week:

20 October: Argentina (4-1) vs. New Zealand (4-1)
21 October: England (5-0) vs. South Africa (4-1)

Both games will be played at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis in the Paris area, with the championship final on the 28th.

With four matches left, attendance has reached 2,123,718, an excellent average of 48,266.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 1984: Los Angeles ● Dick Sargent, one of the key players in the transformational Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee and a key confidant of Peter Ueberroth, has passed at age 89.

His obituary reported that Sargent died peacefully on 5 October in Laguna Nigel, California after a period of declining health. He will be remembered as a tireless, can-do personality who always saw an opportunity or a solution rather than a problem. And he was among the most fun, entertaining and warm personalities to have a drink or dinner with ever.

Sargent, a World War II veteran (Army), graduated from San Jose State and with his lifelong friend Ueberroth, prospered in the travel business, helping to build one of the largest travel concerns in the U.S. He was one of the earliest hires by Ueberroth in the fledgling LAOOC in 1979 and was a key player in the earliest negotiations with the competition and Olympic Village venues, as well as on security and television sales.

As the organizing committee expanded, Sargent became the “fireman.” If there was an impossible-to-solve issue, Ueberroth assigned it to his friend. Perhaps the most chaotic was the initial organization of the 15,000 km cross-country Olympic torch relay, designated to start on 8 May 1984 and run across the U.S. and ending up at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on time for the opening of the Games on 28 July.

Sargent had to deal with intractable opposition from the Hellenic Olympic Committee in Greece, which stridently objected to the LAOOC’s fund-raising program, which offered a “Youth Legacy Kilometer” run with the torch for a $3,000 donation that was split among the Boys and Girls Clubs and the Special Olympics. Some $10.95 million was raised, and the Greeks only relented and agreed to light the flame in the traditional manner at Olympia and turn it over to the LAOOC in the final week before the ceremony. As was his norm, Sargent had a back-up plan, arranging for an alternate flame to be lit and secretly brought to New York from the IOC headquarters in Switzerland!

Sargent returned to the travel industry after the Games, but took time out to organize the Long Beach (California) Centennial celebration in 1988 and worked on many other sports-related projects, notably in sailing. Near the end of his life, he was exploring opportunities for an institute or museum related to the impact of the 1984 Olympic Games that he and his friend Ueberroth helped make such a success.

Sargent is survived by his wife Pat and his children Tony and Michelle.

● Olympic Winter Games 2030-34 ● The IOC Session approved the concept of a double allocation of the 2030 and 2034 Olympic Winter Games. From the announcement:

“The proposal was made in order to allow more time for the Olympic Movement to address the challenges made clear by the preliminary findings of a report looking at the impact of climate change on the Olympic Winter Games, which was also presented to the IOC EB on Friday. It reveals a reduction in the pool of potential hosts by 2040, and further by mid-century.”

Winter Games Future Host Commission head Karl Stoss (AUT) told the members:

“Whilst we look forward to celebrating 100 years of the Olympic Winter Games next February, there is no doubt that we are facing great challenges, and our goal is to ensure we can continue to hold successful Games in the future.

“A double allocation would bring security for the Olympic Movement in solid traditional winter sport and climate-reliable hosts until 2034, while allowing the IOC time to reflect on the long-term future of the Winter Games.”

This is good news for Salt Lake City, which has a ready-to-go bid for 2034, while the 2030 situation is more fluid, with no clear candidate, but activity toward a bid in southern France, Sweden and Switzerland. The announced timeline:

“Should the Commission feel that it is in a position to do so, it will recommend the opening of a Targeted Dialogue to the IOC EB at its meeting in November, with a view to an IOC Session election in 2024.”

● Olympic Games 2036 ● Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi made an impassioned and direct speech at the opening of the 141st IOC Session in Mumbai (IND) that included:

“India is eager to host the Olympics in the country. India will leave no stone unturned in the preparation for the successful organization of the Olympics in 2036, this is the dream of the 140 crore Indians.

“India is also eager to host the Youth Olympics taking place in the year 2029.”

With that, the formal entry of India into the 2036 race has started, with many countries discussing the idea with the IOC’s Future Host Commission. The attribution of the 2036 Games probably won’t come before 2026 at the earliest, but more likely in 2027 or 2028.

● Israel ● Lucy Frazer, the British Secretary of State for Digital, Media, Culture and Sport pointedly criticized the English Football Association last week on X (ex-Twitter):

“I am extremely disappointed by the FA’s decision not to light up the Wembley Stadium arch following last weekend’s horrific terrorist attacks in Israel, and have made my views clear to the FA.

“It is especially disappointing in light of the FA’s bold stance on other terrorist attacks in the recent past.

“Words and actions matter. The Government is clear: we stand with Israel.”

Reuters reported that “Wembley, the home of England’s national football team, has previously lit up its iconic arch with the colours of Ukraine, Turkey and other countries in solidarity. However, it will not do the same for Israel, media reports said.”

The FA posted a statement last Thursday that made no reference to Israel or its attackers:

“On Friday evening, we will remember the innocent victims of the devastating events in Israel and Palestine.

“Our thoughts are with them, and their families and friends in England and Australia and with all the communities who are affected by this ongoing conflict. We stand for humanity and an end to the death, violence, fear and suffering.

“England and Australia players will wear black armbands during their match at Wembley Stadium and there will also be a period of silence held before kick off.”

● Athletics ●Divine Oduduru has been banned for six years by a three-member Disciplinary Tribunal for committing two Anti-Doping Rule Violations (ADRVs) of Possession of Prohibited Substances and the Attempted Use of a Prohibited Substance or Method and ordered to pay World Athletics US$3000 towards its expenses regarding the case.”

The Athletics Integrity Unit’s announcement explained that the suspensions were an outcome of the U.S. Justice Department investigation of American Eric Lira under the Rodchenkov Anti-Doping Act, which alleged Lira as the distributor of doping substances to Oduduru and fellow Nigerian star Blessing Okagare:

“The Prohibited Substances found in Oduduru’s apartment were two boxes of Somatropin, “Xerendip” and “Humatrope”, which were identified as human growth hormone; a plastic ziplock bag labelled “IGF LR3” – an abbreviation for synthetic or “recombinant” Insulin Growth Factor – containing three vials, and two boxes of recombinant erythropoietin (EPO). According to testimony, one of the boxes of EPO was open and had only one of six vials remaining.”

Okagbare was given a total suspension of 11 years in 2022 and Oduduru’s suspension began on 9 February 2023 and will expire on 8 February 2029, when he will be 32. All of his results since 12 July 2021 have been nullified.

Oduduru was a sensation for Texas Tech in 2019, winning the NCAA titles in the men’s 100 m and 200 m in 9.86 and 19.73. He was a two-time Olympian for Nigeria at Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020, but did not make the final at either Games.

Kenyan Joshua Belet and Ethiopia’s Meseret Belete won the Amsterdam Marathon on Sunday in 2:04:18 and 2:18:21, respectively.

Belet moved away from the leak pack after 30 km and won going away, with fellow Kenyans Cybrian Kotut second (2:04:34) and Bethwel Chumba (2:04:37) third. Belet, 25, moved to no. 9 on the 2023 world list with the win, in his third career marathon, all this year.

Belete also moved to no. 9 on the year list, moving away from three challengers around the 40 km mark and winning easily, 1:29 ahead of Meseret Abebayehu (ETH: 2:19:50) and 1:51 ahead of Dorcas Tuitoek (KEN: 2:20:02).

● Badminton ● China took three titles at the BWF World Tour Arctic Open in Vantaa (FIN), starting with an all-China final in the women’s Singles, with third-seed Yue Han defeating countrywoman Zhi Yi Wang, 16-21, 22-20, 21-12.

In the women’s Doubles, Sheng Shu Liu and Ning Tan swept Jongkolphan Kititharakul and Rawinda Prajongjai (THA), 21-13, 24-22, and in the all-China final of the Mixed Doubles, top-seeds Yan Zhe Feng and Dong Ping Huang dispatched Zhen Bang Jiang and Ya Xin Wei, 21-14, 21-15.

The men’s Singles was an all-Malaysian final, with no. 8 seed Zii Lia Lee defeating Tze Yang Ng, 21-14, 21-15.

The Danish men’s Doubles team of Kim Astrup and Anders Rasmussen won in straight sets over Wei Chong Man and Kai Wun Tee (MAS), 21-18, 21-17.

The BWF World Tur moves to Odense, Denmark for the Victor Denmark Open, starting on Tuesday.

● Cycling ● The final race of the UCI World Tour for 2023 is the five-stage Gree-Tour of Guangxi in China, which will finish on Tuesday. The first two stages were flat, won by Italian sprinters Elia Viviani over teammate Jonathan Milan, and then Milan won the second stage.

The mostly flat, 134,3 km third stage in Nanning was another mass sprint finish, with a Dutch sweep by Olav Kooij, Rick Pluimers and Marijn van den Berg, all timed in 3:04:09. On Sunday, a flat, 161.4 km stage finished uphill, with a win for Milan Vader (NED) in 3:43:45, two seconds up on Remy Rochas (FRA) and eight seconds over an eight-member chase pack, with Hugh Carthy (GBR) getting third.

With the win, Vader took the overall lead after four stages, six seconds up on Rochas and 14 up on Carthy. There are 16 riders within 29 seconds of the lead with two mostly-flat stages remaining.

The UCI Women’s World Tour’s China leg started with the Tour of Chongming Island, with Mylene de Zoete (NED) winning the flat first stage at the head of a mass sprint in 2:34:47 for the 108.9 km course.

The 128.6 km second stage was also a flat sprinter’s event, with Hanna Tserakh of Belarus (a “neutral”) winning in 3:18:11. The third and final stage on Saturday was another mass sprint at the end of 112.3 km, won by Italian Chaia Consonni over Daria Pikulik (POL) and Martina Fidanza (ITA). That gave Consonni the overall victory in 8:40:21, with de Zoete nine seconds back and Pikulik 10 seconds back in third.

The women’s season finishes Tuesday with the one-day Tour of Guangxi.

The final BMX World Cup races of the season – nos. 9 and 10 – were in Santiago del Estero (ARG), with 2022 U.S. champ Cameron Wood taking Friday’s final in 30.328 over France’s Romain Mathieu (30.430) and Australian Bodi Turner (30.891).

Mahieu came back on Saturday to win his fifth World Cup race in the seasonal finale in 30.089, trailed by Tokyo Olympic Champion Niek Kimman (NED: 30.530) and Britain’s Quillan Isidore (30.967).

With five wins, Mahieu was an easy winner of the seasonal title with 3,543 points, ahead of teammate Joris Daudet (3,094) and Diego Arboleda (COL: 2,159).

Australian star Saya Sakakibara won Friday’s women’s race in 32.143, just ahead of 2018 World Champion Laura Smulders (NED: 32.280) and American Felicia Stancil (33.073). Sakakibara completed the weekend sweep on Saturday, winning in 32.074, ahead of Tokyo 2020 bronze medalist Merel Smulders (32.976) and American two-time World Champion Alise Willoughby (33.394).

Sakakibara also won five races on the season and took the 2023 World Cup title with 3,775 points to 3,044 for Britain’s Olympic champ Bethany Shriever, with Laura Smulders third (2,680), Willoughby fourth (2,480) and Merel Smulders – Laura’s younger sister – fifth (2,334).

At the BMX Freestyle World Cup Park Bazhong (CHN), the final World Cup on the 2023 schedule, the home team took gold and bronze in the women’s final, with 17-year-old Yawen Deng scoring 93.84 points to win over five-time World Champion Hannah Roberts, 22, of the U.S. (91.00) and 2023 Worlds bronze medalist Sibei Sun, 18, of China (89.20).

Roberts won the seasonal title with 3,700 points, ahead of Sun (2,930), with fellow Chinese Huimin Zhou third overall (2,920).

Australia’s Logan Martin, the Tokyo Olympic gold medalist, won the men’s final with a big second run, scoring 96.74 to win over Kim Reilly (GBR: 96.56) and France’s Anthony Jeanjean (95.70). Martin won the seasonal title with 3,820 points, ahead of Reilly (2,910) and Jeanjean (2,890).

● Football ● Germany out-classed the U.S. men, 3-1, in a friendly in Hartford, Connecticut on Saturday, scoring twice in the second half to break a 1-1 tie.

U.S. star forward Christian Pulisic scored a sensational goal in the 27th minute to put the U.S. on top, taking possession of the ball on the left side and then running through five defenders to send a right-footed rocket into the upper right corner of the German goal for a 1-0 lead.

But the Germans were on the attack as well. Midfielder Leroy Sane hit the post in the 17th minute, and Sane and defender Antonio Rudiger had shots blocked before Sane dribbled past six defenders at the top of the box, then pushed the ball to midfielder Ilkay Gundogan, who returned it to Sane, whose shot was blocked by U.S. keeper Matt Turner. But the rebound rolled free and Gundogan evened the game in the 39th with a left-footed shot from the left side of he goal.

In the second half, the Germans struck twice in three minutes to take control. In the 58th, defender Robin Gosens got hold of a bouncing ball on the top of the box and sent a left-footed through-ball into the box to a sprinting striker Niclas Fuellbrug, who finished with a low shot that got past U.S. keeper Turner for a 2-1 lead.

In the 61st, it was midfielder Jamal Musiala driving with the ball into the box, but a deflection sent the ball to Fuellbrug, who returned it to a charging Musiala for a left-footed goal, and the 3-1 final.

The Germans broke a three-match losing streak with the win, and controlled possession at 60% and had a 19-6 advantage on shots. The U.S. fell to 4-8 all-time vs. Germany. The U.S. men will play Ghana on Tuesday (17th) at Nashville, Tennessee at 8:30 p.m. Eastern time.

● Swimming ● Australia’s Kaylee McKeown was the star of the second World Aquatics World Cup was in Athens (GRE), setting three World Cup records and perilously close to world marks in two events.

McKeown won the 100 and 200 m Backstrokes at the Tokyo Olympic Games and owns the world records in both at 57.45 in 2021 and 2:03.14 from March of 2023. In Berlin, she won the 50 m Back in a world-leading 27.02, moving her to no. 2 all-time and 0.04 off the 26.98 world mark of Xiang Lu (CHN) from 2018.

In the 100 m Back, she won in 57.63, just 0.18 off her own world mark and the equal-sixth performance of all time. McKeown took the 200 m Back in 2:06.02, ahead of Katie Grimes of the U.S. (2:08.01).

Sweden’s five-time World Champion Sarah Sjostrom won the women’s 50 m Butterfly in 24.97, a time that no one else has ever matched and the no. 13 performance in history. She now owns the top 22 performances ever! And Sjostrom was busy, winning the 50 m Free, and second in the 100 m Free and 100 m Fly.

China’s Yufei Zhang, the Tokyo silver winner, took the women’s 100 m Fly over Sjostrom in 56.06 (to 56.92), the no. 2 performance of the year (she’s also the world leader). Zhang also won the 200 m Fly (2:06.73) to be one of four women who won multiple events.

Hong Kong’s Siobhan Haughey continued her winning ways, taking the 100 m (52.55) and 200 m (1:55.03) Freestyles and World Champion Ruta Meilutyte (LTU) won the 50 (30.23) and 100 m (1:06.70) Breast events.

The sole women’s winner for the U.S. was Grimes, who took the 400 m Medley (4:38.74), an event in which she won the 2023 Worlds silver.

Matt Sates (RSA) won the 100 m Fly (51.82), 200 m Fly (1:55.44) and 200 m Medley (1:58.86) as the only three-event winner on the men’s side.

Two-event winners included American Michael Andrew in the men’s 50 m Free (21.96), 50 m Back (24.79); Danas Rapsys (LTU) in the 200 (1:45.72) and 400 m (3:48.64) Freestyles; Italy’s three-time Worlds gold medalist Thomas Ceccon in the 100 m Free (48.36) and the 100 m Backstroke (52.73); China’s triple World Champion Haiyang Qin in the 100 (58.44) and 200 m (2:08.05) Breaststrokes.

The third and final World Cup of 2023 comes next week in Budapest (HUN).

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TSX REPORT: IOC Exec Board approves LA28 added sports, OKs 2030-34 Winter Games double allocation, suspends Russia

The IOC Executive Board meeting in Mumbai, India (Photo: IOC-Greg Martin)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. LA28 added sports OK; 2030 and 2034 Winter double allocation on
2. IOC suspends Russia, offers no condolences to Israel
3. IOC creates four-sport Olympic qualifiers next year
4. IOC approves Wright as U.S. biathlete; Mollaei to Azerbaijan
5. Crouser, Lyles nominated for Men’s World Athlete of the Year

● On Friday morning, the International Olympic Committee Executive Board accepted the five added sports requested by the LA28 organizing committee, agreed to reinstate boxing, modern pentathlon and weightlifting on the 2028 program, and approved the recommendation of the Winter Games Future Host Commission for a double allocation next year of the hosts for the 2030 and 2034 Winter Games. The LA28 Games will now be the largest ever at 36 sports and will surpass the 10,500 athlete limit, with the details to be worked out by the end of 2024. The double allocation of Winter hosts is very good news for Salt Lake City, the leading candidate for 2034.

● On Thursday, the IOC Executive Board suspended the Russian Olympic Committee indefinitely, but said this had no impact on whether “neutral” athletes from Russia or Belarus will be able to compete in Paris in 2024. The IOC issued no statement on the Hamas attack on Israel, but asked about it, its spokesman read a bland statement expressing “sympathy” with “innocent victims.”

● The Executive Board announced two qualifying “festivals” to be held in Shanghai and Budapest next year for Olympic qualifying in BMX-Freestyle, break dancing, skateboarding and sport climbing.

● New Zealand biathlete Campbell Wright, a 2021 World Junior Champion in the sprint, was approved for nationality transfer to the U.S. Former Iranian judo World Champion Saeid Mollaei, who transferred to Mongolia after being told to throw matches to avoid competing against an Israeli, transferred nationality again to Azerbaijan.

● World Athletes posted its nominees for Men’s World Athlete of the Year, including Americans Noah Lyles and Ryan Crouser.

World Championships: Beach Volleyball (four U.S. teams in quarterfinals at Worlds in Mexico) = Rugby (quarterfinals this weekend) ●

Panorama: Asian Games (two more doping cases, total now 10) = Swimming (World Aquatics moves open-water World Cup out of Israel) = Taekwondo (2: Tunisia won two at Taiyuan Grand Prix; Iranian star withdraws with potential to face an Israeli) ●

Now available: our exclusive 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023, 2024, and beyond, by date and by sport: click here!

1.
LA28 added sports OK; 2030 and 2034 Winter
double allocation on

On Friday, the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board made a long list of decisions, shared by IOC President Thomas Bach (GER) and Sports Director Kit McConnell (NZL) at a news conference:

● The LA28 additional-sports request for baseball-softball, cricket, lacrosse, squash and flag football was approved and sent on for approval by the IOC Session. The concept for all of the team sports is for six-team tournaments for men and women, with the team sizes yet to be determined.

● All three of the sports that were previously off of the LA28 program were brought back in: boxing, modern pentathlon and weightlifting. It was noted that boxing has no international federation, that modern pentathlon would have been excluded if riding had been continued and that the improvement in doping control in weightlifting has been satisfactory.

● International federations requested adding a total of 16 disciplines to the Games, but all were rejected except for Beach Sprint in rowing, which will replace the Lightweight Double Sculls. It was the only replacement discipline proposed.

● The result of now having 36 sports – the most ever in an Olympic Games – on the LA28 program will require an athlete total beyond the 10,500 quota, but that the increase is to be managed carefully. The specific number of athletes in all sports and per discipline within sports will be determined at the end of 2024.

● The IOC’s Future Host Commission for the Olympic Winter Games submitted a report stating that by 2040, there would be 10 countries in which the snow sports could be reliably held. In order to figure out a future plan for a permanent rotation or some other way to hold future Winter Games, a double allocation of Winter Games hosts for 2030 and 2034 is to be made in 2024.

● The Winter Games host-selection timetable now foresees the Future Host Commission moving to “targeted dialogue” with potential hosts for specific Games as early as the end of October, but certainly in November, with the IOC Executive Board to review its recommendations at its November meeting. This is great news for Salt Lake City for 2034, but also means that there is considerable pressure on the potential 2030 bidders – France, Sweden and Switzerland – to get their programs together quickly.

Bach noted that with the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee (see item 2 below), that invitations – if any – for “neutral” Russian athletes for Paris 2024 would be made directly to the athletes themselves, or by the relevant International Federation, or through their national (Russian) federations, but not through the Russian Olympic Committee.

2.
IOC suspends Russia, offers no condolences to Israel

On the opening day of the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board meeting in Mumbai, India, a decision was announced to suspend the Russian Olympic Committee:

“The unilateral decision taken by the Russian Olympic Committee on 5 October 2023 to include, as its members, the regional sports organisations which are under the authority of the National Olympic Committee (NOC) of Ukraine (namely Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia) constitutes a breach of the Olympic Charter because it violates the territorial integrity of the NOC of Ukraine, as recognised by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in accordance with the Olympic Charter.”

The announcement went on to note that this has nothing to do with the potential participation of “neutral” athletes from Russia or Belarus. It will end any funding of the Russian Olympic Committee; the ROC is already suing the IOC for about $9 million it says it is owed as a share of the IOC’s TOP sponsorship program.

The Russian Olympic Committee’s response included:

“The IOC made another counterproductive decision today, heavy with obvious political overtones, thus confirming de-jure what was done de-facto back in February 2022.

“Russian athletes, the overwhelming majority of whom were unjustifiably barred from international competitions, are unaffected by this decision as nothing has changed in regard to neutral status.”

Russian sports minister Oleg Matytsin’s statement included:

“By making such decisions, the IOC demonstrates total dependence on political and business conditions, losing authority and independence. … This only confirms that in its current form, the International Olympic Committee no longer adequately represents and protects the interests of world sports and athletes and is significantly losing weight and competence as an international regulator.”

The IOC issued no statement on Thursday concerning the attack by Hamas – the elected leadership of Gaza – on Israel, or the discussion of any sanction on the Palestine National Olympic Committee.

In contrast, on the same day that Russian invaded Ukraine – 24 February 2022 – the IOC issued a statement condemning the breach of the Olympic Truce, which included:

“Following recent events, the IOC is deeply concerned about the safety of the Olympic Community in Ukraine. It has established a task force to closely monitor the situation and to coordinate humanitarian assistance to members of the Olympic Community in Ukraine where possible.”

Asked about last Saturday’s Hamas attack at Thursday’s news conference, IOC spokesman Mark Adams (GBR) read a bland, pre-written response:

“At the start of the IOC Executive Board, the IOC E.B. members expressed their very strong feelings over these tragic events in the recent days and expressed their deepest sympathy with the innocent victims of this terrible violence.”

At Friday’s briefing, Bach said that contact was made with the Israel Olympic Committee last Saturday when the attacks began, but did not condemn Hamas or mention any contact with the Palestine Olympic Committee. He did essentially repeat Adams’s statement, almost word-for-word.

The IOC Executive Board has nominated Israel’s Yael Arad, the country’s first Olympic medalist (judo in 1992) and the head of the Israel Olympic Committee, to be a new member of the IOC at the Mumbai Session. She is in Mumbai and it will be instructive to see whether she is, in fact, elected.

3.
IOC creates four-sport Olympic qualifiers next year

Following its Olympic Agenda 2020+5 promise to create new events to raise the profile of smaller sports, the IOC announced a two-stage Olympic qualifying competition series for BMX-Freestyle cycling, break dancing, skateboarding and sport climbing.

Some 464 athletes are expected to compete, with more than half of the Olympic qualifying places to be settled in the two events:

16-19 May 2024: Shanghai (CHN)
20-23 June 2024: Budapest (HUN)

The international federations for these sports will be responsible for the competitions. With the exception of the BMX-Freestyle, for which the number of worldwide competitions is pretty limited, the other sports are run by much smaller federations which do not receive shares of IOC television revenues: the World DanceSport Federation, World Skate and the International Federation of Sport Climbing. They all have events, but this will be a significantly higher profile than for most of their programs.

These events also have small quotas for Paris 2024, making them easier to handle:

BMX-Freestyle: 2 events and 24 athletes
Break Dancing: 2 events and 32 athletes
Skateboarding: 4 events and 88 athletes
Sport Climbing: 4 events and 68 athletes

The Shanghai event will be held at the Huangpu Riverside; in Budapest, the Ludovika Campus will be used.

4.
IOC approves Wright as U.S. biathlete; Mollaei to Azerbaijan

The IOC Executive Board also approved several changes in nationality, including one which could have significant impact for the U.S. at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Games.

Biathlete Campbell Wright, 21, was approved to compete for the U.S. as a transfer from New Zealand; he has dual citizenship, having been born in New Zealand to two American parents.

He won the IBU World Junior Championships 10 km Sprint in 2023, and debuted at the IBU World Cup in November 2021 at age 19. He was reportedly the second teenager ever to score points in an IBU World Cup, and competed for New Zealand at the 2022 Beijing Winter Games, placing 32nd in the men’s 20 km and 75th in the 10 km Sprint.

Said Wright, who trained with the U.S. team last season:

“I have made the decision to swap nations to the U.S., because it gives me the best chance to be able to reach my goals. To reach the top in any sport is hard, and it’s only made harder without the proper team around you. So if I want to be the best biathlete I can be, changing to Team USA is the clear option.”

The IOC also approved a nationality change for 31-year-old judoka Saeid Mollaei from Mongolia to Azerbaijan, his third country, after originally wrestling for Iran. Mollaei won the 2018 World 81 kg Championships for Iran, then was infamously ordered by Iranian officials to throw matches at the 2019 Worlds in order not to face Israel’s eventual World Champion, Sagi Muki.

Mollaei went to Germany, then accepted a citizenship offer from Mongolia, for whom he competed at Tokyo 2020 and won the Olympic 81 kg silver medal. He fought for Mongolia in 2022, but the International Judo Federation approved his transfer to Azerbaijan allowing him to compete in the 2022 IJF World Tour, winning the Baku Grand Slam.

5.
Crouser, Lyles nominated for Men’s World Athlete of the Year

World Athletics announced its nominees for its 2023 Men’s World Athlete of the Year, including two Americans among the 11 choices:

● Neeraj Chopra (IND) ~ Worlds javelin gold medalist
● Ryan Crouser (USA) ~ Worlds shot put champ and world-record setter
● Mondo Duplantis (SWE) ~ Worlds vault champ and world-record setter
● Soufiane El Bakkali (MAR) ~ Worlds Steeple gold medalist
● Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR) ~ Worlds 5,000 m gold, 1,500 m silver
● Kelvin Kiptum (KEN) ~ Marathon world-record setter
● Pierce LePage (CAN) ~ Worlds decathlon gold medalist
● Noah Lyles (USA) ~ Worlds 100-200m gold medalist
● Alvaro Martin (ESP) ~ Worlds 20 km and 35 km champion
● Miltiadis Tentoglou (GRE) ~ Worlds long jump gold medalist
● Karsten Warholm (NOR) ~ Worlds 400 m hurdles champion

According to the announcement:

“The World Athletics Council and the World Athletics Family will cast their votes by email, while fans can vote online via the World Athletics social media platforms. … The World Athletics Council’s vote will count for 50% of the result, while the World Athletics Family’s votes and the public votes will each count for 25% of the final result.”

Balloting is open until 28 October.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Beach Volleyball ● The FIVB World Championships are heading toward the medal round in Tlaxcala, Mexico, with the quarterfinals set for Friday and for American duos still playing:

Men:
● Anders Mol & Christian Sorum (NOR: defending champions) vs. Ondrej Perusic & David Schweiner (CZE)

● Pedro Solberg & Guto Carvalhaes (BRA) vs. Trevor Crabb and Theo Brunner (USA)

● Miles Partian and Andrew Benesh (USA) vs. Bartosz Losiak & Michal Bryl (POL)

● Stefan Boermans & Yorick De Groot (NED) vs. David Ahman & Jonatan Hellvig (SWE)

Women:
● Ana Patricia Ramos & Duda Lisboa (BRA: defending champions) vs. Katja Stam & Raisa Schoon (NED)

● Mariafe Artacho del Solar & Taliqua Clancy (AUS) vs. Melissa Humana-Paredes & Brandie Wilkerson (CAN)

● Sara Hughes & Kelly Cheng (USA) vs. Taina Bigi & Victoria Lopes (BRA)

● Tanja Huberli & Nina Brunner (SUI) vs. Kristen Nuss & Taryn Kloth (USA)

The semifinals will be played on Saturday and the medal matches on Sunday.

● Rugby ● After a week’s break following the pool phase, the Rugby World Cup in France will resume with the quarterfinals on Saturday and Sunday (world rankings listed before each team name):

14 October:
● (7) Wales (4-0) vs. (8) Argentina (3-1) in Marseille
● (1) Ireland (4-0) vs. (4) New Zealand (3-1) in Saint-Denis

15 October:
● (6) England (4-0) vs. (10) Fiji (2-2) in Marseille
● (2) France (4-0) vs. (3) South Africa (3-1) in Saint Denis

All four semi-finalists from 2019 are still involved; South Africa beat England in the 2019 final and New Zealand defeated Wales for third place.

The semis will be on 20-21 October and the championship on 28 October.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Asian Games ● Two more doping positives from the just-completed Asian Games in China, for basketball players Justin Brownlee (PHI) and Sami Bazi (JOR); this brings the total of Asiad doping suspensions to 10.

● Swimming ● The World Aquatics Open Water World Cup event slated to be held in Eilat, Israel from 1-2 December has been moved to Funchal (POR) due to the Hamas attack on Israel. The new dates are 2-3 December.

● Taekwondo ● The World Taekwondo Grand Prix in Taiyuan (CHN) showed a couple of Tokyo Olympic champions still in great shape.

Olympic champ Panipak Wongpattanakit of Thailand won her class with a 2-0 (3-0, 8-3) defeat of 2022 Worlds silver medalist Qing Guo (CHN) in the women’s 49 kg final. At 57 kg, Skylar Park of Canada, the 2019 Worlds bronze winner, took the title, coming from behind, 4-11, 7-6, 9-7 to take a 2-1 decision over Iranian Nahid Kiyanichandeh.

In the women’s 67 kg final, Aleksandra Perisic (SRB), the 2022 Worlds silver winner, swept aside 2022 62 kg World Champion Sarah Chaari (BEL), 2-0 (2-0, 4-2). China’s Lei Xu won the women’s +67 kg division, taking a 2-0 (6-2, 3-1) final win against Sude Uzuncavdar (TUR).

Tunisia won two golds in the four men’s classes, first in the men’s 58 kg with Tokyo 2020 silver medalist Mohamed Jendoubi taking a 2-1 win over Korean 2019 World Champion Jun Jang in the gold-medal match (1-2, 17-11, 11-8), and then from 2022 Worlds 74 kg bronze medalist Firas Katousi winning a wild final, 2-1, from Geon-woo Seo (KOR) at 80 kg by 4-2, 8-8 and 16-10!

Korean Ho-jun Jin, the 2023 Worlds runner-up, took the men’s 68 kg class with a 10-6, 7-6 sweep of France’s Souleyman Alaphilippe. Russian Tokyo Olympic champ Vladislav Larin, competing as a “neutral,” won at +80 kg, over Uzbek Nikita Rafalovich, the 2022 Worlds 87 kg bronze winner, by 2-1 (2-2, 2-0, 11-1).

A star Iranian fighter, Mobina Nematzadeh, was reportedly withdrawn from the Grand Prix in Taiyuan, to avoid potentially facing an Israeli opponent in the women’s 49 kg class.

Nematzadeh had just come from a silver-medal finish at the Asian Games, losing to China’s Qing Guo in the gold-medal match and would have been a medal contender in Taiyuan (Guo won silver in this weight class). But with Israeli entrants on both sides of the bracket, it was possible for her to face one no matter where she was seeded.

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TSX REPORT: Retton med-support fund over $300,000; Bach talks up India and weightlifting; a challenge to Saudi for 2034 FIFA World Cup?

Medical support fund-raising ongoing for Los Angeles 1984 gymnastics star Mary Lou Retton (Photo: Spotfund.com appeal page)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Retton medical-support fund passes $300,000 in two days
2. Bach talks up cricket, weightlifting and the future in India
3. Sapporo out of 2030 Winter Games race; will try for later
4. UEFA reverses Russia stance; EURO 2028 and 2032 hosts confirmed
5. Indonesia to bid with Australia for FIFA World Cup ‘34?

Online fund-raising for Los Angeles 1984 gymnastics icon Mary Lou Retton has passed the $300,000 mark – as against a $50,000 goal – to assist with her medical expenses in a fight against a pneumonia strain that has required breathing assistance.

● International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach of Germany, interviewed in India prior to the IOC Session, said that he likes cricket as an Olympic add-on sport for 2028, but says it will have to be voted on. He’s also enthusiastic about weightlifting’s return, and thinks India could be a viable candidate for the 2036 Olympic Games.

● Sapporo and the Japanese Olympic Committee said there will be no bid for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games, but a bid for 2034 or beyond is possible of the “public trust” can be rebuilt.

● UEFA decided, in a U-turn, not to admit Russian U-17 teams into its competitions, saying it was not feasible, after agreeing to do allow them in a couple of weeks ago. Great Britain and Ireland, and Italy and Turkey were announced as the co-hosts of the EURO 2028 and 2032 tournaments, respectively. A 12 October EURO qualifying match between Israel and Switzerland in Tel Aviv has been postponed to 15 November, with the venue to be determined, in view of the continuing attacks on Israel.

● Saudi Arabia looked to be a walkover winner to host the 2034 FIFA World Cup, but new discussions between Australia and Indonesia could create a formidable competitor, possibly also including Malaysia and Singapore. Expressions of interest are due by the end of the month.

Panorama: Paris 2024 (IOC declines waiver for 44-year-old Pacquiao for boxing) = Los Angeles 2028 (World Rowing enlists Super Bowl announcer to help with Beach Sprint inclusion) = Asian Games (eight doping positives so far) = Athletics (3: U.S. distance stars meeting with USATF over Marathon Trials start times; World Athletics announces women’s athlete-of-year nominees; Birmingham indoor meet likely to go as city bankrupt) = Cycling (2: USA Cycling moves road nationals to Charleston; two Belgian riders removed from Tour of Guangxi for possibly-racist social post) = Judo (Russian federation suspends Rio Olympic champ for social-media posts) = Luge (Skechers sponsors World Cup?!) = Skating (new ISU transgender policy) ●

Now available: our exclusive 850-event International Sports Calendar (no. 4) for 2023, 2024, and beyond, by date and by sport: click here! ●

1.
Retton medical-support fund passes $300,000 in two days

“My amazing mom, Mary Lou, has a very rare form of pneumonia and is fighting for her life. She is not able to breathe on her own. She’s been in the ICU for over a week now. Out of respect for her and her privacy, I will not disclose all details. However, I will disclose that she not insured.

“We ask that if you could help in any way, that 1) you PRAY! and 2) if you could help us with finances for the hospital bill.

“ANYTHING, absolutely anything, would be so helpful for my family and my mom. Thank y’all so very much!”

That post on Spotfund.com from McKenna Kelley on Tuesday (10th) asked for help for the female icon of the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, the then-16-year-old Mary Lou Retton – now 55 – who won the women’s All-Around gold and won four more medals, with silvers in the Team event and Vault and bronzes on the Uneven Bars and Floor. She scored 10.00 on the Vault and Floor to win the All-Around from Romania’s Ecaterina Szabo, 79.175 to 79.125. Szabo also won five medals in Los Angeles; golds in the Team event and in the Vault, Beam and Floor, magnifying Retton’s upset in the All-Around.

She later attended the University of Texas and married football player Shannon Kelley in 1990; they divorced in 2018, with four daughters: Shayla (born 1995), McKenna (1997), Skyla (2000), and Emma (2002). After retiring from gymnastics in 1986, Retton has been a spokesperson and speaker for many companies.

The outpouring of support has been intense. By the end of Wednesday, the donor count was at 5,912 and $330,181 had been raised against an initial goal of $50,000. All but two of the donations was of $2,000 or less; a $50,000 contribution was made by Linda McIngvale, wife of Houston furniture magnate Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale, and an anonymous $5,000 donation was made. Retton remained in intensive care on Wednesday.

2.
Bach talks up cricket, weightlifting and the future in India

With the International Olympic Committee Executive Board meeting on Thursday and Friday and the IOC Session in Mumbai, India meeting from Sunday through next Tuesday, IOC President Thomas Bach took time-out for an interesting interview with the Times of India. And he had quite a bit to say.

As far as the LA28 organizing committee proposal to include cricket (and four more sports) on the program, Bach reiterated his enthusiasm for the T20 format, but noted that the process will start with the IOC Program Commission, then come to the Executive Committee for a review and if allowed, will be voted on by the IOC Session.

On boxing, Bach turned to one of his favorite phrases, explaining “we have no problems with the sport nor with the boxers.” But he pointed again to the IOC’s issues with financing, governance and refereeing and judging at the International Boxing Association, which was de-recognized by the IOC in June. “There will be no boxing with IBA in [the] Olympic program, now or in the future.” The IOC is running the boxing process now for Paris 2024, as it did for Tokyo 2020, and is therefore in no rush to find a new boxing federation.

Bach was highly enthusiastic on weightlifting, which has also been kept off of the 2028 Los Angeles program, saying “They have made great progress. They have outsourced the entire doing management … and ensured that there is a change in the culture.” This bodes well for the return of weightlifting for 2028.

No mention was made of modern pentathlon, also currently outside the 2028 program, but Bach outlined what the IOC is looking for going forward. This is important:

“There are two criteria which are very important to us. First of all, the young sports and secondly, urban sports. In our world today, the kids have so many distractions; not only the kids, but the potential sports fans also have so many distractions. They are not in touch with sports. This is why we have to go where the people are, in the real world with urban centers, and in the digital world. We have to promote our sports there, build small sports centers in the neighborhood.”

As for an India bid for the 2036 Olympic Games, Bach was encouraging, and said that the disastrous and corruption-plagued 2010 Commonwealth Games will not be a barrier:

“You cannot compare today’s India with India of 2010. It is a much more mature country now if we talk of hosting big sports events.”

Observed: Bach is at his best when he gives insight into what his IOC – he will serve into 2025 – is looking for. His statement on “go to where the people are” has been consistent, if not always conversant with the IOC’s actions.

There’s no clear indicator from what he said about what the IOC will do with the five sports that LA28 is proposing, or what the fate of modern pentathlon will be. You can make any case you want from his comments. But while his overall direction is clear, it may face a revision – or even a reversion – depending on who replaces him as the IOC chief in less than two years.

3.
Sapporo out of 2030 Winter Games race; will try for later

The Japanese Olympic Committee and the mayor of Sapporo announced Wednesday that there will be no bid for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games, but that a future bid will be considered. JOC President Yasuhiro Yamashita told reporters:

“There’s a possibility that moving forward with the bid movement too hastily will leave an irrecoverable wound on the value of sports. I’m sorry for the people of Sapporo and Hokkaido.”

Pro-Olympics mayor Katsuhiro Akimoto noted the fallout from the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games in sponsorship selections involving bribery and bid-rigging of test events and venue-management contracts:

“It’s a very tough situation. We need to examine our future activities. We’ll gauge public sentiment at an appropriate time.

“We could not gain understanding from the citizens. There has been a widespread sense of uneasiness among the citizens about the criminal cases related to the 2020 Tokyo Games, and they are also worried about their financial burden for hosting the games.”

Sapporo hosted the Winter Games in 1972 and looked to be a front-runner for 2030, but now faces an uncertain future as Salt Lake City has a nearly-complete package in hand that could allow it to be selected by the IOC at any time. With the IOC’s encouragement, there is bid development work underway in France, Sweden and Switzerland for 2030, using regional or national approaches to avoid building new facilities.

4.
UEFA reverses Russia stance; EURO 2028 and 2032 hosts confirmed

“No technical solution could be found to allow the Russian teams to play.”

That’s from a UEFA spokesman, as the organization’s Executive Committee backtracked from its 26 September decision to allow Russian U-17 teams to play in continental competitions without anthem, flag or national uniforms. At least 12 of the 55 UEFA national federations had said they would not allow their U-17s to play against Russia in view of the continuing invasion of Ukraine.

Sweden, which hosts the UEFA women’s U-17 championship in 2024, said it would not admit the Russian team.

The Ukrainian Football Association commented on X (ex-Twitter):

“Thus, the position of our country, with which the Ukrainian Association of Football appealed to UEFA and all national member associations, was heard. russian football remains in isolation, that is, where it belongs.”

Russian Football Union national team coach Valery Karpin told the Russian news agency TASS:

“I didn’t expect that they would allow it, I didn’t expect that it would be cancelled. First they admitted it, then they canceled it, and this became an even bigger surprise.”

Former FIFA Vice-President and Honorary President of the Russian Football Union Vyacheslav Koloskov told TASS:

“Even when the decision on admission was made, I said that it was not clear how to implement it technically.

“At some point this issue had to come up. This is the first time I have seen such a thing for the UEFA executive committee to make a decision, and then canceled it. They should have explained that the decision had to be firmly implemented, create a mechanism for its implementation. I think, indeed, that UEFA did not invent a reason. But why then make a decision without fully thinking it through? The Executive Committee simply showed its incompetence.”

Left hanging is FIFA, which supported the UEFA position to allow Russian U-17 teams to play, without national symbols.

UEFA formally confirmed the EURO 2028 and 2032 hosts, with Great Britain (four federations) and Ireland staging the 2028 events and Italy and Turkey delivering the 2032 tournament.

Ireland, Wales and Northern Ireland will be first-time hosts; nine venues are projected for games, with two in London, as well as Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle in England, plus Glasgow in Scotland, Cardiff in Wales, Dublin in Ireland and Belfast in Northern Ireland.

Turkey will also host a EURO for the first time. Ten stadiums were proposed in both Italy and Turkey, with five to be chosen in each country by October 2026.

In view of the continuing Hamas attacks on Israel, UEFA also moved the Israel-Switzerland match, scheduled to be played in Tel Aviv on 12 October, to 15 November, with the venue to be determined.

The match is important, as the Swiss are atop Group I at 4-0-2 (W-L-T: 14 points), with Romania second (3-0-3: 12) and Israel third (3-1-2: 11) with the top two to qualify. Israel has an 18 November match against Romania in Jerusalem before finishing at Andorra on 21 November. Israel is assured of at least a playoff spot to get into the EURO 2024 tournament.

5.
Indonesia to bid with Australia for FIFA World Cup ‘34?

Given FIFA’s directive that only bids from the Asian Football Confederation or Oceania Football Confederation would be received for the FIFA World Cup in 2034, Saudi Arabia immediately entered the race and appeared to be unchallenged, according to a statement by AFC President Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa (BRN) last week:

“I am delighted to note that the [Saudi Arabian Football Federation] have presented their intention to bid for the FIFA World Cup in 2034.

“The entire Asian football family will stand united in support of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s momentous initiative, and we are committed to working closely with the global football family to ensure its success.”

But now, the Sydney Morning Herald reported that Indonesian Football Federation head Erick Thohir has had discussions with Australia – also Asian Football Confederation members – about creating a 2034 bid, perhaps also including Malaysia and Singapore.

Australia’s credentials are unmatched as it just completed a well-managed staging, with New Zealand, of the FIFA Women’s World Cup this summer. Indonesia, on the other hand, has human-rights issues to deal with as its exclusion policy on Israel forced the cancellation of the ANOC World Beach Games in August and FIFA removed its men’s U-20 World Cup in March to Argentina over the issue. FIFA apparently wasn’t that upset, as it handed this year’s men’s U-17 World Cup to Indonesia in June; it will kick off on 10 November.

The question is time. FIFA has set a deadline of 31 October for expressions of interest in hosting the 2034 tournament, with completed bidding agreements due by 30 November. Bid submissions will be due in July of 2024 and the decision expected by the end of 2024.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● Philippine boxing legend Manny Pacquiao, now 44, will not be allowed to compete in Paris in view of existing rules that have an age limit of 40. The Russian news agency TASS reported a comment from the IOC which included:

“The eligibility requirements include an age limit of 40, which the then AIBA set back in 2013 as a rule for boxing tournaments. When the IOC suspended AIBA [now IBA] in 2019, it ensured that boxing could remain on the program of the Olympic Games 2020 in Tokyo and Paris in 2024 to protect the interests of athletes. And that is why the IOC approved the IBA technical rules for the Olympic tournament in Tokyo, which have not been challenged. The same technical rules will be applied to the tournament in Paris.”

● Olympic Games 2028: Los Angeles ● World Rowing is all-in on trying to get its Beach Sprint events into the 2028 Los Angeles Olympic Games to replace the Lightweight Double Sculls events which will be dropped after Paris.

The latest: hiring well-known public address announcer Alan Roach, who has been on the microphone for multiple Olympic Games, but especially for 14 NFL Super Bowls. The announcement was suitably understated:

“World Rowing is now laser-focused on cultivating and nurturing the discipline to make it a permanent feature of the Olympic Games.”

● Asian Games ● Qatari cyclist Alsaadi Bilal Haitham was caught for doping (erythropoietin a.k.a. ”EPO”) on 2 October, bringing the Asian Games doping positive total to eight so far. This was the third positive in cycling; two were in track & field and no other sport had more than one. Saudi Arabia had two positives and no other country had more than one.

● Athletics ● An athlete group concerned about the start time of the 2024 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in Orlando, Florida is to meet with USA Track & Field chief executive Max Siegel by videoconference on Thursday.

A letter from Rio 2016 Olympic marathoner Jared Ward and Emma Grace Hurley, the men’s and women’s Athletes’ Advisory Council representatives, and signed on by 86 others posted by Citius Magazine, and included:

“We understand the current start time is being dictated by the television broadcast, and while we recognize the importance of our sport reaching the widest possible television audience, the safety and integrity of our sport must come first. …

“Based on the [Orlando] weather conditions last February, extreme heat stress is not just possible, it is almost assured. Even the most optimistically projected scenario will still be hotter than the 2016 Olympic Trials in Los Angeles, where only 64% of the men’s field and 75% of the women’s field made it to the finish line. …

“We are requesting a start time of preferably 6:00 AM, but no later than 7:00 AM, not a contingency plan based on the hottest allowable weather, to allow for a safe race and the a better chance for our men to qualify for Paris 2024. Note that we aren’t seeking a tolerable threshold, but the best possible conditions- which in Orlando will still likely be challenging.”

The letter suggests interested viewers will watch the race no matter what time it is held and the broadcast can be replayed for the interest of casual viewers later.

World Athletics announced 11 candidates for its Women’s World Athlete of the Year, including American Sha’Carri Richardson:

● Tigist Assefa (ETH) ~ Marathon world-record setter (2:11:53)
● Femke Bol (NED) ~ Worlds 400 m hurdles gold medalist
● Shericka Jackson (JAM) ~ Worlds 200 m gold, 100 m silver
● Faith Kipyegon (KEN) ~ Worlds 1,500-5,000 m winner, three world records
● Haruka Kitaguchi (JPN) ~ Worlds javelin gold medalist
● Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) ~ Worlds high jump gold medalist
● Maria Perez (ESP) ~ Worlds 20 km and 35 km walks gold medalist
● Sha’Carri Richardson (USA) ~ Worlds 100 m gold, 200 m silver
● Yulimar Rojas (VEN) ~ Worlds triple jump gold medalist
● Gudaf Tsegay (ETH) ~ Worlds 10,000 m champion
● Winfred Yavi (BRN) ~ Worlds Steeple champion

Per the announcement:

“The World Athletics Council and the World Athletics Family will cast their votes by email, while fans can vote online via the World Athletics social media platforms”; voting continues through 28 October. Winners will be announced on 11 December.

The Times (London) reported that the 24 February World Indoor Tour Gold meet in Birmingham (GBR) is likely to be canceled as the city is facing a £760 million penalty (~$935.77 million U.S.) on equal-pay claims that essentially bankrupts the municipal government.

The meet has just been removed from the World Athletics and U.K. Athletics Web sites.

● Cycling ● USA Cycling announced that after seven years of holding its Pro Road Championships in Knoxville, Tennessee, it has signed a five-year commitment to hold an expanded version of the event in Charleston, West Virginia.

The 2024 edition will be held from 15-19 May, and will expand the men’s and women’s Road, Time Trial and Criterium races with the addition of U-23 and Junior (ages 17-18) classes as well. For the Time Trials, the winner of the men’s and women’s races will qualify for the Paris 2024 races.

Madis Mihkels (EST: 20) and Gerben Thijssen (BEL: 25), riders for the Belgium-based Intermarche-Circus-Wanty team on the UCI World Tour have been removed from the GREE – Tour of Guangxi in China for a post on Thijssen’s Instagram account showing Mihkels making gestures which have been interpreted as racist.

The team posted an apology on X (ex-Twitter) that included:

“We sincerely regret the behaviour of our rider Madis Mihkels and the images shown on the social media. We would like to apologise to the Chinese people and fans, to the government of Guangxi, to the Chinese Cycling Association, and all parties involved in the organisation of Tour of Guangxi for the image given of our sport.”

A Union Cycliste Internationale statement included:

“The UCI commends the swift reaction of the two riders’ team, Intermarché-Circus-Wanty (BEL), which decided to withdraw them from the Gree – Tour of Guangxi (China) and assess the disciplinary actions it may take following the incident. The event organiser also acted quickly by organising a meeting with those concerned and the local authorities, during which the riders expressed their apologies.

“The UCI has decided to refer the matter to the UCI Disciplinary Commission for a possible breach of article 12.4.004 of the UCI Regulations, which states that any person who, by word or deed, bemeans, discriminates against or denigrates a person or a group of persons in a manner that violates human dignity, on grounds such as race or ethnic origin, shall receive a disciplinary action.”

The Tour of Guangxi is the final event this season on the UCI World Tour, and started on Thursday and will finish on the 17th.

● Judo ● The Russian Judo Federation has suspended Rio 2016 Olympic 81 kg gold medalist Khasan Khalmurzaev; the International Judo Federation statement posted Wednesday included:

“In response to recent social media posts from Olympic champion Khasan Khalmurzaev, the Russian Judo Federation sent a letter to the International Judo Federation to provide the following information:

“● The athlete has been found in breach of the federation’s internal rules and regulations which does not allow the public posting of any religious or political personal views.

“● The Russian Judo Federation immediately suspended the athlete temporarily, until a further decision is taken.”

No other information was provided; Russian judoka are allowed to compete in IJF competitions on a neutral basis vis-a-vis the Russian invasion of Ukraine. He appears to be semi-retired; he has appeared only once in competition since December 2021 and did not place at a June IJF Grand Slam event in Kazakhstan.

● Luge ● A noteworthy announcement from the Federation Internationale de Luge:

“SKECHERS will be the main sponsor of the EBERSPACHER Luge World Cup and the 52nd FIL Luge World Championships in Altenberg, Germany, in the 2023/24 season. The sponsorship agreement between the world’s leading athletic footwear brand and the International Luge Federation (FIL) is initially for one season.

“The deal, signed by Infront, means that SKECHERS branding will be present at all nine World Cup events as well as the World Championships in Altenberg, Germany. This is the first time the company has sponsored a luge event.”

Southern California-based Skechers has been highly active in sports, but not as a high-profile sponsor of Olympic Winter-sport events.

● Skating ● The International Skating Union has issued a new transgender policy, limiting male-to-female transgender athletes to those with serum testosterone of 2.5 nmol/L or less.

The ISU’s Communication 2595 specifies:

● “The Skater has signed and submitted to the ISU a written declaration stating that her gender identity is female. Once submitted to the ISU, the declaration cannot be changed, for sporting purposes, for a minimum of four years.”

● “In addition, the Skater must demonstrate that her total testosterone level in serum has been below 2.5 nmol/L.

● “a) If the Skater transitions before the age of 12 or Tanner stage 2, then the serum testosterone must be below 2.5 nmol/L continuously for at least 12 months prior to competing in her first ISU Event in the female category.

● “b) If the Skater transitions after puberty, then the serum testosterone level must be below 2.5 nmol/L continuously for 24 months prior to competing in her first ISU Event in the female category, (with the requirement for any longer period to be based on a confidential case-by-case evaluation, considering whether or not 24 months is a sufficient length of time to minimize any competitive advantage in Women’s competition).”

The regulations also require monthly reporting of testosterone levels during the transition period and quarterly thereafter, with unannounced testing also to be done.

Female-to-male transgenders are “without restriction,” but require a signed declaration.

The new regulations apply to all ISU disciplines, including figure skating, short track and speed skating.

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TSX REPORT: LA28 asks baseball-softball, cricket, flag, lacrosse and squash as adds; how will IOC handle Palestine and Iran? Could Hassan equal Zatopek?

Israel's Artem Dolgopyat manages a half-smile after his Worlds gold in the men's Floor Exercise, while adding black ribbons to the Israeli flag after Saturday's attacks (Photo: Israel Gymnastics Federation)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. LA28 adds baseball, softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash
2. IOC faces new questions on Palestine and Iran after attack on Israel
3. Dolgopyat on a gymnastics gold while Israel was attacked
4. Could Hassan duplicate Zatopek’s distance triple in Paris?
5. IPC to light torch at Stoke Mandeville from 2024 on

● LA28 asks for five added sports, including baseball-softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash, bringing the sport total to 34, the most ever, with a possibility of expanding to 36 if modern pentathlon and weightlifting are added back.

● The attack by Hamas, backed by Iran, against Israel raises new questions for the International Olympic Committee. Already trying to navigate through a controversial re-admission of “neutral” Russian and Belausian athletes, what will the IOC now do about the participation of Palestine and Iran for Paris in 2024?

● Israeli gymnast Artem Dolgopyat, the Olympic Champion in men’s Floor Exercise, woke up Saturday morning, eight hours before his competition at the 2023 World Championships in Belgium, to air-raid alerts from home on his mobile phone. He somehow managed to win and collect Israel’s first-ever World Gymnastics Championships gold medal.

● Kenyan Kelvin Kiptum stole all the headlines at Sunday’s Chicago Marathon with his world-record 2:00:35 run, but could women’s winner, Dutch star Sifan Hassan, be positioned to duplicate the 1952 Olympic heroics of Czech legend Emil Zatopek in Paris next year?

● The International Paralympic Committee said that it will begin its quadrennial torch run to the Paralympic Games at Stoke Mandeville in Britain, where the concept that began the Paralympics started in 1948.

Panorama: International Olympic Committee (Agenda 2020+5 report says Olympic Movement finances are stable) = Pan American Games (2: U.S. announces 631-member team for Santiago; USATF will send 77) = Russia (Olympic Committee head sees no reason to resign from IOC) = Memorabilia (Olympin show comes to southern California Friday) = Cycling (France’s Mahieu sweeps BMX World Cup in Argentina) ●

Errata: Some readers of Monday’s post on the Ingrid O’Neil Auction no. 95 results saw her name misspelled in the top-of-post summary as “O’Neal.” Of course, it’s “O’Neil,” and quickly corrected. Sorry, Ingrid! ●

Schedule: Due to a scheduling conflict, the next TSX post will be on Thursday (12th). ●

1.
LA28 adds baseball, softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash

“The LA28 Olympic and Paralympic Games shared its official proposal for new Olympic sports, including Baseball/Softball, Flag Football, Cricket (Twenty20), Lacrosse (Sixes) and Squash, to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for potential inclusion in the 2028 Olympic sport program.”

Monday’s statement sets up the approval process for these sports at the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board meetings this week in India and the IOC Session in Mumbai on 15-17 October.

LA28 chief executive Kathy Carter said the additions were made with no added financial risk:

“In building the Olympic sport program, we were willing to challenge the status quo and think differently about what’s possible for the Games in Los Angeles. We approached the process holistically and authentically, ensuring that our decisions were grounded in the Games’ commitment to fiscal responsibility.”

Existing venues in the Los Angeles area – there are plenty – are sure to be used for all of the added sports, with the only question about a suitable cricket facility, although a new, cricket-first venue is planned for development in Irvine, California.

Baseball was featured on and off as a demonstration until the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, where a full-fledged tournament was held at Dodger Stadium, leading to its eventual inclusion as a medal sport in 1992, through 2008. It came back as a medal sport at Tokyo 2020 and now again in 2028. Softball came in for 1996-2008 and again in Tokyo.

Cricket was played at the Paris 1900 Games, but has not been in the Games since. Those promoting cricket have said that its inclusion will provide a television rights windfall for the IOC; India pays about $20 million for TV rights, but estimates range up to $200 million more for 2028 with the sport included.

Flag Football has never been in the Games and is strongly backed by the National Football League, especially as a way to involve women in a game which almost exclusively played by men as tackle football. The NFL would be expected to help promote the sport heavily.

Lacrosse was played at the St. Louis 1904 Games and in London in 1908 and was a demonstration sport in 1928, 1932 in Los Angeles and 1948 in London. It has been chasing Olympic inclusion for decades and is popular in the eastern U.S., especially, and has expanded its national profile through the professional Premier Lacrosse League.

Squash has also been seeking Olympic status for many years and will finally be part of the Games in Los Angeles.

The LA28 program has now exploded to 34 sports, possibly on the way to 36. A list of 28 sports was approved in 2021, with boxing, modern pentathlon and weightlifting left off. When the IOC de-recognized the International Boxing Association last June, it also confirmed boxing’s place on the LA28 program. Now, five more sports are being added (34) and a decision on modern pentathlon and weightlifting are expected in Mumbai, so the LA28 total could be 36 sports.

The most sports in a single Games prior to 2028 was 33 for Tokyo 2020, but the LA28 total of 34 to 36 will be a new high.

The question of the athlete cap of 10,500 for the Olympic Games is now a significant issue, with the addition of so many more sports meaning there is potentially less room for the existing ones. However, depending on the real capacity of the residential housing at UCLA, site of the Olympic Village, some arithmetic gymnastics could be introduced, such as a cap of 10,500 athlete occupants in the Village on any individual day.

There is also the issue of rowing and canoeing housing, as the chosen Long Beach Marine Stadium facility can have significant tidal impacts that would force early-morning sessions to be held … meaning a subsidiary village could be required in Long Beach to allow a short commute to the site, instead of the 45 minutes or more from UCLA.

2.
IOC faces new questions on Palestine and Iran after attack on Israel

“Neutral” athletes from Palestine? Iran?

The International Olympic Committee now has even more headaches to deal with at its 141st Session in Mumbai, India, beginning on Sunday, in the wake of the attack on Israel from the Gaza Strip on Saturday.

The ongoing bloodshed has killed more than 1,000 and will continue for some time, making the issue of a Palestinian presence at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games a trivial issue in comparison. But the high profile of the Games ensures that the issue will arise, especially now as the IOC has nominated Yael Arad, Israel’s first-ever Olympic medal winner – in judo in 1992 – and head of the Israeli National Olympic Committee as a new member, to be confirmed in Mumbai.

Palestine has had only a modest profile at the Games, first appearing in 1996 in Atlanta; five athletes in four sports participated at Tokyo 2020.

And what of Iran, which has been widely acknowledged as a planner and overseer of the attack with its anti-Israeli proxy organizations Hamas (in Palestine) and Hezbollah (in Lebanon)? Iran has been suspended on and off for anti-Semitic activities for years and certainly bears responsibility, but will the IOC act against it, or Palestine?

And the Russian question keeps getting more difficult for the IOC, with the Russian Olympic Committee announcing last Thursday (5th) that it has “admitted as members” newly-formed sports organizations from areas of eastern Ukraine invaded by Russia that were illegally “annexed” into the Russian Federation in 2022:

“Today the Olympic councils of the Donetsk and Lugansk people’s republics, Zaporozhye and Kherson regions, as well as the Yaroslavl region have become members of the ROC.”

The Ukrainian National Olympic Committee sent a message to the IOC on Friday (6th) asking that this action be raised at the IOC’s Executive Board meeting:

“This is a gross and obvious violation of the Olympic Charter. The NOC of Ukraine requests you to bring the issue of this violation to the next meeting of the IOC Executive Committee and apply sanctions established by the Olympic Charter for such a gross violation of the principles and foundations of the Olympic movement.”

The IOC Executive Board meets on Thursday and Friday, with the Session following on Sunday.

Observed: The attack on Israel and the “admission as members” of sports organizations in occupied areas of Ukraine raise the stakes for the IOC. Its President, Thomas Bach of Germany, insists that the IOC is using sport as an instrument of peace.

He will quote the second principle of Olympism from the Olympic Charter, which reads:

“The goal of Olympism is to place sport at the service of the harmonious development of humankind, with a view to promoting a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human dignity.”

Bach and the IOC have to answer, to new member Arad and others, how allowing athletes who are supported by aggressor states are allowed to compete in an event which is support to promote “a peaceful society.” This now includes Palestine and Iran, as well as Russia and Belarus, and if Hezbollah attacks Israel in the north, then also Lebanon must be called into question.

A Monday news release from the IOC on the impact of Bach’s Olympic Agenda 2020+5 reforms noted, “Credibility on and off the field of play is crucial to the Olympic Movement.” It’s at stake right now.

3.
Dolgopyat on a gymnastics gold while Israel was attacked

Imagine going to sleep Friday night, thinking ahead to Saturday at the FIG World Gymnastics Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, where you were going to compete for an individual world title in the men’s Floor Exercise.

Then, Tokyo Olympic Floor gold medalist Artem Dolgopyat, 26, who was born in Ukraine but moved to Israel at age 12, heard his mobile phone going crazy at 5:30 a.m. on Saturday morning. He told the Israeli On site (translation courtesy of Gymnovosti.com):

“I woke up to the sound of an [air raid] alert. I was scared. It was strange, I kept seeing there were [multiple] alerts. Then I heard that there were dead and wounded. Throughout the day, I didn’t know how to get it out of my head.

“It was clear to me that if I didn’t turn off my cell phone, I wouldn’t be able to compete. It was very difficult for me to disconnect. When I got the arena, I told myself that I have to be in the competition and that’s it.”

Israel had never won a World Gymnastics gold and Dolgopyat had already been runner-up on Floor in 2017 and 2019. The finals session began at the Sportpaleis at 2 p.m., with men’s Floor the first event. Dolgopyat started fourth, and his routine was less than hoped for, scoring 14.866, compared to his 15.200 in qualifying:

“The routine was not perfect but the landings were without major errors. I could do more and when I saw the score I thought of a medal, I didn’t know what color. During the routine, I felt it was worse than it really was. I thought it was all lost as soon as I got off the floor. I didn’t know if it would be enough for the gold. But everyone in the final had mistakes. For me, it was clear that would happen after what I went through this morning.”

As it turned out, Japan’s Kazuki Minami, who led off with a 14.666, ended up with the silver and Karimi Milad (KAZ: 14.600) got the bronze. American Fred Richard, who had scored 14.600 in qualifying was eighth at 13.200. The 2019 World Floor champ, Carlos Yulo (PHI), third in qualifying (also 14.600) was fourth at 14.500. Dolgopyat had his gold medal, for what it was now worth:

“I couldn’t celebrate. I was only thinking about the situation in Israel. I didn’t have one iota of joy at all. On my biggest day. I should have been the happiest person but I wasn’t. I heard the Israeli anthem and I had tears in my eyes, I was sad. That’s why we put black ribbons on the Israeli flag.”

Dolgopyat said later that while he had achieved his goal of wins at the Olympics, Worlds and European Championships:

“I fulfilled my dream of getting the three gold medals from the biggest competitions and I can’t process it because I can’t really be happy. It’s a different situation. It’s hard for me to think about it.”

4.
Could Hassan duplicate Zatopek’s distance triple in Paris?

The sensational world record of 2:00:35 by Kenyan Kelvin Kiptum, 23, overshadowed everything else at Sunday’s Chicago Marathon, his third win in three career marathons in fabulous times of 2:01:53, 2:01:25 and 2:00:35!

In some ways, however, 30-year-old Dutch star Sifan Hassan’s stunning win in her second career marathon was more interesting. Unlike most marathoners, Hassan runs track as well, nearly winning this year’s World Championships 10,000 m, but falling just before the finish, then winning the 1,500 m bronze (3:56.00) and the 5,000 m silver (14:54.11). She won the 5-10 combo in Tokyo in 2021 and was third in the 1,500 m.

She debuted at the marathon distance in London in April of this year, winning in 2:18:33, then came back on Sunday in Chicago to post the second-fastest time in history in 2:13:44, about two minutes slower than Ethiopian Tigst Assefa’s insane 2:11:53 in Berlin on 24 September.

Given Hassan’s versatility and outstanding finishing speed, could she consider an Olympic distance triple that has only been done once: the 5,000-10,000-Marathon triple by Czech icon Emil Zatopek in 1952? In Helsinki, Zatopek ran four races across eight days:

20 July: 10,000 m: 1st
22 July: 5,000 m heats: 3rd in heat 3
24 July: 5,000 m final: 1st
27 July: Marathon: 1st

If Hassan were to try this in Paris, her schedule would be similar, with four races across nine days and at least one rest day between each:

03 August: 5,000 m heats
06 August: 5,000 m final
09 August: 10,000 m
11 August: Marathon

Looking at the schedule for a 1,500-5,000-10,000 triple, that effort might be just as challenging, if not more so, with no more than one race a day, but racing on six days instead of four:

04 August: 1,500 m heats
08 August: 1,500 m semifinals
10 August: 1,500 m final

Since Zatopek, the best try at his 5-10-Marathon triple was Finn Lasse Viren in 1976 in Montreal, where he won his second straight 5-10 double and then finished fifth in the marathon.

Kiptum and Hassan both had big paydays in Chicago, with both winning $100,000 for their victories, plus $50,000 each for setting the course records.

Kiptum’s world record took the men’s mark from the Berlin Marathon, at which the last eight world records had been set, back to 2003. Chicago was the site of the 1999 men’s world-record run of 2:05:42 by Khalid Khannouchi, then from Morocco (later the U.S.) and the 1984 record by Britain’s Steve Jones (2:08:05).

Chicago has also been the site of three women’s record marathons, by Paula Radcliffe (GBR) in 2002 (2:17:18), 2003 (2:15:25) and Kenyan Brigid Kosgei’s 2:14:04 in 2019.

There was also good news for the U.S. in these races, with Conner Mantz (6th: 2:07:47) and Clayton Young (7th: 2:08:00) both finishing under the men’s Olympic qualifying standard of 2:08:10. The women’s race saw seven Americans run under the Paris qualifying standard of 2:26:50: Emily Sisson (7th: 2:22:09), Molly Seidel (8th: 2:23:07), Sara Vaughn (10th: 2:23:24), Gabriella Rooker (11th: 2:24:35), Dakotah Lindwurm (12th: 2:24:40), Emma Bates (13th: 2:25:04) and Tristin van Ord (14th: 2:25:58).

5.
IPC to light torch at Stoke Mandeville from 2024 on

The International Paralympic Committee announced that it will permanently begin its torch relays for all future Paralympic Games from Stoke Mandeville (GBR), the birthplace of the Paralympic movement. Said IPC President Andrew Parsons (BRA):

“It is fitting that 75 years on from those historic first Stoke Mandeville Games and on the eve of ticket sales for the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games we are announcing that Stoke Mandeville will play an even greater role in all future editions of the Paralympic Games.

“The Paralympic Movement owes Stoke Mandeville and Sir Ludwig Guttmann a huge debt of gratitude. What started out as a small-scale sport event in 1948 at the back of a rehabilitation hospital for 16 injured war veterans has now become the world’s third biggest sport event. At the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games 4,350 exceptional athletes from 180 countries will compete in 22 sports, while a cumulative audience of 4.1 billion will watch on TV.

“Through his pioneering techniques, Sir Ludwig changed the world with sport, something that is central to the IPC today. With this new concept for the flame lighting, we want to honour the history of the Paralympic Movement but also highlight the evolution of the Paralympic Games since the first edition in Rome, Italy, in 1960.”

Dr. Guttmann, a German Jewish neurologist, left Germany in early 1939 to escape Nazi persecution of Jews and escaped via Portugal to Britain and remained there for the rest of his life. He created the spinal injuries center at the Stoke Mandeville Hospital in southeast England and looked for ways to treat his war-time patients, both physically and emotionally.

On 29 July 1948, on the day of the opening of the London 1948 Olympic Games, Guttmann organized a competition for wheelchair athletes which became known as the Stoke Mandeville Games, with 16 injured servicemen and women who competed in archery.

The Stoke Mandeville Games became the first Paralympic Games with the ninth edition held in Rome, Italy, in 1960, featuring 319 athletes from 21 countries. Since then, they have taken place every four years.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● International Olympic Committee ● The IOC posted a statement on Monday, listing accomplishments and reforms attendant to its Olympic Agenda 2020+5 at the “midway” mark. All of the cited items have been widely reported before; perhaps the most important takeaway was the next-to-last paragraph:

“Despite the worldwide economic crisis, the IOC’s finances continue to be stable, contrary to many other international organisations. From the discussions with other potentially interested commercial partners and Olympic Games hosts, we can conclude that the economic outlook for the IOC and the Olympic Movement can be considered at least as stable.”

● Pan American Games ● The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee announced its 2023 Pan American Games team on Monday, with the XIX PAG to open in Santiago (CHI) on 20 October.

As usual, it’s a massive group, with 631 total athletes competing in 43 of the 36 sports on the program. The team includes 93 U.S. Olympians, 32 Olympic medal winners and 94 returning Pan American Games medal winners.

The U.S. will be looking for Olympic qualifying spots in 10 sports: basketball (3×3), breaking, boxing, gymnastics (rhythmic and trampoline), sport climbing, field hockey (men and women), modern pentathlon, artistic swimming, team handball and water polo (men and women).

Olympic quota slots can be obtained in archery, diving, equestrian jumping, table tennis, sailing and shooting.

The youngest and oldest members on the team: 15-year-old skateboarder Paige Heyn and 57-year-old equestrian Laura Kraut.

USA Track & Field announced its Pan American Games team for Santiago last Friday, with 77 athletes, with the strongest entry in the women’s hammer with 2019 World Champion DeAnna Price and 2022 World Champion Brooke Andersen.

The top men’s entries include triple jumpers Chris Benard, a two-time Olympian, and Omar Craddock (the 2019 Pan American gold medalist), two-time national champion discus thrower Sam Mattis, two-time Olympic hammer thrower Rudy Winkler and Tokyo Olympic javelinist Curtis Thompson.

● Russia ● Russian Olympic Committee President Stanislav Pozdnyakov was asked about the possibility of the ROC “leaving” the Olympic Movement altogether in view of the IOC’s sanctions that he has repeatedly criticized. His reply:

“Legally, there is no such procedure. To be honest, I don’t see the point in any drastic actions to leave or enter. We are part of a large sports system, a self-sufficient part, and we will develop in accordance with current conditions, and most importantly, the main thing is that we will not stand still, but create new conditions for development. This is a priority for us.”

● Memorabilia ● Pin traders unite! The 2023 Olympin Collectors Club 2023 Memorabilia Festival comes this week to Southern California, with the show floor open from Friday through Sunday, with free admission:

13 October: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
14 October: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
15 October: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

The show will be in the Panache Ballroom of the Hotel MdR in Marina del Rey, California and all 40 tables have been sold.

The Olympin Collectors Club show was in Colorado Springs in 2022; the club has 500-plus members in 30 countries.

● Cycling ● The fourth leg of the UCI BMX Racing World Cup was held in Santiago del Estero (ARG), with France’s Romain Mahieu taking his third and fourth wins of the season, beating teammate (and two-time World Champion) Joris Daudet by just 30.322 to 30.330 in race seven and then enjoying a slightly easier won on Sunday over American Cameron Wood by 30.054 to 30.569.

The wins continued France’s success in the seven races held this season (one was canceled due to weather): seven wins, with four for Mahieu and three for Daudet.

The women’s situation was eerily parallel: coming in, only two racers had won this season: Olympic champ Bethany Shriever (GBR: 3) and Australia’s Saya Sakakibara, with two wins.

On Saturday, Shriever eked out a close win in 32.403 for her fourth victory this season, ahead of Sakakibara (32.474) with American Felicia Stancil in third (33.233).

The Australian got even on Sunday, winning the second race in 32.077, beating Shriever (32.424) and France’s Axelle Etienne. Alise Willoughby of the U.S. was fifth (33.460).

The season will finish next week with two more races at Santiago del Estero.

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TSX REPORT: Biles ends with four golds, U.S. gets 11 Worlds medals; 2:00:35 world marathon record for Kiptum in Chicago!

A world record 2:00:35 for Kenya's Kelvin Kiptum in Chicago in October! (Photo: Bank of America Chicago Marathon-Kevin Morris)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Biles wins Worlds A-A, Beam, Floor and U.S. scores 11 medals
2. Kiptum 2:00:35 world record at Chicago Marathon!
3. Asian Games conclude as China totals 383 medals
4. Report: Sapporo to drop 2030 Winter bid, try for 2034?
5. St. Moritz 1948 Canadian hockey gold brings $22,000 at auction

● The iconic Simone Biles won the All-Around, Beam and Floor Exercise golds at the FIG Artistic World Championships in Belgium, plus a Vault silver to bring her career total to a staggering 30. The U.S. won 11 medals, the most of any nation, and the most since 2013, when the American team won 12.

● Kenyan Kelvin Kiptum won his third marathon without a loss and set a world record of 2:00:35! The women’s race was a runaway for Dutch star Sifan Hassan, who won London earlier this year and run the second-fastest time in history in Chicago: 2:13:44!

● The Asian Games concluded in Hangzhou, China, with the host Chinese setting a record for the most gold medals won by one country. Two Chinese swimmers were selected as the “most valuable” athletes, but there is serious concern over the flagrant disregard of North Korea’s non-compliant doping-control status as its flag was freely flown at the Games.

● A Kyodo News report said that a Sapporo bid for a future Olympic Winter Games will have to be for 2034 or later, per the Japanese Olympic Committee, which has a final say in whether a bid will be pursued.

● The giant Ingrid O’Neil memorabilia auction no. 95 saw several items go for more than $10,000, with a 1948 St. Moritz Olympic Winter gold medal from a Canadian hockey player bring the biggest sale at $22,000.

World Championships: Rowing (U.S.’s Bak wins gold and silver at Coastal Worlds) = Rugby (World Cup quarterfinals set) ●

Panorama: Los Angeles 2028 (More Belmont Plaza Pool funding to be voted Tuesday) = European Olympic Committees (Istanbul wants 2027 European Games) = Russia (2: Bach confirms “neutral” conditions for athletes; Russian Olympic Committee sues IOC over TOP funds) = Canoe-Kayak (Fox wins two more titles at Slalom World Cup Final) = Cycling (2: Pogacar wins Il Lombardia; Pidcock and Lecomte win Mountain Bike World Cup finales) = Football (Nilsson resigns Swedish confed post over UEFA vote) = Gymnastics (China sweeps individual Trampoline World Cup events) = Judo (Yonezuka first U.S. men’s World Junior Champs finalist!) = Skateboard (U.S. teen Bottger take World Park Champs gold) = Swimming (Haughey moves to no. 3 all-time in 100 m Free at Berlin World Cup) = Volleyball (U.S., Germany and Poland sweep Paris qualifying tournaments) ●

1.
Biles wins Worlds A-A, Beam, Floor and U.S. scores 11 medals

The amazing Simone Biles continued expanding her medal collection at the FIG Artistic World Championships in Antwerp (BEL), especially with her sixth career All-Around world title, and then adding to it in the apparatus finals.

Biles and U.S. teammate Shilese Jones both started on Vault in the All-Around, with Biles placing enormous pressure on the field with a 15.100 starter, her best score of the day among all four events. Brazil’s defending champion, Rebeca Andrade, counted with an excellent 14.700 for second and Jones scored 14.233 for third … and that’s how they finished after three more events.

Algeria’s Kaylia Nemour topped the Uneven Bars at 15.200, with Jones fourth (14.633), Andrade fifth (14.500) and Biles sixth (14.333). Biles and Jones then went 1-2 on Beam at 14.433 and 14.066, with Andrade 10th, and then Biles and Andrade were 1-2 on Floor at 14.533 and 14.066, with Jones fifth (13.400).

The total showed Biles winning at 58.399, followed by Andrade (56.766) and Jones at 56.332, well ahead of 16-year-old fourth-placer Qiyuan Qiu of China (54.799).

Jones, 21, won her fifth Worlds medal in two years (2-2-1) and still had the apparatus finals to come.

On Saturday, the women’s finals included Vault and Uneven Bars. American Joscelyn Roberson’s injury in the Team finals required her to withdraw from the Vault final, and after an appeal, Leanne Wong of the U.S. was also added to the field based on the two-per-country rule. Biles wowed with her signature Yurchenko double pike, but rolled backwards on her landing and coupled with the 0.5 deduction for a safety spotter, still scored 14.433 for her first try, ahead of everyone except Andrade, who scored 15.000. Biles improved in the second round with a less difficult vault to 14.666 for a two-vault average of 14.549, but Andrade was cool and completed a 14.500 finale to give her the win with an average of 14.750. Seo-jeong Yeo of South Korea was third (14.416) and Wong finished seventh at 13.466.

On the Uneven Bars, Jones was first up and scored a terrific 14.766, but was eventually passed by China’s Qiu, who won with 15.100 and Algeria’s Nemour (15.033), and took her second straight bronze medal in the event. Biles was fifth, scoring 14.200.

On Sunday, Biles was on fire, taking the Beam with a 14.800 score, just ahead of China’s 17-year-old Yaqin Zhou (14.700) and Andrade (14.300). Jones was seventh at 12.933. It’s Biles’ fourth Worlds golds in the event.

On Floor, there was little doubt that Biles was the favorite and she came through with a solid 14.633, equaling her second-best score at the Worlds, winning over Andrade (14.500) and teammate Flavia Saraiva (13.966). Jones finished with at 13.666. It’s the sixth Worlds gold for Biles on Floor.

The amazing Biles now owns 30 Worlds medals, with 23 golds, four silvers and three bronzes. Adding in her two Olympic appearances (4-1-2) and she has 37 total medals, including 27 golds. That’s the largest combined total in history for any gymnast, and with her four golds in Antwerp, she will be favored for five golds in Paris and could equal Soviet Larisa Latynina (1956-64) for the most Olympic golds all-time in men’s or women’s gymnastics.

Overshadowed was Andrade, who won five medals as well (1-3-1) and now has nine career Worlds medals at age 24.

The U.S. men were also busy, with All-Around bronze medalist Fred Richard back in action in the Floor Exercise, won by Olympic champ (and Ukrainian-born) Artem Dolgopyat of Israel (14.866). Japan’s Kazumi Minami won his second Worlds silver in the event – also in 2021 – at 14.666, with Kazakh Milad Karimi third (14.600). All-Around winner Daiki Hashimoto of Japan was seventh (14.233) and Richard finished eighth (13.200).

Starting third in the field of eight on the Pommel Horse, American Khoi Young put up a big score of 14.666 that held up until defending champion Rhys McClenaghan of Ireland scored 15.100 as the final competitor and Young settled for silver for his first-ever Worlds medal. Jordan’s Ahmad Abu Al-Soud finished third (14.633) for his country’s first-ever Worlds gymnastics medal.

Olympic champ Yang Liu won the Rings at 15.233, his second Worlds gold in the event, but first since 2014! Three-time Worlds gold winner Eleftherios Petrounias took the silver at 15.066 and China’s Hao You won his third career Worlds Rings medal at 14.833 for the bronze.

Sunday’s finals saw Britain’s Jake Jarman, 21, move up from second at the European Championships in the Vault to become World Champion, scoring 15.400 and 14.700 for a winning average of 15.050. Young won a silver, scoring 14.849 off scores of 15.033 and 14.666. Ukrainians Nazar Chepurnyi and Igor Radivilov went 3-4 and American Paul Juda was fifth (14.550). It’s the fourth career Worlds medal for Radivoliv, now 30, in the event (0-2-2).

Tokyo Olympic silver medalist Lukas Dauser (GER, also 30) won his first Worlds gold in the Parallel Bars, moving up from silver in 2022. His score of 15.400 was a clear winner over 2021 bronze medalist Cong Shi (CHN: 15.066) and Japan’s Kaito Sugimoto (15.000). Americans Asher Hong and Yul Moldauer finished sixth (14.466) and eighth (13.133), respectively.

On the Horizontal Bar, Tokyo Olympic champ Hashimoto put an exclamation point on his championships, walking away from the field with a brilliant 15.233 score, ahead of 2017 World Champion Tin Srbic (SLO: 14.700), with China’s Weide Su third (14.500). Juda was fifth at 14.100. Hashimoto moved to the top of the podium after Worlds silvers in this event in 2021 and 2022.

Overall, the U.S. led the medal table with 11 (4-3-4) with the women taking seven (4-1-2) and the men winning four (0-2-2). With his apparatus silvers in the Pommel Horse and Vault, Young became the first U.S. man to win three medals at a single Worlds since Paul Hamm in 2003; he’s the first to win two or more apparatus medals since Kurt Thomas and Bart Conner in 1979!

China followed with seven medals (2-3-2), then Brazil with six (1-3-2) and Japan with five (3-1-1).

The 11 U.S. medals is the first time in double figures for any team in a Worlds since the U.S. did it in 2015 (10) and the most since the U.S. scored 12 (3-6-3) back in 2013.

2.
Kiptum 2:00:35 world record at Chicago Marathon!

Whether it’s the shoes, the weather, the pacing or the field, the fastest marathons in history are being run in 2023, with Kenya’s Kelvin Kiptum smashing the men’s world record with a brilliant 2:00:35 victory at the Bank of America Chicago Marathon on Sunday.

This was hardly unexpected, with an excellent field, temperatures in the high 40s (F) at race time and Kiptum, 23, having won the London Marathon in April with the second-fastest time in history at 2:01:25. He had said prior to the race that he was in shape to run the race in two hours. He was.

Kiptum destroyed an excellent field almost from the start, with a lead pack of just seven at 5 km (14:26) and then only fellow Kenyan Daniel Kibet with him at 10 km (28:42) through 30 km. Then Kiptum sped away, with a 49-second lead at the 35 km mark and finishing with a world record by 34 seconds in 2:00:35, eclipsing countryman Eliud Kipchoge’s 2:01:09 mark from Berlin in 2022.

Kiptum’s splits are noteworthy, especially his unreal 27:52 10 km (!!!) from 30 to 40 km:

5 km: 14:26
10 km: 28:42 (14:16)
15 km: 43:09 (14:27)
20 km: 57:39 (14:30)
25 km: 1:12:04 (14:25)
30 km: 1:26:31 (14:27)
35 km: 1:40:22 (13:51)
40 km: 1:54:23 (14:01)
Finish: 2:00:35 (6:12)

He passed the half in 60:48 and ran the second half in just 59:47; he now has two of the fastest three times in history and is undefeated in three career marathons. For the record, he was wearing the Nike Dev 163 prototype shoes.

Fellow Kenyan Benson Kipruto, the 2022 champion, was a distant second in 2:04:02, a lifetime best, then Olympic bronze medalist Bashir Abdi (BEL: 2:04:32), John Korir (KEN: 2:05:09) and Seifu Tura (ETH: 2:05:29). Kibet did not finish, dropping out after 38 km.

Americans went 6-7-8-9, with Conner Mantz sixth in a lifetime best of 2:07:47 (equal fourth all-time U.S.) and Clayton Young seventh in 2:08:00 (seventh all-time U.S.) and former Chicago champ Galen Rupp eighth in 2:08:48. Sam Chelanga was ninth in 2:08:50, moving to no. 8 all-time U.S.

The women’s was also brilliant, with 2019 World Champion Ruth Chepngetich and London Marathon winner and 1,500-5,000-10,000 m track star Sifan Hassan (NED) running away from the field after 5 km and then Hassan coming from six seconds down at the half to run away by the 30 km mark on the way to a sensational 2:13:44 finish, the second-fastest time in history!

Chepngetich was second in 2:15:37, the equal-seventh fastest time ever, with Ethiopia’s Megertu Alemu coming up late for third in 2:17:09, now the no. 11 performer ever.

The U.S. did well here also, with Emily Sisson claiming seventh in 2:22:09, ahead of Tokyo bronze medalist Molly Seidel (8th: 2:23:07), Sara Vaughn (10th: 2:23:24), Gabriella Rooker (11th: 2:24:35) and Emma Bates (13th: 2:25:04). Seidel moves to no. 10 all-time U.S.

The final World Marathon Majors race of 2023 will be the New York City Marathon comes on 5 November

3.
Asian Games conclude as China totals 383 medals

The Hangzhou 2022 Asian Games concluded on Sunday, with host China steamrolling the competition and winning 383 medals, more than the next two-highest countries combined!

The Chinese won 201 events, scored 111 silvers and 71 bronzes, while South Korea finished with 190 medals (42-59-89) and Japan had 188 (52-67-69). This was the first time that a country had won more than 200 golds, with the prior high of 199 by China in 2010, when the Asiad was held in Guangzhou. China led the medal table for the 11th consecutive Asian Games.

India notably became the fourth country to surpass 100 medals in an Asian Games, taking 107 (28-38-41). Forty-one of the 45 competing countries won a medal; this year’s Asian Games had the most events ever, at 481.

The biggest medal winners were from China, of course, with men’s swimmer Zhanle Pan winning seven medals (3-3-1). Multiple athletes won six medals, led by six-time gold winners Yufei Zhang (CHN: women’s 50-100-200 m Butterfly, 50 m Freestyle, two relays) and Bingjie Li (CHN: women’s 200-400-800-1,500 m Frees, two relays), and five-time winner Haiyang Qin (men’s 50-100-200m Breaststrokes, two relays and 200 m Medley silver).

Also winning six medals were men’s swimmers Shun Wang (CHN: 4-1-1) and Sunwoo Hwang (KOR: 2-2-2) and women’s swimmer Siobhan Haughey (HKG: 2-1-3).

The Asiad “Most Valuable Player” awards were handed out in Hangzhou, with the selection committee tabbing Chinese swimmers Qin and Zhang. Both will receive $25,000 prizes.

A significant issue at the Asian Games has been the appearance of the North Korean team for the time at a major event since the Covid-19 pandemic. Moreover, despite North Korea being non-compliant with the World Anti-Doping Agency, has had the use of its flag during the event; WADA media relations chief James Fitzgerald (IRL) reported:

“The DPRK National Anti-Doping Organization continues to be non-compliant with the World Anti-Doping Code and all International Federations and Major Event Organizations, such as the Olympic Council of Asia, are informed of the consequences of DPRK NADO’s non-compliance. WADA is in regular communication with the [National Anti-Doping Organization] as it works to address the issues related to this non-compliance. …

“WADA is aware that the OCA has breached its Signatory obligation to respect the consequences of the DPRK NADO’s non-compliance, namely by flying the DPRK flag at the Asian Games. WADA takes this matter extremely seriously and has written to the OCA on several occasions before and after the opening ceremony of the Games, explaining in clear terms the possible consequences that could arise for the OCA if this matter is ignored.

“WADA is disappointed that the OCA has to date not taken steps to comply with the terms of the DPRK’s non-compliance. WADA will follow due process to ensure that the appropriate consequences are imposed for the OCA’s refusal to meet its Signatory obligations.”

Reuters reported that the acting OCA Director General, Vinod Kumar Tiwari (IND) told reporters on Sunday:

“We are in touch with them and we are trying to resolve this issue; hopefully in the next couple of days we will be able to get through to what WADA wants.

“It’s a very sensitive issue. It’s not very easy to handle, but we are in touch with WADA on a daily basis and hopefully things will be resolved to be mutually acceptable to both parties.

“North Korea, the DPRK Korea, has also written a letter to them very lately telling them that the borders have opened and they can send the doping control officers for the testing which the WADA has agreed and they will be shortly sending it to the DPRK, to North Korea.”

The North Koreans won 39 medals (11-18-10).

4.
Report: Sapporo to drop 2030 Winter bid, try for 2034?

Japan’s Kyodo News Service reported Friday that the Sapporo bid for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games will be ended:

“Sapporo is set to abandon its bid to host the 2030 Winter Olympics at the request of the Japanese Olympic Committee, and will instead aim to stage the games in 2034 or later, sources close to the matter said Friday.”

The JOC, which controls what Olympic bids are made from its country, has been concerned about poor public support for the Sapporo effort in the aftermath of riding cost projections and the odor left by the continuing scandals attendant to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, including sponsorship bribes and the rigging of bids for test-event and venue-management contracts.

However, the Kyodo story also said that the JOC would like to have Sapporo bid again for a future Games, in 2034 or thereafter. The JOC President, 1984 Olympic judo champ Yasuhiro Yamashita will meet with the pro-Olympics mayor of Sapporo, Katsuhiro Akimoto on Wednesday (11th) to chart the future direction of the Sapporo bid effort.

If true, the loss of Sapporo for the 2030 race leaves the International Olympic Committee with three apparent options in Europe, with bids forming in Sweden, Switzerland and France. All are in the development stages, but are following the International Olympic Committee’s strong preference for using existing facilities.

A new, independent survey across Switzerland showed 56% in favor of a Winter Olympic bid for 2030, 2034 or 2038, using existing facilities:

“Support is higher among men (61%) than women (50%). The younger the respondents, the more enthusiastic they are. Those saying they were in favour of the project reached 66% among 18-34 year-olds, compared with 48% among the over-65s.

“The survey was conducted between 19 and 20 September among 29,081 people, 5,570 of them in French-speaking Switzerland.”

For 2034, Salt Lake City, Utah has a ready-to-go bid that it hopes will convince the IOC to select it at the same time a 2030 bid is announced, or earlier.

5.
St. Moritz 1948 Canadian hockey gold brings $22,000 at auction

The 537-lot Ingrid O’Neil Auction no. 95 concluded on Saturday, with seven items selling for more than $10,000:

● $22,000: 1948 St. Moritz Winter gold medal
● $20,000: 2020 Tokyo bronze medal
● $17,000: 1976 Innsbruck Winter gold medal
● $17,000: 1968 Mexico City Olympic torch
● $16,000: 1984 Sarajevo Winter gold medal
● $16,000: 1968 Mexico City Olympic torch
● $11,000: 1932 Lake Placid Winter IOC member badge

The 1948 St. Moritz Winter gold was won by Canada’s Patrick Guzzo, a Royal Canadian Air Force “Flyers” member who was part of a team of World War II airmen who played and won the ice hockey tournament. The 1976 Innsbruck gold was for ski jumping, but it was not indicated whether it was won by East German Hans-Georg Aschenbach (normal hill) or Austria’s Karl Schnabl (large hill). The 1984 Sarajevo gold was for the men’s 30 km Cross Country event, won by Soviet Nikolai Zimyatov.

The 2020 Tokyo bronze was for men’s Freestyle Wrestling at 97 kg, meaning it was awarded either to Reineris Salas of Cuba or Italian Abraham Conyedo.

The Tokyo 1964 Imperial Family Badge that had bidding start at $90,000, did not attract any bids. There were eight other Tokyo ‘64 identification badges on sale, with a Special Delegates Award Badge selling for $1,000, an official’s badge from modern pentathlon for $900 and a Special Delegation badge for $180.

Maybe the wildest item that sold was a 1972 Munich Olympic mascot – Waldi the dachshund – with a radio inside, for $200!

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rowing ● The World Rowing Coastal Championships were held in Barletta (ITA), with multiple defending champions in the finals, but only two were able to repeat.

Let’s start with Spain’s Adrian Miramon, who won the men’s Coastal Solo 4 km in 27:33.52, ahead of Christopher Bak of the U.S. (27:50.71), for Miramon’s fifth career title, and second in a week, after also winning the Beach Sprint title in Barletta.

Bak claimed a gold, however, in the men’s Double Sculls, teaming up with Kory Rogers and outlasting two-time defending champs Dennis Gustavsson and Eskil Borgh of Sweden, 26:37.94 to 26:39.55.

France’s Jessica Berra was the defending women’s Solo champ, but 2016 World Champion Monica Dukarska (IRL) proved the strongest, winning in 32:09.17, with three-time World Champion Diana Dymchenko (AZE: 32:20.94) second for the third year in a row and Berra getting the bronze this time in 32:33.92.

The Dutch women’s Double Sculls pair of Janneke van der Meulen and Karien Robbers also managed to defend their 2022 titles, winning decisively in a race that featured multiple clashes in 28:35.36 to 28:46.80 for the Austria’s Katharina and Tokyo Olympic Single Sculls bronze medalist Magdalena Lobnig.

In the Mixed Double Sculls, Spain’s two-year grip on the event was broken, as Ireland’s Dukarska took her second gold as she and Ronan Byrne got to the line first in 27:09.60 to 27:41.93 for France’s Vincent Noirot and Edwige Alfred.

● Rugby ● The 10th Rugby World Cup in France concluded the pool phase on Sunday, with the quarterfinals set to begin next Saturday (14th). The pool results:

Pool A: Host France finished with a perfect 4-0 record, outscoring its opponents by 210-32, including an opening 27-13 victory over New Zealand. The Kiwis finished second at 3-1 (15 points) and beat Italy (2-2: 10) by 60-7 on Friday.

Pool B: Ireland finished with a 4-0 mark (190-46) and 19 points, ahead of South Africa (3-1: 15), with Scotland (2-2: 10) missing out after a 36-14 loss to the Irish on Saturday.

Pool C: Wales completed a 4-0 pool sweep (143-59) with a 43-19 win over Georgia, and Fiji (2-2: 11) winning the tie-breaker over Australia (2-2: 11), having won their head-to-head match by 22-15.

Pool D: England had long wrapped up this group with a 4-0 record (150-39: 18), ahead of Argentina (3-1: 14), with Japan third (2-2: 9), as the Argentines won Sunday’s decisive match, 39-17, against the Japanese.

The quarterfinals:

Upper bracket (14 October): Wales vs. Argentina and Ireland vs. New Zealand.

Lower bracket (15 October) : England vs. Fiji and France vs. South Africa.

The semis will be on 20-21 October and the championship on 28 October at the Stade de France.

Attendance in the pool stage was excellent, with 1.809 million fans and an average of 45,218.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2028: Los Angeles ● The famed Belmont Plaza swimming facility in Long Beach was opened in 1968 – and site of the 1968 U.S. Olympic Trials – and was demolished over safety concerns in 2014. The City of Long Beach has committed to building a new facility, with an additional step expected to come on Tuesday.

The Long Beach City Council will consider a proposal for added funding for project design services for existing contractor Harley Ellis Devereaux Corporation of Los Angeles to $18.66 million to complete construction drawings for the facility. Once completed, the project could proceed to bids for construction; multiple options are available, with the recommendation for a 50 m competition-style pool and a recreational pool, along with diving springboards.

Long Beach has identified most of the funding for the estimated cost of $74.2 million, but is still $8 million short. But the next step will be to get the construction drawings completed and then go to bid on the building effort; this is part of Long Beach’s plan for infrastructure upgrades prior to 2028, very little of which actually impacts the 2028 Olympic venue plan.

The Belmont Plaza Pool replacement is not part of the 2028 Olympic venue program, but could be a training site, especially for water polo, slated to be held in a temporary facility in Long Beach.

● European Olympic Committees ● At the 52nd General Assembly of the European Olympic Committees in Istanbul (TUR), Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu declared his city would be a candidate to organize the fourth European Games, in 2027:

“We are determined to organize the European Games in Istanbul in 2027.

“Istanbul is a city ready for the European Games with all of its means. We believe that organising the games in Istanbul will send a strong message to Europe and the rest of the world. Istanbul is the largest metropolitan area in Europe and would create an amazing synergy for the European Olympic Committees and European sports.“

Istanbul has made prior, unsuccessful bid efforts for prior Olympic Games for 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2020.

● Russia ● Also at the EOC General Assembly in Istanbul, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach reiterated that the conditions for Russian participation in international events as “neutral” athletes must be strictly followed:

“[T]here have been some comments coming from Russia about these conditions. So let me reconfirm what we said from the very beginning, that these conditions are non-negotiable, we will not waiver. They have to be strictly applied to give this approach the credibility and support it currently enjoys among the public, the athletes and the international community. This support has to be earned day by day by strict application.”

The Russian Olympic Committee filed a lawsuit against the IOC on Friday in Switzerland, claiming it is owed nearly $9 million (U.S.) as its share of the TOP sponsorship program.

ROC Director General Vladimir Sengleyev said Friday:

“The IOC owes us money. It has not paid us for our share of the TOP marketing program, which amounts to $3.71 million that we never received on December 31, 2022.

“This year we were owed a payment of $5 million and, therefore, their outstanding debt currently exceeds eight million dollars. We have filed a lawsuit with a Swiss court demanding this contract be enforced.”

The IOC imposed sanctions on the Russian Olympic Committee after the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, including the stoppage of any payments to the ROC.

● Canoe-Kayak ● Australia’s legendary Jessica Fox dominated the ICF Slalom World Cup Final in Vaires-sur-Marne (FRA), taking the women’s Kayak and Canoe finals for her 46th and 47th career World Cup wins and winning the seasonal titles in both.

In the women’s Kayak final, Fox suffered two penalties, but her time of 100.78 was still good enough to win from Corinna Kuhnle (AUT: 102.37, 0 penalties) and Klaudia Zwolinska (POL: 102.73/0)

Fox had no penalties in the Canoe final and won easily in 106.04 seconds, over Gabriela Satkova (CZE: 110.08/2) and Britain’s Tokyo Olympic runner-up Mallory Franklin (GBR: 111.97/2) American Evy Leibfarth was 10th, at 125.24, but with eight penalties.

Fox now owns four seasonal Canoe World Cup titles and has won five Kayak seasonal titles in a row.

New Zealand’s Luuka Jones, the Rio 2016 K-1 silver winner, took the Cross final over Britain’s 2023 World Champion Kimberley Woods and Fox. Woods won the seasonal title over Jones and Fox, 229-204-194.

In the men’s Canoe final, Italy’s Raffaelo Ivaldi (95.50/0) was the winner for the second race in a row, trailed by Franz Anton (GER: 96.18/0) and Miquel Trave (ESP: 96.83/0). Luca Bozic (SLO), a seven-time Worlds medal winner, won the seasonal title, with Ivaldi third.

The men’s Kayak final was a win for France’s Titouan Castryck (89.20/0), beating Czech veteran Vit Prindis (91.78/0) and Jonny Dickson (GBR: 91.78/0). Prindis, the 2022 World Champion, won his third seasonal title.

France won again in the men’s Cross final, as three-time Worlds runner-up Boris Neveu got to the finish first, ahead of Finn Butcher (NZL); Britain’s Joseph Clarke won the seasonal title over Neveu, 189-171.

● Cycling ● Slovenian star Tadej Pogacar won his fifth UCI World Tour race of the season with a 31 km solo to take the 117th edition of the famed Il Lombardia race on Saturday for the third year in a row.

The last of the “Monument” races this season was a challenging, 238 km ride from Como to Bergamo that included seven climbs, including the 1,261 m Zambla Alta. But there was a lead group of eight on the final major climb to the top of the 1,052 Passo di Ganda and then Pogacar attacked on the descent and rode away to an impressive, 52-second victory in 5:55:33, with Andrea Baglioli (ITA) and fellow Slovenian star Primoz Roglic following at the head of a group of six that were given the same time.

Pogacar didn’t win the Tour de France this year – he was second – but won Paris-Nice in March and then the Ronde van Vlaanderen (Monument) in April, followed by the Amstel Gold Race and La Fleche Wallonne. In his nine UCI World Tour races, he won five, was second once, third once, fourth once and did not finish the other. A pretty good year.

The final UCI Mountain Bike World Series stop of 2023 was in Mont-Sainte-Anne (CAN), with Britain’s Tokyo Olympic champ Tom Pidcock riding away with the men’s title, taking over on the final two laps to win in 1:26:27, beating Swiss Mathias Flueckiger (1:26:53) – the Tokyo runner-up – and teammate Marcel Guerrini (1:27:58).

The 10-time World Champion Nino Schurter (SUI) won his ninth men’s seasonal title with 1,549 points top 1,509 for France’s 2020 World Champion, Jordan Sarrou.

The women’s Cross Country Olympic race went to France’s Loana Lecomte, the 2023 Worlds runner-up, who bested Rio 2016 Olympic champ Jenny Rissveds (SWE), 1:28:09 to 1:28:24. Dutch rider Puck Piererse, the 2023 European Games winner, was third in 1:29:12 and American Sevilla Blunk was seventh (1:32:10).

Pieterse, 21, won the seasonal title with 1,939 points, well ahead of Lecomte (1,539) and Mona Mitterwallner (AUT: 1,445).

France’s Viktor Koretzky won the Short Track race in 22:05, just ahead of Sarrou (22:07) and Chris Blevins of the U.S. (22:08). Austria’s two-time World Junior Champion Laura Stigger won the women’s race with superb riding over the last two laps in 19:40, five seconds up on Lecomte (FRA: 19:45) and Rebecca Henderson (AUS: 19:46). Americans Gwen Gibson (19:53) and Haley Batten (19:56) finished 7-8.

Germany’s Luca Schwarzbauer won the men’s seasonal Short Track series with 1,550 points to 1,440 for Sarrou, with France’s Joshua Dubau a distant third (926). Dutch star Pieterse also won the women’s season championship with 1,420 and five medals in the eight races. Alessandra Keller (SUI: 1,278) was second and Evie Richards (GBR: 1,236) was third.

In the non-Olympic men’s Downhill, Canada’s 2021 World Junior champ Jackson Goldstone led most of the way and won his second men’s race this season in 3:57.836, over George Craik (GBR: 4:02.164) and five-time World Champion Loic Bruni (FRA: 4:04.594). Austria’s Valentina Hoell won her fourth race of the season in 4:40.133, also leading most of the way, beating Nina Hoffmann (GER: 4:53.199) and Veronika Widmann (ITA: 4:54.301). It’s Hoffmann’s sixth medal out of eight races on the season.

Bruni won the seasonal title with 1,698 points over Goldstone (1,616), and Hoell (2,422) topped Hoffmann (1,913) for the women’s championship.

● Football ● The UEFA vote to allow Russian U-17 teams to play, which was seconded by FIFA, continues to have repercussions, as Sweden’s Karl-Erik Nilsson, the UEFA First Vice President, has resigned as head of the Swedish Sports Confederation.

Nilsson, 66, very much against the position of essentially all Swedish sports organizations, voted in favor of allowing Russian U-17 teams, which was revealed by Britain’s Sky News. Nilsson at first denied it, then tried to explain his position, but resigned as the head of the Swedish Sports Confederation:

“It is a very difficult decision to now choose to step aside as I have felt great dedication and joy in the mission. But since it has proven difficult to combine my two roles and that it can affect trust in me and Swedish sports.”

Nilsson was replaced by Anna Iwarsson as the acting Chair of the confederation, who commented:

“I want to be clear, it is fixed. The common Nordic stance regarding Russia’s and Belarus’s participation in international sports is firm.

“We had a Nordic meeting as recently as last month where all the Nordic national sports federations, Olympic and Paralympic committees, agreed that we must stick to the current line as Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine is still ongoing.”

● Gymnastics ● China swept the individual titles at the FIG Trampoline World Cup in Varna (BUL), with 2021 World Champion Langyu Yan edging teammate Zisai Wang, 61.460 to 61.310, in the men’s final. Japan’s Ryusei Nishioka was third (60.040); American Ruben Padilla was eighth (58.730).

The women’s final was another Chinese 1-2 for Tokyo Olympic champion Xueying Zhu (56.630) and 2022 Worlds bronze winner Yicheng Hu (56.590), with Japan again third with 2022 World Champion Hikaru Mori (55.760). American Jessica Stevens was sixth at 53.960.

In the women’s Synchro final, Americans Nicole Ahsinger and Cheyenne Webster finished second to Britain’s Bryony Page and Isabelle Songhurst, 48.800 to 48.460. Canada’s Remi Auben and Keegan Soehn won the men’s Synchro (51.950); Americans Aliaksei Shostak and Padilla were seventh, after retiring following two rounds of 10.

● Judo ● Japan dominated the World Junior Championships in Odivelas (POR), winning nine of the 14 classes, but the U.S. made some history as well with a men’s 73 kg silver from Jack Yonezuka.

He won the first men’s medal at the World Juniors in 30 years in 2022 with a bronze-medal finish, but this time reached the final after defeating Japan’s Keito Kihara in overtime in the semifinal. Yonezuka and Azerbaijan’s Vusai Galandarzade also went into overtime in the final, with Galandarzade winning by ippon.

It was the first final for a U.S. junior since Kayla Harrison’s 2008 gold and 2009 silver at 78 kg; he’s the only American man ever to reach a World Junior final.

● Skateboard ● U.S. riders took three of the top four places at the World Park Championships held in Rome (ITA), with 16-year-old Gavin Bottger winning first Worlds medal – gold – on his final run.

After a miss on his first run, Bottger was sitting fourth after two rounds of the final at 83.06, but popped a terrific run that scored 94.03 and no one could match it. Brazil’s Luigi Cini also came up big in the third round, moving from seventh to second with a 91.90 for silver. American Tate Carew, 18, the 2022 U.S. national champ, scored 91.34 on his second run and settled for bronze, with 2022 World Champion Jagger Eaton fourth at 88.33, also in the second round.

Japan won its third world title in the last four as 15-year-old Tokyo runner-up Kokona Hiraki and Hinano Kusaki (also 15) went 1-2 at 94.54 and 93.20, both in the second round. American Minna Stess, 17 – the 2021 national champ – got the bronze for her second-round run of 90.80; teammate Ruby Lilley was seventh at 84.40.

● Swimming ● The first World Aquatics World Cup (50 m) was held in Berlin (GER), with Australia (19) and the U.S. (16) winning the most medals, and double Olympic backstroke star Kaylee McKeown winning four events.

She swept the 50-100-200 m Backstroke finals and also took the women’s 200 m Medley for her wins, one ahead of Italy’s Thomas Ceccon (100 m Free, 100-200 m Back) and China’s Haiyang Qin – fresh from the Asian Games – who won the 50-100-200 m Breast events.

They were the only triple winners; American Michael Andrew won the men’s 50 m Back and 100 m Fly, and claimed silvers in the 50 m Free and 50 m Fly as the only swimmer besides McKeown to grab four medals.

American Katie Grimes won the women’s 400 m Medley, earned silver in the 200 m Back and a bronze in the 800 m Free, for three medals in three different disciplines! The other American winner was Charlie Clark in the men’s 1,500 m (14:59.21).

The top performance of the meet was Hong Kong star Siobhan Haughey’s sensational 52.02 win in the women’s 100 m Free, the world leader for 2023 and now no. 3 on the all-time list! A pretty impressive follow-up to winning the 100-200 m Freestyles as at the Asian Games a week before. Haughey also won the 200 m Free in a speedy 1:55.10.

Swedish sprint star Sarah Sjostrom won the women’s 50 m Free in 23.95, a time only she has bettered this year, ahead of comebacking Australian star Cate Campbell, who moved to fifth on the world list at 24.11 in second.

Australian Lani Pallister won the women’s 400 m Free in 4:02.07, moving to no. 6 on the year list, and the 800 m Free in 8:16.02, now no. four on the season.

Qin equaled his own world-leading time in the men’s 100 m Breast (57.69), set at the World Championships.

The second World Cup comes next week in Athens (GRE).

● Volleyball ● The three FIVB men’s Olympic Qualifying Tournaments concluded on Sunday, with the U.S. men qualifying for Paris 2024 in Group B in Tokyo, Japan with an undefeated run.

The Americans were 7-0 and won 21 of 25 sets to top the Tokyo group, ahead of Japan (5-2), which also qualified for Paris 2024. Slovenia was also 5-2, but lost to Japan head-to-head.

In Rio de Janeiro (BRA), Germany was 7-0, taking 21 of 25 sets, with host Brazil at 6-1. Cuba was a non-qualifying third at 5-2.

The Xi’an (CHN) group was won by Worlds runner-up Poland, also at 7-0 and winner of 21 of 29 sets. Canada and Argentina were both 5-2, but the Canadians won their head-to-head match and advanced.

This will be the 13th Olympic appearance for the U.S. men at the Olympic Games, winning previously in 1984, 1988 and 2008. Brazil will be making its 16th Olympic start and won in 1992, 2004 and as hosts in 2016.

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TSX REPORT: Hashimoto repeats as World A-A champ, U.S.’s Richard wins bronze! Russia sour on Paris, even if allowed; Embiid will play for U.S.

NCAA champ for Michigan and now World All-Around bronze medalist: Fred Richard! (Photo: Michigan Athletics)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Hashimoto repeats as men’s A-A champ, with Richard third!
2. China passes 300 medals as Asian Games end Sunday
3. Russian Olympic Committee chief coy on Paris participation
4. Commonwealth Games budget woes signaled in April
5. Paris 2024 Paralympic tickets on sale on Monday

● Japan’s Daiki Hashimoto repeated as men’s World All-Around Champion at the FIG Artistic World Championships, topping Ukraine’s Ilia Kovtun and American Fred Richard, the NCAA champ from Michigan. It’s the first U.S. A-A medal since 2010.

● As expected, China is routing the field at the Asian Games in Hangzhou, with 333 medals in all and more gold medals (179) than second-place Japan’s medal total (158). The Games wrap up on Sunday.

● The Russian Olympic Committee president said he doesn’t see any “Russian Olympians” in Paris for 2024, but did not include what he calls “neutralized” athletes. He kept up his steady invective against the International Olympic Committee, but others noted a possible breakthrough with the UEFA and FIFA approval of U-17 teams for the future.

● The continuing tumult over the withdrawal of the State of Victoria in Australia as hosts of the 2026 Commonwealth Games saw details revealed this week that the signals over budget overruns came in June and that attorneys to help prepare Victoria’s exit were hired in June, ahead of the 18 July announcement.

● The Paris 2024 organizers announced that Paralympic Games ticket sales will begin on Monday, with 2.8 million tickets available with modest pricing.

World Championships: Rugby (Six of eight quarterfinal spots still open as pool play ends) ●

Panorama: Paris 2024 (Shipping traffic on the Seine will be diverted during the Games) = Memorabilia (Ingrid O’Neil auction 95 closes Saturday) = Athletics (Chicago Marathon comes Sunday with speedy fields) = Basketball (Embiid says he will play for U.S. in Paris) = Boxing (IBA continues criticism of IOC) ●

1.
Hashimoto repeats as men’s A-A champ, with Richard third!

In April, Michigan freshman Fred Richard, 19, won the NCAA men’s All-Around title. In August, he finished third in the USA Gymnastics National Championships All-Around. On Thursday, he became the FIG Artistic World Championships All-Around bronze medalist.

Richard had to battle experienced stars at the Sportpaleis in Antwerp (BEL), starting with Japan’s Daiki Hashimoto, 22, the reigning Olympic and World All-Around champ, and teammate Kenta Chiba, who had the highest qualifying score of 85.799. In fact, Hashimoto finished third, but was allowed to defend his 2022 gold as runner-up Kazuma Kaya withdrew in favor of his teammate.

Richard was sixth in the qualifying at 83.566, with teammate Asher Hong eighth at 83.165.

On Thursday, however, Richard was great from the start, putting up the top score of Floor +(14.633) for his lead-off event, then posted a solid Pommel horse score of 13.733, which ended up fifth overall. Richard’s Rings score of 13.500 was seventh-best overall – out of 24 competitors – and kept him in contention.

Hashimoto started poorly on Floor and his 13.466 score ended up only 17th. But he caught up with a 14.366 on the Pommel horse (second overall) and 14.000 on Rings (also second overall). He got up to second with a 15.000 score on Vault, again second best in the field, to rank behind China’s Wei Sun, 57.065 to 56.832 after four of six events, with Ukraine’s 2021 A-A bronze winner Ilia Kovtun third (56.698) and Richard fourth (56.432; 14.566 on Vault).

In the fifth rotation, Hashimoto and Richard were on Parallel Bars and Hashimoto took the lead at 14.800 that finished as third-best overall. Richard was also good at 14.600, which ranked seventh overall, but shot him up to second (71.032) as Kovtun scored 14.000 on Floor (70.698) and Sun fell way back with a 13.333 Floor total. Japan’s Chiba was now standing third, at 70.831.

Into the final rotation, with Hashimoto, Richard and Chiba on the Horizontal Bar and Kovtun and Sun on the Pommel Horse. Hashimoto was brilliant, winning the event at 14.500 and winning his second Worlds A-A gold at 86.132.

Kovtun’s Pommel Horse routine was excellent and score 14.300, enough for third place in the event and gave him a final total of 84.998, way up from his 19th-place qualifying score of 81.931.

Richard’s Horizontal Bar routine included a fall and earned a modest 13.300, only 15th-best in the field, but Sun ranked only 21st with his Pommel Horse score of 12.300 – with two falls – and dropped to seventh overall. At 84.332, Richard was sitting third with only Chiba to go, and a score of 13.502 would have given the Japanese star the bronze.

But Chiba had a fall and scored only 12.633, ranking 20th, and finished at 83.464 for fourth.

Richard added 0.766 to his qualifying score and that was enough for a medal. It’s the first U.S. men’s All-Around medal since 2010 (Jonathan Horton: bronze) and only the fourth ever, also Kurt Thomas (1979 silver) and Paul Hamm (2003 gold). Richard is also the first American since Hamm in 2003 to win both a Team and All-Around medal in the same Worlds.

Teammate Hong had a stellar performance on Rings, as his 13.833 as third-best overall, but otherwise struggled and finished 19th at 80.064.

Hashimoto now owns the Tokyo Olympic All-Around gold and Worlds golds in 2022 and 2023 and is the obvious favorite for Paris … if he can get past his own teammates in qualifying! Japan now has 33 total medals in this event at the World Championships, the most ever, with 11 golds, silvers and bronzes.

The women’s All-Around comes on Friday and the apparatus finals on Saturday and Sunday, with American superstar Simone Biles poised to add even more medals to her existing record of 26.

2.
China passes 300 medals as Asian Games end Sunday

There was no doubt that China would dominate the Hangzhou 2022 Asian Games, with a full turn-out of its stars and with the event concluding on Sunday, its medal total is now at 333, more than double that of any other country.

Through 402 of 481 events, the Chinese have 179 golds, 99 silvers and 55 bronzes, compared to Japan’s 158 medal total (44-54-60) and South Korea, with 157 (33-47-77). India is a distant fourth with 86. This will be the 11th straight Asian in which China has led the medal table. Among its best medal sports:

● 58: Swimming (28-21-9)
● 39: Athletics (19-11-9)
● 29: Shooting (16-9-4)
● 18: Gymnastics (10-4-4)
● 16: Diving (10-6-0)
● 15: Cycling (4-9-2)
● 13: Rowing (11-2-0)

In Athletics, 2023 women’s Steeple World Champion Winfred Yavi (BRN) won a double in the women’s 1,500 m (4:11.65) and the Steeple (9:18.28), while fellow Bahraini Birhanu Balew won the men’s 5,000 (13:17.40) and 10,000 m (28:13.62). Olympic men’s javelin champ and Indian heartthrob Neeraj Chopra led a 1-2 for his country at 88.88 m (291-7), ahead of Kishore Jena (87.54 m/287-2).

India impressively signaled its emergence in the sport with 29 medals (6-14-9).

Weightlifting signaled the return of North Korea to major international competition, with some attendant controversy, but with superior results. The North Korean men won six medals (1-3-2), but the women have dominated, winning all five weight classes held so far, with world records from Song-gum Ri at 49 kg (216 kg total) and Hyong-yong Kang at 55 kg (233 kg total).

Through Thursday, the International Testing Agency has registered six doping positives, with two from Saudi Arabia and one each from Afghanistan, the Philippines, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

3.
Russian Olympic Committee chief coy on Paris participation

“I potentially don’t see a single Russian Olympian at the Games yet. Because the Russian Olympic Committee has not received an invitation. I would refrain from talking about individual ‘neutralized’ athletes for now.”

That’s Russian Olympic Committee President Stanislav Pozdnyakov, speaking on Thursday about the prospects for Russian athletes participating at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. And:

“In the absence of measures of political will in the International Olympic Committee to correct the situation, international federations are avoiding as much as possible any decisions to return to legality. In the meantime, selection is being finalized, qualifying competitions for the Olympic Games are underway, and the issue of the Olympic Games will simply soon become irrelevant. So far, there is only one conclusion: our athletes are not expected at this Olympics, and those who can get there are guaranteed neither security, nor support, nor fair judging.”

He responded directly to calls from Ukrainian athletes at the IOC’s International Athletes’ Forum for Russian athletes to be admitted to the Paris Games only as essentially refugees:

“This statement is unacceptable. The most important thing is that there is an old wisdom: don’t dig a hole for someone else, you yourself will fall into it. I want to warn against this kind of proposal, so as not to end up on this team.”

He repeated his usual criticisms of the IOC at a meeting of the Russian Olympic Committee’s Executive Committee:

“The form and essence of the [IOC] recommendations are discriminatory in nature and multiply double standards, legal arbitrariness, devaluing the Olympic Charter. By the way, the IOC is going to change it, probably to justify and legitimize its decisions. The decisions are exclusively political.

“Banning athletes from professional activities in the international arena is nothing but a blatant manifestation of unfair competition. And changing the Olympic Charter is a telling moment in the context of the fact that, to the great regret, the international Olympic movement is no longer even trying to resist political pressure. Lausanne has taken one side of the political conflict.

“Sanctions against our sport are unfounded and illegal, and for many years now they have been boomeranging on the integrity and reputation of the IOC, its true mission, self-sufficiency and political independence. The current recommendations are harmful, and the only option is to return the status quo that existed before, as they were hastily introduced in February 2022.”

At the same session, he also chillingly announced that the Russian Olympic Committee has “admitted” newly-formed sports organizations from areas of eastern Ukraine invaded by Russia that were “annexed” into the Russian Federation in 2022:

“Today the Olympic councils of the Donetsk and Lugansk people’s republics, Zaporozhye and Kherson regions, as well as the Yaroslavl region have become members of the ROC.”

The Russian Olympic Committee will provide 500,000 rubles (about $4,988 U.S.) to still-active current and former Olympic champions as compensation for their international ban due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

ROC President Pozdnyakov said Thursday that prior Olympic silver medalists would get 350,000 rubles, bronze medalists would receive 250,000 rubles and members of Russia’s Olympic teams would receive 150,000.

He added that “only those athletes who have refused to compete as neutrals will get paid.” The number of athletes to receive this bonus will be specified at the end of the year.

In the aftermath of the UEFA decision to allow Russian U-17 teams to play in its tournaments again and the approval of the FIFA Council, the Russian Hockey Federation is now asking the International Ice Hockey Federation to also allow its junior teams to play.

The IIHF Congress began Thursday in Portugal, but no discussion of Russian eligibility has been planned.

4.
Commonwealth Games budget woes signaled in April

Amid multiple investigations of how and why the Australian state of Victoria withdrew from its agreement to host the 2026 Commonwealth Games last July, new information about the timeline and the possible tripwires has come out.

The Guardian reported this week that the Victoria 2026 organizing committee wrote in April to then-Victoria Deputy Premier Jacinta Allan – she is now the Premier after the resignation of nine-year incumbent Dan Andrews on 27 September – that the A$2.6 billion cost projection “was insufficient to deliver the games.” (A$1 = $0.64 U.S. today)

Australian outlets further reported that while Andrews’ stunning withdrawal announcement on made on 18 July, the state engaged a Melbourne law firm in June to prepare the “withdrawal from hosting the 2026 Commonwealth Games” and then to meet with the Commonwealth Games Federation and negotiate the damages fee, which turned out to be $A380 million. The law firm’s cost to the taxpayers was more than A$1.2 million for work from June through September. Another law firm was hired in August for additional work on the Commonwealth Games withdrawal and cost A$19,745.

Allan responded to the disclosures by noting:

“As the cost were materialising … advice was sought from the public service as you would expect. When you have to make a decision, you weigh up the options, you get the advice from the public service. Often, when you’re making decisions, that does include legal advice.

“There was advice sought from across the public service, and that included legal advice.”

Andrews announced that Victoria was withdrawing from hosting the Games as the cost projections he was seeing were for A$6 billion or more.

5.
Paris 2024 Paralympic tickets on sale on Monday

The 2.8 million tickets for the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris will go on sale on Monday, 9 October, with all tickets available all at once.

The pricing is much lower, of course, than for the Olympic Games and includes:

● €50 or less for 80% of all tickets
● €25 or less for 50% of all tickets
● €15 for 500,000 tickets (17.9% of all tickets)
● All finals priced between €25-100

Tickets for the opening ceremony, at the Place de la Concorde, are priced from €150-700. (€1 = $1.05 U.S. today)

There are also new-concept packages, including the “Discovery Pass,” priced at €24, which allow attendance at multiple venues on the same day:

● “Discovery Pass – Paris Centre”: access to the Grand Palais (wheelchair fencing and Para taekwondo), the Champ-de-Mars Arena (Para judo and wheelchair rugby), the Eiffel Tower Stadium (football 5-a-side) and Les Invalides (Para archery).

● “Discovery Pass – South Paris”: access to Paris Sud 1 Arena (boccia), Paris Sud 4 Arena (Para table tennis) and Paris Sud 6 Arena (goalball).

A “Family Offer” program allows the purchase of two children’s tickets at €10 each for every two standard tickets for adults.

About 4,400 athletes from 184 nations are expected for the 11-day Paralympics from 28 August to 8 September, with 549 events in 22 sports across 259 sessions.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rugby ● The tenth Rugby World Cup will conclude the pool phase on Sunday, advancing two teams from each of the four groups to the quarterfinals. The situation is still fluid; the contenders:

Pool A: New Zealand (3-1: 14 points); France (3-0: 13); Italy (2-1: 10). France and Italy play on Friday to determine who advances.

Pool B: South Africa (3-1: 15), Ireland (3-0; 14); Scotland (2-1: 10). Ireland and Scotland play on Saturday.

Pool C: Wales (3-0: 14); Australia (2-2: 11); Fiji (2-1: 10). Fiji and Wales each have a game left.

Pool D: England (3-0: 14); Argentina (2-1: 9); Japan (2-1: 9). Japan and Argentina will play on Sunday.

Only New Zealand and England have clinched quarterfinal spots.

Everyone gets a rest after this weekend. The quarters will be played on 14-15 October, the semis on 20-21 October and the championship match on 28 October.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● Much has been made of the use of the Seine River in Paris for the opening of the 2024 Olympic Games, but the river is also the object of security concerns during the whole Games.

Agence France Presse reported that the Paris organizers have signed an agreement with the Voies navigables de France – the governmental authority over the country’s internal waterways – that traffic on the section of the Seine which passes by the Olympic Village will be diverted to a secondary waterway which is now being renovated.

The diversion will last from about 19 July, when the Olympic Village opens, through the close of the Paralympic Games, on 8 September. The cost of the diversion and the renovation work is estimated at €15 million, to be handled by the government’s Olympic construction arm, Solideo.

● Memorabilia ● The Ingrid O’Neil auction no. 95 closes on Saturday, with 537 lots up; the highest bids offered so far include:

● $20,000: 2020 Tokyo bronze medal
● $17,000: 1948 St. Moritz Winter gold medal
● $17,000: 1976 Innsbruck Winter gold medal
● $16,000: 1984 Sarajevo Winter gold medal
● $10,000: 1932 Lake Placid Winter IOC member badge

No bids yet on the Tokyo 1964 Imperial Family badge that starts at $90,000, or the gaudy 1936 Berlin “Chain of Office” for IOC members that begins at 35,000.

● Athletics ● The 45th Chicago Marathon comes Sunday, with great attention to the women’s race after Ethiopian Tigst Assefa’s startling 2:11:53 world record in Berlin.

The Chicago field is outstanding; the top entries by lifetime best (with year), headed by two-time defending champ Ruth Chepngetich, now no. 3 all-time:

● 2:14:18: Ruth Chepngetich (KEN: 2022) ~ 2019 World Champion
● 2:17:36: Tade Teshome Nare (ETH: 2022) ~ 2022 Valencia fourth
● 2:17:43: Joycilene Jepkosgei (KEN: 2021) ~ 2021 London winner
● 2:18:05: Ginzebe Dibaba (ETH: 2022) ~ 2015 World 1,500 m gold
● 2:18:12: Sutume Kebede (ETH: 2022) ~ 2022 Seoul runner-up
● 2:18:29: Emily Sisson (USA: 2022) ~ 2022 Chicago silver, U.S. record
● 2:18:32: Megertu Alemu (ETH: 2022) ~ 2023 London runner-up
● 2:18:33: Sifan Hassan (NED: 2023) ~ Tokyo Olympic 5,000-10,000 m golds, London winner

Hassan may be the most interesting of all, as she has run only one career marathon, winning at London in April and then almost winning the Worlds 10,000 m in Budapest before falling at the finish, and taking the 5,000 m silver and 1,500 m bronze.

There are additional strong American entries, including Des Linden (2:22:38 in 2011), Emma Bates (2:23:18 for seventh at the 2022 Worlds), and Tokyo bronze medalist Molly Seidel (2:24:42 in 2021).

The men’s field is also excellent, including Kenyan Kelvin Kiptum, who stands at no. 2 all-time. The top entries by lifetime best:

● 2:01:25: Kelvin Kiptum (KEN: 2023) ~ 2023 London winner
● 2:03:36: Bashir Abdi (BEL: 2021) ~ Tokyo 2020 Olympic bronze
● 2:03:51: Kinde Atanaw (ETH: 2019) ~ 2019 Valencia winner
● 2:04:24: Benson Kipruto (KEN: 2022) ~ Defending champion
● 2:04:27: Dawit Wolde (ETH: 2021) ~ Rotterdam third in 2021
● 2:04:29: Seifu Tura (ETH: 2021) ~ 2021 Chicago champion
● 2:05:01: John Korir (KEN: 2022) ~ Chicago bronze in 2022
● 2:05:05: Huseydin Mohamed (ETH: 2022) ~ 2023 Tokyo runner-up

The top U.S. entries are Galen Rupp (2:06:07 in 2018, won in Chicago in 2017), Leonard Korir (2:07:56 in 2017) and Conner Mantz (2:08:16 at Chicago last year).

Weather is expected to be cool, with temperatures in the mid-to-high 40s at the 7:30 a.m. race start, but also with winds of about 8 miles per hour.

● Basketball ● NBA star Joel Embiid, born in Cameroon, but also eligible to play for France or the U.S., has told USA Basketball that he will play for the United States at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.

The seven-foot Embiid, the NBA’s Most Valuable Player last season, told reporters that he was thinking about his three-year-old son when he made his decision:

“I’ve been here for such a long time. For the past few years, every decision I’ve made has been based on just family. My family, my son, and having the chance to represent a country like the U.S., with my son being born here … I love my home country, but I really wanted to play in the Olympics.”

Embiid, 29, attended high school in Florida, played one year at Kansas and has played seven seasons in the NBA, all with the Philadelphia 76ers, winning the NBA scoring title each of the last two seasons. He has never played international basketball at the senior level, and would significantly help the American team with his size and interior presence, qualities lacking on the 2023 FIBA World Cup team that finished fourth.

● Boxing ● The International Boxing Association, de-recognized by the IOC in June, and led by Russian President Umar Kremlev, continues complaining about not being in charge of Olympic boxing. Part of a Thursday statement included:

“The International Boxing Association (IBA) remains stunned as the IOC continues to remain silent in all regards, particularly those related to the grave mistakes and violations committed by C.K. Wu [TPE], former IOC Member and Executive Board Member under whose leadership AIBA was a true farce with bankruptcy and corruption at all levels. Traces of these destructive actions can be seen at recent boxing tournaments organized under the umbrella of the IOC. …

“Following the tremendous error made by the IOC to withdraw its recognition, the IBA remains disappointed that it has not been involved in the Asian Games or consulted at any stage and stresses the importance of keeping the integrity of the competitions’ officials at the highest possible level and not accepting substandard performances.”

The comments are in line with the Russian government’s consistent criticism of the IOC, simply distributed though another organization.

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TSX REPORT: Biles stars as U.S. women win seventh straight Worlds Team gold; FIFA hands 2030 World Cup to six countries, 2034 to Saudi?

Back in action and still on top: gymnastics icon Simone Biles (Photo courtesy USA Gymnastics/John Cheng)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Biles carries U.S. women to record-setting Worlds Team gold
2. FIFA awards 2030 World Cup to six countries!
3. FIFA starts 2034 World Cup bids, OKs UEFA’s Russia proposal
4. UEFA signals hosts for Euro 2028 and Euro 2032
5. Sapporo’s 2030 Winter Games bid may re-emerge

The U.S. women won their seventh straight FIG Artistic World Championships Team gold in Antwerp, Belgium, led by Simone Biles, who won her fifth Team gold and extended her record for the most medals won at a Worlds to 26.

● The FIFA Council surprised with an early announcement that it will offer one candidate to the FIFA Congress for the 2030 FIFA World Cup, the Spain-Portugal-Morocco bid, but with three games to be played in South America to celebrate the centennial of the event, which debuted in Uruguay in 1930.

● The FIFA Council also opened the bidding for 2034, with Saudi Arabia now a big favorite to be awarded the tournament as bids will only be accepted from Asia or Oceania and the Saudis already being back from the Asian confederation. The Council also endorsed UEFA’s decision to allow Russian U-17 teams back into competitions without flags or anthems.

● UEFA accepted a joint bid from Italy and Turkey for the men’s 2032 European Championships, meaning that the British-Irish bid to host the 2028 Euro in England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and Ireland, will be unopposed.

● Sapporo’s pro-Winter Olympics mayor announced a new plan for a 2030 Olympic Winter Games candidature, after the bid had been suspended with fading public support due to expanding costs and the Tokyo 2020 post-Games corruption scandals. The new bid concept is being studied and could be formalized by the end of the month.

Panorama: Boxing (African elections and Mandela Boxing Cup postponed) = Cycling (Cavendish returning for Tour de France record try) = Shooting (veteran stars dominate first U.S. Olympic Trials stage) = Volleyball (men’s Olympic qualifying continuing in Rio, Tokyo and Xi’an) ●

1.
Biles carries U.S. women to record-setting Worlds Team gold

She was and is the world’s greatest gymnast and American icon Simone Biles led her U.S. team to a seventh straight World Team title on Wednesday at the FIG Artistic World Championships in Antwerp (BEL).

This was no cakewalk, however. The U.S. lost a key player before the event got started as Joscelyn Roberson, 17, suffered a left leg injury during Vault warm-ups and could not compete. So, the 2021 Worlds All-Around runner-up, Leanne Wong, was brought in and contested three of the four events. Round-by round:

Rotation 1: China scored 43.032 on the Uneven Bars to lead all teams, with the U.S. second, scoring 42.966 on Vault. Wong led off at 14.066, followed by Shilese Jones at 14.100 – second-highest in the event – and then Biles with a 14.800, the second-best score of the day to Brazil’s defending World All-Around champ Rebeca Andrade (14.900). The American total was the best on the day.

Rotation 2: The U.S. took the lead, scoring 43.265 on the Uneven Bars, while China fell to 41.732 on Beam. Jones was outstanding, scoring 14.633, with Skye Blakely scoring 14.166 and Biles drumming up a 14.466. The U.S. total turned out to be the best of the day, ahead of China (43.032).

Rotation 3: Things got interesting for the U.S. when Wong fell during her Beam routine; she finished at 11.700 and opened the door for others. But Jones contained the damage with a 13.600 and Biles finished at 14.300 – second-best on the day – to total 39.600 and hold a tight 125.831 to 124.063 edge on China.

Rotation 4: Now China suffered, with three modest scores on Vault, totaling just 39.099 for the event, finishing eighth. The U.S. was on Floor, with Wong solid at 13.166, Jones better at 13.566 and Biles clinching the gold with the best score of the day at 15.166 for a 41.898 total, second-best to Brazil (42.166).

The total showed the U.S. with a 167.729 to 165.530 win over Brazil, which had a strong finish on Vault, with France passing China for third, 164.064 to 163.162..

This was the seventh straight women’s team title for the Americans, extending their own record of six from last year. Romania won five in a row from 1994-2001, but now Biles herself owns five Worlds Team golds herself.

With the win, the U.S. women have 15 total medals in this event (9-4-2), tying Romania for the most ever (15: 7-5-3) and passing the USSR (14: 11-3-0).

Biles sets new records with every medal she wins, and she took her 26th Worlds medal in this event (20-3-3); the next best is Vitaly Scherbo (URS-CIS-BLR: 1991-96) with 23 total. The amazing Biles has her next competition on Friday with the women’s All-Around and then apparatus finals on Saturday and Sunday.

The men’s All-Around is up on Thursday.

2.
FIFA awards 2030 World Cup to six countries!

In a dramatic gesture, the FIFA Council cleared the way for the tri-country bid from Spain, Portugal and Morocco to be selected as the host for the 2030 FIFA World Cup, but with games also played in Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay:

“In 2030, the FIFA World Cup will unite three continents and six countries, inviting the entire world to join in the celebration of the beautiful game, the Centenary and the FIFA World Cup itself. The FIFA Council unanimously agreed that the sole candidacy will be the combined bid of Morocco, Portugal, and Spain, which will host the event in 2030 and qualify automatically from the existing slot allocation subject to the completion of a successful bidding process conducted by FIFA and a decision by the FIFA Congress in 2024.

“Additionally, having taken into account the historical context of the first-ever FIFA World Cup, the FIFA Council further unanimously agreed to host a unique centenary celebration ceremony in Uruguay’s capital, Montevideo, where the first ever FIFA World Cup took place in 1930, as well as three World Cup matches in Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay respectively.”

The selection of match hosts in six countries resolved the question of the South American claim to hosting in the centennial year of the FIFA World Cup, and brought the tournament back to Europe, which last hosted in 2018 (Russia). It will be the first World Cup in western Europe since Germany in 2006, the second-ever in Africa after South Africa in 2010 and the second in an Arab country in eight years.

All of this is easier now that the tournament has been enormously expanded – beginning in 2026 – to 48 entries and 104 matches. Said FIFA President Gianni Infantino (SUI) of the opening matches in South America:

The first of these three matches will of course be played at the stadium where it all began, in Montevideo’s mythical Estádio Centenário, precisely to celebrate the centenary edition of the FIFA World Cup.”

Said Alejandro Dominguez (PAR), President of the South American confederation CONMEBOL:

“It’s a historic event and CONMEBOL is happy. We’re honoring the memory of those who came before us and today we’re at the level. We appreciate again the confidence that FIFA and our colleagues showed for a historic event and date.

“The good thing is that in having three countries, three hosts, we’re talking about almost no other investment more than what already exists. And that’s very good news because we all know that in that context, unfortunately we’re not able to compete if this had been a question of investment or money demands.

“If this had been a competition where our governments had to commit the funds which today countries commit to be hosts, I think it would have been an irresponsible proposal from us. And I think we wouldn’t have been able to either because we know that there are other countries who have much better economic conditions and fewer priorities than our nations. So I think this is a super responsible and very viable proposal.”

All six teams which will host matches will be automatically qualified for the tournament. The formal award of the 2030 FIFA World Cup will come in 2024 at the FIFA Congress.

3.
FIFA starts 2034 World Cup bids, OKs UEFA’s Russia proposal

The FIFA Council was busy on Wednesday, also starting controversies about the 2034 FIFA World Cup and about Russian participation.

The FIFA decisions also included the start-up of the 2034 World Cup contest, with noteworthy constraints:

“It was also agreed that in line with the principle of confederation rotation and of securing the best possible hosting conditions for the tournaments, the bidding processes for both the 2030 and 2034 editions be conducted concurrently, with FIFA member associations from the territories of the [Asian Football Confederation] and the [Oceania Football Confederation] invited to bid to host the FIFA World Cup 2034.”

This potentially gives the tournament to Saudi Arabia, which has declared its candidacy for 2034 and which has the Asian confederation’s support, according to a Tuesday statement by AFC President Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa (BRN):

“I am delighted to note that the [Saudi Arabian Football Federation] have presented their intention to bid for the FIFA World Cup in 2034.

“The entire Asian football family will stand united in support of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s momentous initiative, and we are committed to working closely with the global football family to ensure its success.”

If Saudi Arabia is indeed the Asian candidate for 2034, it will be a walkover winner to host the World Cup, as Australia is now part of the Asian confederation as well. The only possible host from the Oceania confederation would be New Zealand, where the reception for the 2023 Women’s World Cup was not as ravenous as in Australia.

The Saudis have invested heavily in football as a vehicle for widening its profile outside of the energy sector, and has already been selected to host the 2023 FIFA Club World Cup and the 2027 Asian Cup.

The Football Supporters Europe fan group posted this message:

“FIFA continues its cycle of destruction against the greatest tournament on earth. Horrendous for supporters, disregards the environment and rolls the red carpet out to a host for 2034 with an appalling human rights record. It’s the end of the World Cup as we know it.”

The FIFA Council also lifted the suspension of Russian U-17 teams:

“Following the decision of the UEFA Executive Committee on 26 September 2023 to once again allow the participation of Russian representative youth teams at U-17 girls and boys level, the FIFA Council approved an extension of this decision to the FIFA U-17 World Cup and FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup for which UEFA’s competitions serve as a qualification pathway, thus lifting the suspension on teams from Russia taking part in these tournaments.

“This is conditional on these teams playing under the name of the ‘Football Union of Russia’ rather than ‘Russia,’ in the absence of their national flag, their national anthem, their national-team kit and equipment, and instead playing in neutral colours.”

Interestingly, the Russian news agency TASS posted a story Wednesday which included:

“Russian national teams will not be allowed to participate in tournaments under the auspices of the International Football Federation (FIFA) until the end of a special military operation in Ukraine. This was reported by the FIFA press service.”

The FIFA Council decision was noted to apply only to the U-17 teams and not to any others.

The next FIFA U-17 World Cups that Russian teams could participate in are the November 2024 tournament for girls in the Dominican Republic and the 2025 boys U-17 World Cup, as yet unassigned.

The UEFA decision was met with immediate criticism, with the national federations of Denmark, England, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Romania, Sweden and Ukraine stating they will not play against Russian teams. Further, Sweden said it will not allow a Russian team to compete at the 2024 girls U-17 European Championship next May.

4.
UEFA signals hosts for Euro 2028 and Euro 2032

The hosts for the UEFA European Championship for 2028 and 2032 became clear on Wednesday, with UEFA issuing a statement that it has accepted a joint bid from Italy and Turkey for 2032.

Turkey withdrew its stand-alone bid for 2028, leaving the five-federation bid from England, Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland, Scotland and Wales for 2028. The formal selection will come at the UEFA Executive Committee meeting on 10 October, in Nyon (SUI).

Multi-country hosting is nothing new for UEFA, which held its Euro 2020 tournament – played in 2021 due to the pandemic – in 11 countries. England hosted the tournament in 1996 and had matches in 2021, as did Scotland. Italy hosted the 1968 and 1980 Euros; this will be the first time for Ireland, Northern Ireland, Wales and Turkey.

Germany will host in 2024; the tournament has been expanded to 24 teams from 55 member associations.

5.
Sapporo’s 2030 Winter Games bid may re-emerge

After imploding under the strain of expanding costs and the blowback from the continuing post-Tokyo 2020 organizing committee scandals last December, Sapporo’s bid for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games may be resurrected.

A Tuesday story by Japanese state broadcaster NHK said that a new bid plan has been formulated and is being reviewed, with an eye to preventing the corruption issues which came out following the Tokyo Games about sponsorship bribes and the rigging of bids.

The Japanese ad giant Dentsu was the Tokyo 2020 sponsorship marketing engine and the new plans call for less concentration of authority in any one outside firm, and more organizing committee oversight is recommended.

The pro-bid Sapporo Mayor, Katsuhiro Akimoto – re-elected in April for a third term – has asked for governance changes to include better gender equality, and better checks on operations to avoid the Tokyo 2020 corruption issues.

Sapporo was once seen as the front-runner for 2030, and is well-known to the International Olympic Committee’s Future Hosts Commission, but the situation it previously knew has changed considerably. Salt Lake City is focused on 2034 and serious bid development for 2030 is underway in Sweden, Switzerland and in a two-region confederation in France. No decision on a 2030 host is expected until 2024.

Meanwhile, the Japanese Olympic Committee, a necessary partner for the bid, has not yet agreed to support any new plan. JOC President Yasuhiro Yamashita said last June that “Under the current circumstances, 2030 will be quite hard,” with polling well under 50% approval for the bid. Newer polls are better, but hardly convincing.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Boxing ● The International Boxing Association announced that the Mandela African Boxing Cup, scheduled to be held in Durban (RSA) from 9-14 October, was postponed to 2024. This is all about politics, per the IBA statement:

“The event received wide support from more than 235 boxers representing 34 nations that were registered to participate.

“The joint decision of IBA, AFBC and the South African Boxing Organization was taken following the postponed African Boxing Confederation Congress, initially slated to coincide with the boxing tournament. Due to the present circumstances, the postponement is motivated by the difficulty most delegates have faced in obtaining visas, and the haste observed in the organization of this event which ultimately led to the postponement.

“IBA Secretary General and CEO, Chris Roberts claimed that ‘In adherence to the high standards of organization we strive to maintain, the parties have unanimously agreed that it is in the best interest of all participants to postpone the competition. Our vision is for the Mandela African Boxing Cup to be a landmark event in the boxing community, and as such, we believe it warrants the extra time to ensure its success. Furthermore, considering the pivotal nature of the AFBC Congress, particularly with its Presidential elections, it is imperative that we give it the due prominence.’”

Thirty of the 50 African federations have protested the candidate clearances made by the Boxing Independent Integrity Unit Nominations Panel; also on Wednesday, the AFBC announced the postponement of elections:

“[I]n this case the postponement is motivated by the difficulty most delegates have in obtaining visas and the uproar caused by the disputed publication of the list of definitively selected candidates.

“The Board of Directors, meeting on September 30, 2023, therefore decided to postpone the Extraordinary Congress scheduled for October 13, 2023 in Durban, South Africa, to a date to be communicated to you in due course.”

● Cycling ● British sprint star Marc Cavendish, 38, announced his retirement earlier this year, ending his career as the 2011 World Road Champion, and with 34 stage wins at the Tour de France, tied with Belgian legend Eddy Merckx (1969-75) for the most ever.

Now, Cavendish is coming back to try for the record in 2024, saying on Wednesday:

“I was looking forward to not having to get up and train in any weather condition and not be away from home; spend time with the kids.

“Ultimately, I’d miss racing. I love racing. But I was happy, I was in a happy place, and I knew I could go out on top. Obviously, it wasn’t the finish I hoped for, crashing at the Tour de France.

“I spoke to the kids and I said, ‘What should dad do?’ They said, ‘Carry on.’ It was an odd question. So, here we are – just one more year, eh?”

He has signed with the Astana Qazaqstan team for one more season. Cavendish has an impressive total of 54 stage wins between the three Grand Tours, with 17 at the Giro d’Italia and three in the Vuelta a Espana.

● Shooting ● The first stage of the U.S. Olympic Trials concluded on Tuesday at Ft. Moore in Georgia, with veteran stars dominating the results:

Men/10 m Air Pistol: Tokyo Olympian James Hall, fourth at the U.S. nationals, leads his fellow Tokyo squad-mates Jay Shi and Nick Mowrer (also the 2023 national champ), 574-572-571.

Men/25 m Rapid-Fire Pistol: Tokyo Olympian and 2023 national champ Henry Leverett had the best second two-round score of 1,161 and won the final, 28-25, over fellow Tokyo Olympian (and 2023 nationals runner-up) Keith Sanderson, who led the two-round shooting at 1,162.

Men/10 m Air Rifle: Ivan Roe, the 2022 U.S. nationals bronze medalist, piled up a significant lead, scoring 631.8 across six rounds to lead 2023 national champ Brandon Muske (628.6) and Tim Sherry (627.1).

Men/50 m Rifle-3 Positions: The 2023 U.S. Nationals runner-up in this event, Roe was again the leader at 1,178 for the two rounds and won the final at 457.0. Second was Mowrer at 452.5 after tying for fourth in the two-round scoring (1,169).

Women/10 m Air Pistol: National bronze medalist Katelyn Abeln won the final at 241.4 over nationals fourth-placer Ada Korkkin and Tokyo Olympian Alexis Lagan (218.1), with Lagan piling up the best two-day score of 1,147.

Women/25 m Sport Pistol: 2023 Nationals runner-up Lagan won the six-round event with a total of 582, ahead of nationals fourth-placer Lisa Emmert Traciak (579) and 2023 national champ Abeln (579).

Women/10 m Air Rifle: Olympic Mixed Team silver winner Mary Tucker won a tight final from 2023 national champ (and Tokyo Olympian) Sagen Maddalena, 252.3 to 251.7, after Maddalena led the two-day total at 1,260.9, with Tucker close at 1,259.1. Rio 2016 gold medalist Ginny Thrasher was fourth in the final at 207.4.

Women/50 m Rifle-3 Positions: U.S. nationals runner-up Maddalena posted the top score across six rounds of 586, attended closely by Gabriela Zych (584) and 2023 nationals bronze winner Molly McGhin (583). Tucker was fourth (582) and Thrasher fifth at 581.

The next stage is for the Pistol events, to be held in Colorado Springs on 5-7 December. The second stage of the Rifle trials comes from 11-13 December, also in Colorado Springs.

● Volleyball ● The FIVB men’s Olympic Qualification Tournaments are ongoing in Brazil (Rio), China (Xi’an) and Japan (Tokyo), with the top two teams in each advancing to Paris.

This is a round-robin tournament, with eight teams per site, and will conclude on Sunday. So far:

In Rio, Germany leads at 4-0, with Cuba at 3-1, World Champion Italy at 3-1 and Brazil at 2-1 the remaining contenders.

In Tokyo, the U.S. is 4-0 and has cruised past Egypt (3-0), Finland (3-0), Turkey (3-1) and Tunisia (3-0). Slovenia is also 4-0 and two face off on Friday. Serbia and Japan are both 3-1.

In Xi’an, the 2014-18 World Champions, Poland, lead the standings at 4-0, chased by Canada (3-1) and Argentina (3-1).

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TSX REPORT: Japan wins gold, U.S gets first men’s gymnastics Worlds medal in nine years; Milan-Cortina ‘26 sliding events could go to Austria

Will the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Games venue for bob, luge and skeleton be the Olympia Eiskanal in Innsbruck, Austria? (Photo: IBSF)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Japan wins gymnastics men’s team title, U.S. gets bronze!
2. Decision time at hand for Cortina sliding track for 2026
3. No “Open” class entries for Berlin Swimming World Cup
4. Kuwaiti Sheikhs Ahmad and Talal file against IOC
5. More contradictory Russian signals on Paris 2024

● Japan won the men’s Artistic Gymnastics World Championship Team event for the first time since 2015, edging China, with the U.S. taking the bronze. It’s the first U.S. men’s Team medal since a bronze in 2014.

● The ongoing fight over the construction of a new sliding track for the Milan Cortina Olympic Winter Games in 2026 is coming to a head, with no bidders for the project, time running out, and the possibility that the event could be re-located to Austria or Switzerland.

● World Aquatics created an “Open” category for the first time for the upcoming Swimming World Cup in Berlin, Germany, which would allow transgender women to compete, but the federation reported that there were no entries in any of the “Open” races.

● As the International Olympic Committee decided to formally ignore the results of the Olympic Council of Asia elections in July and refuses to recognize Kuwait’s Sheikh Talal as the organization’s President, Sheikh Talal filed an action against the IOC in the Court of Arbitration for Sport. His brother, Sheikh Ahmad, who was already-self-suspended as an IOC member due to a criminal prosecution against him in Switzerland, was suspended by the IOC for three years for interference in the OCA elections and also filed an action.

● Senior Russian sports officials and athletes continue to offer contradictory statements about what conditions it will tolerate to participate in the Paris 2024 Olympic Games if invited (and qualified). A rhythmic gymnastics star who appeared at a pro-war rally in Moscow in 2022 said she would not compete as a neutral, but the Russian Paralympic Committee head said the allowance of Russians as neutrals in the Paralympics was a victory.

World Championships: Rugby (England still only confirmed quarterfinalist) ●

Panorama: Asian Games (China rolling up big medal numbers) = Athletics (check out the choreographed Asian Games hurdle placements!) = Football (FIFA’s August suspension decision on Rubiales published) ●

1.
Japan wins gymnastics men’s team title, U.S. gets bronze!

It had been a while since Japan was the men’s World Team Champion and even longer since the U.S. men won a men’s Team medal, but both happened on Tuesday at the FIG Artistic World Championships in Antwerp (BEL).

The Japanese team of defending All-Around champ Daiki Hashimoto, Kenta Chiba, Kazuma Kaya, Kazuki Minami and Kaito Sugimoto won its seventh Worlds men’s Team gold, and first since 2015, mounting a charge on the last three rotations and scoring 255.594 points to 253.794 for defending champion China.

Japan was only fourth on its first event, Floor Exercise, but posted the best score in the field on the Pommel Horse and was third-best on Rings. But in its final three events – Vault, Parallel Bars and Horizontal Bar – Japan ranked second, first and first and took the gold with a nearly two-point margin.

China won on Rings and was steady on the Pommel Horse (second) and Parallel Bars (second) to win a men’s Worlds Team medal for the 11th straight time (8-2-1). All-time, Japan now has 22 men’s Worlds Team medals to 21 for China.

The U.S. squad of Fred Richard, Yul Moldauer, Asher Hong, Paul Juda and Khoi Young was in a fight with 2022 bronze medalists Great Britain for the final medal. The British were fourth on Pommel Horse, second on Rings and first on Vault through their first three rotations and were a solid third, while the U.S. won the Floor Exercise, but was sixth on Pommel Horse and fourth on Rings. But the U.S. closed with third-place finishes on Vault, Parallel Bars and Horizontal Bar to finish at 252.428. Britain closed with a fourth on Parallel Bars, seventh on Horizontal Bar and sixth on Floor to score 249.461, nearly three points short of the Americans.

The individual apparatus high scorers:

Floor: 14.533, Jake Jarman (GBR)
Pommel Horse: 15.266, Max Whitlock (GBR)
Rings: 15.000, Yang Liu (CHN)
Vault: 15.400, Jarman (GBR)
Parallel Bars: 14.966, Hao You (CHN)
Horizontal Bar: 14.533, Fred Richard (USA)

Moldauer and Richard third for third on Floor (14.366); Young was fifth on Pommel Horse (13.600); Hong was sixth on Rings (14.000); Hong was second on Vault (15.100); Moldauer was the Parallel Bars runner-up (14.933) and Richard was the leader on the Horizontal Bar.

It’s the first medal for the U.S. at the Worlds since 2014 and the sixth all-time (0-2-4), with five of the six in this century.

The Worlds roll on tomorrow with the women’s Team final, with the Americans looking for a seventh straight gold, and a fifth for superstar Simone Biles.

2.
Decision time at hand for Cortina sliding track for 2026

The long-running drama over the construction of a new sliding track for bobsled, luge and skeleton in time for the 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Milan-Cortina is coming to a head with time running out.

The proposed plan was to demolish the already-closed Eugenio Monti track in Cortina d’Ampezzo that was used for the 1956 Winter Games and build a new one. But the request for proposals turned up no bidders, leaving the project in severe doubt.

Then there is the cost, which has been estimated at up to €46.5 million in 2019, then €60.7 million in September 2021, then €82.6 million in 2022 and now, perhaps up to €124.77 million! (€1 = $1.05 U.S. today)

The Italian Minister of Sport, Andrea Abodi, said this week: “There are also offers from foreign locations. We will evaluate all options, with the necessary clarity and coldness. Foreign ones are not the first choices. …

“Our job as a country is obviously to respect the commitment to the IOC and we will do so. Among the options in the field, it is true, there are also foreign hypotheses, we will evaluate clearly and coldly, obviously taking into account all availabilities.”

Of the complex building project required to get a new track completed on time:

“There are very few companies available to build the bob, because it is a very high-tech work, so the government will evaluate whether to go ahead with this private negotiation or not.”

The head of the Italian National Olympic Committee and Chair of the Milan Cortina 2026 organizing committee, Giovanni Milago, told Il Fatto Quotidiano:

We don’t build the works, we await with great urgency a response, within a few days at most, from those who have the burdens or honors of taking care of the construction of the venue.

“We won the competition by submitting an application with a dossier for bobsleigh, skeleton and luge in Cortina. We are evaluating any other alternative because our job is to understand the best solution. Perhaps I have an alternative in my head, but we are still confident that within a few days the commitments made will be respected.”

The Italian lower house, the Chamber of Deputies, passed a motion this week to consider alternatives to building a new track, which could include moving the events to Innsbruck (AUT) or St. Moritz (SUI). 

Innsbruck Mayor Georg Willi wrote to the Milan Cortina organizers again last week, saying that the city and the Tyrol region, “as owners of the Olympic ice rink in Innsbruck, can guarantee the approval of the ice rink both from a financial point of view and from that of carrying out the necessary works.”

The Innsbruck facility needs upgrading, but at a fraction of the cost of what a new facility in Cortina would cost. The current estimate is €27 million, with the Innsbruck and Tyrol governments already pledging one-third each, meaning only about €9 million would remain.

3.
No “Open” class entries for Berlin Swimming World Cup

World Aquatics announced back in August that it would accept entries in an “Open” category for the first leg of its Swimming World Cup in Berlin (GER), “welcoming swimmers of all sex and gender identities. …

“The open category will spotlight races in the 50m and 100m distances across all strokes, with the possibility of introducing additional events.”

The category was created with the idea to offer a competition opportunity for transgender women swimmers and those with hyperandrogenism that would not allow them in the women’s division. However, on Tuesday, World Aquatics posted a statement that included:

“Following the close of registration for the Open Category competitions at the World Aquatics Swimming World Cup – Berlin 2023 meet scheduled for 6-8 October, World Aquatics can confirm that no entries have been received for the Open Category events. …

“The World Aquatics Open Category Working Group will continue its work and engagement with the aquatics community on Open Category events. Even if there is no current demand at the elite level, the working group is planning to look at the possibility of including Open Category races at Masters events in the future.”

The federation’s policy on transgender women, passed in 2022, does not allow entry into the women’s division unless the athlete transitioned before age 12 or did not experience male puberty beyond the second stage.

The Berlin World Cup will be held from Friday through Sunday, with 335 athletes from 50 countries registered, including 14 American swimmers.

4.
Kuwaiti Sheikhs Ahmad and Talal file against IOC

The International Olympic Committee’s intervention in the Olympic Council of Asia elections that took place on 8 July has resulted in two actions filed at the Court of Arbitration for Sport by the Kuwaiti brothers Sheikh Ahmad Al-Sabah and Sheikh Talal Fahad Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah.

The IOC did not recognize the 8 July election of Sheikh Talal as President of the OCA, in a close, 24-20 vote over World Aquatics President Husain Al-Musallam (also KUW), citing interference – against instructions – by Sheikh Ahmad. The IOC Ethics Commission recommenced to the IOC Executive Board:

“To consider the undeniable impact on the OCA’s elections of Sheikh Ahmad Al-Sabah’s behaviour, and consequently not to recognise these elections until a full review of the OCA’s elections process is carried out at a later stage.”

A sanction against Sheikh Ahmad was imposed, with a suspension of his IOC membership for three years.

On Tuesday, the Court of Arbitration for Sport stated to the Russian news agency TASS:

“We confirm that the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has registered the following procedures: CAS 2023/A/9904 Sheikh Talal Fahad Al Sabah v. International Olympic Committee CAS 2023/A/9931 Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah v. International Olympic Committee.”

No further information was available, including the grounds for the filings.

Sheikh Ahmad, now the defender minister of Kuwait, was found guilty of fraud in the Swiss Criminal Court on 10 September 2021, and is appealing. He self-suspended himself as an IOC member in September 2018 when the Swiss criminal charges were filed.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport case regarding the IOC’s intervention in the Olympic Council of Asia elections will be interesting to follow. The IOC Ethics Commission declared that “The Olympic Council of Asia is a continental association of NOCs recognised by the IOC; thus, the elections have to be recognised by the IOC,” but the declarations of sport autonomy consistently promoted by the IOC could come back to play a role in a decision on this question.

5.
More contradictory Russian signals on Paris 2024

Senior Russian Olympic and Paralympic officials continue to signal turmoil ahead, regardless of whatever participation invitations are made available to them, including the International Olympic Committee’s preference for individual, “neutral” status.

The President of the All-Russian Federation of Rhythmic Gymnastics, Irina Viner said on Tuesday that she rejects any idea of Russian stars competing as neutrals:

“The program is always made in opposition to Russian athletes in order to neutralize Russia, and this is how it turned out at the Tokyo Olympics.

“The sanctions that have been imposed on us from all sides are unacceptable to intelligent and cultured people who talk about democracy. I don’t think any of my children would say they could compete in this format at the Olympics.”

She then ripped the partial suspension placed on Russian Paralympic athletes, who were approved to compete as neutrals:

“What did they do with the Paralympic athletes? First, they were removed from the Paralympics: just ordinary fascism. And now they removed the Russian Paralympic Committee and allowed individual athletes. It’s like refugees who do not represent anyone.”

Viner’s comments on Russia’s rhythmic gymnasts – who were dominant players in the sport until banned after the Russian invasion of Ukraine – were backed up by 18-time World Champion Dina Averina, still just 25, and who was on-stage at a pro-invasion rally in March of 2022:

“We were already at the Tokyo Games in neutral status. Now I would probably choose to go with the flag and the anthem. Because in Tokyo we lacked this support, although everyone knew what country we were from. Irina Alexandrovna Viner discussed all this with us, of course, we have the same thoughts.”

In the meantime, the head of the Russian Paralympic Committee, Pavel Rozhkov, said plans are underway to move the country from the European Paralympic Committee to Asia, after winning the right to participate in Paris in 2024 as “neutrals” in last week’s vote of the International Paralympic Committee’s General Assembly:

“Neutral status is also, frankly speaking, a victory for us. Whether we will challenge it or not is another question, but it is important that we were allowed.

“Now performance at the Paralympic Games is a separate issue. We are having serious work on transferring to the Asian Paralympic Committee. They sent me accreditation and an invitation, they are ready to see us there, we are moving in this direction with pleasure.”

Rozhkov said earlier that if Russian Paralympians are required to sign a “neutrality” declaration, they will not go to the Paris Games.

No public comments have been made from the Russian Olympic Committee about a possible disassociation with the European Olympic Committees and membership in the Olympic Council of Asia.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rugby ● The tenth Rugby World Cup will resume across France on Thursday with the final round of pool-play matches underway and still only England confirmed into the quarterfinals. The top two from each of the four groups will advance; the contenders:

Pool A: France (3-0: 13 points); New Zealand (2-1: 10), Italy (2-1: 10).

Pool B: South Africa (3-1: 15), Ireland (3-0; 14); Scotland (2-1: 10).

Pool C: Wales (3-0: 14); Australia (2-2: 11); Fiji (2-1: 10).

Pool D: England (3-0: 14); Argentina (2-1: 9); Japan (2-1: 9).

The quarters will be played on 14-15 October, the semis on 20-21 October and the championship match on 28 October.

Interest continues high, with attendance now at 1,426,328 or 45,698 per match!

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Asian Games ● The 19th Asian Games, in Hangzhou (CHN), will conclude this weekend, with China on the way to another impressive medal total.

With 333 events out of 481 completed, the Chinese have 297 total medals (161-90-46), followed by South Korea (139: 32-42-65) and Japan (130: 33-47-50).

North Korea has showed up in force for this event, with 185 entries, and has won 23 medals so far (7-10-6), including eight in weightlifting (4-3-1).

● Athletics ● Ever heard of choreographed high-hurdle placement?

You have now, thanks to this video from the 19th Asian Games organizing committee in Hangzhou.

Now that’s style!

● Football ● FIFA’s Disciplinary Committee decision to suspend former Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) chief Luis Rubiales for 90 days on 26 August 2023 was posted on Tuesday, showing considerable concern for the validity of any investigation amidst the chaos of the post-FIFA Women’s World Cup post-championship match celebration.

The opinion, signed by Disciplinary Committee Chair Jorge Palacio (COL), noted that as Rubiales was – at that time – still head of the RFEF:

“[T]he imposition of provisional measures on the Respondent [Rubiales] will ensure that the ongoing disciplinary proceedings against him are conducted without any interference, particularly so that potential testimonies could be given freely and without any type of pressure, fear or reprisals from the Respondent, particularly given his predominant position towards Ms [Jenni] Hermoso, other players or RFEF officials as President of the RFEF.”

The decision also explained:

“[I]t seemed clear to the Chairperson that a decision on the merits could not be taken early enough given the sensitivity and particularly serious nature of the allegations levelled against the Respondent in this case, so that provisional measures had to be imposed on the Respondent for the aforementioned reasons, which, given all the circumstances taken into account, clearly outweigh the potential adverse effects that such a measure could cause to the Respondent.”

FIFA suspended Rubiales for 90 days and ordered him and the RFEF not to contact Hermoso; Rubiales resigned as the head of the federation on 10 September.

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TSX REPORT: Biles and U.S. star in women’s Gym Worlds qualifying; hammer breaks a leg at Asian Games; Britain and Canada upset on Paralympic vote

The incomparable Simone Biles (Photo courtesy USA Gymnastics/John Cheng)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Biles, U.S. women dominate Worlds qualifying
2. Hammer throw accident at Hangzhou causes broken leg
3. IBA and African federations now conflicted on elections
4. British and Canadian Paralympic heads decry IPC’s Russia vote
5. Ellis expects U.S. women still “to be a major player”

● The iconic Simone Biles and her U.S. teammates dominated the women’s qualifying at the FIG Artistic World Championships, with the American team leading all others by more than five points and Biles posting the top score in three of the four apparatus.

● At the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China, a freak accident in the men’s hammer throw caused a broken leg for one of the officials scoring the event, but he was taken quickly to the hospital and is stable. Said Kuwait’s Ali Al-Zankawi, the thrower involved, “Thank God the hammer hit the ground before it hit his leg.”

● The International Boxing Association, already de-recognized by the International Olympic Committee, is now facing a revolt from 30 of its African federations over actions taken by its independent integrity unit’s nominations clearing board for candidates for this month’s African Boxing Federation elections.

● More unhappy comments from the International Paralympic Committee’s General Assembly vote to allow Russian and Belarusian “neutrals” to compete in Paris in 2024, with the heads of the British and Canadian national committees voicing disappointment. The head of the Russian Paralympic Committee says as many as 300 could qualify, but none will go if a declaration against the Russian invasion of Ukraine is required.

● Jill Ellis, the two-time FIFA Women’s World Cup-winning coach of the U.S. Women’s National Team, says the Americans will be a force to contend with for some time. During her time with the Technical Study Group at the recent Women’s World Cup, it was noted that all of the championship teams had a coach who was a native of that country!

World Championships: Rowing (Beach Sprint Finals conclude in Italy) ●

Panorama: Paris 2024 (IOC says hijabs OK in Olympic Village in Paris) = Anti-doping (2: WADA and WHO sign cooperation agreement; U.S. Anti-Doping Agency co-hosts anti-blood doping symposium) = USOPC (new Agora digital platform assembles support and wellness elements) = Basketball (Durant, James and many others interested in Olympic team) = Equestrian (Germany wins Jumping Nations Cup Final) ●

1.
Biles, U.S. women dominate Worlds qualifying

The women’s team qualifying round concluded on Monday at the FIG World Artistic Championships in Antwerp (BEL), with the U.S. and superstar Simone Biles shining brightly, advancing the maximum of 10 entries to the All-Around and apparatus finals.

Seven of the 10 qualifying groups competed on Monday, but the U.S. marks from Sunday were hardly challenged. The American squad of Biles, Shilese Jones, Leanne Wong, Skye Blakely and Joscelyn Roberson piled up a 171.395 total that was the highest since 2019 – the last time Biles was on the U.S. team – and more than five points ahead of Great Britain (166.130).

The Americans – going for a seventh straight women’s Worlds Team gold – had the highest score on Vault at 43.998 (with Great Britain second: 42.900) and Floor (42.066), with the British second again at 41.199. China rang up the top team scores on Uneven Bars, 43.533 to 43.366, over the U.S., and on Beam, by 42.666 to 41.965, over the U.S.

In the All-Around, Biles had the top scores on Vault, Beam and Floor and was fourth on the Uneven Bars to total 58.865 as the leading qualifier, with teammate Jones a clear second at 56.932, ranking second on the Uneven Bars, fourth on Beam and fifth on floor. Wong, the 2021 Worlds All-Around silver winner, was 11th (54.398) and did not advance since there is a limit of two per country in each individual final.

Britain’s Jessica Gadirova, the Worlds All-Around bronze winner in 2022, was third in the qualifying at 56.766, followed by defending All-Around champ Rebeca Andrade (BRA: 56.599) and Canada’s Ellie Black – the 2017 Worlds All-Around runner-up – in fifth at 55.065.

The U.S. qualified the maximum two entrants for each of the apparatus finals, with Biles (1: 14.949) and Roberson (6: 14.049) advancing on Vault; Jones (2: 14.833) and Biles (4: 14.400) moved on from the Uneven Bars; Biles (1: 14.566) and Jones (4: 14.033) qualified on Beam, and Biles (1: 14.633 and Jones (5: 13.800) making it to the medal round on Floor.

Biles successfully executed her spectacular Yurchenko double pike vault, which is now expected to be confirmed as the “Biles II” by the FIG Technical Committee as her second named element in the Code of Points.

The men’s Team competition medal round comes Tuesday, followed by the women on Wednesday.

2.
Hammer throw accident at Hangzhou causes broken leg

The hammer throw is one of the most dangerous events in track & field, and an accident on Saturday caused a broken leg of an official sitting next to the throwing cage.

Kuwait’s Mohamed Ali Al-Zankawi reached a season’s best of 67.57 m (221-8) in the second round, but on one of his following throws, his grip slipped on the release and the hammer went sideways into the cage. But instead of simply being tangled in the netting – as is normal – the 16-pound ball pushed the netting outward, bounced and hit the nearby official sitting in a chair. Per Reuters:

“Looking horrified, Zankawi sprinted over as blood began spurting from the official’s right leg. The official, Huang Qinhua, 62, grimaced and swayed dizzily as Zankawi rushed to check on him, blood shooting out of the wound.

“Within seconds Zankawi was using his huge hands and strength to improvise a tourniquet on Huang’s thigh and halt the bleeding. Medical personnel soon took Huang away on a stretcher after applying a tourniquet, then sent him to a nearby hospital.”

Zankawi, 39 and the 2006 Asian Games silver winner in the event, continued in the competition and finished eighth. He visited Huang in the hospital and offered an apology, which was readily accepted. Zankawi told Agence France Presse:

“I raised my head and discovered that the hammer had bounced from the ground to the official’s leg, so I quickly ran to him and tried to help him, especially since he was in a state of shock and writhing in pain.

“After I got to him, I discovered a slit in his trousers and saw blood pouring from the leg, and I knew it was broken.

“Then I tied it tightly to stop the bleeding until the ambulance arrived, so I helped them by putting him on an ambulance stretcher to transport him to hospital. Thank God the hammer hit the ground before it hit his leg.”

An Asian Games spokesman told reporters on Sunday, “[Quang] arrived at the hospital at 20:15, where was diagnosed with a right open tibiofibular fracture. Currently his vital signs are stable.”

3.
IBA and African federations now conflicted on elections

New internal friction at the International Boxing Association, already de-recognized by the International Olympic Committee this year, with a group of 30 African national federations questioning the integrity of the Boxing Independent Integrity Unit (BIIU) Nomination Unit, set up by the IBA to clear candidates for elections.

With the 50-member African Boxing Confederation elections coming up on 13 October in Durban (RSA), the BIIU Nomination Unit approved five candidates for President and disqualified a sixth.

However, the 30 federations, led by Angola, complain that Mohamed El Kabbouri (MAR) should not be qualified, since he is not supported by his own national federation. Moses Muhangi (UGA) still owes a fine of CHF 5,000 to the AFBC, yet was declared eligible. The former AFBC President, Bertrand Magloire Mendouga (CAM), was approved despite being forced from office in August over accusations of embezzlement of athlete funds. And there are other issues.

The signatories to the statement included Algeria, Angola, Benin, Guinea-Bissau, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo Brazzaville, D.R. Congo, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea-Conakry, Kenya, Lesotho, Libya, Malawi, Mali, Namibia, Nigeria, Senegal, Somalia, South Africa, Sierra Leone, Tanzania and Togo. They are requesting the election to be postponed by a month and for the AFBC to be responsible for approving the candidates.

In reply, IBA Secretary-General Chris Roberts (GBR) issued a letter to all 50 African federations on Monday that included:

“Regrettably, the IBA recently received so-called a vote of no confidence in the BIIU Nomination Unit, publicly distributed by the Angola National Federation on behalf of AFBC National Federations, which has no legal force due to lack of competence of the National Federations to decide such matters in respect of the independent integrity body, and therefore, it will be disregarded,”

“The IBA Head Office firmly supports the professionalism and impartiality of the BIIU Nomination Unit. …

“In light of the above, the IBA has filed a complaint with the BIIU Tribunal against those who made a public statement damaging the reputation of the BIIU Nomination Unit, in accordance with Article 19 of the Disciplinary and Ethics Code (Disparagement of IBA’s Reputation and Interests).

“We expect comprehensive investigation by the BIIU on identifying the initiators of the public attack on the Nomination Unit.”

The IBA issued a public statement which quoted Roberts thus:

“We strongly urge an end to baseless attacks on the independent body, which plays a critical role in determining the eligibility of candidates seeking positions within the IBA Board of Directors. We expect a comprehensive investigation by the BIIU on identifying the initiators of the public attack on the Nomination Unit.”

In the meantime, the inaugural meeting of the new World Boxing group will take place on 24-25 November in Germany, and is in the process of adding additional federations who wish to vote.

The Court for Arbitration for Sport released a hearings calendar which showed that the IBA’s appeal against the International Olympic Committee’s de-recognition of the federation will take place on 16 November.

4.
British and Canadian Paralympic heads decry IPC’s Russia vote

The International Paralympic Committee General Assembly voted last Friday to allow to-be-defined “neutral” Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete at the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games.

But that does not mean everyone is happy about it, especially when the vote to exclude Russia altogether failed by only 65-74 (with 13 abstentions).

ParalympicsGB chief David Clarke said afterwards:

“Given the ongoing horror of the war in Ukraine, ParalympicsGB voted for the continued suspension of the Russian National Paralympic Committee.

“We are therefore disappointed that the decision was taken to allow Russian nationals to compete as neutral athletes at the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games … as we believe this decision does not align with the values of the Paralympic movement.

“However, given athletes and staff will only be able to attend if they meet the criteria set out by the IPC governing board we would urge them to ensure that individual athletes that have broken the IPC’s code of conduct, by stating their support for the war, are banned from competing at Paris 2024. We wish to continue to express our solidarity with the people of Ukraine and our friends at NPC Ukraine.”

Marc-Andre Fabien, the President of the Canadian Paralympic Committee, said in a statement:

“The Canadian Paralympic Committee stood behind the decision to fully suspend NPC Russia and NPC Belarus, including from participation in the Paralympic Games. We continue to believe this is the right course of action to protect and defend the Paralympic values.

“As such, we are disappointed in the results of today’s vote and that there is not a total ban on membership and participation for NPC Russia and NPC Belarus and their athletes.”

Rob Koehler, the head of the Global Athlete activist group, posted a statement that included:

“By allowing Russia to compete at the Paris Paralympics, the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has shown their true colors by kowtowing to Russia’s influence over international sport.

“Today’s decision lacks reason and principle. The fact that the IPC removed a ban, when Russia’s aggression on Ukraine has only increased, is contradictory and aligns them to the wrong side of history in this war.

“Sadly the IPC has ignored athletes’ calls for a ban and has instead lent their support to Putin’s war on Ukraine.”

The Ukrainian government blasted the decision, as did the German Paralympic Committee.

Russian Paralympic Committee President Pavel Rozhkov said as many as 300 Russians could qualify for Paris … maybe:

“About 300 people can get to the Paralympic Games. We hope that the Paralympic federations will allow our athletes to participate in the competition so that they can be selected. The criteria are in general terms, the executive committee will formulate all this more clearly in the near future.

“The issue of declarations was not discussed. A number of Olympic federations that hold competitions among Paralympians demanded that our athletes sign declarations during competitions in Europe. If this happens, our athletes will not go anywhere.”

5.
Ellis expects U.S. women still “to be a major player”

FIFA posted a fascinating interview with former U.S. Women’s National Team coach Jill Ellis, now 57 and continuing to assist FIFA as head of the Technical Study Group for the recent Women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. Highlights:

“[P]eople talk about the women’s game developing – and it is – but these World Cups have always been so tough to win. You go back to any of the World Cups I was involved in, maybe with the exception of the 2015 final, and the knockout games were always really tight. Most were settled by a one-goal margin. This time we were going in thinking, ‘Ok, can the U.S. pull off the three-peat?’ And I genuinely think we had the talent to do it. The fact we didn’t and the way it all went did kind of hammer home that there’s a good reason why winning back-to-back World Cups doesn’t happen often. It also made me appreciate all the more the work that the players and staff had to do in order to make it happen.”

● On the U.S.’s future: “The talent is still there. I think where we’ve got to really make sure, as a country, we get it right is that 15-18 age group, and look closely at what we’re doing for those players. But I don’t think anyone should write off the U.S., and I still expect this team to be a major player on the world stage.”

● On the next U.S. coach: “Gone are the days where you could just trot it out, show up and expect to do well. It’s also interesting, and the TSG guys told me this, that no team has won a World Cup with a coach who’s not from that particular country.

“I find that fascinating because it raises the point of how important it is, at least in international football, to understand the DNA of the country and how it influences how they play. It’s not like a club where you can go and buy players to suit your style of play, and I wonder if that will come into [U.S. Soccer’s] thinking. Obviously you have Sarina [Wiegman, England’s Dutch coach] as an example of a foreign coach who’s enjoyed great success. But that ability to tap into the strengths of the national and team culture is, I think, still critical to success in international football.”

Ellis’s primary job these days is as President of the San Diego Wave FC of the NWSL.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rowing ● The final day of the Beach Sprint Finals in Barletta, Italy was held on Monday, with Janneke van der Muelen (NED) winning the women’s gold in 3:03.57 over France’s Elodie Ravera-Scaramozzino (3:13.53). The Italian actually had the lead at the 250 m mark by seven seconds, but faded badly in the second half.

Christine Cavallo of the U.S. took the B Final, 3:13.36 to 3:27.19 for Ireland’s Monika Dukarska.

The men’s race was also a decisive win, for Spain’s Adrian Miramon Quiroga, in 2:53.91, over Giovanni Ficarra (ITA: 3:03.56). Germany’s Karl Schulze was the clear bronze winner, in 3:07.77.

World Rowing has proposed the Beach Sprint as a new discipline for the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games, to replace the Lightweight rowing classes now included.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● IOC member Astrid Jacobsen (NOR), serving as an Athletes’ Commission member, told the International Athletes’ Forum in Lausanne:

“On behalf of the IOC and the IOC Athletes’ Commission, it is very important for me to inform you that there will be no restrictions on the wearing of the hijab or any other religious symbols in the Olympic Village. As for the competitions, the rules that apply the specific international federation.

“But since the Games will be held in France, French athletes are subject to local laws, so the IOC will work closely with the French authorities and the National Olympic Committee to clarify this situation. It is important that the IOC rules apply to everyone at the Olympic Games.”

French Sports Minister Amelie Oudea-Castera said that French athletes would not be allowed to wear a hijab in competition.

● Anti-Doping ● A potentially helpful agreement was signed Monday between WADA and the World Health Organization, for the sharing of information and for the promotion of health and against substance abuse. Noted WADA President Witold Banka (POL):

“Through our agreement with WHO, experts from both organizations will be able to work collaboratively to exchange information on emerging substances and reinforce scientific positions that will ultimately benefit not only athletes, but society as a whole.”

The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency’s 22nd annual symposium on anti-doping science was held in Paris this time over the weekend focused on blood doping and the use of synthetic erythropoietin (EPO). The event was co-hosted by the Agence française de lutte contre le dopage (AFLD), and included 26 accredited doping-control laboratories, 14 national anti-doping organizations and both Major League Baseball and the National Football League.

New strategies in detection were featured. Dr. Matthew Fedoruk, the USADA’s Chief Science Officer, explained:

“Advances in biomarker discovery, instrument technology, and sample collection matrices demonstrate tremendous promise in broadening the tools available to defeat blood doping, therefore adoption of the best new detection strategies into our detection arsenal is essential.”

● U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee ● A new digital platform, Agora, has begun operations, aiming to centralize athlete support services and wellness benefits:

“[A]thletes will have access to USOPC’s extensive resources for which they are eligible, including career and education programs, mental health resources, healthcare and medical services, financial support, marketing and brand development, confidential advising and legal aid, and additional resources to enhance their Games and overall experience. …

“The initial launch of the platform will welcome athletes who are selected to represent Team USA at the Pan American and Parapan American Games in Santiago, Chile, this fall. The phased rollout will continue throughout 2023 and into 2024, to include elite-level Team USA athletes.”

The USOPC acknowledged the assistance of The Foundation for Global Sports Development in enabling the new platform.

● Basketball ● Monday’s NBA media days produced lots of questions and plenty of raised hands for stars who want to play Olympic basketball next summer.

In Phoenix, three-time Olympic gold medalist Kevin Durant said “I will play in the Olympics next year” and LeBron James, gold medalist on the 2008 and 2012 teams, said “I do have a lot of interest in playing in Paris.”

Reports indicated that Zion Williamson, Paul George, Kawhi Leonard, Steph Curry, Kyle Kuzma, Kyrie Irving, Draymond Green, Bam Adebayo, DeMar DeRozan, Devin Booker, Bradley Beal, Jaylen Brown, Donovan Mitchell, Khris Middleton, Julius Randle, Zach LaVine, Aaron Gordon, Fred VanVleet, Brook Lopez and others are all interested.

The U.S. team finished fourth at the recent FIBA World Cup in Asia and qualified for Paris as one of the top two finishers from the Americas. The Olympic roster is limited to 12 players, with Grant Hill – a 1996 Olympic gold medalist himself – the USA Basketball executive responsible for Olympic selection.

● Equestrian ● At the FEI Jumping Nations Cup Final in Barcelona (ESP), Germany returned to the top of the podium for the first time since 2016 with a zero-penalties score in the final on Sunday.

Third in the qualifying, the German squad of Christian Kukuk (on Checker 47), Hans-Dieter Dreher (Elysium) and Richard Vogel (United Touch S) all completed the course without a fault; Jana Wargers (Dorette) had her two faults set aside as only the three best scores are counted.

France collected the silver for the second straight year with eight fault points (two total faults), and defending champ Belgium was third, also with eight fault points, but a slower combined completion time. It’s the sixth straight medal for Belgium in the Nations Cup Final (2-1-3).

Brazil qualified for Paris 2024 in fourth as the best team not already in (8 fault points, slower than Belgium), and the U.S. was fifth with nine fault points. The team of McLain Ward (Callas: 4 fault points), Kari Cook (Kalinka van’t Zorgvliet: 4), Laura Kraut (Dorado 212: 1) and the non-scoring Devin Ryan (Eddie Blue: 8) was close, and still has a chance to get in at the Pan American Games coming up in Chile.

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TSX REPORT: Paralympics OKs Russian and Belarusian “neutrals”; Kessler and Welteji win shock Road Worlds miles; U.S. men gymnasts in for Paris

Hobbs Kessler, the new world-record holder in the men's road mile and 2023 World Road Running mile champion! (Photo: Tim Healy for Tracktown USA)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Paralympics agrees to allow Russian and Belarusian “neutrals”
2. Upset wins, records for Kessler, Welteji in Road Worlds miles
3. Japan, U.S. lead men’s gymnastics Worlds qualifying
4. USOPC’s Hirshland on power of sport in international relations
5. Athens’ Olympic Stadium closed due to upper tier support

● The International Paralympic Committee’s General Assembly narrowly refused to fully suspend the national committees in Russian and Belarus late last week, but voted to partially suspend them, allowing Russian and Belarusian “neutral” athletes to compete at Paris 2024. It’s a major win for International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach, as the IPC had previously barred Russian and Belarusian participation completely.

● American Hobbs Kessler and Ethiopian Diribe Welteji won upset victories and set world records in the World Athletics Road Running Championships mile events in Riga, Latvia on Sunday. Kenya and Ethiopia otherwise dominated the event, with Beatrice Chebet (KEN) and Hagos Gebrhiwet (ETH) winning the 5 km races, and Kenyans Peres Jepchirchir and Sabastian Sawe taking the Half Marathon titles.

● At the FIG World Championships in artistic gymnastics, Japan led the men’s qualifying, with the U.S. second, clinching a place for the American men at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. U.S. men advanced to the finals in the All-Around (2) and in five of the six apparatus finals. American superstar Simone Biles was superb in the women’s qualifying and the U.S. had a big lead in the team qualifying through three of 10 competition groups, with the last seven coming on Monday.

● U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee chief exec Sarah Hirshland was a panelist at an all-star panel discussion at Duke University on sport and international relations, noting that “Sport has a very, very powerful way to drive common purpose.”

● The Olympic Stadium built for the 2004 Olympic Games was closed due to concerning tests reports on the support systems for the upper deck and the roof. More tests are to come; some football matches have been moved.

World Championships: Rowing (U.S. mixed quad sculls win Beach Sprint Worlds) = Rugby (England first World Cup quarterfinal qualifier) ●

Panorama: International Olympic Committee (Climate Action Award winners include U.S. distance star Blankenship) = Paris 2024 (2: Seine booksellers meet with police on 2024 issues; bedbugs now a problem?) = Asian Games (2: China continues to dominate; South Korean winners get military exemptions) = Pan American Games (Pan American Flame lit in Mexico) = Beach Volleyball (Ana Patricia and Duda Lisboa win again) = Cycling (Sarrou holds off Schurter in Snowshoe) = Football (eight federations say they won’t compete against Russian U-17s) = Swimming (13 inducted into Int’l Swimming Hall of Fame) ●

1.
Paralympics agrees to allow Russian and Belarusian “neutrals”

The International Paralympic Committee’s General Assembly, meeting in Manana, Bahrain, narrowly decided not to fully suspend the national committees of Russia and Belarus, and agreed to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete as “neutrals” at the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris. Per the IPC announcement on Friday:

● “Prior to the IPC General Assembly’s decisions on partial suspension, IPC members first considered the full suspension of both NPCs. IPC members voted 74-65 (with 13 abstentions) against a motion to fully suspend NPC Russia, while the vote against fully suspending NPC Belarus was 74-56 (with 15 abstentions).”

● “IPC members voted 90-56 in favour of a motion to partially suspend NPC Russia (with six members abstaining), while 79-57 voted to partially suspend NPC Belarus (with nine members abstaining). For a motion to be passed, a 50%+ 1 result of all votes cast was required.”

● “As a result of the General Assembly’s decision all NPC Russia and NPC Belarus’s membership rights are suspended for two years (subject to reassessment at the next ordinary General Assembly) with the exception that their athletes (and related support personnel) will be eligible to participate in an individual and neutral capacity (this means no teams) in the Paralympic Games and World and Regional Championships and sanctioned competitions in the six sports for which the IPC acts as international federation. In each case, this is subject to athletes and support personnel meeting such conditions of participation set by the IPC Governing Board. These conditions will be published in due course.”

IPC President Andrew Parsons (BRA) said: “In reaching its decision, the IPC General Assembly was presented with evidence from the IPC, NPC Russia, and NPC Belarus, before a lengthy discussion took place. This provided an opportunity for IPC members to share their views on this subject.

“As this was a decision taken by the IPC General Assembly, I expect all IPC members to fully respect it. With the decision now behind us, I hope the focus as we lead-up to the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games can now be very much on sport and the performances of Para athletes.”

Ukrainian Presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak, reacting to this and the announcement by UEFA that Russian U-17 teams would be able to compete in its tournaments as neutrals; tweeted bitterly:

“Permitting participation of Russians in the Paralympic Games and youth football competitions, not expelling #Russia from international institutions and organizations, not issuing arrest warrants in any jurisdiction for high-ranking officials for involvement in mass crimes, permitting international companies to trade with Russia – all of this, firstly, prolongs the war, and secondly, provokes Russia to increase the levels of mass violence in #Ukraine in order to exert pressure on global elites and force them to agree to the right of Russia to disregard international laws.”

Women’s wheelchair basketball captain Mareike Muller’s statement for the National Paralympic Committee of Germany included:

“We have no understanding that athletes from Russia and Belarus will be eligible to compete again in the future. This is eyewash. Our situation is no different than last year; there is still horror, suffering and deaths every day as a result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which violates international law. Anyone who takes peace seriously and believes in sport as a peace movement cannot allow warmongering nations to take part in international games. …

“We are left with the bitter realization that our position has not found a majority and that our values are obviously not compatible with the values in other parts of the world. The votes, but especially the debates, clearly show a rift in the Paralympic movement.”

The Russian Paralympic Committee President, Pavel Rozhkov, may contest the partial suspension:

“Due to the partial suspension, the RPC loses all its rights as an IPC member, but its athletes have the right to participate in an individual and neutral capacity in the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris. The RPC is considering possible avenues of recourse and will continue to seek the full restoration of its legal rights and the rights of Russian Paralympic athletes.

“The Russian Paralympic Committee believes that the decision to allow athletes to compete only in a neutral status is unfair, this is discrimination against Russian athletes on the basis of nationality. It puts them in an unequal position compared to athletes from other countries. At the same time, refuse athletes to demonstrate that they come from a particular country, or to be able to celebrate victory while their country’s anthem is played, is to deprive them of their right to their national identity.”

Observed: This is a significant win for International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER), who has campaigned relentlessly to allow Russian and Belarusian “neutrals” – which the IOC has not fully defined – to be allowed to compete in international events. Now the IPC has voted to allow Russian and Belarusian “neutrals” – meeting as-yet-undefined criteria – at the 2024 Paris Paralympic Games prior to the IOC making a decision on the matter; this strengthens Bach’s hand for the IOC’s decision, expected in early 2024.

As for the IPC, Parsons’ comment that the decision is “now behind us” is much more of a hope. As long as Russia continues its war in Ukraine – and for a long time after – the issue of Russia as an international pariah for many nations is not at all settled.

2.
Upset wins, records for Kessler, Welteji in Road Worlds miles

The inaugural World Athletics Road Running Championships in Riga (LAT) was full of surprises, but none more so than in the road miles.

The men’s mile had 35 starters and almost everyone was still in contention at 1,000 m, with South Africa’s Ryan Mphahlele leading. Americans Sam Prakel – the world-record holder at 4:01.21 from April – and Hobbs Kessler were right in the thick of the action, and as Mphahlele faded, it was Kessler who sprinted hard with less than 200 m to go and led the parade to the finish, with Callum Elson (GBR) and Prakel chasing.

But Kessler got to the line first in a world-record time of 3:56.13, chased by Elson (3:56.41), Prakel (3:56.43), Mael Gouyette (FRA: 3:56.47) and Kiran Lumb (CAN: 3:56.98). Mphahlele had to settle for seventh in 3:57.35.

The women’s mile was expected to be a showcase for Kenyan star Faith Kipyegon, who had set the world record for the track mile earlier this year. And she moved smartly out from the start, leading a breakaway pack of four, with Worlds 1,500 m runner-up Diribe Welteji (ETH), 2022 World Indoor 800 m silver medalist Freweyni Hailu (ETH) and Kenyan teammate Nelly Chepchirchir – fifth at the Worlds 1,500 m – close.

Kipyegon and Welteji ran ahead and as the finish line neared, it was Welteji who had the devastating kick to take an upset win and the world road-mile record at 4:20.98, shattering the 4:27.97 April mark by Nikki Hiltz of the U.S.

Hailu came on late and passed the fading Kipyegon for second, 4:23.06 to 4:24.13, with Chepchirchir fourth (4:31.18) and Australian Jessica Hull well back in fifth at 4:32.45. Addy Wiley was the top American in ninth at 4:36.03, with Helen Schlachtenhaufen 17th in 4:40.28.

The men’s 5 km race shaped up as a race between Ethiopia and Kenya, with familiar stars Yomif Kejelcha – a two-time World Indoor 3,000 m winner – and Hagos Gebrhiwet (both ETH) leading Nicholas Kipkorir and Cornelius Kemboi (both KEN) at 3,000 m. The Kenyans were dropped by 4,000 m and it was Gebrhiwet who had the best finish to win in 12:59 to 13:02 for Kejelcha.

It’s the first individual Worlds gold for Gebrhiwet, 29, who won the 2013 Worlds 5,000 m silver. Kipkorir, who was fourth in the Tokyo Olympic 5,000 m, took the bronze in 13:16, with Eritrea’s Dawit Seare coming up for fourth (13:21) with Kenboi (13.24) fifth.

Olin Hacker was the top American, in 14th (13:36), followed by Ahmed Muhumed in 22nd at 14:22.

Seven women were in the lead pack of the women’s 5,000 m by the 3,000 m mark, and six were in contention with 1,000 m to go, but the best finish belonged to Kenya’s Beatrice Chebet, the Worlds 5,000 m bronze winner, who sailed away from Ethiopia’s Ejgayehu Taye and Medina Eisa and Kenyan teammate Lilian Rengeruk, winning in 14:35.

Rengeruk, 10th in the Budapest Worlds 5,000 m, came up for second in 14:39. Just ahead of Taye (14:40) and Eisa (14:41). Americans Weini Kelati was seventh in 15:10, and Fiona O’Keefe was 11th in 15:40.

The men’s Half Marathon was decided very late, with 13 in the lead group at 15 km and 10 within striking distance at 20 km. Kenyan Daniel Ebenyo was leading, but teammate Sabastian Sawe had the best finish by far, running away with the win in 59:10, with Ebenyo at 59:14 and Samwel Mailu completing the Kenyan sweep at 59:14. Ethiopia’s Jemal Yimer Mekonnen stayed in fourth at 59:22 and France’s Jimmy Gressier came up for fifth in 59:46.

The last medal sweep in this event was also by Kenya, in 1997. Abbabiya Simbassa was the top American finisher, in 25th at 1:01:28, and Futsum Zienaselassie was 33rd at 1:01:49. Jacob Thomson was 36th (1:02:26) and Reed Fischer was 53rd (1:03:56).

Kenya struck again in the women’s Half, with a group of eight well ahead by 10 km, seven by 15 km and only five by the 20 km mark, with Tokyo Olympic marathon champ Peres Jepchirchir in the lead and moving away with teammate Margaret Kipkemboi, the 2022 Worlds 10,000 m bronze winner.

Jepchirchir ran hard to the finish and won by just a second in 1:07:25 to 1:07.26, with the Kenyan sweep completed with Catherine Amanang’ole in third (1:07:34). Ethiopia’s Tsigie Gereselama finished fourth (1:07:50).

Molly Grabill was the top U.S. finisher, in 13th (1:09:53), trailed by Sarah Pagano (29: 1:11:37), and Amber Zimmerman (32: 1:12:26).

It’s the third World Half Marathon title for Jepchirchir – also in 2016 and 2020 – and she will race the New York City Marathon next.

3.
Japan, U.S. lead men’s gymnastics Worlds qualifying

The U.S. men’s artistic gymnastics team punched its ticket to the Paris 2024 Olympic Games with a second-place finish in the qualifying phase of the FIG Artistic World Championships in Antwerp (BEL) on Sunday.

China, Japan and Great Britain had already qualified as the top three teams from the 2022 Worlds, but the American team was second in the standings after Sunday’s qualifying, trailing Japan by 258.228 to 254.628, with Britain third (254.193).

In the individual All-Around standings, Japan took the top three places, with Kenta Chiba (85.799), Tokyo Olympic Team silver medalist Kazuma Kaya (85.598) and defending World Champion Daiki Hashimoto (85.432). The rules specify that only two per country can advance, but Hashimoto will be able to defend his title as the Japanese teams said that he will replace Kaya for the All-Around final.

The U.S. qualified Fred Richard in sixth place (83.566) and Asher Hong in eighth (83.165) for the A-A final later this week.

In the apparatus qualifying, Israel’s Olympic champ Artem Dolgopyat led on Floor at 15.100, with Richard second (14.600), and advancing to the individual final. Olympic Pommel Horse champion Max Whitlock (GBR) led the qualifying at 15.266, with American Khoi Young right behind at 15.066, and defending World Champion Rhys McClenaghan third (14.933). Olympic Rings gold medalist Yang Liu (CHN) topped the qualifying at 15.200, with three-time Worlds winner Eleftherios Petrounias second (14.900; Yul Moldauer was the top American in 15th (14.000).

Defending World Champion Artur Davtyan led on Vault at 15.033, with Ukraine’s Igor Radivilov next (14.766) and three Americans at 5-6-7: Paul Juda (14.666), Young (14.583) and Hong (14.516); Hong will not advance to the final due to the two-per-country limit.

Olympic silver winner Lukas Dauser (GER) led on the Parallel Bars at 15.300, with Ilia Kovtun (UKR: 15.233) close behind; Moldauer was fourth (14.966) and Hong was sixth (14.833) and both advanced to the final. Hashimoto, the Olympic champ on the Horizontal Bar, led the qualifying at 15.000, ahead of Milad Karimi (KAZ: 14.600), with Juda sixth (14.166).

The men’s Team final will be on Tuesday (3rd).

The first three women’s groups – of 10 – also had qualifying on Sunday, with the U.S. way in front, scoring a staggering 171.395, the most since 2019, the last time Simone Biles was on the American team. Great Britain was second at 166.130, ahead of Italy (162.230).

By comparison, the winning U.S. team from 2022 scored 167.263 in qualifying and 166.564 in the final; the 20109 team with Biles led the qualifying at 174.205 and won the team gold at 172.330.

Biles led in the All-Around at 58.865, ahead of teammate Shilese Jones (56.932), with Leanne Wong fifth (54.398). Biles led on Vault (14.949), Beam (14.566) and Floor (14.633). She was also second to Jones on the Uneven Bars, 14.833 to 14.400, with the rest of the qualifying to be completed on Monday.

The women’s Team final comes Wednesday (4th).

4.
USOPC’s Hirshland on power of sport in international relations

U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee chief executive Sarah Hirshland took part in a global strategy lecture series program at Duke University on Thursday, considering how sports can be a part of diplomacy.

Hirshland, who earned her bachelor’s degree at Duke, told the attendees:

“I think there are two common languages globally. And that’s inclusive of inside our country, one of them is sports, and the other one is music. And I think those two are incredibly powerful tools to unite. And, we talk all the time, unity does not mean sameness. Unity is common purpose. We heard Coach [Mike Krzyzewski] talk about that. Sport has a very, very powerful way to drive common purpose. Very powerful.”

She shared the stage with former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Gen. Martin Dempsey, legendary retired Duke basketball coach Krzyzewski and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver. Observed Silver:

“I don’t know if I’d use the word naive, but I don’t think you can separate politics from sports. And I don’t necessarily think that’s a bad thing. … I think it’s part and parcel of life.

“And it doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t be drawing lines at certain times. We certainly do. … But I think at the same time, we’re proud of the fact that our athletes … are comfortable with, regardless of where they’re from in the world, speaking out about things that are important to them.

“And I also think that it doesn’t necessarily mean that as a fan, you have to accept what they’re saying. But I think that it’s a healthy dialogue, engaging with them understanding their perspective, particularly on a global stage.”

Hirshland also talked about sport as a way to go beyond the political:

“Our country is the leader in sport around the world and the influence we have is palpable everywhere you go. So, are politics and sports inextricably linked? In ways, yes. But can sport transcend and rise above politics? I’d like to believe the answer to that is yes.”

5.
Athens’ Olympic Stadium closed due to upper tier support

The Olympic Stadium in Athens (GRE), built for the 2004 Olympic Games, was closed on Friday after tests on the roof showed inadequate strength.

The Hellenic Republic Asset Development Fund (abbreviated as TAIPED), now the owner of the complex, said that an inspection of the facilities, including the roof, found that the structures of the stadium roof and the velodrome do not meet the required levels of “static structural adequacy.” Further:

“Based on the above and with a sense of responsibility, every sporting and cultural activity in the Central Stadium and the Cycling Track is suspended as of today. A second study will quickly follow, in order to investigate more thoroughly and to confirm or not the elements of the current study.

“We share the [frustration from the] disruption in the sports family, but it is understandable that we must operate with the sole aim of the safety of athletes and fans.”

A local report noted that the tests showed that “the central stadium is statically safe, but significant maintenance and improvement of the method of supporting the perimeter concrete frame at the top of the stadium is required for the upper tier of the stadium.”

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rowing ● The World Rowing Beach Sprint Finals in Barletta (ITA) were slated to finish on Sunday, but rough weather has moved the finals of the solo events to Monday.

The Mixed Double Sculls final, held on Saturday, was won by New Zealand’s Matthew Dunham and Jackie Kiddle in 2:42.52 over the 500 m distance, over Britain’s Laura Mckenzie and Sam Scrimgeour (2:45.34). Italy took the B Final for the bronze.

The U.S. team of Christopher Bak, Jeni Sorli, Alexa McAuliffe, Kory Rogers and Coral Marie Kasden as cox won the Mixed Quadruple Sculls with Coxswain on Saturday, finishing in 2:27.35 to 2:39.05 for Italy.

● Rugby ● One week remains for the pool phase of the Rugby World Cup in France, with only one place in the quarterfinal assured so far among the four groups and the top two from each group to advance:

Pool A: France (3-0: 13 points); New Zealand (2-1: 10), Italy (2-1: 10).

Pool B: Ireland (3-0: 14); South Africa (2-1: 10), Scotland (2-1: 10).

Pool C: Wales (3-0: 14); Australia (2-2: 11); Fiji (2-1: 10).

Pool D: England (3-0: 14); Argentina (2-1: 9); Japan (2-1: 9).

Only England is assured to advance, and the only head-to-head match-up between the nos. 2-3 teams will be Japan vs. Argentina on 8 October. In Pool A, France will play Italy on 6 October.

The quarterfinals will begin on the 14th, with the semis on 20-21 October and the title match on 28 October.

Attendance continues to be excellent, with 1,360,363 through 31 matches for an average of 43,833. There are continuing, occasional issues of public transit, but the tournament is progressing toward what should be an entertaining conclusion.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● International Olympic Committee ● The IOC announced the winners of its first Climate Action Awards, for individuals, International Federations and National Olympic Committees.

The winners included Ben Blankenship (USA/athletics), Marcus Mepstead (GBR/fencing) and Paloma Schmidt (PER/sailing), plus World Rugby, World Sailing, the Colombian Olympic Committee and the Spanish Olympic Committee.

Blankenship, a 2016 Olympian at 1,500 m, won the award for athlete advocacy – supported by Proctor & Gamble – for the “Endless Mileage Project, which plants trees for every American miler who breaks 4 minutes (men) and 4:30 min (women) in the event and redistributes used sports clothing and equipment to local schools.”

Awards were also given for sustainable travel (Mepstead, World Sailing and the Spanish NOC), and for innovation, with World Rugby and Colombian NOC recognized.

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● The latest chapter in the saga of the iconic French booksellers on the banks of the Seine River was a meeting held last Thursday at the headquarters of the Paris police, hosted by Laurent Nunez, Prefect of the Paris Police.

There was no resolution, but tests will be made on a few of the book boxes to judge the feasibility of moving the stalls next summer in advance of the Olympic opening on the river. Nunez noted, “The city is very attached to second-hand booksellers and their heritage history” but is also aware of “the security constraints which require decision-making by the police prefect.”

A petition to save the boxes has been signed by 147,303 as of Saturday evening on change.org, but does not appear to be making any difference.

The newest reported problem in and around Paris are bedbugs showing up on trains, buses and movie theaters.

Is this serious? Paris Deputy Mayor Emmanuel Grégoire wrote to French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne, asking “The State must urgently bring together all the stakeholders concerned in order to deploy an action plan commensurate with this scourge as the whole of France prepares to host the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2024.”

● Asian Games 2022: Hangzhou ● The 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou (CHN) moves toward its final week, with China continuing to run away with the medal lead.

The powerful Chinese team, performing for a home audience, has won 244 medals (133-72-39) through Sunday, with 275 of the 481 events completed. South Korea has moved into a distant second place, with 125 medals (30-35-60) with Japan sitting third at 112 (29-41-42).

The swimming events concluded last Friday (29th), with the Chinese team dominating with 58 medals (28-21-9) and 18 Asian Games records. Two-time men’s World backstroke champ Jiayu Xu swept the 50-100-200 m Backstroke events, triple World Champion Haiyang Qin won the men’s 50-100-200 m Breaststroke events, and Bingjie Li won the women’s 400-800-1,500 m Free events.

Butterfly star – and Tokyo 200 m Fly gold medalist – Yufei Zhang took the golds in the women’s 50-100-200m Fly finals, but added a fourth individual medal with a win in the 50 m Free as well.

Track & field has started, with China’s Zhenye Xie winning the men’s 100 m in 9.97 and Worlds runner-up Ernest John Obiena (PHI) taking the men’s vault at 5.90 m (19-4 1/4).

Tokyo Olympic shot champ Lijiao Gong (CHN) won her third Asian Games title at 19.58 m (64-3) and 2022 World Champion in the discus, Bin Feng, moved up from second in 2018 to win in Hangzhou at 67.93 m (222-10), a meet record.

In gymnastics, China won five of eight men’s events and three of six women’s events. In the women’s Vault, the amazing Oksana Chusovitina (UZB), 48, finished fourth and skipped the World Championships; she still hopes to qualify for Paris 2024 through the 2024 FIG World Cup series.

An important benefit of the Asian Games for South Korean athletes is that gold medalists receive an exemption from compulsory military service required of all men between 18-28. Eight swimmers won gold in Hangzhou, including 50 m Fly winner Inchul Baek, who commented:

“Not just for swimmers but as an athlete, I think exemption from military service removes a hindrance to an athlete’s life, allowing him to have a longer career.”

SwimSwam.com noted:

“Military exemptions are a point of contention in South Korean culture. Fewer than 100 exemptions were handed out last year — not even K-pop sensation BTS gets special treatment. The debate was reignited this week when League of Legends star ‘Faker’ [Sang-hyeok Lee] received a controversial military exemption for claiming gold as a part of esports’ debut at the Asian Games.”

● Pan American Games 2023: Santiago ● The Pan American Flame was lit on Friday, at the Pyramid of the Sun at the ancient city site of Teotihuacan, Mexico, northeast of Mexico City, site of the flame-lighting beginning in 1995.

It was flown to Santiago, host for the 2023 Pan American Games and received by Chilean President Gabriel Boric on Saturday.

● Beach Volleyball ● The Beach Pro Tour Elite 16 in Paris (FRA) featured a familiar women’s final, with the top two seeds reaching the gold-medal match: Brazil’s top-seeds Ana Patricia Ramos and Duda Lisboa – the reigning World Champions – and Americans Kristen Nuss and Taryn Kloth (USA).

For the second time in an Elite 16 final, Ramos and Lisboa managed a 2-1 win by 21-10, 18-21, 15-13. They had previously beaten Nuss and Kloth at the Hamburg Elite 16 tournament, and the fourth time in five Elite 16 tournaments this season that the Brazilians have beaten a U.S. team in the final.

Katja Stam and Raisa Schoon (NED) defeated Valentina Gottardi and Marta Menegatti (ITA) for the women’s bronze, 21-17, 22-20.

Ondrej Perusic and David Schweiner (CZE), the 2022 European Champs silver winners, scored their second win of the season with a 16-21, 21-19, 15-11 victory over Nils Ehlers and Clemens Wickler (GER).

Alexander Brouwer and Robert Meeuwsen (NED), the 2013 World Champions, took the bronze over Julian Hoerl and Alexander Horst (AUT), 18-21, 21-18, 15-13.

Next up will be the 2023 World Championships, in Tlaxcala, Mexico, from 6-15 October.

● Cycling ● The seventh and penultimate stop on the 2023 UCI Mountain Bike World Cup came to Snowshoe, West Virginia over the weekend, with 2020 World Champion Jordan Sarrou (FRA) barely holding off three Swiss chasers for his first win of the season.

Sarrou took the lead from 10-time individual World Champion Nino Schurter (SUI) on the fifth of seven laps and then managed to hold off Schurter to the finish, 1:18:38 to 1:18:39. Right behind were Marcel Guerrini (SUI: 1:18:41) and Mathias Flueckiger (SUI: 1:18:48). It’s Sarrou’s second medal of the season; Schurter – at 37 – won his fifth medal of the season (2-2-1) out of seven races so far.

France’s Viktor Koretzky won his second World Cup Short Track race in a row in 20:54, just two seconds up on Sarrou (20:56), with Luca Schwarzbauer (GER: 20:58) third.

Austria’s Laura Stigger took over after a couple of laps and rode away with the women’s race, finishing in 1:21:56 to 1:22:19 for Loana Lecompte (FRA), with Martina Berta (ITA: 1:22:28) third. American Sevilla Blunk finished fourth (1:22:34) and fellow American Haley Batten was eighth (1:23:32). It’s Stigger’s first win on the circuit this season and her second medal.

In the women’s Short Track race, Britain’s 2021 World Champion Evie Richards won a tight battle with Dutch star Puck Pieterse, 19:54 to 19:59, with Rebecca Henderson (AUS: 20:03) third.

In the non-Olympic Downhill events, Ireland took a 1-2 in the men’s final, with Oisin O’Callaghan (3:07.624) and Ronan Dunne (3:08.120) with American Dakotah Norton third (3:08.987). France’s 2015 World Champion, Marine Cabirou, won the women’s race in 3:41.042 over Nina Hoffmann (GER: 3:41.386).

The season will conclude next week at Mont-Sainte-Anne in Quebec (CAN).

● Football ● UEFA’s 26 September decision to allow Russian U-17 teams to play in its tournaments as “neutrals” has been met with resistance from multiple national federations.

Sweden announced that it would not allow the Russian team to compete – if it qualifies – in the women’s European U-17 Championship it will host in May 2024. National federations including Denmark, England, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Sweden, and, of course, Ukraine, said they would not play matches against Russian national teams.

● Swimming ● The International Swimming Hall of Fame welcomed 13 new members on Saturday during the induction ceremonies in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. Among them was the greatest swimmer of all: Michael Phelps.

Both Phelps, who won a record 28 Olympic medals and 33 World Championships medals, was inducted along with his coach, Bob Bowman, now at Arizona State and still coaching Olympic stars.

American Missy Franklin, the 100-200 m Olympic backstroke winner at London 2012 and an 11-time World Championships gold medalist, was honored, as was Kirsty Coventry, the seven-time Olympic medal winner from Zimbabwe, now a high-profile member of the International Olympic Committee and a possible candidate for the IOC presidency in 2025.

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BULLETIN: IPC votes to allow Russian neutrals at Paris 2024

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The International Paralympic Committee’s General Assembly, meeting in Bahrain on Friday, took two votes on the question of suspending the membership of the Russian Paralympic Committee, ultimately agreeing on a partial suspension. Per the IPC on Twitter:

● “At the IPC General Assembly in Bahrain, IPC members voted 74-65 (13 abstentions) against a motion to fully suspend NPC Russia for breaches of its constitutional membership obligations. After lunch members will discuss a motion to partially suspend the NPC.”

● “The IPC General Assembly voted 90-56 (six abstentions) to partially suspend NPC Russia for breaches of its constitutional membership obligations.”

● “Due to the partial suspension NPC Russia loses all IPC membership rights, however its athletes are eligible to participate in an individual and neutral capacity at the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games.”

More details are forthcoming.

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TSX REPORT: Valieva hearing continued to November; World Gymnastics Champs open Saturday; first World Road Running Champs on Sunday

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. CAS: Valieva hearing to continue in November
2. Russian Foreign Minister says IOC an instrument of the West
3. World Gymnastics Champs open on Saturday; no U.S. TV
4. Another Kipyegon record at first World Road Champs?
5. Athletes run away from doping officials in India!

● The Court of Arbitration for Sport announced that the hearing over the Kamila Valieva doping case (and the determination of results for the 2022 Winter Olympic Team event in figure skating) was concluded for now, but would be reconvened for two more days in November.

● Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pummeled the International Olympic Committee once again on Thursday, continuing the Russian internal propaganda campaign that portrays the country as a victim, rather than as the aggressor against Ukraine.

● The FIG World Artistic Gymnastics Championships open on Saturday in Belgium, with the U.S. women looking for a seventh team title in a row, and superstar Simone Biles ready to add to her record medal totals.

● The World Athletics Road Running Championships will debut on Sunday in Riga, Latvia, with races for men and women in the road mile, 5 km and half marathon. A new world road record for the women’s mile is widely expected with track 1,500 m and mile world-record holder Faith Kipyegon of Kenya leading the field.

● Doping in India is becoming a problem and at a regional track & field meet in New Delhi, athletes were literally running away from drug-testing personnel! In the men’s 100 m, only one athlete competed in the final, as the other seven pulled out, fearing a test.

World Championships: Rugby (World Cup has five undefeateds left) ●

Panorama: Paris 2024 (Good job fair turnout for Paris vendors) = Asian Games (China with huge lead in Hangzhou medal table) = Athletics (Bob Beamon starts a music career!) = Swimming (380 men and 304 women already qualified for Olympic Trials) ●

1.
CAS: Valieva hearing to continue in November

The Court of Arbitration for Sport announced that the scheduled three days of hearings in the Kamila Valieva doping case concluded on Thursday, but that the hearing will be extended, and reconvened in November:

“The Panel of arbitrators in charge of the matter heard the parties (RUSADA, ISU, WADA and Ms Valieva), their experts and witnesses during the hearing that took place at the CAS headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland, this week.

“After the presentation of evidence by the parties, the Panel ordered the production of further documentation and, in order to allow the parties to consider and address such documentation, allowed two further days for the hearing of the appeal. The hearing will therefore resume on 9 and 10 November 2023 in Lausanne at which time the evidentiary proceedings will be completed and the Panel will hear the parties’ closing submissions. The Panel will then deliberate and prepare the Arbitral Award containing its decision.”

The hearing is a consolidated appeal against a decision of the Disciplinary Anti-Doping Committee, an independent arm of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency, which imposed only a one-day sanction against figure skating star Valieva for a doping positive from trimetazidine, allowing her to compete at the 2022 Olympic Winter Games in Beijing.

The World Anti-Doping Agency, the International Skating Union and the Russian Anti-Doping Agency have all appealed and the actions were brought together in one hearing, now to resume in a couple of weeks.

A WADA statement included:

“Due to the confidential nature of the proceedings, WADA is unable to comment on the adjournment announced by the Court of Arbitration for Sport earlier today. …

“We maintain that the RUSADA Disciplinary Committee’s finding that the athlete had ‘no fault or negligence’ was incorrect under the provisions of the World Anti-Doping Code, we continue to seek a four-year period of Ineligibility and Ineligibility the athlete’s results from the date of sample collection, including her results during the 2022 Olympic Games in Beijing.”

The Team Event in Beijing concluded on 7 February 2022; it is now likely that just under two years will have passed by the time the CAS panel’s decision is announced.

2.
Russian Foreign Minister says IOC an instrument of the West

Russia’s propaganda campaign to support its war against Ukraine is constant and unrelenting and sport is part of the program. The Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov chimed in on Thursday during an interview with the national news agency TASS:

“The [International Olympic Committee] is already using the situation around Ukraine to grossly and directly violate the Olympic Charter.

“At the same time, it is suspending most of our athletes from competitions, but making exceptions for certain sports, for certain age groups in a neutral status, without a flag and without an anthem as some kind of huge positive step.”

After accusing the IOC of ignoring Western transgressions for many years, he added:

[W]hen Russia, after many, many years of warnings to the world community, that NATO is leading the way to a big war, directly creating a military threat on the borders of the Russian Federation, encouraging a regime that was openly prepared by Washington to contain Russia and attack Russia, here the IOC decided to show its incomprehensible principles contrary to its responsibilities under the Olympic Charter.”

Lavrov expanded his remarks specific to the Olympic Movement, saying it “is turning into an instrument of Western policy,” and pointing to the IOC.

“This is absolutely obvious. Just as the World Anti-Doping Agency at one time was turned into such a tool. And for many years they tried to undermine competitors from our country on various international platforms, grossly abusing anti-doping rules, accusing – groundlessly, repeatedly – our great athletes.”

Observed: Lavrov’s comments and those of other Russian officials are aimed primarily at the Russian public, continuing to paint Russia as the victim of aggression worldwide, rather than as the actual attacker of Ukraine. It is important to understand the Russian position as it will be taken into account by the IOC in its deliberations on whether to allow Russian athletes, and on what grounds, to compete in Paris in 2024.

The IOC, starting with President Thomas Bach (GER), and its members and advisors, are more than aware of the issues at stake by allowing any Russian or Belarusian participation in Paris. Bach’s view, developed by years of watching IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch (ESP) stitch the Olympic Games back together after consecutive boycotts in 1976-80-84, insists that the world come together at the Olympic Games as a sign of peaceful coexistence.

That seems impossible given Russian invasion and continuing war in Ukraine, but the IOC is looking for a window that will be small enough to allow some – perhaps a few handfuls – of Russian and Belarusians in Paris, but not enough to offend other countries and hopefully keep Ukraine in attendance.

The comments of Lavrov, Sports Minister Oleg Matytsin and others are for domestic consumption, and the IOC cannot expect Moscow to be happy with anything other than full participation, which is not going to happen. But they are instructive, and the IOC will continue listening all the way into 2024, when it will have to make a decision.

3.
World Gymnastics Champs open on Saturday; no U.S. TV

The 52nd FIG Artistic World Championships begin on Saturday in Antwerp (BEL) and continue through 8 October for men and women. The schedule:

30 Sep.: Men’s team qualifying
01 Oct.: Men’s and women’s team qualifying
02 Oct.: Women’s team qualifying
03 Oct.: Men’s team final
04 Oct.: Women’s team final
05 Oct.: Men’s All-Around
06 Oct.: Women’s All-Around
07 Oct.: Apparatus finals
08 Oct.: Apparatus finals

The U.S. women enter as the six-time defending World team gold medalists and have won seven of the last eight and eight of the last 10 Worlds team titles. The 2023 team returns Skye Blakley, Shilese Jones and Leanne Wong, who won without the incomparable Simone Biles and she also returns, having won four prior Worlds Team golds.

Biles, in fact, will extend her own astounding World Championships medal records with every podium finish in Antwerp. Consider her existing standing, across from six competitions from 2013-19:

● 25 total medals (19-3-3), the most of any gymnast ever
● 21 individual-event medals (15-3-3), the most all-time
● 19 total Worlds golds, the most all-time
● 15 individual-event golds, the most all-time

Biles has also applied to have an original element named for her in Antwerp, the Yurchenko Double Pike vault, which she has performed before. Per the FIG rules:

“In order to have a new element named for her in the Code, a gymnast must first submit it for evaluation to the FIG Women’s Technical Committee, then perform it without a fall at an eligible prestigious international competition like the World Championships.”

If she completes it, the vault will be the most difficult vault to be listed in the FIG Code of Points at 6.4 for degree of difficulty. If completed, this will be Biles’ second named element in the Vault.

Jones, the 2022 All-Around silver winner, has also asked for an named element, for a triple turn with the leg held at horizontal in the Floor Exercise. Jones performed this at the USA Gymnastics Nationals, and if completed, would be graded as an “E” element on the A-to-J scale of difficulty, with a successful execution adding 0.5 points to a routine’s score.

FIG noted that the “same new element was also submitted by Chiaki Hatakeda (JPN).”

Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade, the 2022 All-Around winner over Jones, is back, as is Floor winner Jessica Gadirova (GBR).

The men’s competition was dominated by China in 2022, with Japan taking silver and Great Britain the bronze. Unfortunately, gymnastics at the Asian Games in Hangzhou (CHN) continues through the 29th, making it almost – but not completely – impossible for anyone there to get to Antwerp in time to compete again.

Nevertheless, China and Japan will again be teams to watch, along with Great Britain, South Korea, Ukraine and perhaps Hungary and Turkey. Japan’s All-Around winner, Daiki Hashimoto, will be back, along with three apparatus event winners: Rhys McCleneghan (IRL: Pommel Horse), Artur Davtyan (ARM: Vault) and Adem Asil (TUR: Rings).

There will be no live television coverage of the Worlds in the U.S.; NBC’s Peacock streaming service will have coverage from 3-8 October only. A replay of the women’s Team final will shown on CNBC on 8 October and NBC will have a replay of the women’s All-Around on 14 October.

4.
Another Kipyegon record at first World Road Champs?

The much-anticipated first World Athletics Road Running Championships will be held on Sunday (1st) in Riga, Latvia, with another record opportunity for Kenyan star Faith Kipyegon.

The program includes the road mile, 5 km and Half Marathon, with all of the course quite flat, offering the prospect of fast times. The 5 km and Half courses traverse the Daugava River, while the mile course is separate; all three have mass-participation races also attached to them.

As for the championships:

Mile: Kipyegon has had a season for the ages, with world records on the track for the 1,500 m (3:59.11), mile (4:07.64) and 5,000 m (14:05.20, since broken). Now she is the favorite in the women’s mile, with the just-ratified world road mile mark of 4:27.97 by American Nikki Hiltz in her sights.

She won’t be completely alone, however, as World Champs 1,500 m runner-up Diribe Welteji (ETH: 3:55.69 in Budapest) will challenge, along with Kenyan teammate and Worlds fifth-placer Nelly Chepchirchir (3:57.90 in Budapest) and Australian Jessica Hull (7th: 3:59.54). Ethiopia has also sent 2022 World Indoor 1,500 bronze winner Hirut Meshesha (3:54.87: no. 4 in 2023) and 2022 World Indoor 800 m silver medalist Freweyni Hailu (3:55.68 1,500 m in 2023).

The American continent is led by Addy Wiley, 19, the 2022 World U-20 fifth placer, who was third in the U.S. road mile championships in April in 4:31.

There’s no clear favorite in men’s mile, which includes the new world road-mile record holder, American Sam Prakel, who won the USATF road-mile nationals in Des Moines in 4:01.21. Expect his record to be broken, however, with a solid list of contenders that starts with Kenyan Reynold Kipkorir, eighth at the Worlds 1,500 m in 3:30.78. He ran 3:48.06 for fifth at the Pre Classic on 16 September.

Ethiopia’s Teddese Lemi (3:33.24 this year), American Hobbs Kessler (3:32.61), Melkenah Azeze (ETH: 3:34.29), South African Ryan Mphahlele (3:32.90) and France’s Mael Gouyette (3:35.94) all figure to be challengers.

5 km: Familiar stars from the track season are ready to go, with Ethiopia sending Yomif Kejelcha, no. 3 on the 2023 world list at 12:41.73, Hagos Gebrhiwet (no. 5: 12:42.18), and 2023 Cross Country Worlds runner-up Berihu Aregawi (world leader at 12:40.45). They finished 5-6-8 at the Worlds in Budapest in the 5,000 m final.

Kenya has Nicholas Kipkorir, the Tokyo Olympic fourth-placer, who has run 12:55.46 this season, Cornelius Kemboi (13:00.68 this season), and 2022 Worlds 10,000 m silver winner Stanley Waithaka Mburu. And is this the time for Australia’s hard-luck Stewart McSweyn – 12:56.50 last year – to break out with a medal-winning performance? The top U.S. entry is likely Olin Hacker, who ran 13:09.94 on the track in July this season.

The women’s entries start with Worlds 5,000 m bronze medalist Beatrice Chebet of Kenya (14:05.92 this year, no. 3 in the world and no. 3 all-time!), and teammates 10th-placer Lilian Rengeruk (14:23.05), plus Caroline Nyaga, the world road leader at 14:35.

Uganda’s Tokyo Olympic Steeple winner, Peruth Chemutai, is in and ran a national record 15:12 for 5 km on the roads in March. Ethiopia has the Worlds 5th and 6th placers, Ejgayehu Taye (14:13.31, no. 5 this year) and Medina Eisa (14:16.54, no. 7), ready to go, plus Lemlem Hailu (14:34.53: no. 13).

If fearlessness counts, look out for Japan’s Nozomi Tanaka, eighth at the Worlds and no. 12 on the world list this year at 14:29.18, a national record. American entries include Emily Infeld, the 2015 Worlds 10,000 m bronze winner (14:50.90 this season) and Weini Kelati, the 2021 U.S. 5 km champ, who has run 14:53.41 on the track this season.

Half Marathon: Kenya’s Peres Jepchirchir, the Tokyo Olympic women’s marathon winner, is the headliner in the women’s race. She also the 2016 and 2020 world champ in the Half and just turned 30 in the 27th; her only race this year was a third in the London Marathon in April in 2:18:38.

That’s on top of Kenyan entries that include 2023 world leader Irene Kimais (64:37), Catherine Relin (65:39: 5th in 2023), Margaret Kipkemboi (65:50: 9th, 10,000 m bronze at the 2022 Worlds) and Janeth Chepngetich (66:42)!

Ethiopia counters with Ftaw Zeray (66:04: 12th), Tsigie Gebreselama (66:13: 15th), Yalemget Yaregal (66:27) and Mestawut Fikir (66:44).

The U.S. has an interesting entry list, with Sara Hall, 40, fifth at the 2022 Worlds marathon, who has a Half best of 67:15 from last year, plus Sarah Pagano (69:41 lifetime best), Amber Zimmerman (70:58 lifetime best) and Molly Grabill (71:17 lifetime best).

The men’s Half has nine who have run under an hour this season, starting with Ethiopia’s Jemal Yimer Mekonnen (58:38, no. 2 in 2023), with teammates Nibret Malek (59:06, no. 8), Dinkalem Ayele (59:49) and Tsegay Kidanu (59:49).

Kenya counters with Benard Kibet (58:45, no. 3 in 2023), Charles Langat (58:53, no. 4), Sabastian Sawe (59:00, no. 7) and Daniel Ebenyo (59:52). But look out for France’s Jimmy Gressier, ninth at the Worlds 5,000 m in Budapest and has run 59:55 this season.

South Africa’s Stephen Mokoka, now 38, will be in his eighth Worlds Half, with a best of seventh in 2020. He’s run 60:54 this season, in June, and has a best of 59:36 from 2020.

All together, there are 347 athletes entered from 57 countries with 195 men (from 50) and 152 women (from 44).

NBC has the rights to the event in the U.S., and the World Roads will be on the Peacock streaming service, beginning at 4:20 a.m. Eastern time on Sunday.

5.
Athletes run away from doping officials in India!

Doping is an emerging area of concern in India, and the latest incident in New Delhi was alarming.

The Indian Express reported that during the Delhi State Athletics Championships, as many as half of the entrants left the meet once it was known that anti-doping officials were on-site:

“A steeplechaser at the Delhi athletics championship crossed the finish line and kept running, fleeing dope testers who had turned up the day after a tell-tale video of doping syringes was circulated. Another sprinter ran the 100m alone on the eight tracks, as seven other entrants never turned up, fearing they would be tested.

“Amidst these bizarre scenes at the JN Stadium, lay the tragedy of India’s doping menace in a sport that offers fantasies of dizzying success. Athletes from school-level meets upwards are risking their bodily health with amateur doping practices, hoping they find breakthrough success in terms of jobs or spots in national teams, knowing that sophisticated cheats have gotten away in the past. When the testers show up, the farce of just one athlete willing to run the race points to a deep rot where the honest runner becomes ineligible for a medal because the others ran away from testing.”

Per Agence France Presse:

“[J]ust one sprinter competed in the [men’s] 100-metre final and another continued running beyond the finishing line chased by national anti-doping officers, officials said on Wednesday. …

“Officials told AFP that the National Anti-Doping Agency arrived to conduct tests at the event on Tuesday, resulting in the number of participants on the third and final day of the competition falling by half.”

A social-media post on Tuesday showed a stadium restroom “littered with syringes and packets of the performance-enhancing drug Erythropoietin (EPO).”

AFP noted that 45 Indian athletes (across all sports) have been suspended for doping in 2023.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rugby ● The 10th Rugby World Cup rolls on in France, with four group leaders and one second-place team still undefeated:

Pool A: France (3-0: 13 points), Italy (2-0: 10)
Pool B: Ireland (3-0: 14), South Africa (2-1: 10)
Pool C: Wales (3-0: 14), Fiji (1-1: 6)
Pool D: England (3-0: 14); Samoa (1-1: 5)

The pool phase runs through 8 October, with the top two teams advancing to the quarterfinals on 14-15 October, after a week’s rest. The championship match is scheduled for 28 October at the Stade de France in the Paris area.

Attendance continues to be impressive, with 1,148,108 through 25 matches, for an average of 45,924. There have been continuing, sporadic issues with crowd access to-and-from venues, including public transit being occasionally overwhelmed for some matches.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● The Olympic-vendor job fair held Tuesday  in Paris was well attended, with the Paris 2024 organizers announcing than more than 7,000 people showed up and 2,000 job offers extended from the 50-plus companies looking for help in Games-related positions in hospitality, logistics and transportation. Another major staffing fair will be held by the staffing giant Randstad on 18 October, looking for 3,000 people in logistics, operations, technology and hospitality.

● Asian Games ● With a little more than a week to go, the Asian Games in Hangzhou (CHN) continues as the expected showcase for China, with the hosts nearly doubling the medal count on second-place South Korea.

Through 182 of 481 events, China leads with 167 medals (90-51-26), ahead of South Korea’s 86 (24-23-39) and 78 for Japan (18-30-30). Uzbekistan (31) and India (25) are in fourth and fifth.

● Athletics ● Jazz and hip-hop drummer and producer Stix Bones released a new track, “Leap,” on 15 September, with a new percussionist: 1968 Olympic long jump champ Bob Beamon!

Beamon, now 77, contributed as percussionist on “Leap,” the first of two singles from Bones’ forthcoming EP, Olimpik Soul. Said Beamon in an interview, “I’ve been hypnotized by the drums since I was 9 years old.” Great new gig!

● Swimming ● SwimSwam.com ran two stories about qualifiers for the 2024 U.S. Olympic Trials, now nearing 700.

Some 380 men have qualified for Indianapolis, with more to come, in the 14 events, with Kieran Smith the leader with marks in eight events: four Freestyles, two Backstrokes and both Medleys. Shaine Casas has qualified in seven events and 10 men have qualified in at least five.

A total of 304 women have qualified, with Bella Sims qualifying in 10 events, Katie Grimes in nine and Regan Smith in eight. Thirteen athletes have qualified in six or more events! Sims has met the standard in five Freestyle events, one in Backstroke, two in Butterfly and both Medleys.

The qualification period ends on 30 May 2024, and the Trials will be in Indianapolis from 15-23 June 2024.

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TSX REPORT: Pricey new Paris 2024 T&F hospitality offers; Russia upset over no Asiad invite; RUSADA says Valieva should get just a warning!

Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva, in the middle of the final event to be decided at the 2022 Olympic Winter Games! (Photo: Ttckcv21 via Wikipedia)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. New Paris 2024 top-end track & sailing experiences available
2. Russia upset over no Asian Games invite; wants to retain top athletes
3. RUSADA wants Valieva to get only a warning
4. Fencing rule changes from the Kharlan-Smirnova bout added
5. UEFA to allow Russian U-17 teams to play as neutrals

● A new hospitality offering announced by On Location, the exclusive provider for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, provides first-category tickets and a close-by lounge for most of the track & field evening sessions for between €5,500 to €8,500 per person, or $5,778 to $8,930. A much-lower-priced package is available for morning sessions. A unique, on-the-water package for sailing is also now available.

● The head of the Russian Olympic Committee is still upset that the offer last December for Russian to send athletes to the Asian Games was not followed through, principally by the International Olympic Committee. A new plan is being formulated to keep Russia’s “golden hundred” athletes for moving elsewhere so they can compete again.

● The head of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency said she feels Kamila Valieva should get off with just a warning in the Court of Arbitration for Sport hearing now ongoing.

● The International Fencing Federation (FIE) finally published the new rule which removes the requirement for handshakes at the end of a bout with a “fencer’s salute” a la what Ukraine’s Olha Kharlan tried to do at the 2023 World Championships, but was disqualified anyway.

● UEFA’s Executive Council approved a concept for Russian U-17 teams to be able to compete, saying “children should not be punished for actions” of adults. Ukraine is livid; Sweden, the host of the 2024 UEFA Girls U-17 Championship, said it would not allow a Russian team to play there.

Panorama: Paris 2024 (Bad valve caused Seine water-quality issues) = Olympic Games 2036 (Poland plans to bid) = Asian Games (Three world leaders in the pool; Al-Rashidi, 60, equals shooting WR) = Athletics (2: Coe says the sport must modernize; World Athletics moves cross-country champs to Serbia) = Boxing (World Boxing Congress in November) = Luge (German superstar Geisenberger retires) ●

1.
New Paris 2024 top-end track & sailing experiences available

If you’re looking for a best-of-the-best experience at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, the official hospitality providers – On Location – want to talk.

A new program, announced Monday, focuses on track & field and sailing with unique options.

For track & field, “On the Finish Line Gold” and “On the Finish Line Silver” bookings are now being offered. The Gold-level program is for the evening sessions on 2-3-5-7-9-10 August only, including first-category tickets, a hospitality lounge close to the seating area, food and drink, a gift and “exclusive meetings with star athletes.” Pricing (€1 = $1.05 U.S. today):

03 August: €5,500 per person ~ men’s 10,000 m final
04 August: €6,500 per person ~ women’s 100 m, men’s shot finals
05 August: €5,500 per person ~ women’s 800 m, discus, men’s vault finals
07 August: €5,500 per person ~ men’s 400 m, Steeple, women’s vault finals
09 August: €6,000 per person ~ men’s 400 m hurdles, both 4×100 m finals
10 August: €8,500 per person ~ men’s 800 m, women’s 1,500 m, both 4x 400 m finals

The options do not include 4 August, with the men’s 100 m final; 6 August, with the men’s 1,500 m and women’s 200 m finals, or 8 August, with the men’s 200 m and 110 m hurdles and women’s 400 m hurdles finals.

The Silver-level program is for the morning sessions from 2-9 August, also with first-category tickets and hospitality service, but which costs a lot less:

02 August: €1,150 per person
03 August: €1,150 per person
04 August: €995 per person
05 August: €995 per person
06 August: €995 per person
07 August: €995 per person
08 August: €995 per person
09 August: €995 per person

The 2-3 August sessions include the early rounds of the women’s and men’s 100 m, respectively.

The sailing program is even more ambitious, with a Gold Level Rooftop Package on the water in a private boat, or a Silver Level Terrace Package from the Marseille Marina, watching from a balcony:

28-29-30-31 July: €1,995 and €1,495
03-04-05 August: €1,995 and €1,495
01-02-06-07-08 August: €2,500 and €1,750

The IQ Foil wind-surfing races are on 1-2 August, and the 6-7-8 August programs feature the Formula Kite races and the final races in the 470 dinghy class and the Nacra 17 multi-hulls.

2.
Russia upset over no Asian Games invite;
wants to retain top athletes

Russian Olympic Committee President Stanislav Pozdnyakov blasted the International Olympic Committee once again for disallowing Russian entries into the ongoing Asian Games in Hangzhou (CHN). He told the Russian news agency TASS:

“Let’s return to the Olympic Summit, where Acting President of the Olympic Council of Asia Randhir Singh [IND] was speaking. After [IOC President] Thomas Bach [GER] proposed seeking ways to bring Russian and Belarusian athletes back, he said that it would be nice to begin with the Asian continent, presumably with the Asian Games. Following this, the [Olympic Council of Asia] director general called me and said: ‘500 spots have been reserved for you, we are expecting your athletes.’

“We started waiting for the necessary specifics in terms of selection, logistics, the official invitation, after all. However, we were simply stonewalled by the other side. And on September 23, the Games kicked off. From the point of view of diplomacy, I think that such things are simply unacceptable; they did not even inform us that they reconsidered their decision to invite us.

“Even considering the fact that the Olympic Council of Asia got into trouble related to elections that the International Olympic Committee did not recognize as legitimate, these problems have also somewhat affected the fact that, in the end, there are no athletes from Russia at the Asian Games. The Games are being held in China, relations between our countries would have removed all security issues and the geographical closeness excludes any logistics issues. Yet, the IOC’s stance turned out to be counterproductive.”

The IOC declined to allow Russian and Belarusian entries at the Asian Games for “technical reasons.”

The ongoing international sanctions have caused a substantial staff reduction at the Russian Olympic Committee:

“Certainly, the current situation does not inspire the staff, since one of the main tasks of the ROC is making preparations for the Olympic Games and the participation itself.

“The fact that we did not receive an invitation to Paris 2024 does not add any joy. Moreover, we had to significantly cut our staff. The reason is simple: the amount of work directly related to international Olympic events has decreased significantly.

“We had to make personnel decisions. We were able to help a number of our former staff members to find jobs with some Russia-wide sports federations; they are now working in the same building, doing the amount of work necessary for the relevant Russia-wide sports federations.

“These are specialists with good experience. The staff has been reduced by a quarter in total. However, as soon as the Olympic Games become open to us again, we will ask them to come back. Our main task now is to ensure that those specialists who have skills, knowledge and competencies do not leave the industry.”

Deputy Sports Minister Alexey Morozov said that with more than 100 athletes leaving Russia to affiliate with other countries to allow them to resume competing – 55 in Olympic sports – the ministry is looking to create a program to keep its top athletes in the country:

“There is a working discussion of various approaches to incentivize athletes and coaches in the current situation. No decisions on the ‘golden hundred,’ no final formulations or definitions are available now.

“We are discussing with the expert community what we can do. We intend to raise the pay for athletes and coaches, maybe to reward athletes who have achieved outstanding results, but this discussion is only in the works, as many structures should be involved in this.

“It is a loss for us when an athlete joins the national team of another state, as certain efforts and resources are invested. We want them to compete for the Russian national team and stay with us and we are doing everything possible for that. But so far it is just a working discussion on various options.”

3.
RUSADA wants Valieva to get only a warning

As the Court of Arbitration for Sport hearing on the Kamila Valieva doping case continues in Lausanne (SUI), the Director General of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency, Veronika Loginova, have her view of the case to the Russian daily sports newspaper Sport Express:

“As we said earlier, RUSADA believes that the athlete’s side was unable to prove at the level established by the rules the complete absence of her guilt.

“As at the stage of presenting the case to the disciplinary committee, RUSADA believes that the athlete is guilty of violating the rules, however, it is minimal and a reasonable sanction would be a warning.”

That would allow Valieva’s eligibility to be preserved for the 2022 Beijing Olympic Winter Games and have Russia retained as the gold medalists in the figure skating Team event. The World Anti-Doping Agency is asking for a four-year ban.

Russian Olympic Committee chief Pozdnyakov told TASS that he believes the entire proceeding is suspect:

“The defense counsel was chosen by the athlete’s entourage, which means they trust her. As for CAS, the existing negative experience over the past year and a half shows that there is no need to talk about fairness. For me, the fact that even sports arbitration, once independent, is now seriously engaged, is extremely unpleasant. And I am sorry that this process is taking place against the background of undisguised political pressure on all sports structures. Including CAS.

“In our practice, we have not always paid attention to the nationality of the chairman of the court [James Drake/GBR]. In previous years, they looked more at his professionalism, the prospects and the outcome of the cases in which he participated. Today, everyone is in a state of uncertainty. From our point of view, CAS has certainly come under pressure from external factors. And this affects his authority.”

Pozdnyakov was also asked whether he thought the CAS panel was more interested in whether to “bury” Valieva or have the Team event victory handed to the U.S.:

“This medal is what it’s all about.”

The CAS hearing is scheduled to conclude on Thursday, but could continue on Friday if needed.

4.
Fencing rule changes from the Kharlan-Smirnova bout added

It has been widely reported that the Federation Internationale de Escrime (FIE) changed its rules following the 2023 World Championships incident in Milan (ITA) between four-time World Champion Olha Kharlan of Ukraine and Russian Anna Smirnova on 27 July, won by Kharlan, who refused to shake hands, but saluted her with her sabre, but was disqualified.

In fact, the rule change has only now been published in the FIE’s September rules update, reading:

● “t.122 Rule until the end of the 2023-2024 season
“Before the beginning and at the end of a bout, the two fencers must perform the fencer’s salute to their opponent, to the referee and to the spectators, as defined in article t.1.

“When the final hit of the bout has been scored, the two fencers stand still on their on-guard line while the referee is making his/her decision.

“The two fencers then perform the fencer’s salute (cf. t.1) to their opponent, to the referee and to the spectators.

“The bout has then ended.”

● “t.1
“In competition, the fencer’s salute is a gesture of civility towards the opponent, the referee and the spectators.

“To perform the fencer’s salute, the two fencers:
“– face each other
“– stand still on their on-guard line
“– place the mask under the non-sword arm
“– lift the guard to the chin
“– then lower the blade to the ground.”

No more handshakes, as was required under prior editions of the rules, although relaxed due to the Covid-19 pandemic in recent years.

Russian Olympic Committee head Pozdnyakov said in a TASS interview that he still cannot believe what happened in Milan and afterwards:

“The punishment that the judge handed down in that situation was the only correct and logical one. But what began to happen next caused surprise. The IOC’s decision to allocate her a separate quota, to put it mildly, was surprising.

“And to a greater extent not even the decision [to award an Olympic quota spot] itself, but the fact that it was made by a former fencer – the head of the IOC, Thomas Bach. If it were a representative of another sport, one could assume that he does not fully understand how everything works in fencing.

“I couldn’t imagine that something like this could ever happen.”

5.
UEFA to allow Russian U-17 teams to play as neutrals

“UEFA is also aware that children should not be punished for actions whose responsibility lies exclusively with adults and is firmly convinced that football should never give up sending messages of peace and hope. It is particularly aggrieving that, due to the enduring conflict, a generation of minors is deprived of its right to compete in international football.

“For these reasons, the UEFA Executive Committee has decided that Russian teams of minor players will be readmitted to its competitions in the course of this season. In this respect, the Executive Committee has asked the UEFA administration to propose a technical solution that would enable the reinstatement of the Russian U17 teams (both girls and boys) even when draws have already been held. All matches of the Russian teams shall be played without the country flag, anthem, national playing kit and not on the Russian territory.”

That’s from Tuesday’s meeting of the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) Executive Committee in Cyprus, offering a new look at Russian sanctions while continuing its ban on the higher-age national teams:

“At the same time, the Executive Committee reiterated its condemnation of Russia’s illegal war and confirmed that the suspension of all other teams of Russia (clubs and national teams) will remain in force until the end of the conflict in Ukraine.”

After the Russian invasion of Ukraine, UEFA suspended the Russian federation, removed all of its events from Russia, and ended its sponsorship agreement with the Russian energy giant Gazprom.

Ukraine’s football federation reacted angrily:

“UAF strongly condemns today’s UEFA decision on the return of U-17 teams from the Russian Federation to international competitions.

“UAF insists on preserving the previous decisions of UEFA and FIFA regarding the prevention of all Russian teams from participating in international competitions.

“UAF confirms that we will not take part in any competitions with the participation of Russian teams, and appeal to other UEFA member associations to boycott possible matches with the participation of teams from the Russian Federation, subject to their admission.

“We are convinced that the adoption of similar decisions regarding the gradual return of teams from the Russian Federation to participation in competitions in the midst of hostilities conducted by the Russian Federation against Ukraine is groundless and such that it tolerates Russia’s aggressive policy.”

The Swedish football federation, organizers of the 2024 UEFA girls U-17 championship, said that it would not allow a Russian team to play in the tournament.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● A report from the Paris regional and city authorities confirmed that the poor water quality in the Seine River in August that canceled an Olympic test event in open-water swimming and curtailed part of the following triathlon events was due to heavy rains and an open valve at a water-treatment plant.

The valve issues with the Tolbiac-Massena plant were due to storm damage, now repaired, with new monitoring systems being installed to prevent any wastewater leakage. As for the overflow of unexpectedly heavy rains, the continuing construction of rainwater regulators for the Seine and Marne rivers will be completed prior to the Games and create huge storm basins to deal with major rainfall episodes. These efforts should allow public swimming in sections of the Seine again as planned in 2025.

● Olympic Games 2036 ● Poland is now aiming to host the 2036 Olympic Games, with President Andrzej Duda telling reporters in Zakopane during the II European Congress of Sports and Tourism:

After consultations with the Polish Olympic Committee (POC), the Ministry of Sport and Tourism and the government, I would like to say that it is our ambition and intention to start efforts to hold the Summer Olympic Games in our country in 2036.

“In this matter, I will forward a letter to the President of the International Olympic Committee, Thomas Bach, which will be handed to him by the President of the Polish Olympic Committee Rados aw Piesiewicz during the meeting to be held on October 6.”

Poland is coming off a highly successful hosting of the 2023 European Games in Krakow and Malopolska in June and July, with 6,857 athletes from 48 countries competing in 254 events in 29 sports. The current thinking for a 2036 Olympic bid is that the competitions would be centered in and around the national capital of Warsaw.

● Asian Games ● Competition continues at the 19th Asiad in Hangzhou (CHN), with the hosts continuing to crush the rest of the field in most events.

The swimming events have been fierce, with tremendous marks in multiple events:

Men/100 m Free: 46.97, Zhanle Pan (CHN) ~ World Leader
Men/200 m Free: 1:44.40, Sun-woo Hwang (KOR) ~ no. 2 in 2023
Men/100 m Back: 51.91, Jiayu Xu (CHN) ~ relay lead-off; no. 2 in 2023
Men/200 m Medley: 1:54.62, Shun Wang (CHN) ~ World Leader

Women/100 m Free: 52.17, Siobhan Haughey (HKG) ~ no. 2 in 2023
Women/100 m Fly: 55.86, Yufei Zhang (CHN) ~ World Leader
Women/200 m Fly: 2:05.57, Zhang ~ no. 5 in 2023
Women/200 m Medley: 2:07.75, Yiting Yu (CHN) ~ no. 4 in 2023

Still a couple more days to go in the pool, with Xu having won four golds, including the 50-100 m Backs and two relays, and two individual golds on the women’s side for Haughey (100-200 m Frees); Bingjie Li of China in the 400-1,500 m Frees; Zhang in the 100-200 m Flys and Yu in the 200-400 m Medleys. Zhang also had two relay medals so far.

China’s 4×100 m Medley Relay of Xu, World 100-200 m Breast champ Haiyang Qin, Changhao Wang and Pan won in 3:27.01, the no. 2 performance in history behind only the U.S. record swim of 3:26.78 at Tokyo 2020.

In shooting, Kuwait’s Abdullah Al-Rashidi, now 60, the 1995-97-98 World Skeet Champion and Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020 Olympic bronze medalist, not only won the men’s Skeet final, but equaled the world record with a perfect 60-for-60 performance. That was just two shots better than India’s Anantjeet Singh Naruka (58).

The Asian Games continues through 8 October.

● Athletics ● In a guest editorial in the South China Morning Post, World Athletics chief Sebastian Coe (GBR) wrote that track & field needs to continue to innovate. Highlights:

“I wrote at the beginning we had the chance to shape Budapest in our own fashion. We have had medal plazas in the past, but this one just seemed to catch fire. I gave the medals to the 100 metres guys, and Noah Lyles [USA] broke down and said ‘I’ve never been to a medal ceremony like this’.

“In the past we’ve been conservative – we’ve had them in the stadium, often at the end of the evening when most people are actually home or on buses. This time, it was in front of thousands of people in a fan zone. I think it is highly unlikely we are ever going to go back to presentations in a stadium.”

● “We also changed the way that we introduce the athletes. They do not just come out now and find their lane. We showcase it. I think the public needs to be nudged gently about our history. So 1,500 metres winner Josh Kerr [GBR] walked out, past Steve Cram [GBR] and Hicham El Guerrouj [MAR], which shows that we are a sport with a deep history and heritage.”

● “I am very honoured to be given the stewardship of the sport. The first four years were difficult. We had come through a really bad period and it was self-inflicted. We did not have the right governance in place, people behaved appallingly badly. I remember having to travel almost every day of the week, just to keep our sponsors on board.

“The next four years was dealing with all the things that we certainly could not have done while we were in crisis mode: issues around transfers of allegiance, the way the calendar comes together, the challenges of state sponsored doping in Russia and the illegal invasion of Ukraine.

“Then we had to get the building blocks in place before we can really do what I want to in the last four years of my mandate, which is to have a ruthless, forensic analysis of what is working and what isn’t. Particularly around competition.”

“I am not designing the sport just around 15 and 16-year-olds, but you do need to recognise that the world has changed. The way young people consume everything has altered. And we need to make sure that our competitions are exciting and salient.

“We should question whether a nine-day World Championships is too much. Does it fit into the lifestyles of people?

“We talk about our season being May through to September, but it is really July through to September. And that isn’t the basis of a professional sport. So we do need to get the athletes out on more occasions, we need to see more head-to-heads, that is what excites people.”

After removing the 2024 World Athletics Cross Country Championships from Medulin and Pula in Croatia for lack of progress, the federation stayed in the Balkans and awarded the event to Belgrade, Serbia for 30 March. Belgrade previously hosted the 2013 European Cross Country Championships and next year’s event will use the same location.

The dates for the 2026 World Athletics U-20 Championships in Eugene, Oregon were confirmed for 4-9 August.

● Boxing ● World Boxing announced that its inaugural Congress will be held in Frankfurt (GER) on 24-25 November. Elections will be held; look for more federations to join, with the dates now fixed and membership required to vote.

● Luge ● German star Natalie Geisenberger, now 35 and a mother of two, announced her retirement after one of the greatest careers in the sport.

She won nine World Championships golds from 2009-19, including four Singles titles, a Sprint gold and four on the Team Relay, and collected 16 total Worlds medals, right up to a 2021 Singles silver. She won six Olympic golds, doubling in the Singles and Team Relay in 2014-18-22, and earned a singles bronze back in 2010.

She said in a television interview, “I couldn’t be more grateful and proud. It’s always been my dream to end my career with two big smiles on my face. This is the moment to say: Thank you, that’s it!”

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TSX REPORT: Int’l Paralympic Committee to decide on Russia in ‘24; Zhou rips IOC, WADA on Russian doping; $500 shoes helped Assefa’s WR!

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Int’l Paralympic Committee considers Russia at General Assembly
2. Arrest warrant issued in June for Qatar’s bin Hammam
3. U.S. skater Zhou bemoans lengthy Valieva case resolution
4. Assefa’s record marathon aided by $500 adidas shoe
5. Paris 2024 projected to create 181,000 jobs

● The International Paralympic Committee will vote this week whether to allow Russia and Belarus to compete in any form at the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris. So far, the IPC has banned both countries.

● Mohamed bin Hammam of Qatar, a former President of the Asian Football Confederation and a mastermind of Qatar’s winning bid for the 2022 FIFA World Cup had an arrest warrant for corruption issued against him in France in June. He has been banned from football for life by FIFA and his current whereabouts are unknown.

● Figure skater Vincent Zhou, a member of the medal-winning Team Event squad for the U.S. at the Beijing 2022 Winter Games, posted an open letter decrying the long delays in settling the Kamila Valieva case and criticizing the International Olympic Committee, World Anti-Doping Agency and others for failing athletes instead of helping to ensure clean sport.

● The amazing world marathon record by Ethiopia’s Tigst Assefa (2:11:53) was aided by a new adidas shoe which retails (if you can get it) for $500 and is meant to be worn once! Moreover, her time also has to be considered in light of the pacing assistance she received.

● A new study showed that the Paris 2024 Games will create about 181,000 limited-term and short-term jobs, in the construction, Games operations and tourism sectors.

Panorama: Paris 2024 (Minister reiterates no-hijab rule for French athletes in 2024) = Athletics (Dutch star Schippers retires) = Basketball (strong FIBA World Cup viewing in finalist countries) = Bobsled & Skeleton (2: Russia reinstatement not considered as IBSF Congress; Evans files suit for abuse by U.S. federation) = Football (3: modest ratings for Ertz and Rapinoe send-off matches; U.S. Department of Justice forms anti-collusion strike force for 2026 FIFA World Cup; Spain wins first two UEFA Women’s Nations League matches) = Short Track (Santos-Griswold sweeps U.S. nationals!) = Swimming (Nesty and DeSorbo named 2024 Olympic coaches) ●

1.
Int’l Paralympic Committee considers Russia at General Assembly

While the International Olympic Committee continues to stew over whether to admit Russian and Belarusian athletes to the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, the International Paralympic Committee is expected to vote on the issue at its 2023 General Assembly, which began today (27th) in Manama, Bahrain.

Unlike the IOC, the IPC has maintained a firm ban on both Russian and Belarusian participation. At its Extraordinary General Assembly on 16 November 2022 in Berlin (GER), “IPC members voted 64-39 in favour of a motion to suspend NPC Russia (with 16 members abstaining), while 54-45 voted to suspend NPC Belarus (with 18 abstaining).”

The IPC announcement included:

“The decision by IPC members to suspend NPC Russia and NPC Belarus stems from their inability to comply with their membership obligations under the IPC Constitution. This includes the obligations to ‘ensure that, in Para sport within the Paralympic Movement, the spirit of fair play prevails, the safety and health of the athletes are protected, and fundamental ethical principles are upheld’ and ‘not to do anything (by act or omission) that is contrary to the purpose or objects of the IPC and/or that risks bringing the IPC, the Paralympic Movement, or Para sport into disrepute’.”

At the Beijing 2022 Paralympic Winter Games, a decision by the IPC Governing Board to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes as “neutrals” under the Paralympic flag, was reversed on the day before the opening ceremony. IPC President Andrew Parsons (BRA) said in a statement:

“In the last 12 hours an overwhelming number of members have been in touch with us and been very open, for which I am grateful. They have told us that if we do not reconsider our decision, it is now likely to have grave consequences for the Beijing 2022 Paralympic Winter Games. Multiple NPCs, some of which have been contacted by their governments, teams and athletes, are threatening not to compete.

“Ensuring the safety and security of athletes is of paramount importance to us and the situation in the athlete villages is escalating and has now become untenable. First and foremost, we have a duty as part of the Paralympic mission, enshrined in the constitution, to guarantee and supervise the organisation of successful Paralympic Games, to ensure that in sport practiced within the Paralympic Movement the spirit of fair play prevails, violence is banned, the health risk of the athletes is managed and fundamental ethical principles are upheld.

“With this in mind, and in order to preserve the integrity of these Games and the safety of all participants, we have decided to refuse the athlete entries from RPC and NPC Belarus.”

Parsons has said that the IPC will abide by whatever decision is made by its General Assembly.

The Global Athlete activist group published a statement on Tuesday, urging the continuation of the ban on Russia and Belarus, including:

“[W]e echo and amplify the voices of thousands of athletes and twenty-six governments by calling for both Russia and Belarus to be banned from the 2024 Paris Paralympic Games. For nearly twenty months, Russia has waged a war of aggression in Ukraine, aided and abetted by Belarus. The violence has neither ceased nor diminished. Given the continued violation of sovereignty and ever-increasing toll of the conflict, the IPC has an ongoing responsibility as a world leader of sport to uphold its principled suspension of Russian and Belarusian athletes. …

“With the IPC set to deliberate over the fate of the ban during this week’s General Assembly, we reiterate that neutrality is not an option. There is no such thing as a ‘neutral team’ or ‘neutral athlete’ at the Paralympic Games. Nationality is a central element of the Games – athletes are standard-bearers whose success is strongly associated with their homeland, regardless of whether flags, anthems, or national colours are stripped away. Removing identification does not change the fact that a team or an athlete represents their country – and in the case of Russia, represents, and potentially supports or serves for, the Putin regime.

“In concert with athletes from around the world, we urge the IPC to reject pressure from Russia, Belarus, and the International Olympic Committee to create a pathway for Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete. We call on the IPC to uphold the outright ban on Russia and Belarus for the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games.”

2.
Arrest warrant issued in June for Qatar’s bin Hammam

The French all-sports newspaper L’Equipe reported Tuesday that the Parquet National Financier – France’s National Financial Prosecutor’s Office – asked for and received an arrest warrant for former Asian Football Confederation chief Mohamed bin Hammam of Qatar, concerning corruption charges related to the country’s selection as the host of the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

The report explained that the PNF received the warrant for bin Hammam on 23 June 2023, and that the now 74-year-old did not appear for multiple hearings and his present whereabouts are not known.

Bin Hammam was a major power-broker in football as head of the Asian Football Confederation from 2002-2011, and led the lobbying effort for Qatar in the lead-up to the December 2010 vote in which Qatar was surprisingly selected over Australia, South Korea, Japan and the U.S. as the host for 2022. A report in the online magazine Tablet showed that some $330 million in payments was distributed to specific members of FIFA’s Executive Committee, which made the selection.

Bin Hammam then made a brief and unsuccessful run to be FIFA President in 2011, ultimately withdrawing and allowing Swiss Sepp Blatter to run unopposed for a fourth term. He was accused of offering bribes to potential voters prior to his withdrawal and was suspended for life by FIFA’s Ethics Committee. Bin Hammam appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport and had the ban annulled in 2012, but FIFA suspended him for life again in December 2012 for conflicts-of-interest in his role as the head of the Asian Football Confederation.

The French daily Le Monde reported that bin Hammam has been ordered by the Qatari government to remove himself from any public presence since then.

The L’Equipe story characterized the charges as “acts of private corruption related to the awarding of the 2022 Football World Cup.” This specifically included efforts to “neutralize a vote favorable to Qatar’s competitors,” by financially supporting Oceanian Football Confederation head Reynald Temarii (French Polynesia) with the costs of an appeal of a FIFA ban for corruption, with payments of €305,000. Temarii was indicted by the PNF in May. Temarii has denied any wrongdoing; he recently completed an eight-year ban by FIFA imposed in 2014.

3.
U.S. skater Zhou bemoans lengthy Valieva case resolution

“It has been 595 days since my teammates and I earned medals at the Olympics. We still have not received them.”

That’s the beginning of a two-page open letter posted Monday (25th) from U.S. figure skater Vincent Zhou, now 22, who placed third in the men’s Free Skate segment of the figure skating Team Event at the Beijing 2022 Winter Games. The U.S. placed second to Russia on the ice, but the results of the event are still not finalized pending the resolution of the doping positive against Russian skater Kamila Valieva. The appeal by the World Anti-Doping Agency, International Skating Union and Russian Anti-Doping Agency against Valieva’s lenient sanction by the Russian anti-doping appeals board began Tuesday at the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Zhou wrote, in pertinent part:

“While there are significant economic costs associated with not receiving an Olympic medal (sponsors love medals), the real harm has come from the way the ‘situation’ has been handled by sport administrators.

“In the 19 months since we took to the ice in Beijing, my teammates and I have heard almost nothing from the officials handling the case, and we have no reason to believe our interests are being adequately represented. This week, a hearing is scheduled at CAS … The idea that such a hearing will serve the interests of clean athletes is absurd – the Russian ‘Anti-Doping’ Agency has been facilitating Russian doping for over a decade. The IOC, for its part, has repeatedly refused to hold Russia accountable for a state-sponsored doping program involving more than 1,000 athletes. WADA, which is controlled by the IOC through a governing agreement with public authorities, reinstated the Russian Anti-Doping Agency in 2018 despite the agency’s refusal to turn over data detailed the extent of Russian doping. And the ‘court’ in next week’s hearing, CAS, which is an arm of the IOC (its president is the IOC vice-president), has repeatedly sided with Russia – first in overturning the sanctions of Russian athletes and then in watering down the subsequent sanctions on Russia and RUSADA. Who in this panoply of actors represents the interests of me and my teammates, and furthermore, the interests of the broader sporting community?”

And Zhou pulled no punches on blame:

“The situation we found ourselves in at the Beijing Games and the painful process that we have endured since are a direct result of decisions made by the IOC, WADA and CAS. The global sport administrators allowed Russian athletes to compete in the past four Olympics, including Beijing, despite the country’s state-sponsored doping program. The program is widely known to have corrupted multiple Olympic Games and defrauded thousands of athletes. Also, the Russian government has obstructed the pursuit of justice by manipulating data, destroying laboratories, and going so far as to murder whistleblowers in order to undermine investigations. And yet, the Russian team has not been excluded from a single Olympic Games.

“Valieva’s positive drug test is not an isolated incident. My teammates and I are aware of widespread doping by other Russian skaters – and this, unfortunately, should surprise no one, given that a non-compliant anti-doping organization is still tasked with ensuring the integrity of sport inside Russia. …

“As my team’s empty medal boxes show, the global anti-doping system is failing athletes. … Whenever finally held, the awards ceremony for the Beijing 2022 Figure Skating Team Event will be a symbol of the gross failures of the IOC, CAS, RUSADA and other global sporting administrators.”

The letter was accompanied by a photograph of Zhou’s medal case from Beijing, which is, of course, empty, as the Valieva hearing continues this week.

4.
Assefa’s record marathon aided by $500 adidas shoe

Stunning is just one way to describe the 2:11:53 women’s world record in the marathon by Ethiopian Tigst Assefa in Berlin on Sunday, slashing the prior best of 2:14:04 by Kenyan Brigid Kosgei in Chicago in 2019.

Assefa’s run was amazing not just for the sensational final time, but that she ran the race with “negative splits,” meaning the second half was faster than the first! She passed halfway in 1:06:20, then came home in 1:05:33. Her 5 km splits, as reported by Track & Field News:

5 km: 15:59
10 km: 15:46 [31:45]
15 km: 15:42 [47:27]
20 km: 15:26 [1:02:53]
25 km: 15:47 [1:18:40]
30 km: 15:32 [1:34:12]
35 km: 15:30 [1:49:42]
40 km: 15:32 [2:05:14]
42.2 km: 6:39 [2:11:53]

Association of Track & Field Statisticians Treasurer Tom Casacky (USA) points out that Assefa did have help:

“She was paced all the way to the last 400-600m by her countryman Girmay [Birhanu] Gebru, in company with several others for parts of the way, and by Jared Ward from 28 km until the last mile or so.

“2:11:53 is an impressive time for any human in the marathon, but like so many others, this was a time trial, not a proper ‘race.’ For that, a women-only event without pacers is necessary.”

(Gebru finished 30th overall in 2:12:31; the U.S.’s Ward was 27th in 2:11:44.)

World Athletics keeps a separate record for women-only races, with the record being 2:17:01 by Mary Keitany (KEN) from London in 2017, but that race had pacesetters as well. Casacky noted, “the fastest marathon ever run by a woman in a women’s-only race, without pacers, on a legitimate out-and-back (loop) course, is apparently the 2:18:11 at last year’s Eugene World Championships [by Gotytom Gebreslase/ETH].”

Assefa also benefitted from a new shoe, the adidas Adizero Adios Pro Evo 1, which is reportedly designed to be worn only once and which retails for $500 U.S., and is shown as sold out on the adidas Web site. The description:

“Meet a running shoe like no other. The Adizero Adios Pro Evo 1 is a prototype enhanced with unique technology that challenges the boundaries of racing. Featuring a liquid rubber outsole, a state-of-the-art forefoot rocker, and the latest version of the LIGHTSTRIKE PRO foam, this model embodies performance running innovation.”

Assefa held up the shoes after the race and later told reporters:

“This is the lightest racing shoe I have ever worn and the feeling of running in them is an incredible experience, like nothing I’ve felt before. I knew I wanted to go for the world record but I never thought I would do this time. It was the result of hard work.”

The new shoe has a sole thickness of 39 mm, just under the 40 mm limit, and weighs just 138 g (4.87 oz.).

Tweeted 1984 British Olympian Tim Hutchings, a four-time World Cross Country silver medalist who ran 13:11.50 for 5,000 m and 28:07.57 for 10,000 m:

“‘We no longer have historical context on what times mean.’ – that’s the great sadness. We all have to accept tech advances. But listen to any sport on TV; data & comparisons are everywhere. Yet they’re impossible now, unless you only care about the last 4-5 years.”

Kenya’s Agnes Ngetich’s apparent women-only world-record runs in the women’s 5 km and 10 km on 10 September at the Transylvania 10K in Brasov (ROU), will not be ratified as the course was short. From a Facebook post by the organizers:

During the homologation process of the World Record set by Agnes Ngetich that required a remeasurement, it was indicated that the course used in Brasov, on September 10, differed with 25m from the certified circuit. Although barely relevant in relation to the 36 seconds that Agnes Ngetich took from the previous World Record, this difference makes the result technically non-ratifable. …

“We understand that such an error is way below the standard of our event, and we will take all the measures so that it never repeats.”

The organizers announced that Ngetich is prepared to try for these women-only race records again in 2024. She ran 29:24 for the 10 km distance, way ahead of the women-only 30:01 by the late Agnes Tirop (KEN) from 2021, and 14:25 en route for 5 km, better than the women-only 14:29 by Senbere Teferi (ETH) in 2021.

5.
Paris 2024 projected to create 181,000 jobs

A new study by Limoges Center for Sports Law and Economics (CDES) projects that the 2024 Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games will create 181,000 jobs, mostly in construction, Games operations and tourism:

● 30,000 in construction
● 89,300 in Games operations
● 61,800 in tourism

The leading sectors include catering (40,000), private security (26,000), marketing support (13,000) and logistics (10,000). The Paris 2024 organizers have 1700 staff now, 2,000 by the end of the year and about 4,000 by the time of the Games.

A major job fair was held in Paris on Tuesday, looking to fill 16,000 positions, with the Sodexo Live catering operation looking for 6,000 people and the RATP and SCNF transit groups also looking for workers.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Paris 2024 ● During a Sunday interview, French Sports Minister Amelie Oudea-Castera confirmed a Conseil d’Etat court ruling in June, saying that no French athletes would be allowed to wear a hijab at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, with a policy of “a strict regime of secularism, applied rigorously in the field of sport.

“What does that mean? That means a ban on any type of proselytising and the absolute neutrality of the public service.”

Her ministry noted in a statement:

“French teams are subject to the principle of public service neutrality, from the moment they are selected to this end in all national and international competitions. Thus, one cannot wear a headscarf (or any other accessory or outfit demonstrating a religious affiliation) when representing France in a national or international sporting competition.”

The United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights criticized the announcement, with spokeswoman Maria Hurtado (ESP) adding, “No one should impose on a woman what she needs to wear, or not wear.”

● Athletics ● Dutch sprint star Dafne Schippers, who started as a heptathlete, but became the 2015 and 2017 World Champion in the 200 m, announced her retirement at 31. She wrote on Instagram, in part:

“Today, I have decided to take my life off track to pursue and embrace whatever comes next, but not without saying a massive thank you for all the endless support. It has been a journey without regret.”

She won a Worlds bronze in the heptathlon in 2013 and scored a best of 6,545 points. But she changed to the sprints and was European Champion in the 100 and 200 m in 2014 and then took the 2015 Worlds gold in the 200 (plus a 100 m silver), an Olympic silver at 200 m in 2016 and another 200 World title in 2017. Injuries slowed her after that, finishing in 2022 with five meets in the 100 m only.

She finishes with bests of 10.81 in the 200 m (2015) and 21.63 – no. 6 all-time – in the 200 (2015), and was a 22-time national champion.

● Basketball ● FIBA reported strong viewership of the men’s World Cup for the Serbia vs. Germany final, with a 59% share of audience for the game in Serbia and 35% in Germany. The tournament was shown in 190 countries, a 15% increase over the 2019 edition.

● Bobsled & Skeleton ● The International Bobsleigh & Skeleton Federation Congress met in Barcelona (ESP) on Sunday, but the topic of Russian re-entry for the 2023-24 season was not discussed. Russian Bobsleigh Federation President Anatoly Pegov told the Russian news agency TASS:

“At last year’s Congress, the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation made a decision to impose a temporary ban on all athletes of the Russian Bobsleigh Federation or athletes linked with the Russian Bobsleigh Federation from taking part in IBSF competitions until further notice and until the situation improves so that the Russian Bobsleigh Federation’s teams could be allowed to take part in competitions.

“The Executive Committee enjoys the right to revoke the temporary suspension either partially or fully as soon as it deems expedient taking into account the analysis of the circumstances that have led to this measure. Regrettably, the IBSF Executive Committee did not think it possible to change this decision and put this matter for consideration at today’s Congress.

“The general atmosphere at the congress was calm, although some participants made negative remarks in respect of the Russian delegation. Our bobsledders and skeleton racers will continue training and competing in Russia to prepare for international tournaments when the IBSF makes a positive decision concerning our athletes.”

Former NCAA shot put All-American-turned-Olympic bobsledder Aja Evans filed suit in New York last Thursday (21st) against USA Bobsled & Skeleton, Dr. John Wilhelm, Pro Chiropractic and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee, alleging “sexual abuse and harrassment” over many years.

According to the complaint, Evans – a Sochi 2014 Olympic bronze medalist in the two-woman sled – was assaulted “under the guise of athletic medical care” by Wilhelm, a team osteopathic medical provider. She alleged that much of the abuse took place at the USA Bobsled headquarters in Lake Placid, N.Y.

Wilhelm’s attorney issued a statement denying all claims made against him.

● Football ● Modest television ratings for the farewell matches for Julie Ertz and Megan Rapinoe last week in friendlies against South Africa. On Thursday, the U.S. women’s 3-0 win in Ertz’s finale was watched by an average of 249,000 on TNT. Sunday’s 2-0 win in Chicago had an average of 344,000 during the game, preceded by 266,000 for the half-hour pregame on TNT that saluted Rapinoe.

“The [U.S.] Justice Department announced today, alongside its partners from Mexico’s Federal Economic Competition Commission (COFECE) and Canada’s Competition Bureau, the launch of a joint initiative to deter, detect and prosecute collusive schemes related to the provision of goods and services in connection with the 2026 FIFA World Cup.”

Friday’s announcement also explained:

“Through this initiative, the enforcement agencies will collaborate on outreach to the public and business community about anti-competitive conduct, as well as on investigations, using intelligence sharing and existing international cooperation tools.”

A “Procurement Collusion Strike Force” has been set up and is interested in receiving information on “market allocation, price fixing, bid rigging or other anticompetitive conduct.”

In the aftermath of an agreement with the Spanish federation (RFEF) to improve conditions, Spain’s Women’s World Cup champions returned to the field with impressive victories in the UEFA Nations League Group 4. The Spanish came from behind to beat Sweden in Goteborg (SWE), 3-2, finally winning in stoppage time at 90+6 on a penalty kick from forward Mariona Caldentey.

On Tuesday, the Spanish had no trouble with Switzerland in Cordoba (ESP), winning by 5-0, with Aitana Bonmati scoring twice.

● Short Track ● Beijing 2022 Olympian Kristen Santos-Griswold came into the USA Speedskating Short Track Nationals in Kearns, Utah as the favorite after a brilliant World Cup season. And she showed why, sweeping all six events on the way to national titles in the women’s 500 m, 1,000 m and 1,500 m!

500 m: Santos-Griswold beat Corinne Stoddard in the first final, 42.723 to 42.839, then won the second final over Julie Letai, 42.593 to 43.170.

1,000 m: Santos-Griswold and Stoddard were 1-2 again in the first final, 1:38.373 to 1:38.493, and went 1-2 in the second final, 1:27.422 to 1:27.559.

1,500 m: Santos-Griswold won the first final in 2:50.772, over Stoddard (2:50.859), then they went 1-2 again in the second final, 2:14.572 to 2:14.491.

Santos-Griswold, of course, ended with a perfect overall score of 60,000 points, with Stoddard at 47.720 and Letai third (44,625). In addition to the six wins, Santos-Griswold also set a U.S. record in the 1,500 m at 1500m with her second final time of 2:14.572. Stoddard finished second overall in the 1,000 m and 1,500 m, with Letai grabbing second in the 500 m. In the men’s racing:

500 m: Marcus Howard took the first final in 41.603, beating Brandon Kim (41.678), but Kim won the second final over Seung-Min Kwon, 40.864 to 41.297, with Howard third (41.615).

1,000 m: Howard took the first final over Clayton DeClemente, 1:34.986 to 1:35.074, then Wesley Park won the second final, 1:25.029 to 1:25.128 over DeClemente.

1,500 m: DeClemente won the first race in 2:18.702 over Andrew Heo (2:18.869), while Howard won the second final in 2:18126 over Kim (2:18.131).

Howard came out the overall winner with 42,024 points, ahead of Kim (41,877) and DeClemente (35,399). Kim was the 500 m event winner, with DeClemente winning at 1,000 m and Howard taking the 1,500 m title.

● Swimming ● USA Swimming announced Florida head coach Anthony Nesty and Virginia head coach Todd DeSorbo as the head men’s and women’s coaches for the Paris 2024 Olympic swim team for 2024.

The pair are supremely experienced, as both served as assistant coaches for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic teams and as head coaches for the USA Swimming teams at the 2022 World Aquatics Championships in Hungary.

Nesty was an Olympic gold medalist for Suriname in 1988 in the 100 m Butterfly, and has been the Florida men’s coach since 2018, and for both men and women since 2021. DeSorbo’s Virginia women’s teams are the three-time defending NCAA team champions.

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VOX POPULI: Track & Field: Stupid Rules, and Stupider Management

We have passionate readers of TheSportsExaminer.com, perhaps none more so than Ron Brumel, a 220-440-yard sprinter at Brooklyn College in New York, where he earned a Bachelor’s in Psychology in 1969, and later a Master’s in Exercise Physiology from the University of Oregon in 1975. He embarked on a life-long teaching and coaching career in 1972, with four years in Oregon and nearly 50 in Los Angeles, notably as the highly-successful distance coach of Palisades High School from 1990 to 2011. Just a rant he wanted to share:

I have been an athlete, coach, and minor official in the sport, but most of all, I’m a track & field fan and a believer. I’ve coached high school and middle school since 1970, and continue to this day as a retired teacher and head track & field and cross country coach. Currently running an after-school program at Paul Revere Middle School, along with former world-class decathlete Paul Foxson and former UCLA Bruin, Chris Brazil.

Our enrollment for cross country is at 108 athletes (boys & girls), thanks to an amazing physical education program that has multiple incentives for running and fitness, including T-shirts with “super-hero” status, high recognition in student publications and announcements following meets, and just plain enthusiasm from the P.E. staff and faculty and administration, not to mention parental support on every level.

Point being: sports which are not necessarily intrinsically rewarding, that require hard, often painful workouts, discipline, consistency and effort, can be made attractive on a participatory level, so why not on the professional level, with a potentially HUGE fan base, given that the NUMBER ONE participatory high school sport for females is T&F, and is also the NUMBER TWO for males.

Yet, when I bring up the current stars of the World Championships on TV, I get blank stares from the kids. Names like Sydney McLaughlin, Athing Mu and Jakob Ingebrigtsen are unknown, as are historically great names such as Jesse Owens, Carl Lewis and Wilma Rudolph. Possibly even worse, many – if not most – of the coaches that I work with are equally ignorant and/or are limited in their knowledge of multi-events as well as current athletics in general.

Regarding Noah Lyles: So great to have an outspoken, articulate and highly accomplished athlete at the forefront of our sport. And NOT a college graduate. An original original.

While I don’t necessarily agree with many of his promotional ideas, at least they are out there, and are attracting eyeballs and ear drums (Deion Sanders, anyone? Making Colorado football an overnight media sensation).

I’ve often thought of having a website called “If Other Sports were as Stupid as Track and Field.” For instance:

Baseball: One strike and you’re out, all uniforms the same for both teams, no numbers on uniforms, announcing fastballs in kilometers per hour.

Football: Same ideas, one down to make a first down, same uniforms, announcing yardage gains in meters, as well as kick returns and field goal distances. Penalties determined electronically, such as offsides or false starts in hundredths of seconds, instead of referee-eyeball decisions.

Soccer: Fuggetaboutit.

Basketball: Similar to above re uniforms; also, one foul and you’re out.

NOW for some radical ideas that may put eyeballs on screen, and people in seats, or NOT. Many ideas have been bandied about by the “managers” of the sport, other athletes, coaches, friends and fans, so not totally radical or original.

In no particular order, these are my ideas, going back, in many cases, to my youth, when these were common practices, and track was still alive as a popular spectator sport:

[1.] False start rule: no brainer here. Keep the one-and-done rule for all meets with multiple rounds, UNTIL the final, then apply the one on the field. The idiocy of determining false starts in thousandths of a second needs to be revised, to a visually noticed false start, then-and-only-then to be verified electronically, when, and only when, the start is more than 0.0 seconds (think of the paying spectators who missed out on Devon Allen and Usain Bolt not being able to run because of a barely-noticeable flinch). This rule – one false start on the field – should also be applied to Diamond League events, and non-Diamond League invitationals as well. Absolutely, the dumbest of the dumb rules.

[2.] Political entries: The limitation of athletes to world-class events should eliminate the citizenship of a country as an element of eligibility.

For instance, at one point, the Soviet Union, comprised of multiple large countries, was still only permitted three-per-“nation,” including Ukraine and Georgia. At the same time, Germany had six entries, because of the division into East and West prior to unification. After 1990, the country was doubled in size and lost half of their eligibles.

Simply stated, the top nine athletes in events currently run in lanes, should be eligible to run in the World Championships or Olympic Games. This would include American hurdlers (male and female), African distance runners, etc. The qualifying standard for distance events – not run in lanes – should be the same number eligible to make a World Championships final (16?).

The field for those outside the 9-16 world rankers, could then be filled in by other countries. (Still not happy about Keni Harrison being left off of 2016 U.S. Olympic Team, only to break the world record later that season).

[3.] Alternate distances based on common sense.

Currently, all distances in world-class events are measured metrically, even though historically based on the English measurement system. Consider: 100 yards, 220 yards (furlong, still common in horse racing) 440 yards (quarter mile) 880 yards (half mile), mile, and two-mile. So 100 m, 200 m,400 m, 800 m, and the worst of all, the 1,500 m. Seriously, you would rather watch a 1,500 m than a mile? Or 1,600 m? The four-minute mile is still the most well known (by non-track fans), but the 3:40 1,500 m barrier? Who cares? Not me. (By the way, that’s probably about a 3:57 mile, but who cares?)

BRING BACK THE MILE, and 2, 3 and 6 miles. And while you’re at it, how about 100 yards as an attraction – size of an American Football field would attract much interest – vs. 100 meters (how long is that?). For that matter, why not go back to English/American distances for USA champs, even in Olympic years?

ALTERNATIVELY:

COMPLETELY REVAMP all current races to be metric-centric based on fractions of a KILOMETER rather than fractions of a mile. This idea alone would increase interest throughout the non-English world (uhh, USA?), giving us the 100 meters, 250 m, 500 m, 1000 m, 2000 m, 5000 m and 10,000 m as the World Championships and Olympic distances.

If you’re wondering about history, why not think about whatever happened to the standing long/triple/high jumps, or left and right shot putting distances. Every sport undergoes radical revisions at one time or another. Now both major leagues use the designated hitter, pitch clock, and a runner-on-second starting in extra innings. And they actually pay their athletes as well. A major league bench warmer makes more than World or Olympic champions in track & field. Think radically.

[4.] Events in lanes: eliminate them.

Other than the hurdles, and the 100 and 200 m, lanes should be eliminated. Think about indoor track, where the 400 m is in lanes only until the second curve, then, let the elbows fly. Why not the 400 m off of a curved start, or possibly a one-turn stagger? No more guessing who’s really in the lead until the final curve.

Hey, if thoroughbreds can come off a common start, and quickly accelerate to 40 mph, how about bipeds off a common line, accelerating up to 20 mph? Repeat: Let the elbows fly (helmets are optional)!

I’m gonna stop here, feel free to criticize, even though you know that I’m RIGHT.

Comments on Ron’s comment are welcome here.

[≡The Sports Examiner encourages expressions of opinion – we really do – but preferably based on facts. Send comments to [email protected]. We do not guarantee publication of any comment, but all comments submitted will be considered and your submission implies your agreement to publication (and light editing if needed to meet our grammatical and punctuation standards) at our sole discretion. Please include your name and hometown on any comment submitted for publication.≡]

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TSX REPORT: Assefa solos to 2:11:53 record-smasher in Berlin; more WADA Russia sanctions, U.S. lifter abused at IWF Worlds weigh-in

The clock says it all: a 2:11:53 world record for Tigst Assefa to win the Berlin Marathon! (Photo: SCC Events by Jean-Marc Wiesner)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Assefa smashes women’s marathon record in Berlin: 2:11:53!
2. WADA ExCo extends Russian sanctions … again
3. U.S.’s Vibert rips IWF for weigh-in humiliation at Worlds
4. Asian Games opens with dazzling ceremony and lots of politics
5. U.S. women beat South Africa, 2-0, in Rapinoe’s farewell

● Ethiopia’s defending Berlin Marathon champ Tigst Assefa didn’t just win again, she obliterated the world record with a stunning 2:11:53 win, taking 2:11 off the mark. Kenyan star Eliud Kipchoge win his fifth Berlin Marathon title in 2:02:42, the no. 8 performance in history.

● The World Anti-Doping Agency Executive Committee imposed sanctions on two national anti-doping agencies, on PanAm Sports and imposed new sanctions on Russia for continuing to have the World Anti-Doping Code integrated into the country’s legal system.

● American weightlifter (and Olympic medal winner) Kate Vibert shared a humiliating experience during her weigh-in at the World Weightlifting Championships from two International Weightlifting Federation technical officials in Saudi Arabia, and USA Weightlifting demanded accountability from the federation.

● The 19th Asian Games are underway in Hangzhou, China after an opening ceremony heavy on technology and politics. Chinese Premier Xi Jinping opened the event, with Syrian head of state al-Asaad and International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach of Germany in attendance. The show was a high-tech showcase, with a digital floor and a digital figure lighting the Games cauldron with Olympic swimming champ Shun Wang.

● The U.S. Women’s National Team closed out a two-game series against South Africa with a 2-0 win in Chicago in the final national-team game for star forward Megan Rapinoe. Trinity Rodman and Emily Sonnett got the goals; Rapinoe left to a huge ovation after 53 minutes of play.

World Championships: Breaking (U.S.’s Victor and Lithuania’s Nicka win golds) Canoe-Kayak (Britain and Fox star at Slalom Worlds) = Rugby (France, Ireland, Wales, England lead groups at 3-0) = Triathlon (Connix and Potter take world titles) = Wrestling (Azerbaijan takes Greco title; U.S. wins most total medals) ●

Panorama: Athletics (2: Gletty and Oosterwegal win Decastar; Young and Kelati win 10 km national titles) = Cycling (Daudet and Sakakibara take BMX World Cup titles) = Judo (Azeribaijan and Russia win three each in Baku Grand Slam) = Sport Climbing (China sweeps Speed, Japan sweeps Lead titles in World Cup closer) = Tennis (Haggerty re-elected as ITF chief) = Volleyball (U.S. women in for Paris from FIVB qualifier) ●

Schedule: Sorry, no TSX post on Tuesday, but back in action on Wednesday! ●

1.
Assefa smashes women’s marathon record in Berlin: 2:11:53!

In a year which has seen the women’s world-record lists re-written in the 1,500 m, mile and 5,000 m, another stupendous performance saw Ethiopia’s Tigst Assefa now only defend her Berlin Marathon title on Sunday, but destroy the women’s world mark, winning in an astonishing 2:11:53.

The best-on-record had been Kenyan Brigid Kosgei’s 2:14:04 at the 2019 Chicago Marathon, but Assefa – who came in with a best of 2:15:37 from last year’s Berlin win – was part of a 13-member pack at 5 km and 10 km, then broke away and was all alone by the 20 km mark, with a 27-second lead. The crusher was in the 16th kilometer, when she ran 2:59 to sail away from countrywoman Workenesh Edesa.

Now the question was how fast could she run? All by herself, she passed the halfway mark in 1:06:20, with a 31-second lead, 30 km in 1:34:12 – no. 2 all-time! – and 40 km in 2:05:13 on her way to the finish in 2:11:53.

Assefa, 29, was an 800 m runner early in her career and was a 2016 Olympian for Ethiopia in the event, eliminated in the heats in Rio. She turned to the roads in 2018, but didn’t break through until 2022, winning Berlin in 2:15:37, along with three 10 km and three Half Marathon wins, plus an early-season seventh in the marathon in Riyadh (KSA). Her win Sunday was in her first race in 2023.

She improved the Kosgei’s mark by 2:11, the biggest jump since Norwegian icon Grete Waitz moved the world best from 2:32:30 to 2:27:33 in the 1978 and 1979 New York Marathons. Assefa ran the second half in 1:05:33, 47 seconds faster than the first half!

Assefa’s time raises the question of when will a woman run under 2:10? As it is, her 2:11:53 would have been the men’s world best as late as 1967, when Australian Derek Clayton ran 2:09:37 in December. It took about 2 1/2 years to go from Morlo Shigematsu (JPN)’s 2:12:00 in 1965 to Clayton, so could we see a women’s sub-2:10 this decade?

The race was so fast that the top 19 all broke 2:20. Sheila Chepkirui (KEN) was second with her best World Marathon Majors placement ever, in 2:17:49, followed by Magdalena Shauri (TAN: 2:18:41) and Zeineba Yimer (ETH: 2:19:07). Annie Frisbie was the top American in 17th at 2:27:02.

Overshadowed by Assefa’s monumental achievement was Kenyan superstar Eliud Kipchoge, who showed he is still a force with a convincing win in 2:02:42 for his fifth win in Berlin and second consecutive. He passed the halfway point in 1:00:22 and was alone after 30 km, winning by 31 seconds over Vincent Kipkemoi (KEN: 2:03:13). Ethiopia’s Tadese Takele was third in 2:03:24, with Ronald Korir (KEN: 2:04:22) and Haftu Teklu (ETH: 2:04:42) fifth.

The top American finisher was Teshome Mekonen in 24th in 2:10:16, with Rio Olympian Jared Ward in 27th in 2:11:44.

Kipchoge’s time was the no. 8 performance in history and he owns five of the eight. Kipkemoi’s 2:03:13 pulls him into a four-way tie for no. 11 on the all-time list.

There was the widely-expected protest by the German climate-activist group Last Generation, which tried to interfere with the start of the race, pouring orange paint on part of the roadway. The protesters were quickly removed by police and the race was held without further incident.

2.
WADA ExCo extends Russian sanctions … again

The World Anti-Doping Agency’s Executive Board had a busy meeting on Friday in Shanghai (CHN), imposing new conditions for reinstatement on Russia, holding two National Ando-Doping Organizations as non-compliant and also holding PanAm Sports as noncompliant a month before the 2023 Pan American Games.

Although the sanctions imposed by the Court of Arbitration for Sport against the Russian Anti-Doping Agency expired in December 2022, WADA has not confirmed the organization as compliant with the World Anti-Doping Code due to the lack of integration of the Code by legislation there. WADA noted the issue in September of 2022 and although the legislative fix is pending in the Russian State Duma, it has not been implemented.

The Russian news agency TASS noted, “The Russian cabinet of ministers decided to deprive the Sports Ministry of the authority to adopt regulations that lay down nationwide anti-doping rules.”

The new sanctions package bars RUSADA representatives from participating in WADA governance, hosting any WADA events or receiving WADA funding.

Further, the new sanctions continue the ban on Russia hosting any regional, continental or world championships – which the current International Olympic Committee sanctions also require – and require that the Russian flag not be flown at any regional, continental or world championships, or at the Olympic Games. The current IOC sanctions also cover these elements, but are now also backed by WADA.

Russian Olympic Committee chief Stanislav Pozdnyakov told TASS: “For the time being, I don’t even know how to react to this. But we will soon hold consultations with lawyers and the law department over this decision.”

Last week, Evgeny Revenko, a member of the State Duma Committee on Physical Culture and Sports, told a clean-sport conference, “An international public organization cannot and should not dictate what national laws and rules apply in our country.”

The two national anti-doping organizations to be held non-compliant are in Bermuda and South Africa, “due to a failure to appropriately implement the Code into their legal systems.” Because of this, both countries will be sanctioned with no flag to attend their participation at the 2024 Olympic Games, or at regional, continental or world championships, a ban on hosting such events and no participation in WADA funding of offices.

And four more must become compliant:

“The ExCo also followed the recommendation of the [Compliance Review Committee] to place the NADOs from the following countries on the ‘watchlist’, giving them an additional four months to correct outstanding non-conformity(ies): Algeria, Angola NOC (acting as a NADO), Ecuador, Mongolia, Morrocco, and the Philippines.”

The sanctions against PanAm Sports involve ineligibility for its officers and staff not to hold any WADA offices or host events and will not create any difficulties for the operation of the Pan Am Games in Santiago (CHI), however, “[t]here will be Supervision of the entire testing program implemented by Panam Sports at its Events at Panam Sports’s expense until Reinstatement.”

3.
U.S.’s Vibert rips IWF for weigh-in humiliation at Worlds

“Due to a new [International Weightlifting Federation] rule requiring us to wear singlets at weigh-in, many athletes sought out alternative options for a lighter costume. This lighter singlet was legless, but adhered to the rules in place. My teammates who competed before me wore it and officially weighed in with it, yet after some pushback we got formal approval from the IWF technical committee prior to my competition day.

“I stripped down to said singlet at my weigh in. The officials immediately expressed their disapproval, pointing repeatedly at my chest. They both spoke to each other in a language I couldn’t understand, and told me ‘no, unacceptable’ while staring and pointing directly at my breasts. Without the support and coverage of a sports bra, they seemingly took offense to my natural body under the singlet. The chest area of the singlet violated absolutely no rules for IWF costume guidelines. Any ‘offensive’ part of my body was covered and I was denied to wear this singlet at all simply due to the fact that I am not built similarly to most weightlifters. I was embarrassed, humiliated, and angry.

‘Wanting the whole thing to be over, I had my coach grab my competition singlet. Thanks to @apexpnc [Apex Performance], I was well underweight and knew I would be under 71.0kg with the heavier costume.”

That’s American lifting star Kate Vibert, the Tokyo Olympic silver medalist in the women’s 76 kg class, explaining her painful weigh-in incident on Instagram late last week, after the close of the 2023 World Weightlifting Championships in Riyadh (KSA).

Vibert ended up fifth in the 71 kg competition on 13 September and said the weigh-in drama earlier in the day did not impact her, but drew a sharp public rebuke on Thursday from USA Weightlifting, with chief executive Matt Sicchio posting a message that included:

“The body shaming and humiliation she experienced from the international technical officials responsible for her weigh-in is not acceptable in any context, and certainly not as an elite athlete preparing to represent her country at the highest level of our sport. USAW is submitting a formal complaint to the IWF to demand accountability from the technical officials responsible for Kate’s weigh-in and action from the IWF to ensure no such experience happens to any other athletes at future IWF competitions. We are asking the IWF for swift and decisive action on this matter.

“Three other athletes, including another member of Team USA, weighed-in with the same singlet design as Kate under the watch of different technical officials and without incident. Kate deserved to be treated equitably and professionally. We share her anger and dismay that she was not.”

Sicchio also noted that the incident will result in new procedures from the U.S. for the future:

“Importantly, it should not have taken Kate’s Instagram post to elevate this incident to our leadership team’s attention. While we were on site in Riyadh to provide support to Kate during this incident, we could have been quicker to bring this matter to IWF decision-makers and demand action. We are using it as an opportunity to retrain our team so that we continue to be the strongest advocates for Team USA athletes.”

Observed: This is a bad, self-inflicted wound by the IWF, which is trying to get back onto the Olympic program for 2028. In a time of significantly-increased emphasis by the IOC on gender equity, to have this kind of situation emerge is a step backwards and requires fast work by the IWF, which assured Sicchio that swift action will be taken.

4.
Asian Games opens with dazzling ceremony and lots of politics

The 19th Asian Games opened on Saturday (23rd) in Hangzhou (CHN), with a heavy display of technology and politics in an enormous event that had to be delayed by a year due to Covid-19.

A crowd of 80,000-plus at the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Center Stadium saw Chinese President Xi Jinping formally opened the Games, sitting next to International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach (GER), United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres (POR) and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, among others.

It was widely noticed that Afghanistan’s delegation walked in with men and women marching together, and led by the resistance flag instead of the one approved by the ruling Taliban. North Korea entered 132 athletes, its first major appearance at an international games since the Covid pandemic; although it remains non-compliant with the World Anti-Doping Agency and it flag is not supposed to be flown, it was used at the opening. Reuters reported that “WADA wrote to the OCA to remind them of their obligations and to inform them that a compliance procedure would be opened against them as appropriate.”

The show elements were spectacular, with a cast of thousands of dancers and performers further enlivened the backdrop of glass-free 3-D animations and digitally-enhanced projections on the oval-shaped floor and background screens.

Of course, the lighting of the torch had a major digital element, with a Transformer-like digital figure – made up of over 100 million virtual sparks – running through the streets of Hangzhou, crossing the Qiantangjing River and entering the stadium to light the cauldron alongside Tokyo women’s Olympic 200 m Medley Shun Wang. The ceremony concluded with a light show of “digital fireworks.”

China won the first medal of the Games on Sunday morning, with Jiaqi Zou and Xiuping Qiu taking the women’s Lightweight Double Sculls. And the Chinese won all seven events in swimming on the first night, with world-leading performances from Zhanle Pan in the men’s 100 m Free (46.97, no. 5 all-time) and Wang, who won the 200 m Medley in 1:54.62 to move to no. 3 all-time. Yufei Zhang, the World 100 m Butterfly gold medalist, won the 200 m Fly in 2:05.51, moving to no. 4 in the world for 2023.

The Asian Games is enormously important in Asia and far more important in its region than the Pan American Games is in the U.S. A reported 12,417 athletes from 45 countries were entered, in 481 events across 40 sports. It’s worth noting a comparison with the Olympic Games in 2024, which will have 10,500 athletes in 329 events in 32 sports.

The Games will continue through 8 October, with China certain to lead the medal table again.

5.
U.S. women beat South Africa, 2-0, in Rapinoe’s farewell

The second of two friendlies between the U.S. Women’s National Team and South Africa, this time in Chicago, saw a convincing, 2-0 win for the Americans in the final national-team game for star forward Megan Rapinoe.

The game opened with the U.S. constantly in possession, but unable to score until the 18th minute, when Trinity Rodman’s right-footed volley smash from the middle of the penalty area found the net off of Alex Morgan’s perfect cross from near the endline at the far side of the South African net, for a 1-0 lead.

It was Rodman’s fourth goal of the year and sixth in international competition. She barely missed a second goal in the 33rd on a drive from the top of the box that went just wide. Rapinoe got a couple of open looks from long range, but was unable to get the ball on frame. The U.S. had 60% of possession and a 10-0 advantage on shots.

In the 49th, an in-swinging Rapinoe corner was punched away by South African keeper Andile Diamini, but not cleared and Emily Sonnett headed it in over Diamini’s head for a 2-0 lead. Rapinoe then took a free kick from 20 yards out three minutes later than just skimmed over the net, and she exited the game in the 53rd – for Midge Purce – to loud cheers from the crowd.

The U.S. continued with control, but did not score again, although Rodman’s rocket from 25 yards out hammered the crossbar. The game finished with the U.S. holding 63% of possession and a 19-0 shots advantage. Casey Murphy got the shutout in goal for the Americans, who out-scored South Africa by 5-0 over the two-game set.

Rapinoe finished with 203 appearances for the national team from 2006-23, scoring 63 goals and contributing 73 assists. Although her national team career is concluded, she will finish her NWSL season with the OL Reign in Seattle into October.

She will be remembered as a brilliant playmaker and scorer, with perhaps the best pass in American soccer history – men or women – with her cross-field rainbow to the head of striker Abby Wambach for the tying goal in the 122nd minute of the 2011 FIFA Women’s World Cup quarterfinal against Brazil to send the match into overtime for an eventual U.S. win.

Rapinoe played on four Women’s World Cup teams, reaching the final in 2011 and winning in 2015 and 2019. She won the Golden Ball Award for best player and Golden Boot award as the top scorer in 2019, and was recognized as the women’s Player of the Year. In two Olympic appearances, she was on the gold-medal team in 2012 and the bronze winners in Tokyo.

The U.S. women will be in action again in October against Colombia for two friendlies, on the 26th in Sandy, Utah, and the 29th in San Diego, California.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Break Dancing ● At the 2023 World DanceSport Federation World Breaking Championships in Leuven (BEL), American star Victor (Victor Montalvo) – the 2022 World Games champ – defeated defending champion Phil Wizard (Philip Kim: CAN), 2-1 on the judges’ scorecards, in the final for the men’s world title, winning his second Worlds gold, previously in 2021.

Sixteen-year-old Nicka (Dominika Banevic: LTU) won the women’s gold over 2021 World Champion Ayumi (Ayumi Fukushima: JPN), also by 2-1. It’s the first time that a dancer from other than Japan has won the women’s event in four editions.

● Canoe-Kayak ● The British team thrilled the home fans at Lee Valley (GBR) with five wins in the 10 events of the 2023 ICF World Canoe Slalom Championships.

The men’s star was Joseph Clarke, the Rio 2016 K-1 Olympic champ, who won his fourth and fifth career Worlds golds by taking the K-1 in 91.32 (0 penalties) from Tokyo Olympic champ Jiri Prskavec (CZE: 91.26/0), and then winning the Kayak Cross event – which will be contested at Paris 2024 for the first time – ahead of Boris Neveu (FRA), a two-time K-1 World Champion himself.

Neveu won a second silver in the men’s K-1 team event (92.99), won by the Czech Republic (91.76), including Prskavec, his third career gold in that event.

Britain’s Mallory Franklin, the women’s Tokyo C-1 runner-up and Kimberley Woods, a four-time Worlds Team gold medalist, starred in the women’s racing. Franklin and Woods went 1-2 in the C-1 final in 108.05 (0) and 1.08.47 (0), ahead of superstar Jessica Fox (AUS), who suffered two penalties and finished at 108.94.

American Evy Leibfarth, 19, was seventh (117.95/2).

Franklin and Woods teamed with Ellis Miller to win the C-1 Team final in 112.45, ahead of the Czech Republic (114.55). Then Woods won the Kayak Cross final, ahead of Camile Prigent (FRA), the 2020 European runner-up.

Fox came back to win the women’s K-1 final in 103.60, despite a two-second penalty, ahead of Eliska Mintalova (SVK: 104.73/2) and Klaudia Zwolinska (POL: 105.00/0). Leibfarth was 12th and did not advance to the finals.

Fox teamed with younger sister Noemie Fox and Kate Eckhardt to take the K-1 Team event in 1:08.62 with Spain second in 1:08.91 and Britain (with Franklin and Woods) third in 1:09.02.

For the amazing Jessica Fox, now 29, she owns 14 Worlds golds, five silvers and three bronzes, all but six in individual events. She will once again be a favorite in Paris next year at her fourth Olympic Games.

In the men’s C-1, Slovenia’s Tokyo Olympic champ Benjamin Savsek won his second Worlds individual gold in 97.40 (0), ahead of Nicolas Gestin (FRA: 98.58/0). But Gestin got a gold, too, with Jules Bernardet and Lucas Roisin in the C-1 Team final, winning in 99.17 to 99.20 over Great Britain.

The British had eight medals (5-2-1) to Britain’s five (1-4-0) to lead the medal table.

● Rugby ● The 10th Rugby World Cup continues in France, with the third of five rounds of matches in the group stage continuing through 8 October. The top two teams out each of the four groups will qualify for the quarterfinals; so far:

Group A: France (3-0: 13 points); Italy (2-0: 10)
Group B: Ireland (3-0: 14); South Africa (2-1: 10)
Group C: Wales (3-0: 14); Fiji (1-1: 6)
Group D: England (3-0: 14); Samoa (1-1: 5)

Attendance has surpassed the million mark at 1,009,651 for 22 matches, a healthy 45,893 average across the nine venues.

Although most of the matches have been competitive, there have been some notable routs, with France stomping Namibia, 96-0, on 21 September in Marseille, and South Africa beating Romania, 76-0, on 17 September. England sailed by Chile, 71-0, on 23 September in Lille.

The quarterfinals begin on 14 October; the championship match will be on 28 October.

● Triathlon ● France and Britain dominated the World Triathlon Championship Series final in Pontevedra (ESP), winning five of the six medals, including a men’s win for Dorian Connix and a women’s title for Beth Potter.

Connix was sixth out of the water, and 16th-fastest on the bike, but was in contention going into the run. On the final lap, Connix, countryman Pierre Le Corre and German Tim Hellweg broke away and raced for the tape, with Connix the strongest at the finish for his first World title.

The top three were all timed in 1:42:22, with 2022 World U-23 champs runner-up Hellweg winning the silver and 2018 European champ Le Corre claiming the bronze. France also claimed fourth, with Leo Bergere crossing in 1:42:28. Matthew McElroy was the top U.S. finisher in 16th at 1:43:48.

Potter, already the winner of the Paris 2023 Test Event this season, was 16 seconds behind the leader after the 1,500 m swim, but moved up during the bike phase to be within striking distance on the 10 km run. Then she moved swiftly, with the fastest time in the field by 18 seconds (33:26) to win, 1:53:19 to 1:53:37 over fellow Brit Kate Waugh. France’s Cassandre Beaugrand, a two-time winner on the circuit this season, finished third in 1:53:50.

Americans Kirsten Kasper and Taylor Spivey finished 15-16 in 1:55:17 and 1:55:19, with Katie Zaferes 19th (1:55:46). Comebacking Rio 2016 Olympic champ Gwen Jorgensen was 43rd in 1:59:03.

● Wrestling ● The 2023 World Wrestling Championships concluded in Belgrade (SRB), with the Azerbaijan winning the Greco-Roman team title with 120 points to 104 for Iran and the U.S. winning the most medals overall.

The Azerbaijanis got wins from Eldaniz Azizli (55 kg) and Rafig Huseynov (82kg) and three silvers, while Cuba – with Tokyo 60 kg Olympic champ Luis Orta at 67 kg and Gabriel Rosillo at 97 kg – and Kyrgyzstan – by Zholaman Sharshenbekov (60 kg) and Akzhol Makhmudov (77 kg) – also got two wins.

Azizli, Sharshenkekov and Makhmudov all defended their 2022 titles, while the 139 kg class had the same finalists, but this time it was Iran’s Amin Mirzazadeh defeating Turkey’s Riza Kayaalp, where Kayaalp won in 2022.

The U.S. finished 22nd in the Greco team standings and won 10 matches vs. seven last year. However, the American teams won 14 total medals (4-3-7) for the most overall, trailed by Japan (6-3-3: 12).

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Athletics ● France’s Makenson Gletty scored a lifetime best for home fans at the annual Decastar multi-events showcase in Talence (FRA) over the weekend, moving to no. 14 on the 2023 world list at 8,443.

He won the shot and was second in the 100 m and 400 m on the first day, then took the 100 m hurdles and the 800 m on day two for his record total. Germany’s Manuel Eitel was second (8,193) and Grenada’s Worlds bronze winner Lindon Victor was third (7.980). American Devon Williams was 12th (6,486).

Dutch star Emma Oosterwegal, the Tokyo Olympic bronze medalist, won the women’s division at 6,495, finishing second in the shot and winning the javelin. Swiss Annik Kalan, the 2022 European bronze medalist, was second (6,390) and American Taliyah Brooks (6,181) got third, just ahead of fellow American Annie Kunz (6,126).

The USA Track & Field road 10 km championship was held Saturday morning in conjunction with the Great Cow Harbor 10k in Northpoint, New York, with Clayton Young running away from Willy Fink, 28:49 to 28:52 in the men’s race and Weini Kelati dominating the women’s race, 31:57 to 32:40 over Ednah Kurgat.

Young won in the final meters, moving away from Fink, Leonard Korir (28:54) and Daniel Mesfun (28:56) and took his third national title of the year, after winning the 8 km in July and the 20 km early in September.

Kelati simply ran away from the field, with a 150 m lead by halfway over Kurgat, who was also running alone. Kelati won her second career national title, after the 2021 5 km. Emma Hurley was third in 32:56 and Amanda Vestri finished fourth in 33:02.

● Cycling ● The third of five stops on the 2023 BMX World Cup was scheduled for Sarrians (FRA), with Saturday’s fifth round of the season canceled due to strong winds that made the course unsafe.

On Sunday, the home team – France – swept the men’s final with two-time World Champion Joris Daudet taking the victory at 31.200, ahead of 2018 world titlist Sylvain Andre (31.458) and Jeremy Rencurrel (31.509). It’s Daudet’s third win of the season in five races.

Australia’s two-time seasonal champion Saya Sakakibara won the women’s race in 33.890, beating Swiss 2022 World Champion Zoe Claessens (34.254), Tokyo bronze medalist Merel Smulders (NED: 34.945) and American two-time World Champion Alise Willoughby (35.297). It’s the second win of the season for Sakakibara and the fourth medal in five races for Willoughby.

● Judo ● A big turnout of 446 judoka from 61 countries came for the Baku Grand Slam in Azerbaijan, with the home team scoring three wins.

Yashar Najafov took the men’s 66 kg gold for his first career Grand Slam gold, as did Zelim Tckaev at 81 kg. At 73 kg, 2022 European Champion Hidayat Heydarov won his fifth career Grand Slam title.

Russian fighters, competing as “neutrals,” won three men’s classes: Abdulaev Ramazan won at 60 kg in an all-Russian final with Gamzat Zairbekov; two-time European champ Mikhail Igolnikov won at 90 kg, and 2023 World Co-Champion Inal Tasoev won the +100 kg class over 2018 World Champion Guram Tushashvili (GEO).

Japan’s Kisumi Omori posted a win at 52 kg, beating Kosovo’s Tokyo Olympic champ Distria Krasniqi. Kosovo did get a win from its Tokyo Olympic gold medalist Nora Gjakova at 57 kg, over Georgia’s 2019 World Junior Champion, Eteri Liparteliani.

German Anna-Maria Wagner, the 2021 World Champion in the women’s 78 kg class, won her division over Alice Bellandi (ITA) and Brazil’s Beatriz Souza, the 2022 Worlds runner-up, won the +78 kg division by defeating Portugal’s Rochele Nunes in the final.

● Sport Climbing ● China swept the Speed titles at the IFSC World Cup in Wujiang, and Japan took the honors in Lead in the final competition of the season.

China went 1-2 in the men’s Speed, with Peng Wu, 20, defeating Jingjie Huang in the final, 5.05 to 5.10, with Japan’s Ryo Omasa taking the bronze and American Samuel Watson seventh. It’s Wu’s first World Cup gold after silvers in 2022 and 2023.

Lijuan Deng won her first World Cup in the women’s division, winning in 6.58 over 2022 World Games runner-up Natalia Kalucka (POL: 6.69). It’s Deng’s third medal of the season, after three wins last year. China’s Di Niu was third, 6.89-7.85 over Poland’s Aleksandra Kalucka.

In the seasonal rankings, Indonesia Leonardo Veddriq won the men’s title at 3,470, with Wu second (3,405) and the U.S.’s Watson third (2,550). Poland’s Kalucka won the women’s seasonal crown at 3,700 points, trailed by countrywoman Aleksandra Miroslaw at 3,545.

In Sunday’s Lead finals, Japan swept both divisions, with Sorato Anraku, 16, winning his fourth men’s World Cup event of the year, reaching 39+ holds in the final, ahead of three countrymen: Shion Omada (30+), Taisei Homma (26+) and Yoshiyuki Ogata (26+).

Ai Mori, 20, the 2023 women’s World Lead Champion, won her fourth World Cup medal of 2023 with a finals total of 36+ holds, well ahead of 2022 World Games champ Jessica Pilz (AUT: 31+) and Natsuki Tanii (JPN: 26+).

In the seasonal Lead series, Anraku won the men’s division at 4,300 points, with Alexander Megos (GER: 2,650), while Pilz was the women’s title winner at 3,235, ahead of Olympic champ Janja Garnbret (SLO: 3,300).

● Tennis ● American David Haggerty was easily re-elected for a third term as President of the International Tennis Federation on Sunday at the ITF Annual General Meeting in Cancun (MEX), receiving 318 votes (72.94%) against 118 (27.06%) for German challenger Dietloff von Arnim.

Haggerty, 66, was first elected in 2015, and became a member of the International Olympic Committee, linked to his federation presidency, in 2020. He continues as one of two U.S. members of the IOC, with Anita DeFrantz, now 70, elected as an individual member in 1985.

● Volleyball ● The FIVB’s three Women’s Olympic Qualifying Tournaments were on in China, Japan and Poland, with six teams advancing to Paris out of the 24 competing, including the U.S.

In Group A, held in Ningbo (CHN), rising power Dominican Republic won the group at 6-1 (17 points), ahead of 2022 World Champion Serbia (5-2: 15), just ahead of Canada, also 5-2, but which earned 14 points. Serbia defeated Canada in their head-to-head match-up, 3-0.

Group B in Tokyo (JPN) had Turkey was the undefeated winner at 7-0 (21 points), followed by 2022 Worlds runner-up Brazil (6-1: 16). Japan at 5-2 did not advance.

In Lodz (POL), the Group C standings had the defending Olympic champion U.S. women on top at 6-1 (18 points), finishing ahead on criteria over Poland (6-1: 18), the only team the Americans lost to. Poland had to defeat 2022 Worlds bronzers Italy on the final day, 3-1, to advance to Paris. Paris will be the 12th Olympic appearance for the American women, and their 11th consecutive Olympic appearance.

Seven of the 12 teams for Paris are now decided; the six qualifiers and host France; the last five will come from the FIVB world rankings as of mid-June in 2024.

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TSX REPORT: Eugene to host 2024 T&F Trials (again); U.S. wrestling star Elor wins second straight Worlds gold; Ertz retires after 3-0 U.S. win

Two-time World women's 72 kg champ Amit Elor of the U.S. (Photo by Larry Slater)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Eugene named as T&F Olympic Trials site for 2024
2. U.S.’s Elor wins back-to-back wrestling Worlds gold
3. U.S. women sail by South Africa as Ertz ends storied career
4. Minister: systemic doping never happened in Russia
5. Kipchoge returns to try for fifth Berlin Marathon win

● As expected, Hayward Field in Eugene will host the 2024 U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials for the eighth time and the fifth time in succession.

● American wrestler Amit Elor, 19, won her second straight World Wrestling Championships gold, in the women’s 72 kg class. Still a teen, she now has seven Worlds golds in the Cadet, Junior, U-23 and senior divisions!

● The U.S. Women’s National Team sent star defender Julie Ertz out in style with a 3-0 win over overmatched South Africa in Cincinnati in their first game following the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup.

● The Russian Sports Minister said that his country has never engaged in systemic doping. Russia has not paid its dues to the World Anti-Doping Agency for 2023 and is asking for a new dues formula to be developed at a forthcoming meeting on the UNESCO anti-doping convention.

● Sunday brings the annual Berlin Marathon, with defending champs Eliud Kipchoge of Kenya and Tigst Assefa of Ethiopia both back, and Kipchoge looking to rebound from his sixth-place finish in Boston in May.

World Championships: Rugby (seven unbeatens left at World Cup) ●

Panorama: Athens 2004 (Olympic pool, closed since 2012, to be renovated) = Asian Games 2023 (sustainability means no fireworks at opening) = Russia (minister says no payments will be cut off to its athletes) = Aquatics (Russian federation rejects World Aquatics conditions for re-entry) = Football (Infantino meets with U.S. counterparts Goodell, Manfred, Bettman) = Luge (White Castle USA Luge Slider Search program continues) = Swimming (Grimes leads Golden Goggles nominee list) ●

1.
Eugene named as T&F Olympic Trials site for 2024

To the surprise of absolutely no one, Eugene, Oregon was again selected as the site for the 2024 U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials.

The meet will be held from 21-30 June at Hayward Field at the University of Oregon, hosted by TrackTown USA.

Eugene will be hosting its eighth Olympic Trials, dating back to 1972. The Olympic Trials meet dates back to 1920, and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum – site of the 1932 Olympic Games – was the preferred venue in the 1950s and 1960s, as the site for the men’s Trials in 1952, 1956 and 1964, and again as a “semi-Trials” in 1968, with a final Trials held at Echo Summit, California to mimic the high-altitude of Olympic host Mexico City.

Los Angeles bid again for the 1972 Trials, in the two-day format previously held there four times. Eugene offered a different concept, more-or-less replicating the planned, nine-day Olympic track & field schedule for Munich, proposing a format that would mirror the rounds and rest availability of the Olympic Games.

This was accepted by the AAU and the men’s Trials was held from 29 June to 11 July, and all Trials since have used the week-long format. This proved popular, and Eugene was selected to host the combined men’s and women’s Trials in 1976, in 1980 and then in 2008-12-16-21 and now 2024.

Mt. San Antonio College in Walnut, California – at the eastern end of the Los Angeles metro area – was originally selected to host the 2020 Trials, but the award was revoked and given to Eugene. In addition to the annual Mt. SAC Relays, Hilmer Lodge Stadium – now completely renovated – hosted the U.S. Trials for women in 1968.

The 2028 Olympic Trials could be held in the Coliseum in Los Angeles – as it was in 1984 in advance of the Olympic Games held in the same stadium – if the temporary track facility for the LA28 Games is ready, and available.

2.
U.S.’s Elor wins back-to-back wrestling Worlds gold

The U.S. women completed a seven-medal performance at the 2023 World Wrestling Championships in Belgrade (SRB) with a repeat gold medal for Amit Elor at 72 kg, and a second-place finish in the women’s Freestyle standings.

The amazing Elor, still just 19, won three world titles in 2022, taking the United World Wrestling championships at the Junior, U-23 and senior levels, and is on track for another three-peat!

She won the World Juniors again in Amman (JOR) in August, and now won her second senior title in a row with an 8-2 win over Mongolia’s Enkh-Amaryn Davaanasan in the final. Elor won her prior matches by 7-0, 6-0 and 12-2 to get to the final.

Elor’s international championships record is almost unbelievable at 28-1:

Cadet Worlds: 6-1 (one gold, one bronze)
Junior Worlds: 11-0 (golds in 2021-22-23)
U-23 Worlds: 3-0 (gold in 2022)
World Champs: 8-0 (golds in 2022-23)

She plans to compete in the UWW U-23 Worlds in Finland in late October to try for her second consecutive triple title run!

At 68 kg, Turkey’s Buse Tosun pinned Enkhsaikany Delgermaa of Mongolia in the championship final, while being down 4-3 in the match. It’s Tosun’s first Worlds gold, after bronzes in 2018 and 2021.

American Emma Bruntil lost in a bronze-medal match by a 10-0 technical fall to Koumba Larroque of France.

Japan scored its fifth gold at 53 kg as Akari Fujinami defeated “neutral’ Belarus wrestler Vanesa Kaladzynskaya by technical fall, 10-0. It’s Fujinami’s second title after her 2021 Worlds victory; she won her four matches by 10-0, pinfall and 10-0 prior to the final.

In the 62 kg class, Aisuluu Tynybekova (KGZ) won her third Worlds gold with a 4-1 win over Japan’s Sakura Motoki. Tynykevona also won in 2019 and 2021.Two-time Worlds silver winner Kayla Miracle of the U.S. was eliminated in the round-of-16.

All of that combined to give Japan a 195-135 team win in women’s Freestyle over the U.S., its ninth in a row and 11th in the last 12. The U.S. women claimed seven medals – same as the men – and leads the overall medal table at 14 (4-3-7), with Japan at 10 (6-2-2).

The Greco-Roman division will finish out the championships on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

3.
U.S. women sail by South Africa as Ertz ends storied career

In its first game since bowing out of the FIFA Women’s World Cup in August, the U.S. Women’s National Team faced fellow Women’s World Cup contestant South Africa in Cincinnati and saluted retiring backfield star Julie Ertz with a dominant, 3-0 win.

The U.S. was on offense from the start, with the South African finding counterattack possibilities as the Americans closed in on the net. Ertz got a header at the corner of the penalty area off a corner kick in the 18th minute, but the shot went high, and in the 21st, but that shot was saved by keeper Kaylin Swart.

Another corner kick by midfielder Lindsey Horan in the 32nd was chased by Ertz, but caromed off the head of a defender and flew toward the center of the goal, where it was headed in by forward Lynn Williams for a 1-0 lead.

Just two minutes later, a pass from Horan down the left side of the pitch found striker Alex Morgan, who sent a perfect cross into the middle of the box to a charging forward Tiffany Rodman, who finished with a right-footed volley to make it 2-0 in the 34th.

At this point, Ertz was taken out to hearty cheers and replaced by Andi Sullivan, who got into the match quickly.

In the 41st, a Sullivan corner curved in toward the South African goal, which was brilliantly flicked on from the near-post area by Horan to the far post, where Williams was stationed and it bounced in off of her for a 3-0 halftime lead. The U.S. had 59% of possession and a 9-5 edge on shots in the half. 

The U.S. controlled possession, but substituted liberally in the second half, and did not score, although there were a couple of opportunities that went wide. The Americans finished with 62% of possession and 19-6 on shots.

Ertz, in her 123rd match for the national side, finishes as a two-time World Cup winner, two-time U.S. women’s player of the year and an Olympic bronze medalist from Tokyo. To say she had a magical career is an understatement: in her 123 games for the U.S., she was on the winning side 101 times, with 17 draws and just five losses.

The U.S. plays South Africa again on Sunday in Chicago, which will be the final game for star forward Megan Rapinoe.

4.
Minister: systemic doping never happened in Russia

Another astonishing comment, once again designed to shore up internal opinion, came from Russian Sports Minister Oleg Matytsin at the All-Russian Clean Games Forum in Suzdal concerning Russia and doping:

“This topic is very important not only for our country, but also in shaping the mindset of our young generation, adults. Despite the fact that they want to divide us, it is important for the state to cooperate with all organizations to create and strengthen the development of the anti-doping system in Russia.

“If we are accused of systematic doping, which has never happened, I can say that we have a very effective system for fighting it, [the system] certainly exists, and this has been confirmed by numerous commissions, representatives of UNESCO.

“The most important thing is that we should not focus on the highest international authorities. We should work out criteria and policies for ourselves, which should result in clean sport.”

This is essentially a denial of the long-term doping issues in Russia (an inheritance from the USSR days) and the state-sponsored doping program instituted from 2011-15, which together have resulted in the revocation of 43 Olympic medals from 2002-2016, including 13 from the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games and 15 from London 2012.

Moreover, Matytsin’s Sports Ministry also now refuses to pay its dues to the World Anti-Doping Agency, because the amount is based on its dues to the Council of Europe, which it left after its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. According to a Ministry statement:

“According to the decision of the WADA Executive Committee in 2023, Russia’s annual contribution should amount to $1,267,023. This figure is calculated on the basis of the scale of the country’s contributions to the Council of Europe, while Russia terminated its membership in the council on March 16, 2022. In this regard, it is necessary to work out a mechanism to pay the annual contribution to WADA for countries that are not members of continental organizations, in particular, the Council of Europe.”

Russia has asked for a new dues formula to be developed with reference to the anti-doping convention of UNESCO, to be considered in October. TASS also reported:

“According to documents from the World Anti-Doping Agency obtained by TASS, eight countries pay WADA an annual contribution exceeding $1 million. Russia, the UK, Germany, Italy and France had to pay $1,267,023 in 2023. The US ($3,419,795), Canada ($1,709,897) and Japan ($1,502,800) are expected to make the largest contributions to WADA’s budget in 2023. According to available documents, all of these countries, except Russia, have already paid their dues in full for 2023.”

The TASS story also explained that the WADA dues are paid by the Russian Sports Ministry and not by the Russian Anti-Doping Agency. The head of RUSADA, Director General Veronika Loginova, told TASS:

“RUSADA is doing everything possible to ensure fair competition, clean and fair competitions on the territory of Russia, we are trying to cover everything. Our activities are not limited in any way, we conduct testing, a huge number of educational events. We will continue to achieve our recovery.”

A WADA statement noted that the dues may be paid anytime until the end of the year and that “We will strive to work with the relevant authorities to ensure that all contributions are made on time.”

Observed: This is a very interesting development, as Russia has been working diligently for RUSADA to be deemed compliant by WADA, but a prolonged dues issue could signal a willingness to continue as non-compliant given continuing pessimism about Russia’s participation at Paris 2024.

Comments by former Russian Athletics Federation President Valentin Balakhnichev at a State Duma forum pointed to this as well. He told TASS:

“We have talked a lot about what is happening today, but we haven’t said how long this situation will last. I can say that it will last at least 10 years. We need to prepare for a serious, not short, struggle and think not about whether our athletes will be allowed to go to the Olympics now, but about what will be happening in the Russian Federation over the next 10 years.

“The Olympic Games were the main motivation for the development of Russian sports. The [International Olympic Committee] has placed its people everywhere, while our representatives are practically gone. We will have to protect our interests ourselves, from here. They have prepared well.”

Balakhnichev also recommended considering the Chinese approach, which makes its domestic competitions highly prized. The Russian Sports Ministry has been working in this area, but more with international events such as the BRICS Games next June in Kazan and the Friendship Games in September 2024, in Moscow and Yekaterinburg.

5.
Kipchoge returns to try for fifth Berlin Marathon win

What will Kipchoge do? That’s the question almost everyone is asking ahead of Sunday’s BMW Berlin Marathon, with Kenyan superstar Eliud Kipchoge returning to the scene of his two world-record runs in 2018 (2:01:39) and 2022 (2:01:09).

Kipchoge, the two-time Olympic marathon winner in Rio and Tokyo, won in Berlin in 2015-17-18-22, with his last two runs producing records on the pancake-flat course. However, he was sixth in Boston on 17 April, ending a string of four straight wins in the marathon. The men’s elite line-up offers several challengers (listed by lifetime bests):

2:01:09 (2022) Eliud Kipchoge (KEN) ~ two world records in Berlin
2:03:13 (2022) Amos Kipruto (KEN) ~ 2022 London winner, 2019 Worlds bronze
2:05:34 (2022) Ghirmay Ghebreslassie (ERI) ~ 2015 World Champion
2:05:37 (2022) Ronald Korir (KEN) ~ 2016 Seoul runner-up
2:05:38 (2023) Tadu Abate (ETH) ~ 2022 Berlin third-placer
2:05:44 (2022) Philemon Kiplimo (KEN)
2:05:47 (2023) Enock Onchari (KEN)
2:05:49 (2015) Mark Korir (KEN)
2:05:52 (2021) Andualem Belay Shiferaw (ETH)
2:05:53 (2023) Haftu Teklu (ETH)

Defending champion Tigst Assefa of Ethiopia, fifth-fastest in history, is back for only her third career marathon and first competition of any kind this year. Sheila Chepkirui (KEN), the 10,000 m Commonwealth Games bronze medalist last year, is also running only her third career marathon:

2:15:37 (2022) Tigst Assefa (ETH) ~ 2022 Berlin champion
2:17:29 (2022) Sheila Chepkirui (KEN) ~ 2022 Valencia third, 2023 London fourth
2:18:03 (2022) Tigist Abayechew (ETH) ~ 2022 Berlin third-placer
2:18:51 (2022) Workenesh Edesa (ETH) ~ 2022 Berlin fourth-placer
2:19:10 (2022) Hiwot Gebrekidan (ETH)
2:19:24 (2023) Hitomi Niiya (JPN)
2:19:28 (2019) Zeineba Yimer (ETH)

Some 45,000 runners from 150 countries will line up in Berlin, with the start scheduled for 9:15 a.m. local time. No U.S. television partner is listed by the organizers.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rugby ● The third of four rounds of games in the group stage are starting at the Rugby World Cup in France, with only seven teams out of 20 still undefeated:

Group A: France (3-0: 13 points); Italy (2-0: 10)
Group B: Ireland (2-0: 10); South Africa (2-0: 9)
Group C: Wales (2-0: 10)
Group D: England (2-0: 9); Samoa (1-0: 5)

The top two from each group will advance to the quarterfinals beginning on 14 October, with the championship final on 28 October.

Attendance has been very good, with 753,061 reported through 18 matches for an average of 41,837.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2004: Athens ● One of the dead venues of the 2004 Athens is being brought back to life, as the city of Athens agreed with the Hellenic Olympic Committee to renovate the Athens Olympic Swimming Pool.

Originally built in 1940, it was renovated for the 2004 Games, but shut down in 2012 for lack of funds for maintenance and operations. It is expected to re-open in 2026.

● Asian Games 2023: Hangzhou ● The opening ceremony for the 2023 Asian Games in Hangzhou (CHN) will skip the traditional fireworks, opting for a light show instead. Xiaolan Sha, the general director of the opening event, told reporters:

“The opening ceremony of the Hangzhou Asian Games will break the tradition of having fireworks performance, as we are sticking to a green philosophy in hosting the event.

“As we want to reduce the carbon emissions as much as possible, so we have decided to cut the fireworks performances.”

● Russia ● In comments reported Thursday, Russian Sports Minister Matytsin appeared to contradict his First Deputy Minister, Azat Kadyrov, who said earlier that Russian athletes who participate at Paris 2024 as neutrals will receive no participation payments from the government.

Matytsin told the Russian news agency TASS:

“Our budget provides for the payment of prize money to the winners and medalists of the Olympic Games. After the International Olympic Committee determines the rules for the participation of Russian athletes and their status, a decision will be made on bonuses. But in no way will the state abandon measures of social protection and material support our athletes and coaches.”

● Aquatics ● The executive office of the All-Russian Swimming Federation issued a blanket refusal of the participation terms instituted for Russian and Belarusian entries for World Aquatics competitions, including the February 2024 World Aquatics Championships in Qatar.

According to a federation statement:

“The Presidium considers unacceptable the criteria for the participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes in the World Aquatics competitions. The members of the Presidium expressed full support for the position of the Athletes’ Commission of the [Russian Olympic Committee] on the need to completely cancel any recommendations of a discriminatory nature and categorically unacceptable admission parameters, including the signing of any kind of political declarations.”

Among multiple requirements in the World Aquatics regulations is that potential Russian or Belarusian athletes not support the invasion of Ukraine.

● Football ● FIFA President Gianni Infantino (SUI) was in the U.S. earlier this week and took a tour of sports league offices in New York, including the NFL, Major League Baseball and the National Hockey League.

His meeting with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell was of mutual interest, since all 11 U.S. stadiums for the 2026 FIFA World Cup will be in NFL venues. Infantino was also a guest at AT&T Stadium in Dallas, Texas for the Cowboys-Jets game on Sunday (17th).

With MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, Infantino focused on new information flows for already-number-obsessed baseball fans:

“It was a pleasure meeting Major League Baseball Commissioner Robert Manfred to discuss the upcoming FIFA World Cup 2026 and exchange know-how on the operations of our respective sports.

“We spoke about employing technology to enhance fan experience and I highlighted FIFA’s innovative technological approach that helped to deliver the greatest-ever edition of the FIFA Women’s World Cup earlier this year.”

Also from the FIFA release:

“The FIFA President and the MLB Commissioner also discussed the technological innovations the MLB has recently introduced, notably the upgrades to the Statcast platform now employed in the current season.

“Five of the 12 stat-dedicated cameras covering MLB games have been upgraded to high frame rate devices, enabling the league to provide fans with new bat and biomechanics tracking output, bringing baseball lovers even closer to events on the field.”

Similarly, with NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, Infantino was interested in new technologies for fans:

“Like the NHL, we want to take advantage of the rapid strides being made in technological innovations to get our fans as close to the action as possible at the inaugural 48-team FIFA World Cup in 2026.”

The FIFA announcement also pointed to “[r]ecent developments saw fans able to use a mobile phone application to view multiple camera feeds and angles of games from their device in real time inside the arena, while avatars and fun graphics are used to illustrate the on-ice entertainment for the very youngest of hockey fans.”

● Luge ● Fun feature on the FIL Web site about the introductory White Castle USA Luge Slider Search program, offering a chance for 9-to-13-year-old to experience street luge in a safe environment and as a pathway to developing young-athlete interest in the sport.

It began in 1985, with iconic midwestern burger chain White Castle titling the program to help recruit future members of the USA Luge Junior Development Team. More than 25,000 have tried out and after some instruction on the basics of street luge:

“athletes take several runs down a paved luge course on wheel-equipped luge sleds. Finally, athletes test their physical skills through a battery of fitness tests. Those who show promise in the summer program are invited to Lake Placid, N.Y., Park City, Utah, or Muskegon, Mich. to try luge on ice at a USA Luge sanctioned training site. The top young athletes from this group are selected for the next year’s development team.”

Amazingly, 70% or more of the U.S. Olympic luge team members since 2002 have come from the program.

● Swimming ● USA Swimming announced the nominees for its annual Golden Goggles Awards, to be held this year in Los Angeles on 19 November.

The name which popped up most often was the amazing Katie Grimes, 17, who earned four nominations for Female Athlete of the Year, Female Race of the Year for her bronze-medal performance in the Worlds women’s 10 km open-water race, Breakout Performer, and the Fran Crippen Open Water Athlete of the Year.

The other Female Athlete of the Year nominees are Kate Douglass, the 200 m Medley World Champion and 200 m Breaststroke runner-up, plus three relay medals; Katie Ledecky, the 800-1,500 m Freestyle Worlds gold medalist (plus two silvers), and Regan Smith, the Worlds silver medalist in the 50-100-200 m Backstrokes, 200 m Butterfly bronze medalist and gold winner on the 4×100 m Medley.

The other Female Race of the Year candidates are Douglass for her 200 m Medley gold; Ledecky, for her fifth career win in the 1,500 m Freestyle and the no. 3 performance of all-time.

The Male Athlete of the Year candidates include Jack Alexy, the 50-100 m Freestyle runner-up; Bobby Finke, who won silver in the 1,500 m and bronze in the 800 m; Carson Foster, the 400 m Medley silver winner, and Ryan Murphy, who won the 100 m Backstroke, was second in the 200 m Back and won a relay gold and bronze.

The Male Race of the Year nominees are Alexy for the 100 m Free silver, Finke for his runner-up performance in American Record time in the 1,500 m Free and Murphy for his win in the 100 m Back.

Fan voting for the awards is available now and runs through 15 October.

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For our updated, 787-event International Sports Calendar (no. 3) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: Russia will pay 2024 “neutral” Olympians nothing; Biles wins U.S. selection camp All-Around; $90,000 for a Tokyo ‘64 badge?

This 1964 Tokyo Olympic identity badge for the Japanese Imperial Family is on auction, with the bidding starting at $90,000! (Photo: Ingrid O'Neil auctions)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Russia: no money for Paris 2024 participation, maybe for medals
2. Biles seals sixth Worlds appearance with camp A-A win
3. Japan: four golds, U.S.: four medals at women’s wrestling Worlds
4. Paris 2024 opening ceremony to have 8-10,000 staff!
5. New memorabilia auction includes $90,000 Tokyo ‘64 badge!

● Russia’s deputy sports minister said there would be no government payments to athletes who decide to compete as neutrals in Paris in 2024, even with 882.2 million rubles set aside for team support.

● Simone Biles came from behind on the final rotation to win the All-Around at the USA Gymnastics training camp in Katy, Texas on Tuesday. The federation named its World Championships and Pan American Games teams on Wednesday.

● At the World Wrestling Championships, Japan won all four women’s classes contested on Wednesday, but the U.S. won four medals as well (0-3-1) and continued to lead the overall medal count.

● More details on the Paris 2024 opening were released on Wednesday, with 2,000 dancers and 6-8,000 more support personnel needed for the show, which will be covered by 130 cameras. A decision has not yet been finalized on the number of spectators who will be allowed to watch.

● A new auction of Olympic memorabilia is now live, with 48 Olympic medals and 33 Olympic torches, but led by a badge from the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games, to be worn by the Japanese Imperial Family. The starting bid is set at $90,000!

Panorama: Athletics (3: Diamond League calendars for 2024-25 posted; DDR double Olympic jav champ Fuchs passes; not so many Mexico City Marathon disqualifications) = Football (3: Julie Ertz farewell on Thursday vs. South Africa; Spanish women’s team ends boycott with RFEF agreement; UEFA sanctions Albania, Poland, Romania and Ukraine for fan violence) = Shooting (ISSF ExBoard sends Russian-Belarusian re-entry decision to Council) = Swimming (2: Boston College suspends swim-dive programs for hazing; USA Swimming and Swimming World in commercial tie-up) = Triathlon (World Tri inducts four to Hall of Fame) ●

Errata: A note in yesterday’s post on Noah Lyles’ interview on Paper Route stated that direct-to-athlete payments were not allowed until the late 1970s; it was actually the mid-1980s when trust funds were approved by the IAAF (now World Athletics). Also, reader Olivier Bourgoin notes that Rob Stull, who is part of a modern pentathlon working group to absorb the obstacle-racing federation, was not only an Olympian in the pentathlon (1988 and 1992) for the U.S., but also as a fencer in Seoul ‘88 as well! ●

1.
Russia: no money for Paris 2024 participation, maybe for medals

The sour notes coming from Moscow on the possible participation of Russian athletes at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris continued Wednesday, with First Deputy Sports Minister Azat Kadyrov telling the State Duma Committee on Physical Culture and Sports that any “neutral” athletes who make it to Paris will receive no payment from the government:

“They are going as nobody from nobody, athletes have to give up everything. If someone gets a license to go, we have to take them off the Sports Training Center roster, all these expenses are taken up by the International Olympic Committee.

“If someone wins a medal of any dignity, the relevant issue will be raised.”

Kadyrov said that an allocation of 882.2 million Russian rubles (~$9.14 million U.S.) has been made, but made clear that if an athlete agrees to compete as a neutral – which is expected to include a declaration of non-support of the war against Ukraine – the sports ministry cannot be expected to help them:

“The Ministry of Sport of the Russian Federation provides the necessary conditions to protect the interests of Russian athletes in the international arena and the social payments and guarantees stipulated by law. (emphasis added)

“At the moment, the IOC criteria on the issue of Russian athletes’ participation in the Olympic Games have not been officially defined, therefore, it is impossible to form specific regulations.

“The interests of athletes are a priority for the Russian Ministry of Sport when providing training and competition activities, as well as when making a decision on participation in the Olympic Games. At the same time, we consider it unacceptable to set discriminatory conditions for our athletes that have nothing to do with the sporting principle.”

Kadyrov’s statements continue the Russian line that the country’s invasion of Ukraine should have no impact on its athletes, whether as individuals or teams. There has been considerable discussion within Russia about whether individual athletes should compete in Paris if the IOC eventually decides to allow them to go. Wednesday’s announcement opens the question about whether those Russian athletes who do go will be welcomed back into the country’s training system.

The Russian sports ministry has asked the government for medal bonuses at the recent CIS Games held in Belarus last August, with 179,200 rubles for a gold (~$1,857 U.S.), 76,800 for silver (~$796 U.S.) and 38,400 for bronze (~$398 U.S.). Considering that Russian athletes won 149 golds, 89 silvers and 50 bronzes at the event, the total ask is for 36.006 million rubles or $373,023 U.S.

2.
Biles seals sixth Worlds appearance with camp A-A win

Gymnastics icon Simone Biles won the All-Around competition at the USA Gymnastics selection camp in Katy, Texas Tuesday night to earn an automatic selection to the American team for the FIG World Artistic Championships in Belgium later this month.

The All-Around came down to the final rotation, after Biles had another adventure on the Uneven Bars – her least favorite apparatus – scoring 12.800 for 13th place among the 18 contestants. But she won on Floor (14.300) and was third in Beam (14.050), and then scored 14.550 for third in Vault to give her a winning total of 55.700.

That was just 0.400 better than 2022 Worlds All-Around runner-up Shi Jones, who scored a second on Beam (14.150) and was fifth on Floor (13.500) and scored 13.500 on the Uneven Bars. Skye Blakely, a member of the 2022 Worlds Team gold medalists, won on Beam (14.350) and tied for second on the Uneven Bars (14.200) to score 55.000 for third, emerging star Joscelyn Roberson was fourth at 54.900, with runner-up finishes on Vault (14.600) and Floor (13.850); and 2021 World All-Around silver and Floor bronze medalist Leanne Wong was fifth (54.850).

Jade Carey, the 2022 World Champion on Vault, won that event at 14.650, and Zoe Miller was tops on the Uneven Bars (14.500).

Beyond Biles, the rest of the 2023 Worlds team was selected Wednesday night, as well as the Pan American Games team for October. Blakely, Jones, Roberson and Wong will be at Worlds, with 2021 Worlds A-A bronze medalist Kayla DiCello as the traveling reserve athlete.

Heading to Santiago (CHI) for the PanAms will be DiCello, Miller, 2022 Worlds Team gold medalist Jordan Chiles, Kaliya Lincoln and Tiana Sumanasekera.

At the Wednesday session, competitions were held on the Uneven Bars and Beam, with Jones winning on Bars (14.750) ahead of Miller (14.400) with Biles a much-improved fourth (14.050). On Beam, Biles won at 14.900, with Blakely second (14.500) and Jones (14.350) third.

3.
Japan: four golds, U.S.: four medals at women’s wrestling Worlds

The U.S. medal machine kept purring at the World Wrestling Championships in Belgrade (SRB), but Wednesday belonged to Japan as the top team in women’s wrestling won four golds in all four classes with finals. In each case, the U.S. also won medals: a silver and three bronzes.

Yui Sasaki won her fourth Worlds gold in the women’s 50 kg division, racing past Dolgorjavyn Otgonjargal (MGL) in the final with a 10-0 technical fall. Sasaski won her matched by 12-1, pinfall, 8-2 in her semi and 10-0. Otgonjargal, who lost to Sasaki in the 2022 gold-medal match, won her third career Worlds medal.

American Sarah Hildebrandt, the silver medalist in 2018 and 2021, won her second career Worlds bronze with a 5-0 victory in her bronze-medal match with Evin Demirhan (TUR).

Tsugumi Sakurai won her third straight Worlds gold in the 55-57 kg class, edging Anastasia Nichita (MDA) – the 2022 Worlds winner at 59 kg – by 3-2 in the final. American Helen Maroulis, a three-time World Champion, won her seventh career Worlds medal with a bronze by defeating Poland’s Anhelina Lysak, 10-6. Now 32, Maroulis has won seven Worlds medals and two Olympic medals in her international career from 2012-23!

At 65 kg, Nonoka Ozaki won her second straight Worlds gold, moving up from 62 kg in 2022. She defeated American Macey Kilty – in her first Worlds – by a 10-0 technical fall in the final. Kilty, 22, had won her prior matches by 10-0, pinfall, 11-2 and 10-0 before facing Ozaki.

At 76 kg, Yuka Kagami won her first Worlds gold with an 8-0 win over Aiperi Medet Kyzy (TUR) in the final, as Medet Kyzy retired before the end of the match. American Adeline Gray, the six-time World Champion, returned to the Worlds after maternity last year – she had twins – and won the bronze with a 10-6 victory over Miliamys Marin of Cuba. Gray lost to Kagami in the quarterfinals, but now has nine career Worlds medals (6-0-3), plus an Olympic silver from Tokyo.

The women’s wrestling continues on Thursday, with defending champion Amit Elor of the U.S. already in the finals against 72 kg and first-time Worlds entrant Emma Bruntil contesting a bronze-medal match at 68 kg. The U.S. leads the overall medal count with 13 (3-3-7) with Japan at seven (5-1-1).

4.
Paris 2024 opening ceremony to have 8-10,000 staff!

During a Tuesday interview, Paris 2024’s Executive Director of Brand, Events and Ceremonies, Thierry Reboul, explained that the precise schedule for the 26 July 2024 Olympic opening on the Seine River would be completed by the end of the year.

He explained that from the 200 people currently working on the project, there would be 6-8,000 people actually involved in staging the event, plus another 2,000 dancers as part of the entertainment program.

Rehearsals will mostly be held out of view for the show, but certain aspects have to be worked on on the river and will serve as “teasers” for the show. Some 130 cameras are expected to cover the event along the 6 km route, with the first test shots completed on Sunday,

Serge Boulanger, the Paris Police prefect in charge of the Olympic project, said that the actual number of free spectators is still being worked out, with an announcement due in the coming weeks. It has been reported that tickets for 100,000 spectators on the lower quays will be sold, but the number of free-to-view places is still being worked out with the Paris transit authorities. All spectators, including those in free-to-view places, will be required to have a ticket, with the Ministry of the Interior to set up a distribution plan.

5.
New memorabilia auction includes $90,000 Tokyo ‘64 badge!

Olympic memorabilia fans can bid on a new, 537-lot auction from Ingrid O’Neil which began on Wednesday and will run through 7 October. There are some big-ticket items in this auction, based on the minimum bids:

● $90,000: Tokyo 1964 Imperial Family badge
● $65,000: Albertville 1992 Winter Olympic torch
● $35,000: Berlin 1936 IOC Chain of Office
● $30,000: Melbourne 1956 Olympic torch
● $24,000: St. Moritz 1928 Winter gold medal
● $22,000: Chamonix 1924 Winter silver medal
● $20,000: Oslo 1952 Winter silver medal
● $20,000: Tokyo 2020 bronze medal for wrestling
● $19,000: Rio 2016 gold medal
● $18,000: Albertville 1992 Winter silver medal, with case

● $18,000: Sochi 2014 Winter bronze medal, with case
● $17,000: St. Moritz 1948 Winter gold medal
● $17,000: Innsbruck 1976 Winter gold medal for ski jumping
● $17,000: Calgary 1988 Winter silver medal for alpine skiing
● $16,000: Stockholm 1956 Equestrian bronze medal
● $16,000: Sarajevo 1984 Winter gold medal for cross-country skiing
● $16,000: Lillehammer 1994 Winter silver medal for figure skating
● $15,000: Lake Placid 1932 Winter bronze medal
● $14,000: Chamonix 1924 Winter bronze medal, with case
● $12,000: St. Louis 1904 participation medal

● $12,000: Chamonix 1924 Winter bronze medal
● $12,000: Berlin 1936 Sevres porcelain vase
● $12,000: Innsbruck 1964 Winter silver medal for ice hockey
● $12,000: Tokyo 1964 Olympic torch

The 1928 St. Moritz gold was won by Norwegian cross-country skier Johan Grottumsbraaten, one of two he won there. The 1948 St. Moritz gold was won by Canadian ice hockey team member Patrick Guzzo. A total of 48 Olympic medals are available, from the Athens 1906 ten-year anniversary Games to Tokyo 2020.

There are 33 Olympic torches and some smaller replicas and a couple of Paralympic torches on offer, plus flame-safety lamps used to carry the Olympic Flame during the torch relay from Los Angeles 1984, Vancouver 2010 and Sochi 2014.

The astonishing $90,000 starting price for the Tokyo 1964 “Badge of the Imperial Family” – Lot 33 – is described as:

“Gold colored, 50x67mm. The Rising Sun of the national flag is surrounded on three sides by the five Olympic colors, Olympic rings dividing ‘TOKYO-1964.’ A blank gold bar represents the Imperial Family’s badge. With long white moiree ribbon. Elbel S-2. Housed in its case. Badge EF. ($90,000)”

There are eight other badges from the Tokyo 1964 Games, with starting prices from $180 to $2,600.

Among the really unique pieces on offer is the Congressional medal given to American athletes in 1980; the description:

“Gold-plated bronze, 76mm. Logo of the American Olympic Committee surrounded by ‘United States Olympic Team 1980.’ Rev. ‘In Recognition of Outstanding Athletic Achievement and Determination in the Pursuit of Excellence’ in seven lines, flanked by laurel branches, united by ribbon inscribed ‘By Act of Congress.’ Awarded to U.S. Moscow 1980 team members by President Carter after his decision to boycott the Moscow Olympic Games in protest of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Congressional medals are made in gold while this medal is gold-plated bronze – another fact that made team members unhappy. With red-white-blue ribbon. EF. ($1,200)”

Also:

● A mounted set of 80 badges and pins issued by the British Olympic Committee, from the 1908 London Games to Beijing 2008. Starting bid of $6,000.

● A logo pin of the never-held 1940 Olympic Games in Helsinki, Finland. Starting bid of $100.

● A used discus signed by Al Oerter, the 1956-60-64-68 Olympic champion; starting bid of $600.

● A bugle used at the opening of the Moscow 1980 Games; starting bid of $300.

● An Atlanta 1996 police badge, starting bid of $70.

Pretty wild; the auction continues through 7 October.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Athletics ● The Wanda Diamond League schedules for 2024 and 2025 were posted, with the series opening earlier than ever, with the meets in China in April in Xiamen and Shanghai.

For 2024, these meets will be on 20 and 27 April, the on to Doha (QAT) in May (10th), to Rabat (MAR) on the 19th and the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene on the 25th before heading to Europe for the final nine meets of the series. The final in 2024 will be the Memorial Van Damme meet in Brussels (BEL) on 13-14 September.

The 23 August Mexico City Marathon did not have the 11,000 disqualifications that had been reported. Road Race Management asked race communications coordinator Carlos Ochoa Aranda about the situation and he reported that 21,504 started the race and 19,697 “qualified as finalists of the full route.”

So, not more than 1,807 would have been disqualified for course-cutting. Ochoa Aranda added:

“We regret that some media outlets have disseminated information without verifying it and without having sources of information, which negatively affects the runners who made a valuable effort. Therefore, the erroneous information spread in the media regarding participants in the Telcel 2023 Mexico City Marathon is flatly denied.”

German sources reported that two-time Olympic women’s javelin champ Ruth Fuchs, 76, passed away on Wednesday in Jena (GER).

Competing for East Germany, Fuchs won the javelin gold in Munich in 1972 and Montreal in 1976 and set six world records between 1972 and 1980 with the old-style javelin (replaced in 1999). She finished with a best of 69.96 m (229-6), and later admitted that she was a steroid user, as part of the East German state-sponsored doping program.

After reunification, she became a member of Parliament for the Party of Democratic Socialism (now the Left Party).

● Football ● The U.S. women’s national team will be back in action on Thursday in Cincinnati against South Africa (7:30 p.m. Eastern on TNT and Universo), and will be the final match for star defender and midfielder Julie Ertz.

Now 31, Ertz will play in her 123rd game for the national team, making her first appearance in 2013, and a key member of the Women’s World Cup championship teams in 2015 and 2019, and the Tokyo 2020 Olympic bronze medalists.

She left the national squad for 18th months to heal injuries and then for maternity, but came back in some and in fitness to make the 2023 Women’s World Cup team. It’s worth noting that with Ertz and others, the American defense gave up just one goal across four games, being eliminated only on penalty kicks in the quarterfinals.

On Sunday, the U.S. will play South Africa – which also reached the round-of-16 at the Women’s World Cup this summer – again in Chicago, which will be the final U.S. national team match for star midfielder and striker Megan Rapinoe (5:30 p.m. Eastern, on TNT and Universo).

The Spanish women’s national team – the FIFA Women’s World Cup champions – and other unhappy players reached an agreement with the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF), and ended their boycott of the national team. Per Reuters:

“The decision was reached around 5 a.m. (0300 GMT) after more than seven hours of meetings at a hotel in Oliva, an hour from Valencia, involving the players, RFEF officials, the National Sports Council (CSD) and the women’s players’ union FUTPRO.”

A joint working group will be formed to implement changes in the federation, with several officials to be dismissed. The Spanish team is scheduled to play at Sweden on Friday in a UEFA Nations League match and against Switzerland in Cordoba on Sunday.

UEFA announced a series of sanctions, including on Romania for the actions of its fans:

“● To fine the Romanian Football Federation €40,000 and to order the Romanian Football Federation to play its next (1) UEFA competition match as host association behind closed doors for lighting of fireworks, throwing of objects, transmitting messages of a political nature (i.e. for the “Kosovo is Serbia” banner and chants) and for the racist behaviour of its supporters.

“● To fine the Romanian Football Federation €12,000 for blocking of public passageways.”

Sanctions were announced against Ukraine for the actions of its fans, and also against Albania and Poland, all for the “throwing of objects and lighting of fireworks.”

● Shooting ● The International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) announced Wednesday:

“[T]he ISSF Executive Committee unanimously decided to submit eligibility regulations drafted by the appointed ISSF Ad hoc Committee regarding the participation of athletes with a Russian or Belarusian passport in ISSF Competitions to the ISSF Council as the competent body for discussion and approval in its next meeting.”

The proposed regulations were not included. No next-meeting date for the 30-member Council is shown on the ISSF calendar.

● Swimming ● In a statement posted Wednesday:

“The Boston College Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving program has been placed on indefinite suspension, after University administrators determined that hazing had occurred within the program. Consistent with University policy, the matter will be investigated by the Office of the Dean of Students and adjudicated fairly and impartially through the student conduct process.

“The University does not—and will not—tolerate hazing in any form. During the suspension, all Swimming and Diving student-athletes will continue to have access to academic and medical resources provided to all Boston College student-athletes.”

SwimSwam.com reported that Boston College does not offer scholarships in this sport, but that the program was on an upward trajectory after breaking three school records last season. It had been scheduled to start the 2023-24 season on 7 October.

USA Swimming announced a commercial partnership with Swimming World Magazine as the “Official Supplier of Magazine Publishing Services”:

“With dedicated 20-page Splash Magazine inserts in each publication, Swimming World will help amplify coverage of USA Swimming athletes, teams, and events. Swimming World will also get access to exclusive stories and news around USA Swimming national events and athletes.”

USA Swimming members will also be able to access a 50% subscription discount for Swimming World, whose origins go back to 1960.

● Triathlon ● World Triathlon inducted four members into its Hall of Fame, at a gala in Pontevedra (ESP), site of this weekend’s World Triathlon Championship Series finale.

The newest members, in the sixth Hall of Fame class included American Siri Lindley, the 2001 women’s World Champion, and Spain’s Ivan Rana, the 2002 men’s World Champion.

The Michel Grigoux Award for contributors went to Japanese official and Japanese Triathlon Board member Kiriyo Suzuki, and the Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to Loreen Barnett (CAN), a founding member of Triathlon Canada and a former World Triathlon Secretary General.

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TSX REPORT: Lyles says T&F looking for change, but to what? Respectable TV ratings for Pre Classic; U.S. men win wrestling World team title!

Triple World Champion Noah Lyles speaking on the Paper Route by I am Athlete video (Photo: Paper Route video screen shot)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. “We all want change, but we all struggle to find how we should change”
2. Very respectable ratings for Pre Classic on NBC
3. U.S. win men’s Freestyle team title at wrestling Worlds
4. Russia could send up to 180 to Paris, says minister
5. Spanish women’s footballers report, unhappily, for UEFA matches

● In a fascinating, hour-plus interview on video with former NFL receiving star Brandon Marshall, Noah Lyles explained the desire of track & field athletes today to change their sport, but no one is quite sure how to get more attention, more interest and more money into it.

● Competing against college football on Saturday and the NFL on Sunday, the Prefontaine Classic on NBC did reasonably well in terms of television viewership, averaging more than 750,000 view for the two days.

● The U.S. men’s Freestyle wrestling team won its second consecutive team title at the World Wrestling Championships in Belgrade, Serbia, winning seven medals (3-2-3) in the 10 divisions and out-pointing Iran. The American women also won two medals in the first two weight classes.

● Russian Sports Minister Oleg Matytsin said Russia could send as many as 180 athletes to Paris in 2024, but the window for qualifying continues to shrink. The head of the Russian Olympic Committee ripped the International Olympic Committee for restrictions which eliminate athletes from the famed Central Sports Club of the Army (CSKA) from competing, even as neutrals.

● In Spain, 15 players who said they would not participate with the national women’s soccer team decided to come to practice on Tuesday rather than risk sanctions ranging from a fine to suspension, but who are still unhappy with the pace of change within the Spanish federation. Spain has UEFA Nations League matches coming up with Sweden and Switzerland.

Panorama: Judo (U.S.’s Cutro-Kelly sanctioned for doping) = Modern Pentathlon (UIPM forms group to absorb obstacle federation) ●

1.
Lyles: “We all want change, but we all struggle
to find how we should change”

In a fascinating, hour-plus interview with former NFL All-Pro receiver Brandon Marshall on the Paper Route by I Am Athlete video, triple sprint World Champion Noah Lyles talked about his sport, about the impact he has had and wants to have, fashion and the future.

And he and Marshall talked a lot about the business of track and field, or the lack thereof.

The video, one of a series that Marshall hosts online, was posted on 13 September (last Wednesday) and has garnered nearly 24,000 views in less than a week. Marshall asked Lyles about his comments at the Worlds men’s 200 m medal-winners news conference, where he asked why NBA teams that win the seasonal title get hats with “World Champion” on them, for a domestic league. Lyles shared that his answer was about track & field, not basketball:

“In the question, I dive into how it hurts. Usually you don’t get paid attention to [until] the Olympics, and being a track athlete living in the U.S. and trying to run and build your career, you start to get this idea that you’re only cared about for four years and you’re in a dying sport.

“But then when you go to Europe, and you’re a champion and people are taking care of you and they’re giving you hotel rooms for free and everybody in the city recognizes you like … you don’t get none of that stuff here, in the U.S. It hurts. …

“We are ready to do just as much work, and show our journey and all that, but we’re just not paid attention to. So it hurts.”

Lyles said he was not expecting the strong pushback he got from NBA players:

“And the reason why is because I’ve said this multiple times before. It’s not until now that they have paid attention, heard or even seen what’s happening.

“So, here I’ve said this multiple times and now, all of a sudden it’s blowing up. … My mission in my sport is to transcend the sport and, hopefully, take it with me. But if nobody’s hearing and seeing, it’s hard to do that.”

And then he and Marshall got into a discussion which has been going on a lot this year. Lyles explained that he wanted to use the immediate attention after the World Athletics Championships to get people interested in his next meet, the Diamond League Final:

Marshall: “What and where?”

Lyles: “I’m competing in Eugene, Oregon on September 15th.”

Marshall: “Where the hell is Eugene?”

Lyles: “In Eugene, Oregon. (Marshall laughs) Oregon Ducks, University of Oregon! (Marshall: ‘OK. Sorry.’) Hey, no, it’s OK. That leads to another issue of our sport, that we are running in these random places. …

“So, we’re running in these random places … everybody and their mama has run track & field at one point, so they’re excited, and, yeah, they just saw a meet, or Sha’Carri [Richardson] or Christian Coleman, who else won World Championships, and like ‘I want to go see them now.’

“Well, OK, we’re going to be in the U.S., but how would they know that? How would they know, if we’re not marketing or targeting the right demographics, which we really struggle with in our sport.”

Asked to explain further later, Lyles explained the backdrop – from his view – that led to today’s situation:

“The problem with the business of track & field is, there is no business. These are non-profits, and they are treated as such. Track & field started off as clubs, they were club groups. When you think of Carl Lewis’s era, they were all track & field clubs. And it just so happened that one club would have a more popular or faster athlete. So that athlete would be invited to a track meet, and eventually that athlete started saying, ‘I’m bringing in all these tickets, you need to pay me.’

“So then they started paying them. Then they started getting shoe contracts, like I’m bringing all these people in TV attention, you need to pay me. And then we just kept going, but eventually, it kind of just stopped, the growth kind of just stopped, because we were still in that club mentality.

“Everybody’s in a club, everybody only gets paid for the big moments, and that’s really what they see as what our sport is doing. But the problem is because we only get paid for those big moments, we only show up for those big moments.

“A lot of athletes [will] forego the normal part of the season to make sure they’re going to be ready – and when I say a lot of athletes, I mean the Sydney McLaughlins, the Athing Mus, the mes, the Fred Kerleys – the athletes that everyone wants to see on TV will forego to make sure they are healthy enough so that they can perform on the big stage so that they can stay and have their paycheck so they can survive.

“If you look at basketball, football, tennis, soccer, golf, they have their regular season and of course, they can all go to the Olympics, but that’s an afterthought because their sport supplies them with the ability to stay here, play, compete and still keep a normal job, a steady income. …

“It is a business at the end of the day. Technically, all track and field athletes who are paid by shoe contract are contractors: they’re not hired, they’re contractors for that brand, meaning that they can be taken on and let go very easily. So when athletes talk about unionizing and stuff like that, we can’t even technically do that, because we aren’t even employees. We got 1099s, we don’t got W-2s.

“A lot of the athletes that are in the sport can’t even think about because they’re just trying to get food on the table.”

In fact, athlete payments were made in secret for decades because of the sport’s amateur rules, which were so strict that the iconic Finnish distance runner Paavo Nurmi was disqualified before the 1932 Olympic Games in Los Angeles on the suspicion that he had received money in excess of his actual on-the-road living expenses (which wasn’t true). Approval of direct payments to athletes didn’t come until the mid-1980s.

So what now? Lyles:

“The issue comes when we are reminded that track & field is an amateur sport. There is no line for what is considered professional. A high schooler can run in a professional track meet if he knows the right person. It happens all the time, and because of that, we all have different aspirations of what we want to see change in our sport. So you’ll have the little guy who just wants more money, you’ll have the middle guy who believes he should be in more meets, and you have the higher-ups like me, who are trying to make the biggest changes on the biggest stages.

So we all want change, but we all struggle to find how we should change it.”

Marshall commented favorably on the Atlanta City Games street meet that was held in May, and advised, “If you put the athletes first, not the fans, put the athletes first, the fans will follow, which means the money will follow.”

Lyles was also asked about the introduction of fashion into the sport, with his walk-ins, developed in conjunction with agent Mark Wetmore. Lyles said he wants to see it spread:

“Now I’m trying to get more athletes into it, and what’s funny is I will go a lot of track meets and I’ll be like ‘hey guys, we’ve had great success here; if you just give me a place to change, a vehicle and … a walkway, we can set this up at your track meet.”

The interview goes a lot of places in 66 minutes, including Lyles’ health challenges growing up, and his mind-set that has allowed him to be so good so many times. And then there’s his dream of running 9.41 in the 100 m.

2.
Very respectable ratings for Pre Classic on NBC

This was going to be an acid test of U.S. viewer interest in track and field: the two-day Wanda Diamond League was going to be on NBC live at 3 p.m. Eastern time on Saturday and 4 p.m. on Sunday, directly against the two biggest sports in the country: college football and the NFL.

And the results were encouraging. Not great, but good.

On Saturday, the first day of the Prefontaine Classic from Eugene, the telecast drew 744,000, behind the live football games on ABC-CBS-ESPN-FOX, but ahead of everything else.

On Sunday, the NFL games on CBS and FOX were the runaway winners in the afternoon, but the Pre Classic came in at 765,000, a slight improvement.

Track & field has done poorly on television in the outdoor season; the three indoor meets in February on NBC averaged over 930,000, but the three U.S. outdoor meets in the spring on NBC averaged only a little more than 750,000. The three NBC telecasts of the World Athletics Championships averaged 1.122 million.

So, to have the two days of the Pre Classic draw 744,000 and 765,000 going against football on both days is a sign of strength for the sport among American viewers. Not great, but quite good.

There was a lot less interest in the U.S. men’s National Team soccer friendly against Oman on Tuesday (12th), which drew an average of 339,000 on TNT. On the other hand, the Mexico-Uzbekistan friendly, a 3-3 draw in Atlanta on the same day, did a lot better, with an average of 1.285 million viewers on Univision!

3.
U.S. win men’s Freestyle team title at wrestling Worlds

The U.S. men’s Freestyle wrestling impressively defended their team title at the 2023 World Wrestling Championships in Belgrade (SRB), winning seven medals (3-1-3) in the 10 classes, and scoring 148 points to 110 for Iran.

On Tuesday, the U.S. scored the seventh medal with a bronze at 97 kg from three-time World Champion Kyle Snyder, defeating Russian rival Abdulrashid Sadulaev in a walkover due to Sadulaev’s neck injury suffered in the semifinals. Snyder won his first two matches, then was beaten by 20-year-old newcomer Akhmed Tazhudinov of Bahrain – who transitioned from Russian affiliation in 2022 – in the quarterfinals, sending him to the repechage round. He won there and advanced to the bronze-medal match; he’s now won a Worlds medal in seven straight championships, beginning in 2015 (3-2-2).

Tazhudinov took the title, pinning Magomedkhan Magomedov (AZE) in the final.

At 65 kg, another ex-Russian, Ismail Musukaev – wrestling for Hungary since 2019 – won his third career Worlds medal and first gold with an 11-0 win over Sebastian Rivera of Puerto Rico, who won his first Worlds medal. Nick Lee of the U.S. was defeated in the quarterfinals.

The men’s team Freestyle win was the fifth all-time for the U.S. and the first time it won back-to-back titles. Both teams were down from their 2022 totals of 198 for the U.S. and 150 for Iran, significantly due to the re-appearance of Russian and Belarusian wrestlers. The American men previously won the title in 1993, 1995 and 2017.

The women’s Freestyle competition got started and the American women collected medals in both the 55 and 59 kg classes.

Jacarra Winchester, the 2019 World Champion, won the silver at 55 kg, losing to Japan’s now three-time World Champion Haruna Okuno in the final, 4-2. Winchester had dominated her first three opponents, winning by 7-2, 11-1 and 10-0, and won her second career Worlds medal.

At 59 kg, newcomer Jennifer Rogers capped her first Worlds with a bronze medal, pinning Alyona Kolesnik (AZE) in 1:40, after losing to eventual champ Qi Zhang (CHN) in the semis. Zhang defeated Ukraine’s 2014 World Champion, Yuliya Tkach, 4-1, in the gold-medal final.

4.
Russia could send up to 180 to Paris, says minister

Russian Sports Minister Oleg Matytsin said Tuesday that the maximum number of athletes that Russia could send to the Paris 2024 Games – if allowed – remains at 180:

“The forecast remains the same; the figure is based on athlete participation in qualifying competitions.

“Our athletes won’t be able to participate in team competitions or track and field. A statistical analysis was conducted, which led us to this figure; 180 athletes is the maximum number. However, it keeps changing every day, and not for the better.

“Our position does not change, we are united in understanding that the sanctions are politicized and discriminatory. We defend the interests of our athletes on all platforms, but we must take a proactive stance. We hope that in terms of admitting our athletes, the voice of reason will prevail in the international federations and the IOC.”

Russia sent 436 athletes to the London 2012 Games, but this was reduced in view of the state-sponsored doping program from 2011-15 to 282 for Rio in 2016 and then to 335 for the “Russian Olympic Committee” team in Tokyo in 2021.

Other than token appearances in 1900 (5) and 1908 (6), the smallest Russian delegation at a Games was 159 in Stockholm in 1912.

Russian Olympic Committee President Stanislav Pozdnyakov blasted the sanctions recommended by the International Olympic Committee against athletes who are part of the Central Sports Club of the Army, or CSKA, as a link to the military which would disqualify them from competing in Paris:

“CSKA played a key role in the early ‘90s, when it did not allow the sports component, national teams, and centralized training to fall apart. Today it is at the forefront of Russian sport, and it is probably because of this that the unfair and illegal sanctions against CSKA athletes imposed by the IOC are related to this.

“There is unfair competition, but we will not just look at it, but will prove, including to our colleagues from Lausanne, that such actions are flawed and erroneous. I’m sure that CSKA athletes in the near future will go to the Olympic tracks, swimming pools and will, as before, defend the honor of the Russian flag.”

He also ripped the IOC’s recommendations as prohibiting support of Russian athletes:

“There is a big difference in funding between 2018 and now. Then the athletes represented the Russian Olympic Committee, but now they will be as individual athletes. The IOC, guided by its regulations, has actually prohibited us from funding neutral athletes.”

Swim star Evgeny Rylov, the 100-200 m Backstroke winner in Tokyo, said in a Russian MatchTV interview:

“You can count on your fingers how many athletes meet these [IOC] requirements. If necessary, everyone will go, but I only speak for myself: if I have to sign such a declaration, I will refuse. I don’t want to accept their conditions.”

5.
Spanish women’s footballers report, unhappily, for UEFA matches

Not wanting to be subject to sanctions, Spanish players reported for training on Tuesday for women’s national team matches in the UEFA Nations League Friday against Sweden and against Switzerland on 26 September.

Many of the players called – 15 – had signed a statement (signed by 39 players in all) pledging not to play for the national team while their grievances against the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) continued. However, a Spanish law imposes penalties, ranging from fines to suspensions, for not reporting to a national team call-up, except in cases of injury.

Victor Francos, the state secretary for sports, said in a television interview that he would be meeting with the players:

“The government had let the federation be the ones to talk to the players, giving it room to maneuver.

“(But) yesterday we looked ridiculous as a nation. It is unacceptable and this morning I spoke to some of the players. The impression I came away with was the most negative one possible. I did not hear resentment or anger, I heard sadness and exhaustion, and that is why I decided to back them.”

Midfield star Jenni Hermoso, the victim of the FIFA Women’s World Cup medal ceremony controversy, was not called up, with new coach Montse Tome, saying it was for her protection. Hermoso posted a bi-lingual statement titled, Protect me from what?,” which included:

“The players are certain that this is yet another strategy of division and manipulation to intimidate and threaten us with legal repercussions and economic sanctions. It is yet more irrefutable proof that shows that even today, nothing has changed.

“I want to once again show my full support to my colleagues who have been caught by surprise and forced to react to another unfortunate situation caused by the people who continue to make decisions within the RFEF.”

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Judo ● American judoka Nina Cutro-Kelly, 38, a four-time Pan American Championships medal winner – and silver medalist at +78 kg in 2021 – has been sanctioned for two years by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. She tested positive from an out-of-competition sample collected on 2 October 2022. Per the USADA:

“During its investigation into the circumstances of the case, USADA determined that Cutro-Kelly used a DHEA supplement at the recommendation of her doctor but failed to assess the prohibited status of any ingredients in the supplement before use despite USADA having educated her on the importance of carefully checking product labels and the significant risks of supplement use.

“Cutro-Kelly’s two-year period of ineligibility began on April 12, 2023, the date her provisional suspension was imposed. In addition, Cutro-Kelly has been disqualified from all competitive results obtained on and after October 2, 2022, the date of her positive test.”

● Modern Pentathlon ● The Union Internationale de Pentathlon Moderne (UIPM) named a seven-member committee to work out the absorption of the FISO – Federation Internationale de Sports d’Obstacles – into the UIPM:

“The formation of the Working Group is the next step in the process to deliver on the Memorandum of Understanding signed by the UIPM and FISO Presidents in Bath (GBR) in August. This agreement will enable UIPM to oversee the global Obstacle sports movement, following the integration of Obstacle as a discipline of Modern Pentathlon, with the mutual aim of increasing audience and participation numbers across a wider multi-sports portfolio.”

The question on the minds of many observers will be the extent to which the tail will wag the dog, i.e., whether pentathlon actually becomes obstacle-first, moving further away from modern Olympic founder Pierre de Coubertin‘s concept of the five-part soldier’s test, introduced at the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm.

The working group is chaired by UIPM President Klaus Schormann (GER) and includes UIPM Secretary General Shiny Fang (CHN), FISO President Ian Adamson (AUS), and also American pentathlon Olympian Rob Stull, the head of the Pan American (NORCECA) confederation. The first meeting is scheduled for November.

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For our updated, 787-event International Sports Calendar (no. 3) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: All protests forbidden at Asian Games; will Australia “salvage” the 2026 Commonwealth Games? U.S. Soccer moving from Chicago

She's no. 1! American teen Casey Kaufhold, now ranked nol. 1 in the world! (Photo: World Archery)

★ The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

★ To get The Sports Examiner by e-mail: sign up here! ★

≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Olympic Council of Asia forbids protests at Asian Games
2. Australian Senate asks to “salvage” ‘26 Commonwealth Games
3. Athletics Integrity Unit appeals Amusan clearance
4. U.S. Soccer moving to Atlanta from Chicago
5. Obstacle proves too much for 27% of World Junior entrants

● The Olympic Council of Asia said that protests will not be allowed at the 2023 Asian Games, set to begin in Hangzhou, China on Saturday. Any such protest will be met with a loss of accreditation for the individual concerned. The edict was met with anger from those favoring athlete expression.

● An interim report from an Australian Senate committee said that the Australian government should try to “salvage” the 2026 Commonwealth Games by finding a replacement host in Australia, to replace Victoria, which backed out in July. The same report questioned the wisdom of the renovation of the Gabba stadium in Brisbane for the 2032 Olympic Games, when athletics could be held in Cararra, used for the 2018 Commonwealth Games, as well as building a canoe-slalom facility, when one already exists in the Sydney area, used for the 2000 Olympic Games.

● The Athletics Integrity Unit filed a notice of appeal on Friday on the clearance on “whereabouts failure” charges for Nigerian star hurdler Tobi Amusan, who won the Diamond League title on Sunday in Eugene. The appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport could wipe out her win and subject her to a lengthy suspension. The AIU annual report for 2022 illustrated a vigorous testing program, with special attention to countries considered likely to have doping.

● The U.S. Soccer Federation, the wealthiest of the American National Governing Bodies, got a $50 million donation from The Home Depot founder Arthur Blank and will move its headquarters from Chicago to Atlanta and build a national training center for all of its teams. Site selection is ongoing.

● At the World Junior Championships in modern pentathlon held in Lithuania held over the weekend, the obstacle discipline was included for the first time and while the men’s entries managed to complete the course 83% of the time, the women completed it only 55%, for an overall average of 73% success. It’s a major shift, for which the competitors – especially the women – were not fully prepared.

● World Championships: Wrestling (Russian “neutrals”
win two in men’s Freestyle) ●

● Panorama: Archery (U.S. teen Kaufhold ascends to no. 1 Recurve ranking) = Athletics (Budapest sold 80.7% of all tickets available for Worlds) = Football (2: UEFA head says no Russian teams until Ukraine invasion ends; Spain calls up 15 members of Women’s World Cup team for UEFA Nations League matches) = Shooting (ISSF World Cup wraps in Rio) = Sport Climbing (IFSC reaches 100 member federations) ●

● Errata ● Some readers of Monday’s post saw that Vuelta a Espana winner Sepp Kuss was the third American winner of a Grand Tour; nope: it’s four: also Vuelta winner Greg Horner in 2013; Greg LeMond, who won the Tour de France three times, and Andrew Hampsten, the 1988 Giro d’Italia winner. Thanks to Dr. Bill Mallon for the correction. ●

1.
Olympic Council of Asia forbids protests at Asian Games

“We will not allow any protest, religious or political.

“Please ensure that your athletes are aware of this. If there is any form of protest we will withdraw the accreditation.”

That’s from Olympic Council of Asia Acting Director General Vinor Kumary Tiwari  (IND), speaking on Sunday to the Chefs de Mission getting ready for the 2023 Asian Games in Hangzhou (CHN), which begin on Saturday (23rd).

A prior warning on Friday (15th) noted a ban on:

“Banners, slogans and other promotional materials that promote political, racial, religious or commercial content and violate the OCA Constitution and Rules, or Chinese laws and regulations (Religious items for personal use are permitted).”

The OCA announcement added that “This rule applies especially to the victory ceremony, when an athlete can display the flag of their country or region but no other props are allowed, including photos and posters.”

The activist group Global Athlete posted an angry reply on Monday, titled “The Olympic Council of Asia Openly Threatens and Silences Athletes” and included:

“The OCA’s archaic approach to limiting athletes’ rights to freedom of expression is a clear demonstration that sport systems continue to believe they can operate in silo without adherence to globally accepted human rights. This decision from the OCA appears to favour China’s authoritarian rule of law that rejects freedom of expression over every athlete’s civil liberties. …

“Silencing the athlete voice within sporting organisations has led to oppression, discrimination, and abuse of athletes – restricting their basic human rights has, and will, do the same.”

Observed: Interestingly, the OCA’s restrictions for the 2023 Asiad are out of line with the International Olympic Committee’s Rule 50.2 Guidelines – Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022 which restrict protests only to the Olympic Village, official ceremonies and on the field of play.

The IOC interceded in the OCA’s business, saying that it was not possible to allow Russian or Belarusian athletes to compete due to “technical reasons.” Will it intervene here, and have the OCA (and the Chinese hosts) send out a “clarification”?

2.
Australian Senate asks to “salvage” ‘26 Commonwealth Games

A 97-page interim report, Australia’s preparedness to host Commonwealth, Olympic and Paralympic Games, was presented last week by the Australian Senate’s Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport References Committee, asking pointed questions about the abandonment of the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Victoria and the A$2.7 billion redevelopment of the Gabba stadium and surrounding area for the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games.

The committee was unimpressed with the way that the Victoria government canceled its hosting of the 2026 Commonwealth Games in July, after signing on to the event in 2022. Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews said at the time that the expected cost of A$2.6 billion had ballooned to A$6 billion or more ($1.68 to $3.87 billion U.S.) and was too expensive. Victoria had to pay A$380 million ($244.85 million U.S.) to the Commonwealth Games Federation to break its agreement to host.

The report noted “the Victorian Government’s refusal to cooperate with the inquiry,” and the chaos now surrounding the promises which had been made to the participating communities for new housing and sports facility upgrades. And there was this:

“[T]he committee was surprised and disappointed to observe the passive approach the Government appears to be taking in relation to the cancellation. While the abrupt cancellation of the 2026 Commonwealth Games is not the Australian Government’s fault, the consequences affect Australia’s reputation and therefore there is a role for the Australian Government to get active in trying to find a solution.

“The committee has not reached a view on which alternative cities could, or should, host a salvaged 2026 Commonwealth Games. However, the committee notes the willingness of the City of Gold Coast to engage in this process. This is a matter for the Australian Government to evaluate. However, given the constrained timeframe to salvage the Games, and concurrent fiscal and cost of living pressures, the committee endorses the principle that alternative options should maximise the use of existing sporting, transport and housing infrastructure across Australia.”

But its view is clear:

“The committee recommends that the Australian Government takes on a facilitation and coordination role in order to salvage the 2026 Commonwealth Games being held in Australia.”

To ensure this incident is not repeated:

“The committee recommends that the Australian Government develops guidelines for future major sporting events which make Commonwealth funding, regulatory, policy and operational support conditional on state and territory governments being required to notify the Australian Government well in advance of cancelling, or making major changes to, a major sporting event for which hosting rights have been awarded.”

As far as the 2032 Olympic Games is concerned, the report worried about the cost and scope of the redevelopment of the famed Brisbane Cricket Ground – The Gabba – and the surrounding area, now estimated to cost A$2.7 billion or about $1.74 billion U.S.:

“It may also be unwise and inappropriate for the Government to insist that a redeveloped Gabba host the athletics for the Games. Affected stakeholders pointed out that the Gabba could be redeveloped in its current footprint without the need to demolish the East Brisbane State School or develop Raymond Park.

“State governments should not use major events as an excuse to fast-track already-planned urban development against the wishes of their citizens and local communities, and without due diligence.

“The Gabba redevelopment should be subject to the same requirements for consultation as any development proposal, and required to be based on a sound business case. The Queensland Government should be honest with Queenslanders about why this project is being undertaken.

“Relocating the students of the East Brisbane State School to a new school location outside of the catchment area – where children can no longer walk or ride to school – represents a permanently poor outcome for the affected community that will outlast the 2032 Games. The Queensland Government needs to sit down with the community and find a solution that is acceptable – keeping front of mind over a century of history being weighed against a single event.”

Similarly, questions were raised about the construction of a canoe-slalom facility at Redland, with a comment:

“The history of whitewater facilities built for previous Games suggests there is a high likelihood that the facility could become a drain on the community and public funds in the future. This evidence would suggest that Australia does not need, and cannot sustain, two whitewater facilities.”

A facility for this sport already exists, and is in use, in the greater Sydney area, site of the 2000 Olympic Games.

The recommendations call for a further review by the Queensland government of the decision to hold athletics at the Gabba and the redevelopment of the nearby school and park; even the International Olympic Committee in its review of the Brisbane proposal noted that the Carrara Stadium – used for the 2018 Commonwealth Games – would be suitable.

As far as the new canoe-slalom center, “[i]f it is feasible to host the events at the Penrith Whitewater Centre in New South Wales, including with refurbishments, this option should be prioritised over building a new facility.”

The Queensland government is mostly ignoring the report, with Tourism and Sport Minister Stirling Hinchliffe explaining Friday: “The Gabba is the way in which we will deliver a world-class experience not just for the Games, but for Queensland and for Brisbane for decades to come.”

The final report is expected to be delivered in December.

3.
Athletics Integrity Unit appeals Amusan clearance

Nigeria’s 2022 World Champion and world-record setter Tobi Amusan had a big finish to her 2023 season with a 12.33 win at the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene on Sunday to take the Diamond League title in the women’s 100 m hurdles.

Maybe.

The Athletics Integrity Unit noted Monday that it has filed a notice of appeal on its provisional suspension from July that was overturned:

“The AIU filed an appeal last Friday (15 September 2023) with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) against the Disciplinary Tribunal’s decision, dated 17 August 2023, that Tobi Amusan did not commit an anti-doping rule violation for Whereabouts Failures.”

Amusan was charged with three “whereabouts” failures on 18 July and appealed to the Athletics Disciplinary Tribunal, which cleared her on 17 August:

“A panel of the Disciplinary Tribunal, by majority decision, has today found that Tobi Amusan has not committed an Anti-Doping Rule Violation (ADRV) of three Whereabouts Failures within a 12-month period. …

“Amusan’s provisional suspension has now been lifted with immediate effect.”

Amusan competed on 18 July in Hungary and won in a fast 12.35, but did not compete again until the World Championships in Budapest, where she finished sixth in the final. She then waited to compete again until the Prefontaine Classic, with her win earning her $30,000, which could now be in jeopardy.

The AIU published its annual report for 2022 last week, with Board Chair David Howman (NZL) noting in his opening message:

● “We collected 10,686 samples from 2,779 athletes representing 136 nationalities. Out-of-competition samples accounted for 67% of the samples collected.”

● “[A]ll qualifiers from ‘Category A’ National Federations – those deemed to pose the highest doping risk to athletics in 2022 – were declared eligible for the [2022] World Championships after meeting the minimum testing requirements as set out under the World Athletics Anti-Doping Rules (Rule 15).

“It was great to see full compliance by five of the seven ‘Category A’ National Federations: Bahrain, Ethiopia, Kenya, Morocco and Nigeria. Meanwhile, seven Ukrainian athletes were given exemptions due to extenuating circumstances because of the war, though 15 of their team-mates fulfilled the testing obligations. Belarus – the other ‘Category A’ nation – did not compete in Eugene.

“In total, 156 athletes from six ‘Category A’ countries were entered for the World Championships, with 1206 out-of-competition tests conducted since 1 January 2022 at domestic level (excluding AIU tests).”

● “To stave off the prospect of any possible international ban from competition, the Kenyan Government pledged US$25 million ($5 million annually for five years) in late 2022 to fight doping in athletics. A Steering Committee – primarily comprising the AIU, ADAK and Athletics Kenya (AK) – was set up to oversee the disbursement of government’s funding and track its usage.”

● “[S]temming from the AIU’s investigation of 17 reports of suspicious competition results during the qualification period for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games … [s]even Member Federations – Albania, Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Turkey and Uzbekistan – were placed on the Watch List which reflects the high degree of risk of results manipulation within those organisations.”

The AIU did all this on a budget of $8.88 million for 2022, of which testing and results management consumed $2.97 million. In terms of testing, distance running was overwhelmingly the biggest focus, with 24.3% of all tests on track events and 23.1% on road events (total: 47.4%). The sprints were next at 17.4% and then throws (11.4%), jumps (10.5%), middle distances (10.2%) and multi-events (3.0%).

The most-tested areas were Africa (36.8%), Europe (31.8%), then North America (18.0%), Asia (9.2%), South America (2.8%) and Oceania (1.5%).

4.
U.S. Soccer moving to Atlanta from Chicago

The most financially successful U.S. National Governing Body, the U.S. Soccer Federation, is heading south after a Friday announcement of a new national headquarters and National Training Center in Atlanta.

The USSF has been in Chicago since 1991, and in New York and Colorado Springs before that, but will now head to Atlanta thanks to a $50 million gift from The Home Depot founder Arthur Blank, who owns the NFL’s Atlanta Falcons and Atlanta United of Major League Soccer:

“The facility will serve as headquarters for the U.S. Soccer Federation, creating a central hub for the entire soccer community, including coaches and referees, to access best-in-class training, technology and infrastructure to promote successful and sustainable playing environments throughout the country. For players, the National Training Center will provide the best environment, guaranteeing uninterrupted access to elite infrastructure for training, development, recovery and performance analysis – cultivating expertise and excellence in the sport on an international level.

“While the National Training Center will be utilized by all 27 of U.S. Soccer’s National Teams, part of Blank’s contribution will specifically go towards the construction of facilities for U.S. Soccer’s nine Extended National Teams (ENTs), particularly in support of the Cerebral Palsy (CP), Deaf, and Power Soccer National Teams, including thoughtful design of locker rooms and training facilities to maximize accessibility for players.”

Site selection is continuing and is expected to be announced in early 2024. Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium has already been selected as a site for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

U.S. Soccer reported assets of $171.67 million in its 2022 financial statement, with $108.34 million in reserves. It had $117.75 million in operating revenues in 2022, against operating expenses of $145.37 million before investment gains of $3.11 million net. Having the 2026 FIFA World Cup in the U.S. is expected to open new opportunities for the federation to expand interest nationally and internationally.

5.
Obstacle proves too much for 27% of World Junior entrants

The UIPM World Junior (U-22) Championships in Druskininkai (LTU) were of interest not only for the outcomes, with individual wins by France’s Mathis Rochat and German Josefine Unterberger, but also the implementation of the new obstacle discipline that will completely replace riding beyond 2024.

With very few chances for practice, the new concept was challenging, so much so that 27% of all entries in the event were eliminated in the obstacle discipline and scored no points in that event. Athletes could – and did – continue, with Unterberger being eliminated in the qualifying round, but scoring enough in the other events to make it to the final and win! But the women had a tough time:

● Men/qualifying: 55 completed, 11 eliminated (83.3%)

● Women/qualifying: 27 completed, 17 eliminated (61.4%)

● Team/Men: 14 completed, 3 eliminated (82.4%)

● Team/Women: 4 completed, 8 eliminated (33.3%)

● Team/Mixed: 11 completed, 2 eliminated (84.6%)

The overall count was 111 completions and 41 eliminations for an overall success rate of 73.0%. The men did well, with a combined 69-14 for 83.1% success, but the women completed only 31 of 56 tries, or 55.4%.

Eliminations in the obstacle discipline are assigned for various reasons, most often for failing to complete an obstacle on two tries, but also for interference with a competitor.

The activist Pentathlon United athlete group posted a redacted message from one athlete that included, “I thank you [heart] I am so mad at all UIPM now, I really wanted to enjoy my last championships in juniors, but ocr completely destroyed it. [sad face]”

The Modern Pentathlon is not, at present, on the program for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles and was charged by the IOC with improving its events and widening its popularity. It has put all of its hopes on incorporating obstacle racing as one of its four events – running and shooting are combined into the Laser Run – to the point of agreeing to absorb the FISO, the international federation for obstacle racing that was formed in 2014.

No senior-level events have been held with obstacle included since the format for the Paris 2024 competition still includes riding, part of the modern pentathlon as introduced by Baron Pierre de Coubertin (FRA) at the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm (SWE).

The other sports that were not included for 2028 are boxing – which has since been assured a place after the withdrawal of recognition of the International Boxing Association – and weightlifting, which has drawn positive comments from IOC officials as it has revamped its governance and anti-doping processes. Very little has been said about pentathlon, but the issue is expected to be resolved at the IOC Session in India in October.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Wrestling ● Russian wrestlers, competing as “neutrals” won two men’s Freestyle classes on Monday at the UWW World Wrestling Championships in Belgrade (SRB).

At 74 kg, Zaurbek Sidakov, the Tokyo 2020 Olympic champ, won his third world title with a 10-7 victory over four-time champion Kyle Dake of the U.S. The match was tied 3-3 in the final period when a flurry of takedowns and reverses led to a challenge that eventually had Sidakov leading 8-7, and another challenged decision gave Sidakov two more points for the 10-7 final.

In the 79 kg class, Russian Akhmed Usmanov defeated Georgia’s Vladimir Gamkrelidze in the final by 4-1, with Iranian Mohammad Nokhodi and Ukraine’s Vasyl Mykhailov. During the awards ceremony, Mykhailov exited the podium prior to a joint photograph of the medal winners, refusing to stand with Usmanov.

In the 57 kg final, Serbia’s Stevan Micic – U.S.-born and a two-time NCAA medalist at Michigan – thrilled the home fans with a win over Rei Higuchi (JPN), the 2022 Worlds winner at 61 kg, by 7-4.

The 92 kg crown went to Kazakhstan’s Rizabek Aitmukhan, 5-2, over two-time Worlds bronze winner Osman Nurmagomedov, with American Zain Valencia  taking a bronze – his first Worlds medal – along with Feyzullah Akturk (TUR). It’s the sixth medal for the U.S. men so far in Belgrade.

There had been a Russia-Ukraine match at 61 kg on the 16th, with Russian  Abasgadzhi Magomedov winning over Ukrainian Valentin Blesetsky; the two did not shake hands afterwards. Russian Wrestling Federation President Mikhail Mamiashvili told the Russian news agency TASS that while no express instructions were given to Russian wrestlers by United World Wrestling, “they were simply warned to react adequately.”

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Archery ● American Casey Kaufhold, 19, has moved to the no. 1 ranking in World Archery’s women’s Recurve Division, the first American woman to reach the top since rankings began in 2001.

The rankings use a points-accumulation system, and Kaufhold has been solid this season, with a fourth at the World Championships, another fourth at the World Cup Final and a won at the Paris World Cup, which doubled as the test event for Paris 2024.

All of that elevated her to 281 points, passing Britain’s Penny Healey, now second. Two other American women are in the top 50: Jennifer Mucino-Fernandez at 42nd and Catalina GNoriega in 46th.

Brady Ellison continues as the top American in the men’s Recurve (Olympic) rankings, in fourth. Next is Jack Williams, in a tie for 28th. Brazil’s Marcus D’Almeida, the 2023 Worlds bronze winner and World Cup Final champion, continues at no. 1.

● Athletics ● More details are becoming available concerning attendance at the 2023 Worlds in Budapest, with 404,088 tickets claimed of 423,090 that were available, meaning that 95.5% of all tickets were distributed.

However, that does not mean that all of these tickets were sold. A Budapest Business Journal report noted:

● Tickets sold totaled 341,555 (80.7% of all available), with the remaining 52,533 distributed for free. About 10,000 tickets were used for school children and another 10,000 for underserved groups. The remainder were used for guests and news media.

● The nine evening sessions drew 267,331 or 29,703 each, and the five morning sessions drew 136,757 or 27,351 on average, at the 35,000-seat National Athletics Centre.

● Spectators came from 120 countries, with the biggest contingents from Great Britain, then Germany and the U.S. About 40% of all tickets sold went to buyers outside Hungary.

An estimated 30,000 visitors came to the event from outside of Hungary, an important figure for future organizers in Europe to note regarding hotel availability.

● Football ● UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin (SLO) told the Sportklub site in a Sunday post:

“The Russians will return to football only when the war in Ukraine ends.”

He also explained why the federation ended its commercial relationship with the Russian energy giant Gazprom after the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022:

“It simply had to be done as some sort of symbolic act.

“It is difficult after the start of the war over the stadium, where hundreds of millions of people watch the games, to advertise for this company. I’m sorry, but we had to do it. But it is also a fact that those who still buy gas from the same company are the ones who complain the most about this issue.”

The drama in Spain continues as the Royal Spanish Football Federation’s new women’s coach, Montse Tome, called up 23 players for UEFA Nations League matches coming up against Sweden on Friday (22nd) and Switzerland on the 26th.

Of the 23, 15 are from the FIFA Women’s World Cup championship team, and 20 are signatories to a message from 39 players who said they will not play for the national team again until further changes are made. Tome said she expected them to report for practice on Tuesday.

Spanish law requires players to report if called up, with significant financial sanctions and possibly suspensions if they do not appear.

Midfielder Jenni Hermoso, at the center of the turmoil over the actions of ex-RFEF President Luis Rubiales, was not called up. Said Tome, “We are all with Jenni and with all of the players. I believe this was the best way to protect her.”

● Shooting ● On the final day of the ISSF World Cup in Rio de Janeiro (BRA), France’s Tokyo Olympic champ Jean Quiquampoix won the men’s 25 m Rapid-Fire Pistol, 34-30 over China’s Zhiming Lu, and Norway’s 2022 Worlds bronze winner Jeanette Hegg Duestad won the women’s 50 m Rifle/3 Positions event, scoring 461.5 to 458.0 for Nischal Nischal (IND).

China finished with eight medals overall (1-4-3) and Italy (2-0-1), Hungary (1-1-1) and Norway (1-1-1) each had three.

● Sport Climbing ● The International Federation of Sport Climbing (IFSC) announced the addition of federations from Guam and Nigeria, reaching the 100 mark in total affiliated federations.

The IFSC started in 2007, with 57 founding members.

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TSX REPORT: U.S.’s Kuss wins Vuelta a Espana! Arbitrators for Valieva case named; high jump icon Fosbury fondly remembered in L.A.

American Sepp Kuss (c), with teammates Jonas Vingegaard (l) and Primoz Roglic (r) on the way to victory at the Vuelta a Espana (Photo: Jumbo-Visma)

★ The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

  1. Kuss becomes first U.S. winner of Vuelta a Espana in 10 years
  2. Court of Arbitration names Valieva case arbitrators
  3. USOPC looking for ways to preserve collegiate sport
  4. Nearly $113 million in Olympic Solidarity spending in 2022
  5. Dick Fosbury fondly remembered by family and friends

● Sepp Kuss became the first American winner of one of cycling’s Grand Tours in 10 years on Sunday, with a win at the 78th La Vuelta a Espana that finished in Madrid. He led an unheard-of 1-2-3 sweep by the Dutch Jumbo-Visma team, ahead of Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark and Slovenian Primoz Roglic, winner of this year’s Giro d’Italia.

● The Court of Arbitration for Sport announced the members of the panel that will hear the appeal of the Kamila Valieva doping case from 26-29 September in Lausanne, Switzerland. No timetable has been established for the issuance of a decision.

● The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee’s chief executive, Sarah Hirshland, said that the organization is concerned about the continuing chaos of conference realignment in college sports and looking to preserve the role of intercollegiate athletics not only for Olympic team purposes, but for the benefit of the thousands of students who participate annually.

● The International Olympic Committee’s report on Olympic Solidarity programs for 2022 showed almost $113 million in spending, but also that most National Olympic Committees are small and underfunded.

● Nearly 50 family, friends and admirers of 1968 Olympic high jump champion Dick Fosbury, who revolutionized the event with the “Fosbury Flop,” gathered in Los Angeles for a celebration of his life and his contribution to sport, politics and the Olympic Movement. Some of it was hilarious.

● World Championships: Rugby (World Cup underway in France, with some issues) = Weightlifting (China finishes as top medal winner again) = Wrestling (U.S. claims three men’s Freestyle golds!) ●

 Panorama: Athletics (3: Saina wins in Sydney; Class of 2023 inducted into Collegiate Hall of Fame; World Ath removes 2024 X-C Champs from Croatia) = Badminton (Indonesia wins two at Hong Kong Open) = Basketball (2: U.S. men regain no. 1 world ranking; Canada wins FIBA 3×3 Women’s Series) = Boxing (2: Roberts named IBA chief exec; Oceania confederation claims Polynesian federation belongs to IBA) = Cycling (Vollering takes Tour de Romandie for seventh win in 2023) = Football (2: Hermoso granted restraining order vs. Rubiales; 39 Spanish women’s players demand further RFEF changes) = Gymnastics (Britain and France win three each at World Challenge Cup) = Judo (Brazil and Canada lead Pan Am Champs) = Shooting (Italy wins two at ISSF World Cup) = Table Tennis (Calderano and Wang take Pan Am singles titles) ●

● Special coverage of the sensational Prefontaine Classic, also the 2023 Diamond League Final, was posted over the weekend, on Saturday and Sunday. ●

● Errata: Some readers of Friday’s post saw a reference to the Salt Lake City bid for the 2034 Olympic Winter Games incorrectly shown as “2023″; now corrected. Thanks to reader Don Kopriva for the sharp eyes! ●

1.
Kuss becomes first U.S. winner of Vuelta a Espana in 10 years

No one predicted this, but American Sepp Kuss, 29, won the 78th Vuelta a Espana in Madrid on Sunday, rising above his celebrated Jumbo-Visma teammates Primoz Roglic (SLO) – the 2020 and 2021 winner – and two-time Tour de France champion, Jonas Vingegaard (DEN).

Kuss, who has been a support rider for those race leaders, won the sixth stage and took the overall race lead after the eighth stage, and held it to the end. He came into Friday’s stage with a 17-second lead on Vingegaard and 1:08 on Roglic, after both had – controversially – attacked him hard on Wednesday, with the lead down to eight seconds. But the situation calmed on Thursday and Kuss continued leading, with a 177.1 km flat, sprint stage on Friday won by Italy’s Alberto Dianese in 3:42:09, ahead of countryman Filippo Ganna.

Saturday’s hilly, 207.8 km stage to Guadarrama saw Dutch star Wout Poels win over defending champ Remco Evenepoel (BEL), Pelayo Sanchez (ESP) and Lennert van Eetvelt (BEL) in a four-man sprint to the line in 4:59:29. Roglic, Vingegaard and Kuss rode in together in 34-35-36th place at +10.37. Said Kuss, a day from winning the event:

“We decided to cross the finish line with the three of us. It was a fantastic moment.

“We’ve achieved something unique with the team this season by winning the three grand tours. The last three weeks certainly haven’t been easy, but we’ve granted one another. It is like a fairytale.

“It will take a while for everything to sink in. It’s an incredible feeling. It was a huge relief to cross the line here. I knew it was possible to finish this, but you have to get through all the stages well. I suffered a lot, but I survived every time. This Tour of Spain has been an unexpected success for me. When I became a cyclist, I did it for the love of the sport. Now, I am close to winning a grand tour. It is still too difficult to express my feelings. I am grateful for this experience.”

Sunday’s short, flat, 101.5 km ride into Madrid finished with the expected mass sprint, won by Australia’s Kaden Groves – his third stage win! – in 2:24:13, ahead of Italy’s Ganna and Nico Denz (GER), with Roglic, Vingegaard and Kuss in 52-53-56th (+0:26).

Kuss’s win completes an astonishing year for the Dutch-based Jumbo-Visma team, which won all three of the Grand Tours. Roglic won the Giro d’Italia, Vingegaard repeated as the Tour de France winner and Kuss got his first Grand Tour title, in Spain. Moreover, Kuss, Vingegaard and Roglic finished 1-2-3 in La Vuelta, an almost unbelievable achievement in cycling, where teams ride in support of their lead entry, not with him.

Kuss finished in 76:48:21, with Vingegaard 17 seconds back and Roglic at +1:08 to complete the Jumbo-Visma podium sweep.

It’s the second-ever U.S. win at the Vuelta a Espana, after Chris Horner’s victory in 2013, and Kuss is only the fourth American winner of a Grand Tour, also Horner, Greg LeMond, who won the Tour de France three times, and Andrew Hampsten, the 1988 Giro d’Italia winner.

2.
Court of Arbitration names Valieva case arbitrators

The long saga of the Kamila Valieva doping case and the 2022 Olympic Winter Games figure skating Team event are getting closer to a resolution with the hearing before the Court of Arbitration for Sport coming up on 26-29 September in Lausanne, Switzerland.

Valieva tested positive for the prohibited substance trimetazidine, which can help with blood flow efficiency and endurance, following a competition on 25 December 2021. She was given a four-year ban by the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA), but this was overturned by the independent appeals panel, which gave her a one-day sanction and allowed her to continue competing, including at the Beijing Winter Games in February 2022.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport announced Friday:

● “The parties to the proceedings: RUSADA, the ISU, WADA and Ms Valieva (collectively, the parties), want privacy and have not requested that a public hearing be held. Consequently, the hearing will take place behind closed doors in accordance with the provisions of Article 57 of the Code of Sports-related Arbitration (the “CAS Code”), and outside persons will not be authorised to attend. For that reason, on 5 September 2023, the CAS Panel denied a request filed by the 2022 United States Olympic Figure Skating Team for an observer to be permitted to attend the hearing on their behalf.”

● “The Panel of CAS arbitrators constituted to decide the matter is composed of:

“President: Mr James Drake KC, Barrister, United Kingdom & Australia

“Arbitrators: “Mr Jeffrey Mishkin, Attorney-at-Law, USA “Dr Mathieu Maisonneuve, Professor of law, France

“The ISU and WADA nominated Mr Jeffrey Mishkin, and Ms Valieva nominated Prof. Mathieu Maisonneuve. RUSADA being involved as Appellant in one procedure and as Respondent in the other two, it decided not to participate in the nomination process. The President of the Panel was appointed by the Deputy President of the Appeals Arbitration Division in accordance with the CAS Code.”

● “The Panel and parties have established a detailed hearing timetable. The proceedings will open on Tuesday, 26 September 2023 with a short opening submission from each party, followed by the hearing of fact witnesses. On Wednesday, 27 September 2023, the Panel will hear expert witnesses and on Thursday, 28 September 2023, the Panel will hear the parties’ closing submissions and rebuttals. Should additional time be required, the Panel and parties have reserved Friday, 29 September 2023.

“Following the hearing, the Panel will deliberate and prepare the Arbitral Award containing its decision. At this juncture, it is not possible to indicate when the final decision will be announced. The CAS Panel’s decision will be final and binding, with the exception of the parties’ right to file an appeal to the Swiss Federal Tribunal within 30 days on limited procedural grounds.”

The written submissions on the case have already been completed and exchanged. Valieva and the RUSADA team will participate by videoconference and will not be in Lausanne.

There are three appellants in the case: the World Anti-Doping Agency, which is seeking a four-year ban from 25 December 2021; the International Skating Union, which has asked for a ban of two to four years, and RUSADA, which wants the holding of the independent appeal board invalidated and an “appropriate penalty” instituted.

Waiting on the sidelines are the rest of the Russian Team Event team, which won the competition on the ice; the U.S. team, which was second, and Japan and Canada, which finished 3-4. The results of this event have never been declared completed and no medals were awarded in Beijing.

3.
USOPC looking for ways to preserve collegiate sport

In a session with reporters last week during the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Assembly in Los Angeles, U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee chief executive Sarah Hirshland made a special point concerning the conference realignment chaos now consuming the Football Bowl Subdivision schools:

“There’s been a lot of movement in the college landscape and I want to comment briefly on the big shift in college sport in the recent weeks and months.

“We made a commitment back in 2016 to engage deeply on this issue and to find better connection points between Team USA and the schools that play Olympic and Paralympic sports. This is important to us for a number of reasons and we will continue to work with our entire community to advocate for the promotion of preservation of Olympic and Paralympic sports on collegiate campuses.

“It is profoundly important not only to Team USA at the elite level, but to the health of sport in our country, broadly.”

The USOPC has a Collegiate Advisory Council which is made up primarily of current and former university athletic directors, currently chaired by Stanford athletic director Bernard Muir and includes the head of athletics at Alabama, Florida, Iowa State, North Carolina, Ohio State and Oregon. A staff member is responsible for collegiate partnership projects, which are in the development stage and, as with all programs related to sports, need more money.

But this is an area which will need expanded attention as the gyrations around college football continue to disrupt what used to be a college sports system that was rooted in geography rather than television game windows.

Hirshland, who is a member of the International Olympic Committee’s Programme Commission, spoke briefly about the status of the added-sport program for the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games:

“As part of organizing the [Olympic Games], the OCOG – the organizing committee – takes on the responsibility of collaborating in a review, and thinking about new sports for the program. This work has been ongoing for some time now and the original timing for the recommendations to be considered was by the IOC Executive Board last week.

“As many of you know, that discussion has been delayed and postponed, at this point, indefinitely. As those conversations continue, we don’t yet have a date for the future decisions, and discussions , but we know that LA28 and the IOC are in very active and productive conversations to come to resolution, and, frankly, we’re excited about the outcome of that, knowing that the LA28 Games is going to present an exceptional program.”

4.
Nearly $113 million in Olympic Solidarity spending in 2022

The International Olympic Committee shared details of its Olympic Solidarity and National Olympic Committee support services in a 27-page report posted last week that showed $112.879 million spent in 2022, a 21.2% increase from 2021.

Where did the money go? Most of it went to two sets of programs:

● $52.59 million to the continental associations of National Olympic Committees

This includes $9.26 million to ANOCA (Africa), $10.03 million to PanAm Sports, $10.97 million to Asia (OCA), $12.11 million to Europe (EOC), $6.23 million to Oceania (ONOC) and $4.00 million to the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC).

● $57.07 million to 17 individual programs for athletes, coaches and NOCs

The largest groups receiving this type of aid includes athletes, with $14.66 million for direct athlete scholarships, $4.34 million for continental athlete grants, $2.28 million for youth athlete development, and $821,000 for refugee athlete support; that’s $22.10 million combined.

Coaching programs received $5.27 million and another $17.37 million to help NOCs with staff education, sports management training and team support for travel, uniforms and so on. That’s more than 78% of the total.

There’s also $5.52 million in spending on “Olympic Values Programme” on health and sustainability, and $3.10 million on special projects.

The report also included some snapshot statistics on National Olympic Committees which are fascinating:

● NOC spending is, on average, divided between operations (32%), direct support to national federations (27%), athlete management (26%) and other (15%).

● NOC funding consists, on average, of IOC support (50%), government (24%), the IOC’s TOP sponsor program (9%), domestic sponsors and donors (7%), a national lottery (4%) and other (6%).

● The median (mid-point) of the number of employees of National Olympic Committees is 27 in Asia, 26 in Europe, 15 in Africa, 12 in the Americas and eight in Oceania.

Taken together, the data demonstrates that there are a lot of small NOCs, with small staffs and limited resources. And even with nearly $113 million in spending, it’s not close to enough, perhaps anywhere.

The Olympic Scholarship program is supporting 1,146 individuals from 145 NOCs for Paris 2024, after 429 athletes were supported for the Beijing 2022 Winter Games, from more than 8- NOCs. The Paris 2024 Olympic Refugee project has 52 athletes from 12 countries that are living in 18 host countries and training for 2024, across 10 sports.

5.
Dick Fosbury fondly remembered by family and friends

Nearly 50 family, friends and admirers of Olympic high jump legend Dick Fosbury  gathered for a celebration of life at the LA84 Foundation in Los Angeles last Tuesday.

Fosbury was remembered not only for revolutionizing the high jump with his back-to-the-bar approach recognized as the “Fosbury Flop,” but for his successes in life, as an engineer, family and community stalwart and as Blaine County Commissioner in Idaho.

His widow, Dr. Robin Tomasi, shared Fosbury’s passion for his sport, for the Olympic Games and his commitment to his beloved Idaho, where he ran unsuccessfully for the Idaho House in 2014 before winning the Blaine County Commissioner post in 2019:

“He loved Idaho, he loved the beautiful mountains where we lived, he loved Blaine County and he loved politics. He was really into politics as a vehicle for making things better go everybody.”

And she broke up the audience completely, explaining the giant, dressed-up torso topped with an enlarged photograph of Fosbury’s head that was displayed behind her:

“In 2014, he decided he wanted to run for the Idaho Statehouse. And so, District 26, Seat B was his goal. He had a campaign manager who was very serious about his campaign. …

“He had to go to every parade. There were a lot of things he had to do. Unfortunately at the time, he was also President of USOPA [U.S. Olympians and Paralympians Association], and so he had to be gone for some of these events.

“So we dreamed up these – there’s actually two of them – and they are very affectionately referred to as ‘the Dickheads,’ … so the Dickheads stood in for Dick at these parades.”

A series of speakers shared their memories of Fosbury, including Olympic swim star Donna de Varona, who was a broadcaster with ABC at the 1968 Mexico City Games, where Fosbury won his high jump gold; Cathy Oerter, the widow of four-time Olympic discus winner Al OerterBob Welch, who co-wrote “The Wizard of Foz: Dick Fosbury’s One-Man High-Jump Revolution” with Fosbury in 2018, and Olympians (and friends) Willie Banks and John Naber.

The high jump fraternity was well represented in the room with Rey Brown, Fosbury’s 1968 teammate who made the team as a high schooler and finished fifth; Doug Nordquist, fifth at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, and Erik Kynard, now the 2012 Olympic champion in the event.

The iconic Dwight Stones spoke for all of them, and shared messages from high jump stars such as two-time Olympic medalist Hollis Conway, Charles Austin, the 1996 Olympic champion, and Germany’s Dietmar Mogenburg, the 1984 Olympic gold medalist, all of whom paid tribute to Fosbury’s contributions to their success.

Stones recounted his own journey to the Flop in high school – against the advice of his coach – improving from 5-6 (1.68 m) with the Straddle style to 7-1 1/2 (2.17 m) and the national high school record by 1971. In 1972, he became the first flop-style jumper to set the world record at 2.30 m (7-6 1/2), but noted:

“I always felt that Dick’s technique would have continued to evolve if he had seriously continued with the sport. But engineering school at Oregon State University became the priority. … Of course, he made the right decision, for his future and his family, but I really wanted the chance to compete with him.”

Stones spoke about what Fosbury meant to him and everyone else in his event:

“We’re all connected to Dick Fosbury for life, every high jumper in this room. I tried, at least a couple of times each year, through Facebook, on the phone, or in person, to let him know how much he meant to me. I would always say or post, ‘Dick, have I thanked you lately, for all my jobs?’ …

“Thanks to Dick, I had a 16-year athletic career that morphed into a 46-year sports television gig that’s still going. Let’s get real: he changed the life of every high jumper in this room. We all owe him a debt of gratitude that we can never repay.”

Tom Lough, a 1968 U.S. Olympic modern pentathlete, presented Tomasi with a commemorative flag from the U.S. Olympians and Paralympians Association. The event showed that Dick Fosbury’s life was no flop, indeed.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rugby ● The 10th Rugby World Cup is into its second of seven weeks of matches, lasting until 28 October, in nine venues across France, with defending champion South Africa and runner-up England both returning.

The first phase of group play has 20 teams playing 15-per-side round-robin matches in four groups, with the top two in each advancing to the quarterfinals. This will last until 8 October, with the playoffs beginning on 14 October. Through the first two rounds of matches in each group, the pool leaders:

Group A: France (2-0), New Zealand (1-1)

Group B: Ireland (2-0), South Africa (2-0)

Group C: Wales (2-0), Fiji (1-1)

Group D: Samoa, Japan, England (all 1-0)

This is a major event, with attendance through the first 13 matches at 545,860, or 41,989 on average.

The biggest controversy so far has been about the national anthems of the teams, played prior to the matches. A massive youth choir was used for the first-round matches and was badly received; organizing committee President Jacques Rivoal explained that “instrumental elements” would be added to “remixed” anthems beginning in the second round:

“The feedback we got after eight games were that these anthems were disturbing, or surprising to our fans. We are here to prioritize the fan experience, and we were quite concerned by this negative feedback.

“It is quite a sensitive question because for all the teams it’s a very important point. Today we have proposed new versions, simplified versions, while preserving the children’s voices. These different versions will not be disturbing for the supporters, and will offer a more affirmative musical performance.”

Crowd flow issues also surfaced at some venues, such as in Marseille for England-Argentina and Bordeaux for the Ireland-Romania match due to public transit problems. This is an ultra-sensitive issue after the security debacle at the European Championship football match at the Stade de France in Paris in 2022 and with the 2024 Olympic Games coming next year.

● Weightlifting ● The two-week World Weightlifting Championships  concluded in Riyadh (KSA), with China once again on top of the medal table.

The Chinese won their seventh class in the women’s 81 kg category, with defending champ Xiaomei Liang setting a world record in the Clean & Jerk on the way to the gold medal. She was second in the Snatch (122 kg), lifted a record 159 kg in the Clean & Jerk for a winning total of 281 kg. Teammate Zhouyu Wang took the Snatch (122 kg), was second at 155 kg in the C&J and second overall at 277 kg.

Australia’s Eileen Cikamantana was only fifth after the Snatch, but her 146 kg C&J was third-best and lifted her to the bronze at 256 kg. American Mattie Rogers, a four-time Worlds silver winner, was able to complete only three of her six lifts and finished fourth at 252 kg.

Chinese Taipei’s Ying-yuan Lo completed only one of her lifts at the 2022 Worlds, and did not place, but roared back in 2023 to win the Snatch at 112 kg, and with 133 kg in the C&J, totaled 245 kg for the gold medal. Yeinny Geles of Colombia won her first Worlds medal at 244 kg, with the second-best C&J lift of 138 kg.

Korea’s Hye-jeong Park moved from eighth in 2022 to the gold in 2023 in the women’s +87 kg class, winning the Snatch at 124 kg and the C&J at 165 kg for a total of 289 kg. That was well ahead of American Mary Theisen-Lappen, who won her first Worlds medal at 117-160-277 kg, and had her last C&J attempt controversially ruled a no-lift.

Fellow American Sarah Robles finished fifth at 117-150-267, completing three of her six lifts.

In the men’s 109 kg class, Olympic champ Akbar Djuraev (UZB) swept to his second title – also in 2021 – winning the Snatch (189 kg), the Clean & Jerk (226 kg) and the total at 415 kg. Teammate Ruslan Nurudinov, the defending champ, finished second at 180-227-407. American Wesley Kitts was 11th at 170-200-370.

The +109 kg category was another showcase for super-strongman Lasha Talakhadze of Georgia, who won all three segments, lifting 220-253-473 kg for a clear win over Varazdat Lalayan (ARM: 212-248-460 kg) and Gor Minasyan (BRN: 213-246-459 kg). Americans Caine Wilkes was 16th (386 kg) and Alejandro Medina was 19th (373 kg).

It’s Talakhadze’s seventh World Championships gold, going back to 2015.

Despite injury issues with some of its stars, China led all nations with 13 medals (7-4-2) in the overall standings only; South Korea was well back in second with five (1-2-2), and Colombia had four (1-3-0). It’s the second straight Worlds for China as the medals leader and in four of the last five, as it did not compete in 2021 due to Covid.

The U.S. had three medals: one silver and two bronze.

● Wrestling ● The 2023 United World Wrestling World Wrestling Championships are ongoing in Belgrade (SRB), with Olympic quota places at stake in addition to individual honors.

The men’s Freestyle finals in four classes were held Sunday, with the U.S. dominating, scoring three golds and a bronze:

● At 61 kg, NCAA champ Vito Araujo from Cornell faced 2021 World Champion  Abasgadzhi Magomedov (RUS) in the final, after winning his earlier bouts by 10-0, 10-0, 8-2 and 12-2. The two were tied, 7-7, in the second period, but Araujo got a takedown and a step-out to lead by 10-7, than running out the clock with the final of 10-9. It’s Araujo’s first Worlds gold in his first Worlds appearance.

● At 70 kg, 2022 silver winner Zain Retherford took care of his first three opponents by 4-0, 9-2 and 7-0, then faced Iran’s 2021 Worlds silver medalist Amir Yazdani in the final. Retherford led 3-2 after one period, then extended to 8-2 with two takedowns and a step-out an cruised to an 8-5 win and his first World title.

● Two-time World Champion David Taylor steamrolled his way to a third Worlds gold at 86 kg by dismantling five opponents in a row, by pinfall, 10-0, 12-2, another pin in the semis and finally a dominant victory over Iran’s three-time World Champion,  Hassan Yazdani. Taylor led by 5-3 at the period, then got a takedown for a 7-3 edge and pinned the Iranian when he tried to turn him, at 5:57. It’s the second straight win for Taylor over Yazdani at the Worlds.

● In the 125 kg class, Iranian Amir Hossein Zare won his second World title – also in 2021 – with an 11-0 technical fall over three-time World Champion Geno Petriashvili (GEO). American Mason Parris, in his first Worlds, lost a tight, 8-6 battle to Petriashvili in the semis, then came back to take the bronze with a 12-2 win over Russian “neutral” Abdulla Kurbanov.

The top five in each of the six Olympic weight classes in men’s freestyle wrestling qualify their nation for the 2024 Paris Olympics. Competitions continue through the 24th.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Athletics ● American Betsy Saina, the 2023 U.S. 25 km champion, won the Sydney Marathon on Sunday, moving away with Ethiopia’s Rahma Tusa after 30 km and breaking free by 40 km, to win in 2:26:47, with Tusa making a late surge to close to 2:26:53.

It’s Saina’s first marathon win since the 2018 Paris Marathon. Othmane El Gourmi of Morocco won the men’s race in 2:08:20.

The Collegiate Hall of Fame induction ceremony for the Class of 2023 took place on Thursday evening (14th) at the Hult Center for the Performing Arts at the University of Oregon:

● Dyrol Burleson, distances (Oregon 1959-62)

● Michael Carter, throws (SMU 1980-84)

● Joetta Clark, distances (Tennessee 1981-84)

● Mike Conley, jumps (Arkansas 1982-85)

● Sheila Hudson, jumps (California 1986-90)

● Holli Hyche, sprints (Indiana State 1991-94)

● Edwin Moses, hurdles (Morehouse 1974-77)

● Renaldo Nehemiah, hurdles (Maryland 1978-79)

● Sonia O’Sullivan, distances (Villanova 1988-91)

● Julie Shea, distances (North Carolina State 1978-81)

● Seilala Sua, throws (UCLA 1997-2000)

● John Thomas, jumps (Boston University, 1959-62)

● Wyomia Tyus, sprints (Tennessee State 1964-67)

● Dave Wottle, distances (Bowling Green 1969-73)

The 14 new members won 70 national collegiate titles, set 39 world records, and won eight Olympic medals.

World Athletics announced Friday that it has removed the 2024 World Athletics Cross Country Championships from Medulin and Pula in Croatia, stating the organization “believes that preparations have not advanced sufficiently for Medulin and Pula to host the event on February 10 next year, as scheduled.”

Instead, the federation is “in advanced negotiations with an alternative host in Europe with a view to staging the event in March 2024.”

● Badminton ● At the BWF World Tour Hong Kong Open in Kowloon, Indonesia came out with two wins, starting with the women’s Doubles, with Apriyani Rahayu and Siti Ramadhanti taking gold over Pearly Tan and Muralitharan Thinaah (MAS), 14-21, 24-22, 21-9, and then fifth-seed Jonatan Christie winning the men’s Singles against Kenta Nishimoto (JPN), 12-21, 22-20, 21-18.

Top-seeded Akane Yamaguchi (JPN) defeated Yi Man Zhang (CHN) in the women’s Singles final, 21-18, 21-15. China’s Xin Wa Guo and Ya Xin Wei won the Mixed Doubles against Chun Man Tang and Ying Suet Tse (HKG), 21-13, 21-19.

Kim Astrup and Anders Rasmussen (DEN) won the men’s Doubles over Leo Rolly Carnando and Daniel Marthin (INA), 21-10, 22-24, 21-19.

● Basketball ● Even with a fourth-place finish at the just-completed FIBA World Cup, the U.S. men regained the no. 1 spot in the FIBA World Rankings.

The U.S. leaped over former no. 1 and 2019 FIBA World Cup winners Spain, 786.6 to 778.2. While the American men lost the bronze-medal game to Canada, Spain finished ninth and did not make it to the elimination round.

Champion Germany moved all the way to third from 11th, now with 759.7 points. Australia, runner-up Serbia (+1), and bronze medalists Canada (+9) make up the top six.

Canada won the FIBA 3×3 Women’s Series in Ulaanbaatar (MGL), with a 16-15 win over France in the final, with former Utah star Paige Crozon sinking the winner with no time left.

France’s Hortense Limouzin had tied the game with seven seconds left, but the Canadians completed an undefeated final with wins over Mongolia (22-17), France (16-14) and Germany (21-13) in pool play and then beating the U.S., 21-12, in the semis prior to the final.

The American squad – Cierra Burdick, Blake Dietrich, Linnae Harper and Camille Zimmerman – finished fourth overall.

● Boxing ● The International Boxing Association promoted interim chief executive Chris Roberts (GBR) to permanent status on Friday. He was previously the IBA’s Development Director, coming to the IBA after 17 months at Boxing Scotland and a long career at the Royal Army Physical Training Corps.

The IBA-affiliated Oceania Boxing Confederation issued a statement that the French Polynesia federation which joined World Boxing is not a federation at all and its boxers are part of the Polynesian Boxing Federation (Fédération Polynésienne de Boxe), which is still affiliated with the IBA.

None of this has anything to do with the Olympic boxing tournament in Paris in 2024, as qualification is being handled directly by the International Olympic Committee.

● Cycling ● On the UCI Women’s World Tour, the three-stage Tour de Romandie in Switzerland concluded on Sunday, with a showdown between Demi Vollering (NED), Poland’s Kasia Niewiadoma and Swiss home favorite Marlon Reusser.

Friday’s first stage was a mass-finish sprint over 144.1 km won by Sofia Bertizzolo (ITA) in 3:53:10, with the first 52 riders given the same time. On Saturday, Vollering beat Niewiadoma and Reusser to the line on the uphill-finishing 110.8 km course to Torgon, taking six-second lead on the Pole and 12 seconds on Reusser into Sunday’s finale.

The 131.9 km ride to Nyon finished with a two-lap course with two modest climbs, and a final sprint had Liane Lippert (GER) as the winner in 3:18:31, ahead of Fem van Empel (NED) and Silvia Persico (ITA). Reusser was fourth, Vollering sixth and Niewiadoma seventh, so the final standings ended with Vollering the winner, Niewiadoma at +0:06 and Reusser at +0:12.

It’s Vollering’s seventh win of the year on the Women’s World Tour, including the Tour de France Femmes.

● Football ● Spanish midfielder Jenni Hermoso was granted a restraining order against former Royal Spanish Football Federation President Luis Rubiales. The Spanish High Court ordered that Rubiales stay more than 200 m away from Hermoso.

Even with the resignation of Rubiales and the end of the coaching tenure of Jorge Vilda, 39 players stated they would not report for any national-team matches, including 21 of the 23 members of the winning FIFA Women’s World Cup team. The message said in part:

“As of today, as we have communicated to RFEF, the changes which have been made are not enough so that the players feel in a safe place, where women are respected, women’s football is supported and where we can give our all.”

The message called for changes in the federation’s women’s program, in governance, and in the communications, marketing and integrity departments.

● Gymnastics ● The FIG Artistic World Challenge Cup series concluded in Paris (FRA) with the sixth stage, and the French women and British men scoring three wins each.

French star Melanie de Jesus dos Santos – the 2019 European All-Around champ – won two events, taking the Uneven Bars, 14.700 to 14.600 over Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade, the 2022 World All-Around gold medalist, then winning on Floor, 13.650 to 13.400 vs. Brazilian Jade Barbosa, the 2007 Worlds All-Around bronzer.

The third French win came on Beam from Marine Boyer, the 2016 European silver winner, scoring 13.500 along with Kaylia Nemour (ALG), but winning on criteria. Mexico’s 2018 Worlds bronze winner, Alexa Moreno, took the Vault with a 14.075 average for two, and Australian Georgia Godwin second (13.850).

The British men’s wins came from two-time Olympic champ Max Whitlock on Pommel Horse, 2022 Worlds bronze medalist Courtney Tulloch on Rings and senior-level newcomer Harry Hepworth on Vault.

Whitlock scored 15.540 to beat 2022 World Champion Rhys McClenaghan (IRL: 15.100); Tulloch shared the Rings win with 2021 Worlds bronze winner Salvatore Maresca (ITA), with both scoring 14.700, and Hepworth received 14.700 for his average on Vault, well ahead of Leo Saladino (FRA: 14.250).

Japan’s Koga Hiramitsu won on Floor (14.700, over Benjamin Osberger/FRA and Luke Whitehouse/GBR, both 14.650); Olympic silver winner Lukas Dauser (GER) took the Parallel Bars winner at 15.250, and Chia-hung Tang (TPE), the 2018 Asian Games winner, dominated on the Horizontal Bar, winning at 14.950.

● Judo ● Brazil and Canada were the big winners at the Pan American Championships in Calgary (CAN), taking six and four classes each.

The Brazilians got wins from Matheus Takaki in the men’s 60 kg, Tokyo bronze medalist Daniel Cargnin at 73 kg and Rafael Macedo at 90 kg, and 2021 Pan Am Champs winner Larissa Pimenta at 52 kg, three-time Olympic bronze winner Mayra Aguiar at 78 kg and 2022 Worlds silver winner Beatriz Souza at +78 kg.

Canada’s Julien Frascadore took the men’s 66 kg class, Francois Gauthier Drapeau won at 81 kg, and Shady El Nahas at 100 kg, and two-time World Champion Christa Deguchi struck gold at 57 kg.

Cuba’s Andy Granda, the 2022 World Champion, won at +100 kg, defeating two-time Olympic bronze medalist Rafael Silva.

The U.S. won bronze medals from Nathaniel Keeve at 100 kg, and Maria Celia Laborde in the women’s 48 kg, and Hannah Martin at 63 kg.

● Shooting ● The latest ISSF World Cup in Rifle and Pistol is in Rio de Janeiro (BRA), with Italy winning two events.

Italian Federico Maldini won the men’s 10 m Air Pistol final, 237.8 to 236.4 against Latvian Emils Vasermanis. Armenia’s Elmira Karapetyan took the women’s 10 m Air Pistol title, 236.6 to 235.8 over Siyu Wang (CHN).

The 2022 Worlds runner-up, Danilo Sollazzo, also won for Italy in the men’s 10 m Rifle final, beating Germany’s Maximilian Dallinger, 251.0 to 250.0. India’s Elavenil Valarivan won the women’s 10 m Air Rifle, 252.2 to 251.9 over France’s Oceanne Muller, 20, the 2021 World Junior Champion.

Hungary’s Veronika Major took the women’s 25 m Pistol by 34-31 over Kaiyan Shang of China for her fourth career World Cup win in the event.

China scored a win in the men’s 50 m Rifle/3 Positions, with Yukun Liu – the 2017 World Junior Champion in this event – scoring 460.1 in the final to edge Norway’s 2022 Worlds bronze medalist Jon-Hermann Hegg (456.9) and three-time World Cup winner Istvan Peni (HUN: 444.5).

The events conclude on Monday.

● Table Tennis ● Chile took two titles at the Pan American Championships in Havana (CUB), with the U.S. and Brazil winning the Singles golds.

Chile’s Doubles wins came in the men’s classification, with Gustavo Gomez and Nicolas Burgos defeating Gaston Alto and Horacio Cifuentes (ARG), 3-0, and in the Mixed Doubles, with Burgos and Paulina Vega sweeping Brazil’s Vitor Ishiy and Bruna Takahashi, 3-0.

Brazil was in both Singles finals, with Hugo Calderano (BRA) defeating Burgos (CHI) by 4-1 (11-4, 11-8, 13-11, 11-13 and 11-5), and American Amy Wang – seeded fourth – claiming her first Pan Am title, taking down Takahashi, in a 4-3 thriller (11-13, 11-6, 4-11, 11-8, 12-10, 9-11, 12-10).

Puerto Rico’s Melanie Diaz and Adriana Diaz won the women’s Doubles, over Canada’s Ivy Liao and Mo Zhang, 3-1.

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ATHLETICS: World records for Tsegay (14:00.21) and Duplantis (20-5 1/4), two American Records at Pre Classic!

He did it again! Sweden's Mondo Duplantis with another world record! (Photo: Matthew Quine for Diamond League AG)

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A second day of spectacular competition at the Nike Prefontaine Classic in Eugene, which also doubles this year as the Diamond League Final, with two sensational world records among seven world-leading marks:

Men/800 m: 1:42.80, Emmanuel Wanyonyi (KEN)
Men/3,000 m: 7:23.63, Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR)
Men/110 m hurdles: 12.93, Hansle Parchment (JAM)
Men/Pole Vault: 6.23 m (20-5 1/4), Mondo Duplantis (SWE) ~ World Record
Women/800 m: 1:54.97, Athing Mu (USA) ~ American Record
Women/5,000 m: 14:00.21, Gudaf Tsegay (ETH) ~ World Record
Women/High Jump: 2.03 m (6-8), Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) and Nicola Olyslsagers (AUS)

First, the world records:

Ethiopia’s Gudaf Tsegay, who won the women’s 5,000 m world title at Hayward Field in 2022, was making a world-record try, with countrywoman Birke Haylom (17) leading through 2,000 m. By 3,000 m, Haylom stepped off – essentially a pacesetter for Tsegay – and Tsegay and Worlds bronze winner Beatrice Chebet (KEN) had a huge lead on the rest of the field.

With three laps left, Tsegay and Chebet had 50 m-plus on the field, and at 4,400 m, Tsegay broke Chebet and took off down the back straight. All alone now at the bell, Tsegay passed in 12:55 and Tsegay was flying down the back stretch for the final time and, gritting her teeth, charged down the straight to finish in a staggering 14:00.21 world record! It’s the second world mark in the event this season, after Kenyan Faith Kipyegon’s 14:05.20 in June.

Tsegay’s prior best was 14:12.29 in London in July and she now has two of the top eight performances ever. Chebet was second in 14:05.92, the no. 3 performance in history. Ethiopia’s Ejgayehu Taye was third in 14:21.52; Americans Alicia Monson and Weini Kelati were 7-8 in 14:45.98 and 15:25.62.

Only world-record holder Mondo Duplantis (SWE) and Ernest John Obiena (PHI) were left in the men’s pole vault at 5.82 m (19-1), and the bar went to 6.02 m (19-9). Duplantis sailed over right away, while Obiena missed three times. So the bar went up to 6.23 m of course – a world record of 20-5 1/4 – and on his 16th try at this height, snaked over and celebrated another mark, just as he did at the 2022 Worlds at the same site.

Incredibly, he might have had another six inches of hip height over the bar! It’s his seventh world record in the vault, actually surpassing his 6.22 m (20-4 3/4) indoor clearance in February in France. Americans Sam Kendricks, Chris Nilsen and KC Lightfoot finished 3-5-7 at 5.72 m (18-9 1/4), 5.72 m and 5.52 m (18-1 1/4), respectively.

And the American Records:

What would Norway’s 22-year-old Jakob Ingebrigtsen do in the men’s 3,000 m a day after his 3:43.73 mile win? He had the lead after 1,600 m, with four Ethiopians chasing him. Eight were in contact with three laps left, and with two laps to go, but when would the break come? Two-time World Indoor 3,000 m champ Yomif Kejelcha came up on Ingebrigtsen and then Telahun Bekele, but Ingebrigtsen stayed in front at the bell (at 6:29!). On the backstraight, Kejelcha made his move and came right up on the Norwegian, who fought him off and ran into the home straight with a half-meter lead. Ingebrigtsen held on, and even looked to his right to find Kejelcha, who kept coming and both leaned hard at the finish, with Ingebrigtsen falling to the track, but winning in 7:23.63, the no. 3 performance of all time. Kejelcha got a national record of 7:23.64 in second (no. 4 all-time), and American Grant Fisher rocketed up in the final 100 m to get third in an American Record of 7:25.47, now the no. 8 performer of all-time. Bekele was fourth in 7:25.48.

No one knew exactly what to expect in the women’s 800 m, with all three medalists from Budapest back again. World leader Keely Hodgkinson (GBR) and Olympic champ Athing Mu of the U.S. were running together at the bell, but would Mu have the finish she lacked at the Worlds? Onto the backstraight, Hodgkinson and Mu were leading World Champion Mary Moraa (KEN) and Jamaican Natoya Goule-Toppin, but Mu and Hodgkinson were a clear 1-2 into the home straight and Mu had the speed through the line to finish this time to win in a world-leading and American Record of 1:54.97, ahead of Hodgkinson’s British record of 1:55.19 and Goule-Toppin’s Jamaican record of 1:55.96. Moraa was fourth in 1:57.42. Sage Hurta-Klecker of the U.S. was eighth in 1:59.65.

Mu remains eighth all-time, while Hodgkinson is now equal-10th ever.

In the men’s 800 m, Canada’s World Champion Marco Arop led at the bell in a quick first lap of 49.19, and he simply would not be passed into the final straight. But in the final 50 m, he slowed slightly and that was enough for 19-year-old Emmanuel Wanyonyi (KEN) – already the world leader at 1:43.20 – to come through in lane two to get the win in a world-leading 1:42.80. Arop stayed close at 1:42.85 – a national record – for second and Algerian Djamel Sedjati – who ran up on Arop with Wanyonyi – had to settle for third in a lifetime best 1:43.06. American Bryce Hoppel was sixth in 1:44.63.

Five Americans lined up in the men’s 110 m hurdles, with World Champion Grant Holloway out like a shot and leading over five hurdles. Jamaica’s Olympic champ Hansle Parchment was left in the blocks, but stormed into the lead in mid-race and ran away in a world-leading 12.93 (wind: +0.9 m/s). Holloway barely held on to second, 13.06 to 13.07, over fellow American Daniel Roberts. The rest of the U.S. entries, Freddie Crittenden, Cordell Tinch and Jamal Britt were 6-7-8 in 13.15, 13.21 and 13.36.

The top three in the women’s high jump was decided by 1.95 m (6-4 3/4), with World Champion Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR), Tokyo silver winner Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) and Angelina Topic (SLO) all over on the first try. Topic exited at 1.98 m (6-6) and Mahuchukh and Olyslagers both made a world-leading 2.03 m (6-8) on their second and third tries, respectively. At 2.05 m (6-8 3/4), both missed all three times, so Mahuchikh earned the win on misses. American Vashti Cunningham was fourth at 1.91 m (6-3 1/4).

The rest of the competition was excellent on a sunny day in Eugene, with plenty of surprises:

The men’s 200 m was a stunner, with Olympic silver winner Kenny Bednarek of the U.S. leading Worlds silver winner Erriyon Knighton (USA) into the straight, but suddenly Canada’s Olympic champ Andre De Grasse – sixth in Budapest – stormed down the straight in the final 50 m and ran away to a season-best 19.76 win (+0.6), with Bednarek second in 19.95 and Knighton third in 19.97. Kyree King of the U.S. was fifth in 20.16.

The men’s long jump came to life in the fifth round, as both Swiss Simon Ehammer – the 2022 Worlds bronze medalist – and 2019 World Champion Tajay Gayle (JAM) reached 8.22 m (26-11 3/4), with Gayle’s jump wind-aided. Ehammer won based on his second-best mark. Japan’s Yuki Hashioka claimed third with his final jump of 8.15 m (26-9). Americans Jarrion Lawson and Will Williams were fifth and sixth at 8.02 m (26-3 3/4) and 7.99 m (26-2 3/4).

Two-time World Champion Joe Kovacs took the lead in the men’s shot at 22.70 m (74-5 3/4) in the first round, trailed by Olympic and World Champion Ryan Crouser at 22.42 m (73-6 3/4). New Zealand’s Tom Walsh, the 2017 World Champion, moved into second at 22.69 m (74-5 1/2) in round three.

Crouser took over at 22.91 m (75-2) in round two, but Kovacs was unimpressed, taking the lead again at 22.93 m (75-2 3/4) in round four. Crouser got out to 22.86 m (75-0) in round six, but it wasn’t enough and Kovacs had another Diamond League title. Payton Otterdahl of the U.S. reached 21.43 m (70-3 3/4) and finished fifth.

A major upset in the men’s discus, where the usual Daniel Stahl (SWE) and Kristjian Ceh (SLO) parade was interrupted by Matthew Denny (AUS) at 68.43 m (224-6) on his final throw to move past 2022 World Champion Ceh and set a national record! Ceh settled for second at 67.64 m (221-11) and 2023 Worlds winner Stahl was third at 67.36 m (221-0). American Sam Mattis was sixth at 64.51 m (211-7).

Everyone was thinking about Florence Griffith-Joyner’s 21.34 world record from 1988 as the women’s 200 m lined up, with two-time World Champion Shericka Jackson of Jamaica in lane seven. Jackson won the Worlds at 21.41 and 21.48 in Brussels on 8 September and owned the nos. 2-3-4-6 performances in history coming in.

Off the gun, Jackson took the lead immediately and came off the straight running for the record and won going away in 21.57 (wind: +0.3 m/s), the no. 8 performance in history. On the inside, Marie-Josee Ta Lou (CIV) was a clear second in 22.10, with Anthonique Strachan (BAH: 22.16) coming on late to pass TeeTee Terry of the U.S. (22.21). Americans Kayla White and Jenna Prandini were 6-7 in 22.49 and 22.68.

World champ Marileidy Paulino (DOM) was trailing American Lynna Irby-Jackson on the backstraight of the women’s 400 m, but came to the fore by 250 m and ran away down the straight to win in 49.58. Poland’s Worlds silver winner Natalia Kaczmarek came on for second in the final 75 m (50.38) with Lieke Klaver (NED) third in 50.47. Irby-Jackson was seventh in 51.60.

The women’s 100 m hurdles was redemption for Nigeria’s Tobi Amusan, who won the 2022 World Championships at Hayward Field, who got out hard and led Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (PUR) through the middle of the race and moved away over the final two hurdles to win in 12.33 (+1.8). Camacho-Quinn was second in 12.38 and American Keni Harrison came up for third in 12.44 over World Champion Danielle Williams (JAM: 12.47). Americans Alaysha Johnson, Nia Ali and Tia Jones finished 6-7-9 in 12.48, 12.62 and 12.82, respectively.

Femke Bol, the World Champion from the Netherlands in the women’s 400 m hurdles, was the focus, but Worlds silver and bronze winners Shamier Little of the U.S. and Rushell Clayton (JAM) were in front after six hurdles. But Bol came on and led Little off the eighth and they were close over nine. But the Dutch star moved away after hurdle nine and won in 51.98, the no. 10 performance of all-time. Little got second in 53.45 and Clayton third in 53.56. American Anna Cockrell got fifth in 54.48.

Nigeria’s 2022 Worlds runner-up Ese Brume took charge of the women’s long jump with a seasonal best of 6.85 m (22-5 3/4) in round three, then Quanesha Burks of the U.S. burst into second in the fifth at 6.77 m (22-2 1/2). But what about World Champion Ivana Vuleta (SRB)? Of course, she left it late, blasting out to 6.85 m (22-5 3/4) in round six to steal the title, and leave Brume second and Burks in third. American Taliyah Brooks was sixth at 6.45 m (21-2). It’s Vuleta’s sixth Diamond League title.

In the women’s discus, Olympic champ – and Budapest runner-up – Valarie Allman of the U.S. got going right away at 68.66 m (225-3) in the first round, with World Champion teammate Lagi Tausaga moving up to second at 68.36 m (224-3) in round three. Neither could improve; two-time Olympic champ Sandra Perkovic (CRO) got third at 66.85 m (219-4).

The event winners were crowned Diamond League champs; prize money was $30,000-12,000-7,000-4,000-2,500-2,000-1,500-1,000. This was pretty special, with two world records, four American Records and – in September – world-leading or equaling marks in 13 events. Better than special: fabulous.

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ATHLETICS: Ingebrigtsen’s 3:43.73 wins the mile, American Records for Ealey and Nuguse and Benjamin beats Warholm at Pre Classic!

American Record for shot star Chase Ealey! (Photo: Diamond League AG)

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A sensational first day for the Nike Prefontaine Classic, which also doubles this year as the Diamond League Final, with six world-leading (or equaling marks) at the end of the season:

Men/100 m: 9.83 (=), Christian Coleman (USA)
Men/Mile: 3:43.73, Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR)
Men/400 m hurdles: 46.39, Rai Benjamin (USA)
Women/Steeple: 8:50.66, Winfred Yavi (BRN)
Women/Triple Jump: 15.35 m (50-4 1/2), Yulimar Rojas (VEN)
Women/Shot Put: 20.76 m (68-1 1/2), Chase Ealey (USA) ~ American Record

This was a hot meet from the start, with the very first race a stunner, with world-record holder Karsten Warholm (NOR) and World Champion Kyron McMaster (IVB) running together through the first seven hurdles and then Warholm took over with Tokyo Olympic runner-up Rai Benjamin of the U.S. coming on. Benjamin passed McMaster before the 10th hurdle and then ran down Warholm on the straight to win in a world-leading 46.39 – the no. 4 performance ever – to 46.53 for Warholm (no. 7 performance all-time), with McMaster at 47.31 in third. Americans Trevor Bassitt and CJ Allen went 8-9 in 48.42 and 48.62.

Benjamin improved to 2-4 against Warholm all-time, in only their second race together outside of the Olympic Games or World Championships (now 1-1).

About an hour later, World Champion Ealey was in the ring in the women’s shot put, and put the event to bed early with a world-leading 20.61 m (67-7 1/2) in the second round. But then she reached into history in the third, sending the 4 kg ball out to an American Record of 20.76 m (68-1 1/2), surpassing Michelle Carter’s 20.63 m (67-8 1/4) from 2016. Ealey now owns seven of the top nine throws in American history.

Canada’s Sarah Mitton was second at 19.94 m (65-5) and prior world leader Maggie Ewen of the U.S. was fifth at 19.82 m (65-0 1/2). Consider this: Ealey’s mark ranks her no. 5 this century, and with a Russian and Belarusian on that list, she might rank no. 3 ever among athletes when a fully-in-place anti-doping regime was in place.

The men’s mile was a world-record attempt at the 3:43.13 by Hicham El Guerrouj (MAR) from 1999, with Norway’s Ingebrigtsen and American Yared Nuguse running ahead of the pack once the pacesetters were done. World 5,000 m champ Ingebrigtsen, who set the world 2,000 m record earlier this season, and Nuguse were at 2:47.8 with 400 m to go, and the chase was absolutely on. Ingebrigtsen was a meter ahead with 200 m left and held that lead despite a determined charge by Nuguse down the straight, and won in 3:43.73, with Nuguse setting the American Record in 3:43.97 in second.

Ingebrigtsen moves to no. 3 all-time in mile history, and Nuguse crushed Alan Webb’s U.S. record of 3:46.91 from 2007. Nuguse is now no. 4 all-time, with the no. 4 performance ever. Britain’s George Mills was third in 3:47.65, a lifetime best and American Cole Hocker got a lifetime best of 3:48.08 in sixth, now fourth all-time U.S. Wow!

The men’s 100 m had World Champion and super-finisher Noah Lyles in five and 2019 Worlds gold medalist and super-starter Christian Coleman in four. But the race had to wait, as Ackeem Blake (JAM) false-started out. But on the re-start, Coleman got his usual fast start, with Kenyan Ferdinand Omanyala to his left and closing. Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson was a clear third, until Lyles came on hard in the final 10 m, passing Thompson and then Omanyala at the line, but with Coleman winning in 9.83 (+0.1), equaling the world best in 2023 (and his second 9.83 of the season). Lyles was second at 9.85, with Omanyala third in the same time and Thompson fourth in 9.87.

Last year’s Worlds runner-up Marvin Bracy-Williams of the U.S. got fifth at 10.01.

After a false start and disqualification of Alexander Ogando (DOM), the men’s 400 m started and Britain’s Worlds silver winner Matthew Hudson-Smith (GBR) pulled up on the back straight. Meanwhile, Worlds fourth-placer Vernon Norwood of the U.S. and London 2012 Olympic champ Kirani James (GRN) were in front, with Worlds bronzer Quincy Hall (USA) moving past Norwood and challenging for the lead in the final 75 m. Hall looked like he might take the lead, but James just held on as Hall ran out of gas at the line, 44.30 to 44.44. Norwood got third in 44.61 and U.S. champ Bryce Deadmon was fourth in 44.90.

In the Steeple, Kenyan Simon Koech, no. 3 in the world for 2023, led the race at 2,000 m, and then ran away from Samuel Firewu (ETH) over the final 200 m, winning in 8:06.26, with Firewu at 8:10.74 and George Beamish (NZL) third in 8:14.01.

The men’s high jump was tight through 2.29 m (7-6), then Sang-hyeok Woo (KOR) and Norbert Kobielski (POL) cleared 2.33 m (7-7 3/4) on their first try, with American Worlds silver medalist JuVaughn Harrison making on his third attempt. Only Woo made 2.35 m (7-8 1/2) to equal his lifetime best and take the Diamond League title, with Kobielski second on misses.

Only five competitors in the men’s triple jump, with Italy’s Andy Diaz winning with his first-round effort of 17.43 m (57-2 1/4), beating World Champion Hugues Fabrice Zango (BUR: 17.25 m/56-7 1/4). Three Americans follows: Donald Scott at 16.84 m (55-3), Chris Benard (16.07 m/52-8 3/4) and Will Claye, who had no legal mark.

In the men’s javelin, Jakub Vadlejch (CZE), the Worlds bronze medalist, reached 84.01 m (275-7) in the first round of the men’s javelin, good enough for the lead, as Worlds winner Neeraj Chopra (IND) was chasing at 83.80 m (274-11) in round two. No one improved except Vadlejch, who pushed out to 84.24 m (276-4) on his final toss for the winner. American Curtis Thompson reached 77.01 m (252-8) for fifth.

The women’s 100 m was another showdown between Worlds winner Sha’Carri Richardson of the U.S. and Jamaica’s runner-up, Shericka Jackson. Richardson got out poorly, as Marie-Josee Ta Lou (CIV) was in front, but Jackson got going in the middle of the race and won cleanly in 10.70 (+0.8). Ta Lou (10.75) was second and twice-Olympic champ Elaine Thompson-Herah (10.79), came on strong in the final 30 m got third. Richardson got up to fourth in the final 20 m in 10.80 and TeeTee Terry was right behind in 10.83.

Kenyan Faith Kipyegon, who won the 1,500 m and 5,000 m at Worlds and will try for the road mile title at the first World Road Champs in two weeks, was the focus of the women’s 1,500 m and was second at 400 m, ahead of Worlds silver winner Diribe Welteji (ETH) and Tokyo silver medalist Laura Muir (GBR). Kipyegon gapped the field by 800 m and was on her own with 500 m to go. She was up by 50 m on the backstraight and increasing her lead into the straight and finished with a rout in 3:50.72!

That’s the no. 5 performance in history, and she owns three of those, and now five of the top 10. Welteji took over for second on the final straight in a lifetime best of 3:53.93 (no. 10 performer all-time), with Muir third at 3:55.16. American Cory McGee was 10th in 4:01.28 and Sinclaire Johnson was 12th (4:03.21).

World Champion Winfred Yavi (BRN) and world-record holder Beatrice Chepkoech (KEN) headlined the women’s 3,000 m Steeple and by 2,000 m, they were 2-3 behind Worlds bronze winner Faith Cherotich (KEN: 5:59.01). Yavi and Chepkoech took over at 2,400 m and they were 1-2 at the bell and running away from the field. Chepkoech tried to take the lead on the final water jump, but Yavi would have none of it, and grabbed the lead back into the final straight and held on to win in a world-leading 8:50.66, to 8:51.67 for Chepkoech. Cherotich was also under 9:00 at 8:59.65.

Yavi’s win moves her to no. 2 all-time, behind only Chepkoech’s world record from 2018; Chepkoech’s mark is the no. 3 performance ever and Cherotich moves to no. 11 all-time. American Courtney Wayment finished ninth in 9:20.69.

Tokyo Olympic and 2022 World Champion Katie Moon of the U.S. and Slovenia’s Tina Sutej were the only ones over 4.81 m (15-9 1/4) in the women’s pole vault – a lifetime best for Worlds fourth-placer Sutej – with American Sandi Morris taking second at 4.71 m (15-5 1/2).

Neither Moon or Sutej cleared 4.86 m (15-11 1/4) on three tries, but Moon finally decided the issue with a jump-off clearance at 4.86 m, while Sutej missed.

Jamaica’s Shanieka Ricketts, a two-time Worlds silver winner, got in front from the start of the women’s triple jump at 14.79 m (48-6 1/4) in the first round. World-record holder and World Champkion Yulimar Rojas was again late to the party, in third after four rounds, but in the fifth, she exploded – as she always seems to – with a world-leading 15.35 m (50-4 1/2) explosion that was the winner.

Ricketts improved to 15.00 m (49-2 1/2) and then 15.03 m (49-3 3/4) for second and fellow Jamaican Kimberly Williams for third at 14.61 m (47-11 1/4).

In the women’s javelin, World Champion Haruka Kitaguchi (JPN) took the lead at 63.78 m (209-3) in round two and no one approached her. American Maggie Malone finished fourth at 60.42 m (198-3).

Superb, especially so late in the year. The meet continues on Sunday, with NBC’s coverage beginning at 3 p.m. Eastern.

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TSX REPORT: USOPC formally blesses SLC-Utah 2034 winter bid, and starts $500 million funding campaign; Kuss still leads at La Vuelta

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. USOPC formally endorses advanced SLC-Utah Winter Games bid
2. Sykes highlights $500 million fund-raising campaign
3. Kuss retains lead, barely, as La Vuela closes
4. Putin, Pozdnyakov continue slamming IOC, IFs
5. Modest interest in FIBA World Cup on U.S. television

● The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee formally endorsed the Salt Lake City-Utah bid for the Olympic Winter Games, with the bid itself extremely advanced, essentially to the point of being ready for selection after an International Olympic Committee review.

● Gene Sykes, the USOPC Chair, told the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Assembly that a fund-raising project of $500 million is being undertaken by the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Foundation.

● American Sepp Kuss maintained his lead in the Vuelta a Espana expanding his lead on Thursday to 17 seconds over Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard (DEN). Three stages remain, with two flat stages on Friday and Sunday, but a hilly, challenging course on Saturday.

● Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Russian Olympic Committee head Stanislav Pozdnyakov continued to slam the IOC and all sanctions against Russian athletes. Putin repeated his threat to create an alternate system to the Olympic Movement, and Pozdnyakov indicated that Russian athletes will make own choice about whether to go to Paris in 2024 if allowed.

● Very U.S. modest television audiences for the FIBA World Cup games televised on cable, shown at an early-morning slot. The U.S. men’s soccer team’s game against Uzbekistan last Saturday had more viewers on Spanish-language television than in English. The Fifth Avenue Mile did well, however, on NBC on Sunday morning.

World Championships: Weightlifting (China’s Liao ups own world record in women’s 71 kg class) ●

Panorama: Paris 2024 (French prosecutor sees any misconduct over contracts as not serious) = Winter Games 2030 (France moving quickly, hopes for possible targeted dialogue in December!) = Pan American Games (Santiago 2023 village completed and dedicated) = IOC (Coventry re-appointed as Zimbabwe sports minister) = Athletics (UCLA star Seaman passes at 88) = Boxing (World Boxing adds four more member federations) = Fencing (USA Fencing elects Lee as new chair) = Football (3: U.S. men beat Oman, 4-0; U.S. Soccer announces 2026 expansion plans; Spanish women’s players to return to league play) = Tennis (Halep hit for doping and suspended four years) = Weightlifting (IWF Congress adopts strategic plan and constitutional amendments) ●

1.
USOPC formally endorses advanced SLC-Utah Winter Games bid

The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee’s Board of Directors extended its support of the Salt Lake City-Utah Committee for the Olympic Games’ bid for a return of the Olympic Winter Games on Thursday. USOPC Chair Gene Sykes told reporters during a mid-day call:

“The Board was pleased to hear from [the Salt-Lake City-Utah Committee for the Games], and give our firm endorsement of the candidature file that will be shared with the IOC once the Utah project is invited into targeted dialogue with the [International Olympic Committee].

“And we don’t know when that will happen precisely, or the exact process for when a host decision will be made, but our hope is that the work of the Utah team, and their incredibly detailed and thoughtful plan, with great public support will be rewarded by the IOC in short order.

“After this discussion by our Board, and on a motion duly made and seconded, the Board resolved that it fully endorses and supports the Salt Lake City-Utah committee’s bid intentions to offer to the IOC a formal, preferred-host submission, and specifically supports my signing and delivering the letter of support included in the advanced materials that we had for our meeting.

“So that letter has now gone off to the IOC.”

Fraser Bullock, the chief executive of the SLC-Utah Committee explained that significant steps have been taken that will further invite the IOC to award them the preferred 2034 Games:

“We are very grateful to the Board of the USOPC for its partnership, and now, this endorsement of our bid. We have completed a significant amount of work on our bid, and with this endorsement, we are ready for targeted dialogue, if we are so fortunate to receive that invitation.

“This is a significant milestone for us.

“We have a fantastic bid to offer the Olympic and Paralympic communities. We have incredible venues, all in place. We have 100% of the government guarantees all competed at the Federal, state and local levels. I will note that we just completed all of our 10 Federal guarantees about two weeks ago.

“This was another big milestone for us. Most importantly, we have strong community support, including 82% from the public, and 100% from our political leadership.”

The USOPC Board meeting was in Los Angeles, during the 2023 USOPC Assembly, a meeting of the entire U.S. Olympic Movement, including the National Governing Bodies and allied organizations.

Observed: The Salt Lake City-Utah bid has taken some significant steps that will very much impress the IOC. What has essentially happened is that the Utah bid team has gone ahead and completed most of the work that would take place after a designation for targeted dialogue.

Obtaining the required guarantees, especially from the U.S. government in our time of turmoil, is a remarkable achievement that is normally excruciatingly difficult. Bullock acknowledged the significant help of U.S. Senator Mitt Romney (R-Utah), the chief executive of the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City, in advancing the process.

What the bid package, as described, does is tell the IOC that it is not just ready for “targeted dialogue” but has advanced to the point where Salt Lake City can be selected – after the IOC’s own review, of course – as the host for 2034. Very, very impressive.

Not directly related to the bid, but further validation of the continuing importance of Utah within the U.S. is the announcement by the U.S. Biathlon Association that it will move its headquarters from Maine to Midway, Utah, site of the Solider Hollow venue that was used for the sport in 2002 and is proposed again for 2034. It will be the fourth U.S. National Governing Body in the state, also including U.S. Ski & Snowboard, US Speedskating and USA Climbing.

2.
Sykes highlights $500 million fund-raising campaign

The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee is likely the largest National Olympic Committee in the world in terms of assets and continually produces the largest and most successful Olympic teams in the world.

But as years of reports have shown and testimony at the 6 September public hearing of the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics confirmed, it’s still not enough. Not even close.

The USOPC is more than aware of this, and during Thursday’s opening remarks to the USOPC Assembly, Board Chair Sykes spoke of a renewed commitment to obtain wider support:

“The USOPC must work together with the NGBs to produce champions on the playing fields who are also champions in life. We have a duty of care for every athlete that goes far beyond wins, losses, statistics, and records.

“Both the challenges and the opportunities are unprecedented. So many of the longstanding foundations of our Movement are fundamentally shifting. We need to reinvent our business models, redefine our paths to success, and rekindle the unique appeal of our Movement with a new generation of fans.

“Technology and imagination have created higher expectations. Technology makes virtual and live closer than ever. Experiences are more personal, more intense, and more active. Passive consumption no longer works. The Olympic and Paralympic experience should be more valuable. In order to take advantage of this, we need to make all parts of the US Olympic and Paralympic movement financially stronger and better at engaging with the American public – across the country and in all communities.

“The Olympic & Paralympic Foundation provides a tremendous opportunity to establish stronger financial support. The Foundation, founded fifteen years ago, has grown tremendously under the initial guidance of founding Chair Gordy Crawford and President Christine Walshe. The Foundation has embarked on a $500 million campaign which is aimed at enhancing the resources the USOPC provides to athletes, in their health and wellness, their performance, and their transition after competition into leaders in American society. The Foundation’s new Chair, Geoff Yang, together with Christine and her team, make the Foundation as meaningful for the USOPC as the highly successful development efforts of our country’s most effective colleges and universities.”

Yang was elected as Chair in June, and comes from the private-equity sector as founding partner and managing director of Redpoint Ventures, with extensive experience in the consumer media, Internet and infrastructure worlds.

3.
Kuss retains lead, barely, as La Vuelta closes

The first true opportunity for an American rider to win one of cycling’s Grand Tour in 10 years is hanging in the balance this weekend as the finale of the 78th La Vuelta a Espana comes on Sunday.

The U.S.’s Sepp Kuss, who turned 29 on Wednesday (13th), is hanging onto a tight, 13-second lead going into the final three stages of the race. He has had a wild week, with two brutal stages on Tuesday and Wednesday that shrunk his lead of 1:37 over Jumbo-Visma teammate (and two-time winner Primoz Roglic of Slovenia).

On Tuesday’s 16th stage, a flat, 120.1 km course with a nasty uphill finish from 106 m to 528 m in the final 5,000 m, Tour de France champ Jonas Vingegaard – also a Jumbo-Visma rider – attacked with 4 km left and won in 2:38:23, 43 seconds ahead of runner-up Finn Fisher-Black (NZL) with Kuss in 10th and 1:05 back. That moved Vingegaard into second, just 29 seconds back.

A sterner test came Wednesday in a misery-inducing, 124.4 km triple climb in the back half of the course, with another uphill finish to the 1,555 m Altu de l’Angliru, gaining more than 1,200 m of altitude in the final 11 km. This was a leader’s match race, with Kuss, Roglic and Vingegaard dueling up the final climb, until Kuss fell back a bit with 1,000 m left and Roglic and Vingegaard powered to a 1-2 finish in 3:15:56 for both, with Kuss third, 19 seconds behind.

Adding in the timing bonuses for the top three, Kuss’s lead was reduced to just eight seconds over Vingegaard and 1:08 over Roglic. Not his happiest birthday, but still in the red leader’s jersey.

Then came Thursday’s test, a third-straight triple climb and third-straight uphill finish, this time to La Cruz de Linares at just 840 m, but with a steep approach from 120 m to 840 m in the final 8 km.

This time it was defending champ Remco Evenepoel (BEL), one of the pre-race favorites who had fallen back earlier, who attacked with 29 km left and won in 4:47:37, a stunning 4:44 ahead of Damiano Caruso (ITA) in second. Almost five minutes behind them was the duel between Kuss and Vingegaard, with Kuss winning this battle in 10th place with Roglic (+9:29), but ahead of Vingegaard in 13th (+9:38).

That increased Kuss’s overall lead to 0:17 over Vingegaard and still 1:08 over Roglic with three stages left.

Stages 19 and 21 are fairly flat and not expected to change the standings. That leaves Saturday’s 20th stage, a 207.8 km test starting at 904 m altitude with a dozen smaller climbs, topping out at 1,404 m twice. Lots of chances for attacks by Vingegaard.

No American has won a Grand Tour since Chris Horner took La Vuelta in 2013.

4.
Putin, Pozdnyakov continue slamming IOC, IFs

Continuing the drumbeat of criticism of anyone who sanctions Russian athletes anywhere in response to the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Olympic Committee head Stanislav Pozdnyakov spoke up again this week.

On Tuesday, Putin told the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok:

“I believe that the present-day leadership of International Federations and of the International Olympic Committee, are perverting the original idea of Pierre de Coubertin.

“Sports must go beyond politics. It must unite, not divide people.

“But what happened over the past decade? The Olympic Movement has been caught in the trap of financial interests. We have witnessed the unacceptable commercialization of global sports and the International Olympic Movement.

“After all, it’s not just about setting records. It’s about uniting people and the global Olympic Movement has lost this function. This is very regrettable for the Olympic Movement itself, because alternative movements will start emerging one way or another and nothing can be done about this since it’s an unbiased process.”

Putin also reinforced, rather bluntly, the importance of sport as propaganda in Russia:

“I do not know if it’s suitable to put it this way, but some people say that sports at the international level is a sublimation of war. There is something to this.”

On Thursday, Pozdnyakov ripped the continuing lack of a decision from the IOC about whether Russian athletes will be able to compete in Paris in 2024 and under what conditions:

“Double standards from our colleagues in Lausanne also form our perception of the International Olympic Movement.

“It is on a path to degradation. The lack of clear rules leads to chaos. …

“The current recommendations are prohibitive and will not allow a large number of athletes to take part in the Olympic Games. We bring this to the attention of our colleagues from Lausanne on a regular basis. For our athletes to participate, it is necessary to cancel the notorious recommendations, which, as one of our Ukrainian colleagues said, were prepared in Ukraine and came to Lausanne directly from Kiev. We do not agree with them. And we will fight against it with all integrity.

“It is necessary to return to the roots that were laid by the founder of the Olympic movement, who dreamed of making the imperfect world a better place through sport. This is what we are calling on our colleagues from Lausanne and the international sports federations to do.”

He also commented about a possible boycott by Russian athletes:

“We live in a civilized, democratic country. Everyone is entitled to possess freedom to the extent that he or she deems necessary. A boycott is out of the question as we are not invited [to Paris 2024] and, so, there is nothing to boycott.

“This is a personal choice as we are talking about mature athletes capable of making their own decisions and bearing personal responsibility. I’m sure that the Russian Olympic community has the sufficient level of maturity.”

Pozdnyakov explained that athletes who have missed out on international competitions will receive some money from the government:

“Although the ROC is a public organization, it is ready to make up for the losses that our athletes inevitably incur. I have instructed that a document be drafted that will stipulate financial payments to Russian Olympic team members.

“This includes athletes who competed in the Olympics, continue to compete, or are preparing for the Olympics, but were deprived of the right to participate in international tournaments. It will also include those who, on moral grounds, have declined to sign documents [condemning the Ukraine invasion] and have not taken part in such actions.

“Our range of available tools has contracted, [but] we have found the internal means to support our athletes. Payments will be allocated starting early next year for athletes competing in summer sports.”

“One-time payments will stand at 500,000 rubles [about $5,200], 350,000 rubles [$3,640] and 250,000 rubles [$2,600] for athletic achievements, while 150,000 rubles [$1,560] will be paid to all athletes on the Olympic team who continue to train and participate in tournaments.”

5.
Modest interest in FIBA World Cup on U.S. television

Audience data is in for last week’s shows, with small viewership of the FIBA World Cup from the Philippines for the U.S. games that were played in the early morning, U.S. time, and a really low number for the championship final between Serbia and Germany:

05 Sep. (Tue.): 145,000 for USA-Italy on ESPN2 (8:30 a.m. Eastern)
08 Sep. (Fri.): 241,000 for USA-Germany on ESPN2 (8:30 a.m. Eastern)
10 Sep. (Sun.): 116,000 for Germany-Serbia on ESPN2 (8:30 a.m. Eastern)

The U.S.-Italy game was a championship quarterfinal, and the Germany game was a semifinal. The U.S.-Canada bronze-medal game was only available online.

The U.S. men’s national soccer team was back in action, with a friendly against Uzbekistan, which drew more interest from Spanish-language viewers than English-language, on a day dominated by college football:

09 Sep. (Sat.): 323,000 for USA-Uzbekistan on TNT (5:30 p.m. Eastern)
09 Sep. (Sat.): 410,000 for USA-Uzbekistan on Telemundo (5:00 p.m. Eastern)

There was also the Fifth Avenue Mile on NBC, with the show not even starting until a lightning watch had passed. Competing against the NFL pre-game shows on CBS and Fox, the road mile actually did quite respectably:

10 Sep. (Sun.): 513,000 for the Fifth Avenue Mile on NBC at 12:10 p.m. ET

The Diamond League Memorial Van Damme replay on CNBC on Saturday drew less than the 150,000 floor reported by Nielsen in their main report and, based on an all-programs Saturday report, may have been less than 50,000.

NBC’s “Chasing Gold: Paris 2024″ promo show on Saturday (9th) drew 373,000 at 2 p.m. Eastern.

NBC will have live coverage this weekend of the Prefontaine Classic, which also serves as the Diamond League Final for 2023.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Weightlifting ● China and Egypt were the big winners as the 2023 World Weightlifting Championships head toward the close this weekend in Riyadh (KSA).

In the men’s 96 kg class, Egypt’s 2022 African Champion Karim Abokahia was the dominant force, placing second in Snatch (174 kg), winning the Clean & Jerk (213 kg) and the overall total at 387 kg. That was just enough to beat Korea’s Jong-beom Won (384 kg), with Iraqi Qasim Al-Lami – the Snatch winner – third at 379 kg.

At 102 kg, the 2022 bronze medalist, China’s Huanhua Liu moved up, winning the Clean & Jerk at 224 kg, seven more than anyone else and vaulting him from fourth in the Snatch to the gold medal at 404 kg. Korea scored the silver with Yeon-hak Jang (399 kg) and Belarus lifter Yauheni Tsikhantsou – competing as a “neutral” – won bronze at 394 kg. American Ryan Sester, competing in the B group, missed all three of his Snatch attempts and did not go further.

The women’s 71 kg class was a showcase for China’s Guifang Liao, who won the Asian Championships in May and set a world record for the combined total of 268 kg. That didn’t last.

Fourth at the 2022 Worlds, Liao opened with a win in the Snatch at 120 kg, then powered up a world-record Clean & Jerk of 153 kg for another world-record total of 273 kg! Behind her was a battle between 2022 bronze winner Angie Palacios (ECU) and American Olivia Reeves. Palacios was second in the Snatch at 117 kg and third in the C&J, enough to total 255 kg and win silver.

Reeves was third in the Snatch at 111 kg, but was second in the C&J at 142 kg and that got her the bronze at 253 kg, her first senior-level Worlds medal. She was the 2021 World Junior Champion in this class, and set junior world marks on the C&J and total. Fellow American Kate Vibert, the 2019 World Champion, finished fifth overall at 244 kg.

The women’s 76 kg was a sweep for Egypt’s defending champ Sara Samir Ahmed, who won the Snatch with her only lift of 108 kg, then took the Clean & Jerk at 138 kg – again, one lift – and won with the combined total of 246 kg. All the more impressive due to discomfort from a recent back injury!

Colombia’s Hellen Escobar was fourth in 2022, but was third in the Snatch (106 kg) and second in the C&J (136 kg) to earn silver at 242 kg, ahead of Bella Paredes (ECU), who also won her first Worlds medal with 105-135-240 total. American Meredith Alwine lifted 103 kg in the Snatch on her final attempt, missed her first C&J try at 134 kg, and retired. The championships continue through Sunday.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Games 2024: Paris ● The head of the French financial prosecutor’s office said Wednesday that the search of the Paris 2024 offices and elsewhere over contract favoritism did not uncover “serious” wrongdoing.

“It’s about favoritism, of illegal interest-taking,” said Jean-Francois Bohnert in a radio interview. “It’s about the way certain contracts have been distributed, the arrangements … But I don’t see any elements, at least not at this stage, that would lead the investigation towards the most serious cases of corruption or influence peddling.”

He explained further, “It’s not up to us to come and disrupt that order. And that’s why we started early enough. The searches that took place were carried out more than a year before the start of the Games.”

● Olympic Winter Games 2030 ● The French candidature for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games is progressing rapidly, with a 15 October target to present the master plan and confirm a €1.5 billion budget (about $1.596 billion U.S.), then an early November meeting with the IOC’s Future Host Commission for the Olympic Winter Games.

If all goes well, why not shoot for a “targeted dialogue” nod from the Winter Future Host Commission at the 1 December 2023 IOC Executive Board meeting? The joint bid by the regions Auvergne Rhone-Alpes and Provence Alpes-Cote d’Azur includes some of the sites used for the 1992 Winter Games in Albertville.

● Pan American Games 2023: Santiago ● An important milestone for the organizing committee as the Pan American Village was officially opened on Thursday, in a ribbon-cutting ceremony featuring Chilean President Gabriel Boric Font. The complex includes 17 buildings and 1,355 apartments that will be used for local residents following the Games.

● International Olympic Committee ● Kirsty Coventry, 39, the seven-time Olympic medal winner in swimming in 2004-08, was re-appointed as the Minister of Youth, Sports, Arts and Recreation by re-elected President Emmerson Mnangagwa, a post she has held since September 2018.

Said Mnangagwa, “The fact that I’ve reappointed her means I’m satisfied.”

Zimbabwe continues to be suspended by FIFA over governmental interference with the national federation and the conditions of stadiums in the country has been reported as poor, preventing international matches from being played there.

Coventry has been eyed as a possible successor to Thomas Bach (GER) as IOC President in 2025, and she has a high profile as the head of the Coordination Commissions for the Dakar 2026 Youth Olympic Games and the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games.

● International Federations ● The final dissolution of the Global Association of International Sports Federations (GAISF) was approved on Thursday. The SportAccord organization will revise its rules in November and integrate the umbrella bodies for Olympic and Winter federations (ASOIF, AIOWF), IOC-recognized federation (ARISF) and independent federations (AIMS).

● Athletics ● Sad news of the passing of UCLA great and Rafer Johnson teammate Bob Seaman, 88, on Monday (11th), after a long battle with Parkinson’s Disease.

Seaman was an All-American in the mile (3rd: 1955) and 1,500 m (4th: 1956) for coach Ducky Drake, as the Bruins won the school’s first NCAA title in track & field in ‘56. The UCLA record-holder in the mile at 4:01.4 from 1956 (later broken), he eventually finished with a lifetime best of 3:58.0, ranking no. 6 in the world for 1962.

Beyond his running career, Seaman became a fixture as a track & field official in Southern California, acknowledged as an expert in the field events. Working as a member of the Southern Pacific Association of the AAU and later, The Athletics Congress and USA Track & Field, Seaman was a tireless organizer, and part of the team which brought (and staged) the AAU National Championships at UCLA in 1976-77-78 and to Mt. San Antonio College in 1979-80-81.

He is survived by his wife, Simie.

● Boxing ● World Boxing continues to grow:

“The National Federations for boxing in Denmark, Mongolia, Panama and French Polynesia have been confirmed as the latest four members of World Boxing, the new international federation established to keep boxing at the heart of the Olympic movement and support the growth and development of the sport at local, regional, national and international levels.

“The addition of four more countries means World Boxing now has 16 members.”

More applications are being scrutinized and new members are expected to be announced soon.

● Fencing ● USA Fencing took another step to mending an internal rift from 2021, as 2004 Olympian Ivan Lee, 42, was elected as the federation’s Board Chair on 8 September.

Lee won four career World Championships medals, including a gold in Team Sabre from 2001, an individual silver from 2001 and bronzes in 1998 and 2000, and has continued in the sport as a veteran fencer and a coach.

He joined the USA Fencing Board in 2022 as an appointed Vice Chair and was elected as an At-Large Director this past June. His selection for a two-year term as Chair follows the tumult from the 2021 removal of Board member Peter Burchard, who was the elected President, but removed without notice by the Board with Treasurer David Arias installed as President and then the re-defined position of Chair.

Close observers have commended Burchard – who has continued as a Board member – for working toward positive change in the federation irrespective of his personal situation. Arias was replaced as Treasurer this month by the promotion of Deputy Treasurer Emily Bian. Both Arias and Burchard were eligible to be elected as Chair, but the selection ended up being Lee.

The future of the federation will also be shaped in 2024, with terms of 13 of 16 Board members concluding; Lee will continue as Chair to 2025 and his Board position continues to 2026.

● Football ● The U.S. men’s team shut down Oman on Tuesday in a second straight friendly, this time by 4-0 in St. Paul, Minnesota before 13,665 at Allianz Field.

The Americans controlled the match, with 60% of possession and 19 shots to seven, taking the lead in the 13th minute on a shot by defender Sergino Dest that was saved by Oman keeper Ibrahim Al Mukhaini, but striker Folarin Balogun scored in the rebound.

That was the only score until the 60th minute, when substitute forward Brenden Aaronson was fouled, leading to a free kick. Aaronson took the shot right at goal, got the ball through the defensive wall and the ball rolled into the middle of the net as Al Mukhaini dived to the right, for the 2-0 edge.

Substitute striker Ricardo Pepi increased the lead to 3-0 in the 79th with a right-footed shot off a cross from sun defender DeJuan Jones that found the left side of the net. Oman suffered an own goal in the 81st by defender Khalid Al-Braiki, trying to clear a cross, but sending it into his own net instead.

Next up is a friendly with Germany on 14 October in East Hartford, Connecticut.

U.S. Soccer posted a letter from President Cindy Parlow Cone and chief executive JT Batson about the federation’s plans to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

While the fully-detailed plan will be completed in 2024, the outline is available now:

“The strategy is built around five incredibly ambitious key pillars that will be imperative to our success moving forward:

“1. Grow the game.
“2. Foster the best playing environments.
“3. Develop winning teams.
“4. Grow the soccer economy to fuel reinvestment.
“5. Create a world-class organization.”

More detail will be available over time; the common element in all of the ambitions is money, with the 2026 World Cup a multiplier for interest at all levels of the game.

It’s worth noting that the development and staging of the FIFA World Cup 2026 will be done by FIFA itself, not by a separate organizing committee. However, U.S. Soccer, as one of the host federations, will have its profile substantially raised by the tournament coming back to the U.S. for the first time since the highly-impacted 1994 event.

The strike by Spanish women’s players over low wages was canceled on Thursday as a deal was reached with the clubs in Liga F to increase minimum salaries from €16,000 ($17,031 U.S.) to €21,000 ($22,353) this season and to €23,500 ($25,015)by 2025. ‘

The first week of games was missed, but the season will now begin.

● Tennis ● Romanian star Simona Halep, 31, the 2018 French Open and 2019 Wimbledon winner, has been suspended by the International Tennis Integrity Agency for four years for doping violations:

“The first related to an Adverse Analytical Finding (AAF) for the prohibited substance roxadustat at the US Open in 2022, carried out through regular urine testing during competition. The second charge related to irregularities in Halep’s Athlete Biological Passport (ABP). …

“On 11 September 2023, the tribunal confirmed that it had found the player had committed intentional Anti-Doping Rule Violations under Article 2 of the [Tennis Anti-Doping Program].”

Halep was provisionally suspended since October 2022 and her suspension is slated to continue through 6 October 2026. She has maintained that she did not knowing ingest any prohibited substance and indicated she will appeal.

● Weightlifting ● At the International Weightlifting Federation Congress in Riyadh (KSA), the new strategic plan for 2024-32 was adopted unanimously by the 114 delegates. Interim chief executive Pedro Adrega (POR) explained the four key “pillars” of the program:

“The first one is the most obvious one – Athletes. The second pillar is also quite straightforward – Events. The third pillar aims at keeping the IWF safe. And finally, the fourth pillar looks at reaching the best results beyond the IWF.”

Given that weightlifting is still not confirmed as a sport on the Los Angeles 2028 program, Adrega added:

“[W]e must not be complacent. The competition is hard. Many new sports want to enter the Olympic club and we cannot rest on our laurels. We cannot take our position for granted. We need to fight – every day, in every action we plan and do. We need to strive for excellence, for great performances, as our athletes do all the time. Let’s get inspired by them, by their devotion to the sport they love. We have now an additional, important tool to help us do things well.”

The plan recognized the sport’s positives – long history, easy to understand and appreciate and already in 195 countries, but also the glaring problems of rampant historical doping, a currently weak relationship with the IOC, static presentation and outreach and low revenues in view of enormous expenses in the anti-doping area. The major threats to the sport continue to be any slipback on doping and if the sport is not reinstated for LA28 and beyond.

A revision of the IWF Constitution was also adopted, by 85.2% of the delegates, aimed at modernizing the federation’s operations.

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TSX REPORT: Fine whine about cricket, USOPC oversight, sustainability; Schroder is FIBA World Cup MVP; rowing survives on IOC money

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. LANE ONE: Fine whine about cricket, CSUSOP and sustainability
2. Schroder named Most Valuable at FIBA World Cup
3. Rowing Congress shows Olympic TV dependence
4. Weightlifting anti-doping effort approved for 2024
5. Confidence in hosting events in Japan at “extreme low”

● In Lane One, a chance to whine about things seen this summer, and continuing in 2023, about cricket and flag football for Los Angeles 2028, what might come out of the USOPC review commission (that has little to do with the USOPC), sustainability claims, the World University Games and doing results right.

● German guard Dennis Schroder was named the Most Valuable Player of the FIBA World Cup, with Luka Doncic joining elite company with his scoring, and, did you know that the tournament carries no prize money?

● The World Rowing Congress took place on Monday following the world championships, with the documentation showing the federation is completely dependent on the International Olympic Committee’s quadrennial television rights fee distribution. Isn’t this also a sustainability issue?

● The International Weightlifting Federation, meeting in Saudi Arabia, confirmed a new anti-doping program designed to help it get back onto the Olympic program for Los Angeles in 2028.

● A Vice President of the Japan Wrestling Federation told a World Academy of Sport forum in London that confidence in her country in large events is “extremely low,” based on the high cost of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and the continuing scandals that have come out post-Games.

World Championships: Rowing (Russians, Belarusians not harassed at Worlds) = Weightlifting (Reyes and Javadi take 81-89 kg world titles) ●

Panorama: Russia (doping figures for 2023 show lots of tests, quite a few positives) = Athletics (2: newest Kenyan distance doping positive; Des Moines honors Grand Blue Mile winners with “World Record Way”) = Football (2: court accepts Hermoso complaint; 11 Brazil players banned for match fixing) = Surfing (Marks and Toledo won World Surf League finals) = Tennis (U.S. in two Doubles finals at U.S. Open) = Triathlon (Jorgensen and Pearson win in Czechia) ●

Schedule: Owing to a scheduling conflict, no TSX Report will be posted on Wednesday (and maybe Thursday). Back Friday for sure! ●

1.
LANE ONE: Fine whine about cricket, CSUSOP and sustainability

This has been a busy summer, with the World Aquatics Championships, FIFA Women’s World Cup, the World Athletics Championships and FIBA World Cup back-to-back-to-back-to-back, along with many others.

Covering these events and monitoring the politics, avarice and showboating attendant to all of them leads one to a certain level of exasperation. So, a little “fine whine” as the championship season of 2023 heads toward its close and Olympic politics stay hot:

● The chatter around the possible inclusion of cricket – controlled by the International Cricket Council (ICC) – and flag football – a project of the National Football League (NFL) – as added sports, either in addition to, or possibly at the expense of long-time American favorites baseball and softball is amazing.

Both the cricket crowd and the flag-football proponents wants the massive expansion of worldwide exposure that an Olympic berth – as a medal sport – would bring. The ICC has claimed that if selected, the television rights for the Los Angeles 2028 Games from India would rise from its current $14 million to more than $200 million. The NFL isn’t claiming that for flag football, but it offers a path for women to play without contact, and could be a significant way to expand the game down to the school level.

The difficulty for the ICC is that the IOC control the Olympic television rights, so LA28 gets nothing by selecting cricket, unless the IOC is willing to share. But the answer is at hand, since the ICC’s 2022 financials show the federation with $1.31 billion in assets and $913 million in reserves.

So, why shouldn’t the ICC simply pay LA28 the $200 million to add cricket – become a 2028 sponsor – with a promotional agreement that LA28 will stage test-event tournaments in the Southern California area annually in 2026 and 2027 for both men and women, further expanding the reach of the event for their newest sponsor.

And LA28 will work with the ICC to get the IOC to split the added television revenues in cricket-mad countries with them. Everybody wins, right?

The same logic applies to the NFL as well. Wouldn’t test tournaments in 2026 and 2027 significantly raise the flag football profile, as well as having the NFL as a sponsor?

Given the difficult economic environment worldwide which faces the LA28 organizers, why shouldn’t those federations desperately seeking future rewards contribute now, especially if they can (easily) afford it?

● Those looking for a roasting of the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee at last week’s public hearing of the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics didn’t get much satisfaction.

But look for the report to pick up on the comments of the last panel, suggesting new concepts in developing grass-roots participation in sports in the U.S. The hearing’s first speaker, Arizona State Associate Professor of History, Dr. Victoria Jackson, did not address this in her remarks on the history that led up to the hearing, but commented separately on a theme which could well be a major focus of the CSUSOP report:

“I will not be making policy recommendations at the hearing. But I do have lots of policy ideas. I would like to see an overhaul and redesign of the American sports ecosystem. I want to see an independent body, perhaps a sports ministry, that serves as a hard backstop of regulation, coordination, transparency and accountability through checks on power, something the American sports ecosystem does not have.

Watch for something along those lines when the Commission’s report comes out next spring.

● One of the most obnoxious wastes of time, space and – yes – energy are the claims made concerning sustainability and how much federations and organizing committees are doing.

A Nielsen study on the 2022 World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Oregon noted that the local organizers knocked themselves out, eliminating single-use plastics, using paper-based water containers, renewable energy, composting food waste, pushing public transit and much more, diverting almost 79% of all waste directly related to the event. Fantastic, right?

Well, all that effort reduced the environmental footprint of the event by 2%. Why? Because: “Total air travel undertaken by individuals to reach Eugene accounted for 75,537 tonnes of CO2 emissions.” And the total was 97,095 tons of CO2 emissions in all.

Any claim of event sustainability which does not take into account air travel emissions is simply not credible.

● The World University Games reappeared in 2023, with the event in Chengdu (CHN), with athletes from 116 countries competing in 18 sports and 269 events.

This was the 31st Universiade, but the first since 2019 due to the pandemic. And, once again, it was largely ignored by most media in most of the competing countries. Part of this is due to the age and eligibility requirements of being in college.

Part is also due to an outdated approach to the athletes as members of national teams. The WUG would be far more interesting if the athletes were identified by nation and school. Alabama? Duke? Texas? UCLA?

The Sorbonne in France? Fudan University in China? The International University Sports Federation (FISU) missed out on an enormous opportunity by not promoting the schools involved in the WUG, as much as countries. And with the 2029 WUG coming to the U.S., what about allowing universities to field their own teams, including players who are from foreign countries. Let the North Carolina Tar Heels play with its regular team as the U.S. entry, since its foreign players are in the country legally on a student visa.

● Speaking of the Chengdu WUG, did you know that China’s Yufei Zhang won nine gold medals in swimming? Yep: the 50-100 m Frees, 50-100 m Butterflys and five relays.

There’s a good reason you didn’t know: it wasn’t easy to figure this out. Beyond the general disinterest in the WUG, the results system did not generate a list of multiple medal winners. This is a common error in results systems, in part to save programming time and cost, but also because no one ever asks users what could be useful for them.

If you want to do it almost right, check out the Omega Timing results book for the just-completed World Aquatics Junior Championships in swimming held in Netanya (ISR). At the back of a 259-page list of all of the results of the meet are several key tables that EVERY results system should produce:

● List of medalists by event
● List of medalists by country
● List of multi-medalists
● Medal table
● Records set (and tied)

Major events such as the European Games, South American Games and even some of World Aquatics’ own events do not include these tables as part of their results systems. They should.

Even the Netanya book was missing a user-friendly addition, as the first page is the summary of the heats of the men’s 400 m Freestyle. The opening pages of any results book should be a list of the events in the order they are presented, to act as a way to find a specific event or race.

This is all in the programming, folks, and quite logical to those who think about the user experience.

There are lots of other things to complain about, but these will do for a start. Thanks for reading.

Rich Perelman
Editor

2.
Schroder named Most Valuable at FIBA World Cup

Germany’s unexpected 8-0 run to its first FIBA World Cup championship- was keyed by Raptors guard Dennis Schroder, who was named Most Valuable Player in the tournament following Sunday’s win over Serbia in the gold-medal final.

Schroder headed the All-Star team, which also included Canadian guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Thunder), U.S. scoring star Anthony Edwards (Timberwolves), Hawks guard Bogdan Bogdanovic (SRB) and Mavericks star Luka Doncic (SLO).

Canada’s Dillon Brooks (Rockets), who scored an equal-tournament-high 39 points in the third-place match against the U.S., was named best defender.

Doncic won the scoring title, playing eight games and scoring 216 points for a 27.0 average, ahead of Jazz guard Jordan Clarkson (PHI: 26.0) and Finland’s Lauri Markkanen (Jazz) at 24.8. Doncic also became only the 12th player ever to score 200 or more points in a World Cup tournament; his 216 points ranks eighth all-time.

The U.S. finished fourth, but led the tournament in scoring at 104.5 per game – the only team over 100 – and shot 53.6% from the field, second only to Serbia (54.2%),

The 92 games drew 700,665 fans for an average of 7,616 per match, with games split between Indonesia (Jakarta), Japan (Okinawa) and three sites in the Philippines.

FIBA Secretary General Andreas Zagklis (GRE) explained some unusual facets of the tournament:

“There is no prize money for the World Cup. FIBA is supporting the federations in covering a lot of their costs. We have directly or indirectly contributed more than 80 million Swiss francs to the federations for their costs over the four years. …

“The Central Board has decided there is no prize money for national team competitions. What we generate in terms of resources – as a non-profit organization – is distributed according to our development programs and other distribution mechanisms across all 212 members of FIBA.”

FIBA’s costs include player insurance for all of its championship tournament, which costs more than CHF 15 million for the next four-year cycle, and a contribution of CHF 50,000 to all 32 federations for preparation costs for the 2023 World Cup. The 15 teams which advanced to the second group stage all received another CHF 100,000 for their added costs.

Zagklis also noted a high standard of support for all players; FIBA’s statement noted:

“All the players stayed in single rooms at the hotels.

“There were dedicated player lounges with a former player in charge as the liaison between the players, the teams, and the organizing committees. Former players also served as advisers on how to build those players spaces, which included amenities ranging from their own dedicated bar to a barber shop in every players hotel.”

3.
Rowing Congress shows Olympic TV dependence

Without the International Olympic Committee’s distribution of money from its Olympic Games television rights fees to the International Federations which help stage the Olympic and Winter Games, many of these organizations would fold.

World Rowing provided another example on Monday, as its annual Congress following their 2023 world championships included financial statements which documented their dependence on Olympic television money.

The federation’s assets were shown at CHF 14.224 million, or about $15.970 million U.S. (1 CHF = $1.12 U.S. today). This includes CHF 13.120 million in reserves, of which 73.979% is Olympic television money from Tokyo 2020 not yet spent.

World Rowing received $17,305,168 in Tokyo TV money from the IOC (CHF 16.051 million) and is spending it down by about CHF $4 million annually. Since the return of events in 2021, World Rowing has shown a substantial loss but for its Olympic television dividend:

2021 Revenue: CHF 2.610 million
2021 Operations: CHF 6.412 million
2021 Investments: CHF 0.45 million gain

This is a loss of CHF 3.352 million, but turned into a surplus of CHF 648,070 by the application of CHF 4.000 million of Olympic TV money.

2022 Revenue: CHF 3.448 million
2022 Operations: CHF 7.062 million
2022 Investments: CHF 1.245 million loss

So, another loss of CHF 4.859 million for the year in 2022, but only a loss of CHF 858,817 after another CHF 4.000 million from the Olympic television reserves.

The federation’s projections show reserves down to CHF 4.175 million by the end of 2024, when another Olympic TV dividend is being counted on. All four years from 2021 to 2024 show an annual loss outside of the Olympic television money it receives.

President Jean-Christophe Rolland (FRA) underscored the issue in his opening statement in the Congress package, which included:

“I would like to emphasise once again the very cautious management of our resources. We came out of the uncertainty around the Olympic revenue due to the possible cancellation of the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games and given the very complex and costly conditions for postponement. The Executive Committee has pursued a policy of restricting expenditure, while ensuring that our priority missions were fulfilled, namely the smooth delivery of international competitions and the promotion of our sport, all in accordance with the rules of good governance.

“The Executive Committee has approved the project to review our marketing and commercial approach, a project which was presented at the 2022 Congress. We are committed to adapting to a context that has evolved, with a business and partnership model that has changed radically. It is essential that we have the resources to invest in promoting our sport and competitions. If we look at our disciplines, we can clearly see the different potentials of our sport.

“In parallel with the above-mentioned project, we have launched a project to review our events and the international competitions’ calendar. To repeat what I said at the 2022 Congress, we are facing the major challenge of rethinking our approach. The observations are straightforward: whether it’s the attractiveness of World Cups, or the large – too large? – number of events and duration of our World Championships . . . when the number of international competitions valued by broadcasters is low, we need to rethink and adjust our deliverables for tomorrow’s survival. That’s the whole point of this project, which should be completed by the end of 2024 followed by significant amendments to the Rule 25 of the World Championships Programme.”

Observed: There is no thought of rowing being removed from the Olympic program, and the federation is hopeful that some added events in beach rowing will be approved for Los Angeles in 2028 to compensate for the removal of the two Lightweight class events.

But the fact that, as Rolland notes, commercial interest in this sport is so low that it does not have the resources to promote itself is a danger sign for the future, for rowing and many other federations.

And it raises a new question of sustainability to be taken up by the IOC President who will follow Thomas Bach (GER): what is the IOC’s responsibility to prop up federations which cannot fund themselves?

4.
Weightlifting anti-doping effort approved for 2024

With considerably less fanfare than either boxing or modern pentathlon, the International Weightlifting Federation has been working quietly to restore the confidence of the IOC that it belongs back on the Olympic program for Los Angeles for 2028.

Boxing’s place has been assured, with the removal of the International Boxing Association as the recognized federation for the sport, and modern pentathlon is trying to convince the IOC that its move to obstacle racing is somehow going to ignite interest in the sport amidst a continuing revolt of many of its top performers.

Weightlifting, following major doping, financial and governance scandals, elected a new board and officers in 2022, led by former Secretary General Mohammed Jalood (IRQ) as President, and brought the highly-respected Rune Andersen (NOR), known for running the Russia Task Force for a decade for World Athletics, in as its Anti-Doping Commission Chair.

On Monday, its Executive Board approved Andersen’s Commission’s plan for enhanced anti-doping measures ahead of the Paris 2024 Games, that will include:

“[T]he categorisation of National Member Federations will be enforced from November 1, 2023. According to this categorisation, IWF members will be included in three different groups, taking into account their doping history and many other criteria related to their national anti-doping strategy.

“For the nations in the A group, a minimum of two out-of-competition tests will be mandatory for eligible athletes for the Paris Games, while educational anti-doping courses are also compulsory; in the B group, the requirements include one test per athlete and optional education; countries in C group won’t need to fulfil any special requirements. The list of countries in each category is to be announced in October by the International Testing Agency (ITA).”

An IWF Strategic Plan for 2024-32 was also approved, and will be submitted to Tuesday’s IWF Congress for final approval. In the meantime, the 2023 World Championships have been ongoing, reportedly at a high level, in Riyadh (KSA) and will continue through the 17th.

5.
Confidence in hosting events in Japan at “extreme low”

In the aftermath of the high cost of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and the subsequent scandals over sponsorship sales and bid-rigging for test event and venue contracts, a Vice President of the Japan Wrestling Federation said this is a low period for Japan to look at future events.

“Essentially, hosting Tokyo 2020 stole the dreams of the sport events industry in Japan as it completely failed to live up to its promise,” said Dr. Kuniko Tanioka, the President of Shigakkan University, and Vice President of the Japan Wrestling Federation. She spoke at the second Global Sports Agora, held by the World Academy of Sport in London (GBR).

“Unfortunately hosting the Games did not fulfil the perception that they would be economically beneficial to Tokyo as a city or Japan as a country. Although the COVID-19 pandemic had a major influence on that, other issues had a negative effect too and the malaise is still being felt now.”

The Tokyo Games continues to be reported on as the sponsorship-sales and bid-rigging scandals continue through the Japanese court system more than two years after the event ended. One of the results has been the blowback against a front-running bid from Sapporo for the Olympic Winter Games in 2030, now postponed to a future Games:

“Confidence in hosting sports events in Japan is at an extreme low.

“However, we now have a great chance to build that confidence back up in Japan as the city of Aichi-Nagoya moves forward in its preparations for hosting the 2026 Asian Games. The [Global Sports Agora] has highlighted the role that the private and commercial sector can take in building relationships with the sports industry and collaborating through greater transparency and integrity so that the mistakes of Tokyo 2020 are not repeated.

Tokyo will get a major shot at redemption in 2025, however, as it hosts the World Athletics Championships in the National Stadium that had to sit empty during the Olympic Games due to the pandemic. That and the 2026 Asian Games could be feel-good moments for Japan and sports.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rowing ● More from World Rowing chief Rolland, who said on Monday that there were no incidents with the three Russian or seven Belarusian athletes entered at the Worlds in Belgrade (SRB) that concluded Sunday:

“Under the current circumstances, there cannot be an ideal solution, it would be easier to say no, it would cause less controversy, but our responsibility is not to make life easier, our responsibility is to fight for the values we believe in and realize how difficult it is to put emotions aside, especially in the context of this state of affairs. We must consider the arguments for and against. I do not intend to open a discussion on this topic now, I understand that the issue is very sensitive and political pressure must be taken into account. I also understand and I respect the position of each national federation, I understand that they are different.

“In our three tournaments – in Plovdiv, Paris and Belgrade – nine neutral athletes competed, and I am pleased to report that all of them fully complied with the rules of neutrality, without a single incident. I am also pleased to report that these athletes were treated with respect all participants in the competition.”

● Weightlifting ● The men’s 81 and 89 kg classes at the 2023 IWF World Championships in Riyadh (KSA) were decided on Monday, with new winners in both, and a world mark in one lift.

At 81 kg, 2021 World Junior Champion Mukhammadkodir Toshtemirov of Uzbekistan led after the Snatch at 164 kg, and then Rahmat Erwin Abdullah (INA), the 2021-22 winner at 73 kg, set a world record of 209 kg in the Clean & Jerk. But the winner of the weight class was Italy’s European champ Oscar Reyes, who was second in Snatch and only fourth in the C&J, but his combined total of 356 kg was golden. Abdullah was second at 354 kg and Toshtemirov – who made only his first lift in the C&J – won bronze (352 kg).

Iran’s Mirmostafa Javadi won the Worlds silver at 81 kg in 2021, but won at 89 here, placing sixth in Snatch, but winning the Clean & Jerk at 215 kg for a 384 kg total. That barely beat world-record holder Dayin Li (CHN), last year’s 81 kg champ, who lifted 383 kg, despite making only one successful Snatch lift. Venezuela’s Keydomar Vallenilla, the 2022 winner of this class, was third at 381 kg. American Clarence Cummings was 25th at 336 kg.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Russia ● The Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) reported test statistics for 2023, with 6,820 tests carried out through the end of August, and 105 positives.

For comparison, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency reports its statistics quarterly, and had 4,889 tests and 35 sanctions for the first six months of this year. For RUSADA, it conducted 5,280 tests during the same period and had 91 positives.

● Athletics ● Another Kenyan doping positive, this time of 41-year-old Agnes Jeruto Barsosio, whose samples in 2022 showed “likely doping,” and an admission of doping was received in August 2023. A penalty of four years was imposed, plus another two years for “aggravating circumstances,” in this case, repeated violations, lowered by one year for her admission, to five years in total. The five-year suspension began on 6 September 2023and her results since 9 May 2022 have been nullified.

Jeruto Barsosio has a lifetime best of 2:20:59 from 2017 as the Paris Marathon runner-up.

Never one to miss a promotional opportunity, an honorary street naming was approved by the Des Moines City Council on Monday, naming of 13th Street as “World Record Way” between Grand Avenue and Locust Street in downtown Des Moines.

This area is just beyond the finish line of the Grand Blue Mile held annually, and which, in 2023, saw wins by Americans Sam Prakel (4:01.21) and Nikki Hiltz (4:27.97), which are being submitted as the first World Athletics-ratified world records in the road mile.

● Football ● The Spanish National Court accepted the complaint for sexual abuse and coercion by now-resigned Royal Spanish Football Federation President Luis Rubiales. This technical procedure allows the court to begin gathering evidence that could lead to the filing of formal charges against him.

FIFA’s Disciplinary Committee has extended the bans on 11 Brazilian players for “match manipulation” to worldwide status, with three players listed with lifetime bans and two for two years. The original penalties were imposed by the Brazilian federation (CBF).

● Surfing ● At the World Surf League final off San Clemente, California, the all-American (sort of) women’s final saw Caroline Marks of the U.S. top Tokyo Olympic gold medalist Carissa Moore (Hawaii), 17.10 to 14.97 and 14.60 to 13.53, for her first WSL title. Marks won her fourth tournament of the season and her seventh medal out of 11 starts.

The men’s title went to defending champion Filipe Toledo of Brazil, who got past Ethan Ewing (AUS) by 2-0 in their final (17.97 to 17.23 and 14.27 to 12.37). It’s Toledo’s fourth win of the season and 17th career victory, while Ewing finished second in three of the last four events of the season.

● Tennis ● In addition to the high-profile singles U.S. Open finals, where Novak Djokovic (SRB) swept Russian Daniil Medvedev (6-3, 7-6, 6-3) for his 24th career Grand Slam title and fourth at the U.S. Open, and American star Coco Gauff dispatched Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka (2-6, 6-3, 6-2), the U.S. was heavily involved in the Doubles finals.

In the men’s Doubles, Rajeev Ram (USA) and Joe Salisbury (GBR) defeated Rohan Bopanna (IND) and Matthew Ebden (AUS), 2–6, 6–3, 6–4; it’s the third straight U.S. Open Doubles title for Rav and Salisbury.

In Mixed Doubles, the U.S. pair of Jessica Pegula and Austin Krajicek got to the final, but lost in straight sets to Anna Danilina (KAZ) and Harri Heliovaara (FIN), 6–3, 6–4.

The pairing of Gabriela Dabrowski (CAN) and Erin Routliffe (NZL; ex-Canada) took the women’s Doubles final from Laura Siegemund (GER) and Vera Zvonareva (RUS), 7–6, 6–3. It’s the first U.S. Open title for the women’s and Mixed Doubles winners.

● Triathlon ● Comebacking Rio 2016 Olympic champ Gwen Jorgensen posted another World Triathlon Cup win in Karlovy Vary (CZE), using her feared running speed to track down Rachel Klamer (NED), 2:03:51 to 2:03:55 in the Olympic-distance race.

Jorgensen was eighth out of the water and sixth-fastest on the bike, and in contention when the 10 km run segment started. She and Klamer were 1-2 on the run in 34:39 and 34:45 and that’s how they finished.

Fellow American Morgan Pearson won the men’s race for his first World Triathlon Cup gold, dominating the field in 1:51:55 to 1:53:05 for runner-up Mark Devay (HUN).

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TSX REPORT: U.S.’s Kuss could win the Vuelta a Espana! Ingebrigtsen smashes world 2,000 m record; Germany wins FIBA World Cup

A world 2,000 m record for Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen in Brussels! (Photo: Matthew Quine for Diamond League AG)

The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. U.S.’s Kuss positioned to win Vuelta a Espana!
2. Ingebrigtsen shatters 2,000 m WR in Brussels
3. Germany wins first FIBA World Cup, as U.S. fourth
4. IOC adding human rights provisions to Olympic Charter
5. Rubiales resigns as head of Royal Spanish Football Federation

● Only one American has ever won cycling’s Vuelta a Espana – the Tour of Spain – one of the three Grand Tours, but Sepp Kuss is getting close. After 15 of the 21 stages, he leads the field by 1:37 and has survived two brutal climbing stages in the Pyrenees on Friday and Saturday. He has two more difficult stages to go, on Wednesday and Thursday.

● At the Memorial Van Damme Diamond League meet in Brussels, Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen incinerated another record, this time a very good 2,000 m mark from 1999, winning in 4:43.13. Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson won the women’s 200 m in 21.48, just 0.14 off the world record, and American Kenny Bednarek won the men’s 200 m in 19.79.

● At the 19th FIBA World Cup, Germany won its first title at 8-0, out-lasting the U.S. in its semifinal, 113-111, and beating Serbia in the final, 83-77. Raptors guard Dennis Schroder led the Germans with 28 in the final. Canada got 39 points from Rockets guard Dillon Brooks and won the bronze medal over the U.S., 127-118 in overtime after a miracle three-pointer from Nets forward Mikal Bridges forced overtime for the Americans.

● The International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board proposed new provisions for the Olympic Charter concerning human rights requirements as part of the Olympic Movement, continuing a concerted move by President Thomas Bach to focus on “values.” The Executive Board also nominated eight new members for approval by the IOC Session in October, including Malaysian actress and Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh.

● Luis Rubiales, the elected head of the Royal Spanish Football Federation, resigned on Sunday in a statement posted on Twitter. He continues to face possible civil and criminal penalties for his post-match behavior at the end of the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup. 

World Championships: Rowing (Netherlands and British combine for eight wins in Belgrade) = Swimming (Williamson ends with seven medals at World Juniors) = Weightlifting (China wins fourth class in Riyadh) ●

Panorama: Commonwealth Games (head of Commonwealth Games Australia says other countries expect a new Australian host for 2026) = Archery (D’Almeida and Kang take World Cup Final wins) = Athletics (4: Chepkoech gets 2,000 m Steeple world best in Zagreb; Reekie and Kerr win Fifth Avenue Miles; Ngetich gets 5 km/10 km women’s-only road records; sad passing of stat great Peter Matthews) = Badminton (Axelsen, An win China Open titles) = Cycling (3: De Lie and Adam Yates win sprint finishes in Quebec City and Montreal; Kopecky wins Simac Ladies Tour; France’s Koretzky sweeps both men’s Mountain Bike XC races in Lets Gets) = Football (new Berhalter era begins with 3-0 win over Uzbekistan) = Gymnastics (Hungary and Ukraine win three each at Artistic Challenge Cup) = Sport Climbing (Garnbret wins again in Lead World Cup) = Triathlon (Sereno scores gold at Americas sprint champs) = Volleyball ( (U.S. sweeps Canada for men’s NORCECA title in Charleston) ●

1.
U.S.’s Kuss positioned to win Vuelta a Espana!

It was hardly thought likely going in, but American Sepp Kuss, 28, now only leads the 78th Vuelta a Espana, but is in an excellent position to win it next Sunday after surviving two brutal climbing stages on Saturday and Sunday.

He came into Friday’s triple-climb test that finished in France at the 2,115 m Col de Tourmalet with a 26-second lead over Spain’s Marc Soler and 1:09 over defending champ Remco Evenepoel (BEL).

While Evenepoel flounders, Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard accelerated away from the other five in the lead group – including Kuss – and rode away to win the 134.7 km stage in 3:51:10, but Kuss was second (+0:30) and two-time winner Primoz Roglic (SLO: +0:33) was third. Evenepoel fell back to 60th (+27:05) and fell out of contention. Kuss suddenly had a 1:37 lead on Roglic and 1:44 on Vingegaard – his Jumbo-Visma teammates!

Saturday’s test was a 156.2 km bruiser with three more difficult climbs, including a misery-inducing uphill finish to the Larra-Belagua skiing resort in the Pyrenees, near the French border. A group of five, including Evenepoel, attack after 30 km, and Evenepoel simply rides away from everyone else and was alone for the last four km on the way to a 4:13:38 win. France’s Romain Bardet was second (+1:12), with the overall leaders finishing way back, with Kuss in eighth (+8:22). But all that did was cut Evenepoel’s deficit from +27:50 to +19:12.

On Sunday, the 158.3 km ride was hilly, but well short of punishing, with Rui Costa (POR) and Santiago Buitrago (COL) breaking away from a lead group of 15 on the descent into Lekunberri, only to be caught by Germany’s Lennard Kamna, the stage 9 winner. But Kamna crashed, got up, but saw Costa go by for the win in 3:30:56, with Kamna and Buitrago given the same time. Evenepoel was only two seconds back, with Kuss in 19th (+2:52).

Going into Monday’s rest day, Kuss maintains a lead of 1:37 over his Jumbo-Visma teammates Roglic and 1:44 over Vingegaard, and 2:37 against Juan Ayuso (ESP). Evenepoel is now +16:22.

The Tuesday and Wednesday stages are hilly, with uphill finishes, especially Wednesday’s final climb to the Altu l’Agliru at 1,555 m. But Thursday’s 178.9 km ride has four major climbs, including an uphill finish to La Cruz de Linares, and will be the final major test for Kuss and opportunity for his chasers to make an impact.

The only U.S. winner of the Vuelta a Espana was Chris Horner in 2013. No American has ever won the Giro d’Italia and only Greg LeMond has won the Tour de France (1986-89-90) after Lance Armstrong’s seven wins were wiped out for doping. So Kuss is looking at history, and has the unusual situation of having two teammates chasing him – and helping him at the same time.

2.
Ingebrigtsen shatters 2,000 m WR in Brussels

A world-record attempt stuck gold at the Diamond League Memorial Van Damme in Brussels (BEL), as Norwegian star Jakob Ingebrigtsen smashed the 24-year old mark in the 2,000 m, and Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson just missed the women’s 200 m mark. Two world leads from the meet:

Men/2,000 m: 4:43.13, Jakob Ingebrgtsen (NOR) ~ World Record
Women/Javelin: 67.38 m (221-1), Haruka Kitaguchi (JPN)

The rarely-seen men’s 2,000 was aimed at Moroccan Hicham El Guerroj’s 4:44.79 mark from 1999, with Ingebrigtsen staying close behind the pacesetters in the early going, crossing 1,000 m in 2:22.28 and then moving into the lead. He was trailed by Kenyans Abel Kipsang and Reynold Cheruiyot, but Ingebrigtsen was mostly on his own.

At the bell, the record was clearly within reach and the Norwegian was by himself. Australia’s Stewart McSweyn moved up to second with 200 m to go, then was passed by Cheruiyot in the final straight.

All alone, Ingebrigtsen sprinted to the finish – completing a 55.00 last lap – and crushed the world mark at 4:43.13, with a slew of national-record finishes behind him for Cheruiyot (4:48.14, fifth performance all-time), McSweyn (4:48.77, ninth performance all-time), Dutch teen Niels Laros (4:49.68, ninth performer all-time) and Spain’s Mario Garcia (4:49.85, 10th performer ever).

Ingebrigtsen now has the 2023 world leads at 1,500 m, 2,000 m, 3,000 m and two miles, to go along with his Worlds win in the 5,000 m and silver at 1,500 m, and now all-time bests at 2,000 m and two miles (7:54.10).

World Champion Kitaguchi took the lead in the women’s jav in the second round at 65.20 m (213-11) and no one really came close. But with her usual flair for the dramatic, she scored a world lead on her sixth-round throw at 67.38 m (221-1), a lifetime best and now no. 21 all-time. Austria’s Victoria Hudson was second with her third-round toss of 64.65 m (212-1).

It took until 5.92 m (19-5) to sort out the medal winners in the men’s vault: Sweden’s Mondo Duplantis, two-time World Champion Sam Kendricks of the U.S. and Worlds runner-up Ernest John Obiena (PHI). The bar went to 6.02 m (19-9) and Duplantis sailed over immediately, but Kendricks and Obiena all missed three times. Duplantis cleared 6.10 m (20-0) without incident to break his own meet record, and immediately raised the bar to a world-record 6.23 m (20-5 1/4), having missed this height 12 times previously … and now 15 times.

Three Americans finished 4-5-6 at 5.82 m (19-1): Chris Nilsen, KC Lightfoot and Zach McWhorter.

The women’s 200 m was also set up for Jamaica’s Jackson, who ran 21.41 to win in Budapest, to try for Florence Griffith-Joyner’s 21.34 world mark from 1988. Jackson, running out of lane six, had Britain’s Worlds fifth-placer Daryll Neita in front of her and took over right away, steaming into the straight and winning unchallenged in 21.48 (wind: +0.2 m/s), the no. 4 performance in history … of which she owns three (21.41, 21.45 and 21.48).

Anthonique Strachan (BAH) was second in 22.31, followed by Jenna Prandini of the U.S. (22.47) and Neita (22.59). Jackson said she will take another shot at Flojo’s mark at the Diamond League Final in Eugene next week.

The men’s 200 m was a sweet redemption for American Kenny Bednarek, the Tokyo and 2022 Worlds runner-up, who was fifth in Budapest. This time, he got out well and was quickly in a two-man race against Britain’s Zharnel Hughes, the Worlds 100 m bronzer and fourth in the 200 m. But Bednarek kept cool and pushed to the line in a season’s best 19.79 to 19.82 for Hughes (-0.1). Canada’s Tokyo winner, Andre De Grasse, was third in a season’s best 19.89; American Kyree King was seventh (20.52).

Jamaica’s Rusheen McDonald came on over the final 100 m to win the men’s 400 m in 44.84, trailed by Dominican Alexander Ogando in a seasonal best of 44.93.

Algeria’s Djamel Sedjati suffered a disqualification for a lane violation at the Worlds, but made amends, with a dash from fourth to first around the final turn to win the men’s 800 m in 1:43.60. France’s Yanis Meziane, the leader with 200 m to go, held on for second (1:43.94 lifetime best) and Botswana’s Tshepiso Masalela also got a personal best in third (1:44.03). American Bryce Hoppel was sixth in 1:44.37.

The rarely-run men’s 10,000 m was a runaway for Kenya Daniel Ebenyo, the Budapest silver winner, taking over by the 6,000 m mark and winning by more than 27 seconds in 26:57.80, moving him to nol. 3 on the 2023 year list. France’s Jimmy Gressier was second with a seasonal best of 27:25.48, followed by Stanley Mburu (KEN: 27:30.36). Ebenyo finished with a 62.90 last lap.

The women’s 100 m featured Jamaica’s Rio-Tokyo Olympic champ Elaine Thompson-Herah and 2019 World 200 m winner Dina Asher-Smith (GBR), and Asher-Smith got the best start. But the Jamaican had the lead by midway and won by daylight in a season’s best 10.84 (0.0). Asher-Smith was passed in the final 10 m by Jamaica’s Natasha Morrison, who got a seasonal best of 10.95 in second, with Asher-Smith third in 10.97.

The women’s 400 m looked like a battle between Dutch star Lieke Klaver, sixth in Budapest and Worlds 400 m hurdles runner-up Shamier Little of the U.S. and it certainly started that way. The two exchanged the lead through 300 m, but on the straight, the home crowd roared for Belgium’s Cynthia Bolingo, who came on to win in 50.09, ahead of Klaver (50.16) and Little (50.58).

A great field in the women’s 1,500 m had Tokyo runner-up Laura Muir (GBR) battling the 4-5 finishers from Budapest, Ireland’s Ciara Mageean and Kenyan Nelly Chepchirchir. Muir, Ethiopia’s Hirut Meshasha and Chepchirchir took over after the pacemakers were done, but then Mageean came up to challenge Muir at the bell.

Muir charged ahead on the back straight, but Mageean caught her off the turn, and on the home straight, Muir had enough left to win in a season’s best of 3:55.34, with Mageean getting a national record of 3:55.87 in second. Chepchirchir was third in 3:56.93, with Americans Addy Wiley and Sinclaire Johnson in 8-9, with very creditable times of 3:59.17 (lifetime best) for Wiley and 3:59.19 for Johnson. Cory McGee of the U.S. was 12th in 4:02.32. Wiley is now the 15th American woman to break 4:00.

At 5,000 m, Ethiopia’s Worlds sixth-placer Medina Eisa was leading the front pack at 8:43.25, with Kenyan Lilian Rengeruk in close attendance. Those two broke contact and dueled to the finish, with Rengeruk taking over into the final turn and winning in 14:26.46, with Eisa second (14:28.94) and Japan’s Nozomi Tanaka moving into third in the final lap to get a national record of 14:29.18. American Elise Cranny finished 11th in 14:57.52.

What would Femke Bol do? The Dutch World Champion in the 400 m hurdles was staring at her world-leading time of 51.45, but it was Jamaican Andrenette Knight and Anna Cockrell of the U.S. with the lead down the backstraight. Bol came on around the turn and had the lead by the eighth hurdle and extended to the line in 52.11, the no. 3 time of the year, and the no. 11 performance in history (of which she has four). Jamaica’s Knight fell back and teammates Janieve Russell and Rushell Clayton came on to finish 2-3 in 53.80 and 54.10, with Cockrell fourth in 54.29. Knight was sixth in 54.75.

Ukraine’s World Champion Yaroslava Mahuchikh had the women’s high jump with her first-try clearance at 2.00 m (6-6 3/4), but had bigger ideas, but missed at a world-leading 2.04 m (6-8 1/4). Serbia’s Angelina Topic was second at 1.97 m (6-5 1/2), equaling her lifetime best.

The non-Diamond League women’s long jump was a showcase for Worlds winner Ivana Vuleta (SRB), who reached 6.74 m (22-1 1/2) in the first round, but was matched by Fleur Jong (NED) in the third. But Vuleta won on her second-best effort, another 6.74 m in the fifth.

Two-time Worlds silver medalist Shanieka Ricketts (JAM) came out on top in the triple jump, with a lifetime best of 15.01 m (49-3) in the third round, now no. 2 on the 2023 world list, and the 27th woman ever to reach 15 m. That was good enough to beat Worlds runner-up Maryna Bekh-Romanchuk (UKR), who reached 14.57 m (47-9 3/4).

The Diamond League concludes next week at the Pre Classic in Eugene, on Saturday and Sunday.

3.
Germany wins first FIBA World Cup, as U.S. fourth

The 2023 FIBA World Cup was unusual from the start, being held in three countries – Indonesia, Japan and the Philippines – and ended with a first-time finalist and first-time winner in Germany, which took down Serbia in the final by 83-77 at the Mall of Asia in Pasay (PHI), in the Manila metro area, before 12,022.

The game was 47-47 at half, but the third quarter was decisive, with the Germans running off a 22-10 edge for a 69-57 advantage that the Serbs could not make up. A 10-2 in the fourth got the game to 73-69, but the Germans scored five straight for a 78-69. But another Serbian push got to within 79-77 with 39 seconds left. But a layin and two free throws from Raptors guard Dennis Schroder were the final points of the game.

The Germans shot 49.1% for the game and held Serbia to 41.9%, with Schroder pouring in 28 to lead all scorers, helped by Magic forward Franz Wagner (19) and center Johannes Voightmann with 12. Guard Aleksa Avramovic led Serbia with 21 and Hawks guard Bogdan Bogdanovic had 17.

It’s only the second-ever medal for Germany in the World Cup, after a bronze in 2002. The Serbs lost in the final for the second time in the last three finals, previously to the U.S. in 2014.

In the bronze-medal game, Canada had a 34-25 edge at the end of the first quarter that the U.S. closed down to 58-56 at half. Canada sprinted out to a 91-82 edge at the end of three, but a furious American rally and a miraculous finish got the U.S. even at 111 to force overtime.

With four seconds to go and the U.S. down 111-107, Nets forward Mikal Bridges made a free throw, then missed the second on purpose, chasing it down in the right corner. He spun, shot and somehow made a three-pointer to tie the score with 0.6 seconds to play.

But the Canadians were better in the overtime, running off five quick points to gain control and finishing with a 16-7 edge for the 127-118 final and the bronze medal. Even without forwards Brandon Ingram, Jaren Jackson Jr. and Paolo Banchero due to illness, the U.S. shot 51.9% and out-rebounded Canada 43-40. But the Canadians show 51.2% and were 17-37 from the three-point line, led by Rockets guard Dillon Brooks with 39 points (equaling the tournament high) and Grizzlies guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (31). Knicks forward R.J. Barrett had 23.

Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards again led the U.S. with 24, and Lakers guard Austin Reaves had 23 – his high game of the tournament – and Bridges had 19. With only nine players available, Bucks forward Bobby Portis Jr. added 14, Knicks guard Jalen Brunson scored 13 and Knicks teammate Josh Hart had 10.

U.S. coach Steve Kerr reflected, “What it comes down to for us in this tournament, we put ourselves in a great position. We got to the semifinals, we’re right there, we couldn’t get enough stops. We just didn’t defend well enough against Germany or against Canada and that’s the bottom line. Every year when you try to build a team, we try to build the best two-way team you can to be able to get stops and score.”

In their Friday semifinal, the U.S. lost to Germany for the first time ever in international play, 113-111, mostly due to a 35-24 third quarter for the Germans.

The game was tight, with the U.S. holding a 60-59 lead at half, but the Germans built a 94-84 lead by the end of the third, including 10 points from guard Andreas Obst. The lead was still 10 with 4:42 to go, when Reaves made a three-pointer for the U.S., Edwards scored five straight, then Reaves scored four more to close to 108-107 with 1:35 to play. Obst made a clutch three-pointer with 1:14 left and Schroder made a step-back jumper for a 113-107 lead with 40 seconds to play. Reaves got a dunk and a tipin, but it was not enough.

Obst had 24 to lead the winners, Orlando Magic brothers Franz and Mo Wagner had 22 and 10 points, Schroder had 17 and Pacers forward Daniel Theis had 21. The Germans shot 57.7% from the floor and out-rebounded the U.S., 30-28. Edwards had 23, Reaves 21, Bridges scored 17 and Brunson had 15. The U.S. shot 58.5%, made 23-24 foul shots, had only nine turnovers, and lost.

In the other semi, Serbia took an early lead on Canada, by 23-15 at the quarter and 52-39 at half and held on for a 95-86 win in the first semi. Bogdanovic led Serbia with 23 on 8-12 shooting, assisted by guard Ognjen Dobric and center Nikola Milutinov, both with 16. Canada won the second half, 47-43, but never got closer than seven points in the second half. Serbia shot 61.2% from the field and held the Canadians to 48.2%.

The U.S. improved in 2023, with a much better roster and rose from seventh in China in 2019 to fourth this time, but did not have enough defensive intensity in the games that were lost: 110-104 to Lithuania, 113-111 to the Germans and 127-118 in overtime to Canada. It’s the first time since 1967-1970 that the U.S. failed to win a medal in two straight World Cups.

4.
IOC adding human rights provisions to Olympic Charter

In a move to cement the legacy of International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach of Germany, the IOC Executive Board – led by Bach – submitted changes to the Olympic Charter to incorporate human rights requirements.

Bach has been an unabashed supporter of the United Nations during his term and has unfailingly championed the IOC’s “values” as the foundation of its positions on multiple issues, including the current furor over Russian and Belarusian inclusion in the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. Three insertions were approved by the Executive Board for approval by the IOC Session in Mumbai (IND) in October (additions in bold):

● In Fundamental Principle of Olympism 1, “Olympism seeks to create a way of life based on the joy of effort, the educational value of good example, social responsibility and respect for internationally recognised human rights and universal fundamental ethical principles within the remit of the Olympic Movement.”

● In Fundamental Principle of Olympism 4, “Every individual must have access to the practice of sport, without discrimination of any kind in respect of internationally recognised human rights within the remit of the Olympic Movement.”

● Added to Rule 40: “All competitors, team officials or other team personnel in the Olympic Games shall enjoy freedom of expression in keeping with the Olympic values and the Fundamental Principles of Olympism, and in accordance with the Guidelines determined by the IOC Executive Board.”

These amendments are very carefully constructed, for example with the limitation in the first item, reading “within the remit of the Olympic Movement,” keeping the IOC’s responsibilities within Olympic sport and not within the wider frame of international politics. .

Also, the addition to Rule 40 concerning “free expression” was not accompanied by any change to the widely-discussed Rule 50.2, which reads “No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas.”

The Executive Board also nominated eight new members for the IOC, five of whom are individual members:

Yael Arad (ISR; President of the Israeli NOC and won Israel’s first Olympic medal, a judo silver at 61 kg).

Balazs Furjes (HUN; lawyer and State Secretary for the development of Budapest, deeply involved in Hungary’s hosting of world championships in swimming and athletics).

Cecilia Tait (PER; elected to Congress from 200-06 and 2011-16, a former three-time Olympian in volleyball in 1980-84-88, winning a silver medal in Seoul).

Michelle Yeoh (MAS; an actress who won the Academy Award for Best Actress for the 2022 American film, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”).

Michael Mronz (GER, a well-known event organizer from the 2006 World Equestrian Games, 2009 World Athletics Championships in Berlin and major events in beach volleyball, tennis and other sports).

Yeoh and Mronz were directly selected by the IOC and not suggested by their National Olympic Committees under a recent provision allowing the it to recruit up to seven members.

Two nominations are tied to positions as heads of International Federations:

Petra Sorling, President of the International Table Tennis Federation (SWE);

Jae Youl Kim, President of the International Skating Union (KOR).

One nomination was for a National Olympic Committee President:

Mehrez Boussayene, President of the Comite National Olympique Tunisien.

All eight are expected to be approved by the IOC Session in October.

5.
Rubiales resigns as head of Royal Spanish Football Federation

“After the quick suspension carried out by Fifa, plus the rest of open proceedings against me, it is evident that I will not be able to return to my position.

“Insisting on waiting and holding on is not going to contribute to anything positive, neither to the federation nor to Spanish football.”

Thus, suspended Royal Spanish Football Federation President Luis Rubiales, 46, resigned on Sunday in a statement posted on Twitter. The federation posted a follow-up confirmation which included:

“The Royal Spanish Football Federation confirms that Luis M. Rubiales Béjar has presented his resignation tonight. This has been made known to the federative entity through a letter to Pedro Rocha Junco. In addition, he also resigns from his position as vice president of UEFA.”

The furor over Rubiales’ conduct following Spain’s victory at the FIFA Women’s World Cup in Australia last month reached a new high this past week with the filing of charges by midfielder Jenni Hermoso, infamously kissed by Rubiales during the medal presentations. He was already suspended by FIFA, had the regional president of his own federation asking him to resign and a Spanish sports court investigating his conduct.

He is now facing Hermoso’s charge, filed by the state prosecutor on Friday, of sexual assault, which could lead to a fine or up to four years imprisonment. An additional count of coercion was added by the prosecutors, based on Hermoso’s details of the incident.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rowing ● The Netherlands and Great Britain had a lot to celebrate at the World Rowing Championships in Belgrade (SRB), winning five and four races in the Olympic classes.

The Dutch got a impressive win from Karolien Florijn, who won her second straight women’s Single Sculls title, beating Olympic champ Emma Twigg (NZL), 7:14.35 to 7:19.43, with Tara Rigney (AUS: 7:21.07) and American Kara Kohler (7:23.98) fourth. It’s Twigg’s third consecutive silver in the event.

Ymkje Clevering and Veronique Meester, who were part of the Dutch Fours silver winners in Tokyo, took their first Pairs title in 7:20.52, over Australia’s Jessica Morrison and Annabelle McIntyre (7:22.90), who had been part of the Olympic Fours winner. Romania was third and the U.S. entry of Alison Rusher and Meghan Musnicki was sixth (7:34.43). The Dutch also won the women’s Fours with a new squad, over Romania and Great Britain, 6:41.82-6:43.29-6:44.31, with the U.S. fourth in 6:47.39.

Romania won its second straight women’s Eights title, beating the U.S., 6:01.28 to 6:03.73, with Australia third in 6:04.17. And Romania got a second gold in the women’s Double Sculls, from Olympic and defending World Champions Ancuta Bodnar and Simona Radis, winning in 6:46.94 over Lithuania (Donata Karaliene and Dovile Rimlute: 6:50.34) and Americans Kristina Wagner and Sophia Vitas (6:50.45 for bronze).

Britain won the Fours over the Dutch, 6:29.70 to 6:30.37, and took the women’s Lightweight Double Sculls, the only Lightweight class for Paris, with defending champs Emily Craig and Imogen Grant (7:19.23) beating the U.S. for the second straight year, this time with Michelle Sechser and Mary Jones (7:22.89).

The Dutch won two men’s events, with Melvin Twellaar and Sref Broenink winning the Double Sculls in 6:09.19 over Rio 2016 Olympic champs Martin and Valent Sinkovic (CRO: 6:12.44), and the Quadruple Sculls in 5:52.33 vs. Italy (5:54.58). Britain scored a second straight win in the Fours, over the U.S., 6:04.35 to 6:06.37, and took the Eights for the second straight Worlds, beating the Dutch by 5:24.20 to 5:25.23, with the U.S. sixth in 5:29.18.

Switzerland won the Pairs, with Roman Roosli and Andrin Gulich in 6:51.09, against Oliver Wynne-Griffith and Tom George (GBR: 6:53.46). Americans William Bender and Evan Olson were fifth in 7:02.98. Germany’s Oliver Zeidler won his third straight Worlds gold in the men’s Single Sculls in 6:38.08, with Simon van Dorp (NED: 6:39.26) a close second.

Olympic champs Fintan McCarthy and Paul O’Donovan won the Lightweight Double Sculls in 6:32.09 over Switzerland, for their third straight Worlds gold in the event.

In the Olympic classes, the Dutch scored seven medals (4-3-0) while Britain had six (4-1-1), Romania five (2-1-2), the U.S. had four (0-3-1) and Australia had four (0-1-3).

● Swimming ● Maximus Williamson of the U.S. concluded the World Aquatics Junior Championships in Netanya (ISR) as the biggest winner, taking seven medals in all: six golds and a silver.

Going into the final days of the meet, Williamson had already won the men’s 200 m Medley in 1:57.29, and added the 100 m Free in 48.45. He also finished with five relay golds in the men’s 4×100 m Freestyle (47.78), 4×200 m Freestyle (1:47.11 lead-off), 4×100 m Medley (47.57), plus the Mixed 4×100 m Medley (47.74), and a silver in the Mixed 4×100 m Free (48.38 lead-off).

He was one of two to win seven medals, along with Canada’s Julie Brousseau (0-2-5)

Australia’s Olivia Wunsch won six medals (5-0-1), with individual wins in the 50-100 m Frees and a bronze in the 50 m Fly.

Leah Hayes of the U.S. won the women’s 200 m and 400 m Medleys, got a win in the 4×200 m Free, plus a bronze in the 200 m Free and a silver on the 4×100 m Free.

The U.S. topped the medal table at 33 (15-11-7), followed by Australia (24: 9-7-8) and Canada (13: 2-3-8).

● Weightlifting ● China continued its winning ways at the 2023 World Weightlifting Championships in Riyadh (KSA), with a modest upset in the women’s 59 kg class, as 2022 Worlds 64 kg winner Xinyi Pei – still just 18 – ended up third, with teammate Shifang Luo – fourth last year – winning her first career Worlds medal.

Luo made all six of her lifts, winning the Snatch at 107 kg, the Clean & Jerk at 136 kg and the combined total at 243 kg. That was more than enough to win over Ukraine’s European Champion Kamila Konotop, who took silver-bronze-silver at 106-130-236 for the overall silver. Pei was third at 232 kg; American Taylor Wilkins was 10th (220 kg) and Danielle Guinn was 14th (216 kg).

At 64 kg, Colombia’s Nathalie Llamosa moved up from bronze in 2022 to gold in 2023, winning the Snatch (101 kg) and third in Clean & Jerk (122 kg) to win the class at 223 kg. Nigeria’s Ruth Ayodele won her first Worlds medal in second place (222 kg) and 2021 bronzer Min-kyung Park (KOR) got a second career bronze with a 220 kg total, but also winning the Clean & Jerk segment (123 kg).

Thailand scored its second gold of the tournament in the men’s 73 kg class, with Weeraphon Wichuma – lifting in the C group – won at 154 (2)-195 (1) and 349 kg, reportedly the first to ever win a world title from the third tier. China’s Yinting Wei made two of six lifts and finished second at 337 kg and Muhammad Ozbek (TUR: 334 kg) was third. Of the 11 starters in group A, five could not complete both lifts; only three of eight completed both in group B.

American Ryan Grimsland was 10th (from group B) at 326 kg, and Caden Cahoy (group C) was 19th at 310 kg.

Competition continues through the 17th.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Commonwealth Games ● Speaking to an Australian Senate hearing in Canberra, the head of Commonwealth Games Australia, Craig Phillips, said that the rest of the Commonwealth expects the 2026 – or 2027 – Games to be held there.

“We talked to our colleagues in the Pacific, we talked to our colleagues in the UK, and they will tell us the same thing: ‘Good luck finding a host because we want to come to Australia, we want you to find a host.’

“It’s clear that our colleagues from around the Commonwealth expect an Australian solution.”

In the aftermath of Victoria’s stunning withdrawal in July from a contract to host the 2026 Commonwealth Games, citing cost estimates that had risen from A$2.6 billion to A$7 billion or more ($1.66 to $4.47 billion U.S.), Phillips said he is talking with other Australian cities and regions:

“It may be a scaled back version of the games, given the time we have, but if you look around the capital cities around Australia … all have the capability of hosting games,”

“Even some of the smaller cities around the country have that capability of certainly contributing to a game. We have to look at all possible models – a single-city games, a shared hosting arrangement.

“Governments are going to want to know what it’s going to mean for a city, what it’s going to cost, what their obligations are. We’re developing the model to actually be able to have those sensible discussions with state governments and councils.”

● Archery ● A dream scenario almost came true at the World Cup Final in Hermosillo (MEX), with home favorite Alejandra Valencia – the 2023 Worlds runner-up – winning a shoot-off to get into the final against 2019 Worlds runner-up Chae-young Kang (KOR).

But the story did not have a happy ending for the home team, as Kang won, 6-2, for her second World Cup Final title, also in 2019. Korea also scored the bronze medal as Si-hyeon Lim shut out Casey Kaufhold of the U.S., 6-0.

The men’s final was a showdown between 2018 World Cup Final winner Woo-seok Lee (KOR) and two-time Worlds medalist Marcus D’Almeida (BRA), with D’Almeida winning the first two ends, then Lee roaring back to tie at 4-4 and D’Almeida winning the final end, 29-28, for a 6-4 victory.

Tokyo Olympic silver winner Mauro Nespoli (ITA) won the bronze, 5-3, over 2017 Asian Championships runner-up Dhiraj Bommadevara (IND).

● Athletics ● The European season continued with the annual Hanzekovic Memorial in Zagreb (CRO), a Continental Tour Gold meet, with some interesting performances, including a world best!

In the rarely-run women’s 2,000 m Steeple, 2019 World Champion and 2023 runner-up Beatrice Chepkoech of Kenya won in 5:47.42, the best on record, ahead of the 5:52.80 by Gesa Krause (GER) from 2019. Chepkoech was an easy winner ahead of countrywoman Winnie Jemutai (5:52.92). That gives Chepkoech the world best at 2,000 m and she already owns the world record for the 3,000 m Steeple.

Ferdinand Omanyala (KEN), the 2022 Commonwealth Games champ, won the men’s 100 m in 9.94 (-0.9) from Jamaica’s Oblique Seville (10.07), Italy’s Tokyo Olympic champ Lamont Marcell Jacobs (10.08) and American Brandon Carnes (10.27). Kyree King was sixth in 10.31.

King and Carnes came back to go 1-2 in the 200 m, in 20.10 and 20.19 (+0.6), with Josephus Lyles fourth in a season’s best of 20.44.

Britain’s Daniel Rowden won the men’s 800 m in 1:44.96, with American Hobbs Kessler, still just 20, winning the second race in 1:46.09, his second-best time ever.

Jamaica’s Olympic champ Hansle Parchment won the men’s 110 m hurdles over Daniel Roberts of the U.S., 13.13 to 13.15 (0.0), with Michael Dickson of the U.S. in sixth (13.70).

A battle of past world champs in the men’s shot saw New Zealand’s Tom Walsh get the early lead and hold it to win over Joe Kovacs of the U.S., 22.46 m (73-8 1/4) to 21.72 (71-3 1/4), with Americans Roger Steen fifth (21.40 m/70-2 1/2) and Payton Otterdahl seventh (21.21 m/69-7).

Slovenia’s 2022 Worlds winner Kristjian Ceh won the men’s discus at 68.48 m (224-8).

Puerto Rico’s Olympic champ Jasmine Camacho-Quinn won the men’s 100 m hurdles in 12.47 (-0.7), with Nadine Visser (NED) well behind at 12.64. Twice Olympic champ and home favorite Sandra Perkovic (CRO) won the women’s disc with her second throw of 67.71 m (222-1).

American Maggie Malone won the women’s javelin with her 63.71 m (209-0) throw in the third round; she has caught fire in the late season, getting a season’s best of 64.04 m (210-1) last Wednesday in Poland and moving to no. 7 on the year list.

Rain and possible lightning strikes interfered with the annual Fifth Avenue Mile in New York, but the races were held, with 2021 winner Jemma Reekie (GBR) taking charge after halfway, running away from fellow Brit Melissa Courtney-Bryant and American Nikki Hiltz to win in 4:20. Ireland’s Sarah Healy came on in the final 100 m to get second, also in 4:20, with Courtney-Bryant at and Hiltz at 4:21.

The men’s race focused in World 1,500 m gold medalist Josh Kerr (GBR) and for good reason. He was at or near the front the entire race and pulled away in the final 200 m to win decisively in 3:48. Fellow Brit George Mills and New Zealand’s Geordie Beamish went 2-3, both in 3:50 and American Vincent Ciattei got fourth in 3:51.

Kenya’s Agnes Ngetich set a world record for the women’s-only 10 km with a 29:24 win at the Trunsylvania 10 km race as part of the Brasov Running Festival in Romania. She finished way ahead of fellow Kenyan Catherine Reline (30:14)

Ngetich, sixth at the Worlds 10,000 m in Budapest last month, ran the third-fastest women’s road 10 km ever, behind 29:14 and 29:19 performances by Ethiopian Yalemzerf Yahualaw in mixed races in 2022 and 2023.

She also ran through the 5 km mark in 14:25, also a world record for a women’s only race, and both marks will apparently be submitted for ratification.

Deeply saddened to report of the passing of British announcer, writer and above all, master statistician Peter Matthews, 78, who died in his sleep on Sunday morning.

Matthews, widely respected for not only his brilliance as a statistician, but as a gentle, kind and fun person about track & field – and other subjects – had suffered from heart issues for the last several years.

He was a public address announcer and a long-time commentator for BBC Radio, ITV, Channel 4, SkySports and on the English-language world feed for the IAAF. He was the editor, from 1985, of the International Athletics Annual, editing to his high standards the signature statistical yearbook of worldwide track and field.

In 1993, he and fellow British writer and statistician Mel Watman created the Athletics International newsletter of results, lists, previews and notes, sent initially as a printed pamphlet, but now as a PDF, with the last issue sent last Monday (4th).

Watman passed away in 2021 and now Matthews, a devastating loss for the sport and especially for the worldwide Association of Track & Field Statisticians, for whom he worked so devotedly for nearly 40 years.

● Badminton ● At the China Open in Changzhou (CHN), three of the top seeds got all the way to the final and won! That includes both of the Singles divisions, with no. 1 Viktor Axelsen (DEN) defeating Guang Zu Lu (CHN), 21-16, 21-19, and Se Young An (KOR) sweeping aside Akane Yamaguchi (JPN), 21-10, 21-19.

In the women’s Doubles, top-seed Qing Chen Chen and Yi Fan Jia (CHN) also managed a sweep over Ha Na Baek and So Hee Lee (KOR), 21-11, 21-17.

China got a second win with Wei Keng Liang and Chang Wang in the men’s Doubles, taking care of Aaron Chia and Wooi Yik Soh (MAS), 21-12, 21-14. Korea’s fifth-seeded Seung Jae Seo and Yu Jung Chae won the Mixed Doubles against Thom Gicqhel and Delphine Delrue (FRA), 21-19, 21-12.

● Cycling ● The UCI World Tour was also in Canada, for the annual Grand Prix de Quebec took place on Friday, with Arnaud de Lie (BEL) winning the hilly, 201.6 km, 16-lap in-city course, coming from behind in the final meters to take the mass sprint, over Corbin Strong (NZL) and Michael Matthews (AUS), all in 4:47:36. It’s the first World Tour win for 21-year-old de Lie.

On Sunday in Montreal, Britain’s Adam Yates triumphed over the 221.4 km route in 5:54:02, winning a final sprint on the in-city course against Pavel Sivakov (FRA) by three seconds, with Spain’s Alex Aranburu third (+0:12). American Brandon McNulty was 13th (+0:55).

Belgium’s Lotte Kopecky won a three-way sprint at the end of Saturday’s 131.6 km Stage 4 of the Simac Ladies Tour in Valkenburg (NED), to maintain her lead going into Sunday’s finale.

Dutch rider Charlotte Kool won the mass sprint in Friday’s 148.9 km third stage – her second win of the event – beating defending champ Lorena Wiebes (NED) and Elisa Balsamo (ITA), all in 3:38:02. Kopecky was maintaining just an 11-second lead on Wiebes on Saturday and got to the line first in 3:24:17, with Wiebes and Kasia Niewiadoma (POL) just behind.

Wiebes had to win on Sunday, and she did, but failed to gain any time on Kopecky, as the hilly, 150.3 km route in Arnhem ended with a sprint of nine riders, including both of the contenders. Wiebes won in 3:44:53. With Balsamo second and Kopecky third (same time) to win the overall title.

Kopecky finished at 14:27:50 overall, with Wiebes just five seconds back after the time bonus for winning, and Anna Henderson (GBR: +0:41) third.

The sixth of eight UCI Mountain Bike World Cups was in Les Gets (FRA) with a sweep for home favorite Victor Koretzky, who took both the Short Track and Cross Country Olympic titles.

In Saturday’s Short Track races, France scored a 1-2 from Worlds silver winner Koretzy and Jordan Sarrou in the men’s race, with both timed in 20:33, and Luca Schwarzbauer (GER) third in 20:35. Chris Blevins of the U.S. was eighth (20:44).

Then Koretzky, who had previously won two XCO World Cups in 2021, earned his third gold with a dominant 1:26:45 win, well ahead of 10-time World Champion Nino Schurter (SUI: 1:27:02) and Vlad Dascalu (ROU: 1:27:06).

Austria’s Mona Mitterwallner was equally brilliant in the women’s XCO final, winning by 38 seconds in 1:14:51 for his second straight World Cup triumph and third medal of the season. Puck Pieterse, the 21-year-old Dutch European champ, was second in 1:15:29 and France’s four-time World Champion, Pauline Ferrand-Prevot, was third (1:16:05). Americans Haley Batten and Sevilla Blunk went 4-5 in 1:16:25 and 1:17:19.

Pieterse, the 2023 Worlds runner-up, won the Short Track race at 20:28, just a second up on 2023 bronzer Evie Richards (GBR: 20:29) and Alessandra Keller (SUI: 20:31). Batten of the U.S. was fourth (20:42) and Gwen Gibson was eighth (20:48).

France swept the non-Olympic Downhill races, with Worlds 2021 runner-up Benoit Coulanges coming from behind to take the men’s race in 3:19.573, from Worlds silver medalist Andreas Kolb (AUT: 3:19.733) and France’s Loris Vergier (3:19.936). Worlds bronze medalist Marine Cabriou (FRA) was a wire-to-wire winner in the women race in 3:47.390, ahead of Monika Hrastnik (SLO: 3:51.807).

● Football ● The second stint for re-hired U.S. men’s national team coach Gregg Berhalter could not have started better on Saturday in St. Louis as Tim Weah scored in the fourth minute against Uzbekistan, on the way to a 3-0 win.

The American men got going quickly, with Weah sending a shot over goal in the third minute, then midfielder Weston McKennie somehow got control of a Christian Pulisic pass to the corner of the box in the Uzbek zone, dropped it off for Weah to his right and he rocketed a shot into the net for a 1-0 lead in the fourth.

In the 16th, McKennie almost did it again, taking a header at the left side of the Uzbek goal, and heading it to striker Folarin Balogun, whose follow-on header hit the right post. Uzbekistan did best on counterattacks, with midfielder Khojiakbar Alidzhanov hitting the crossbar at the left end of the goal on a diagonal blast from the right side in the 22nd.

Uzbek striker Eldor Shomurodov got a great chance off a steal at 45+1, steaming toward the U.S. goal against defender Tim Ream, but got a clear shot at U.S. keeper Matt Turner from the right side. But Turner cut down the angle and saved the try to maintain the lead. The U.S. had 66% of possession in the half, but only six shot attempts, where Uzbekistan managed seven, but only two on target.

The U.S. maintained most of the possession to start the second half, but Uzbekistan again got chances, but its shots were wide of the U.S. goal. The game remained at 1-0 as the American offense could not get clean shots at the Uzbek net, and constant counterattacks keeping the U.S. defenders busy. Defender Sergino Dest danced through most of the Uzbek defense in the 73rd, but his shot in front goal was blocked. Pulisic’s weak header in the 75th was saved.

The U.S. finally sealed the win at 90+1, as Dest found substitute forward Brenden Aaronson in the box, with Aaronsen sending a lateral pass back toward the middle that was blasted toward the net by sub striker Ricardo Pepi, and off the hand of Uzbek keeper Utkir Yusupov, for a 2-0 edge.

At 90+5, substitute midfielder Malik Tillman was driving in the box and was tripped by defender Umar Eshmuradov for a penalty. Pulisic took the penalty and sent a powerful, right-footed shot into the left side of the goal, overcoming a right-handed tip from Yusupov, for the 3-0 final.

The U.S. ended with 65% of possession and 13 shots to 15 for the visitors. The U.S. men will play Oman on Tuesday in St. Paul, Minnesota.

● Gymnastics ● The penultimate FIG Artistic World Challenge Cup was in Szombathely (HUN), with the home team getting three wins on Saturday.

Sixteen-year-old Greta Mayer won the women’s Vault at 13.149, over Czech Alice Vlkova (12.199), and Zoja Szekely (20), the 2020 European Bars silver medalist, won that event at 14.133, over Ukraine’s 19-year-old Yelyzaveta Hubareva (13.000).

On Sunday, Ukraine went 1-2 on Beam, with Anna Laschevska winning (13.000) and Hubareva second (12.733) and Vlkova third (12.466). Czech Sona Artamonova took the honors on Floor (12.966), with Hungary’s Bettina Lili Czifra second (12.900) and Vlkova third (12.800).

On the men’s side, Krisztofer Meszaros won on Floor (14.666), his second World Challenge Cup win, over ex-American Eddie Penev (BUL: 14.400). Albania’s Matvei Petrov won on Pommel Horse (14.733), over Ukraine’s Oleg Verniaiev (14.633), and Vinzenz Hock (AUT: 14.300), the 2020 European runner-up took the Rings.

Ukraine dominated the men’s second day, with emerging star Nazar Chepurnyi, 21, taking the Vault at 14.666 and Verniaiev – a four-time Worlds medalist – winning on Parallel Bars (14.966), with Meszaros second (14.866) and Chepurnyi third (14.800). And Meszaros won a bronze on the Horizontal Bar (14.266), behind the brothers Ilias (14.433) and Marios Georgiu (14.300) from Cyprus.

The World Challenge Cup series ends next week in Paris.

● Sport Climbing ● The next-to-last IFSC World Cup in Lead was in Koper (SLO), with Slovenian star Janja Garnbret underlining her status as the best women’s climber in the world with her 26th career World Cup win.

She led the qualifying, semifinal and reached the top in the final, trailed by Japan’s 2023 Lead World Champion Ai Mori (44+ holds) and Vita Lukan (SLO: 40+), who won her second medal of the year.

Japan’s 16-year-old Sorato Anraku won his fifth World Cup medal of the season with a win in Lead, getting to the top in the final, with only American Jesse Grupper close at 42+, for his fifth career World Cup medal.

The final World Cup comes in Wujiang (CHN) from 22-24 September, in Lead and Speed.

● Triathlon ● At the Americas Sprint Championships in Santa Maria (COL), American Gina Sereno won the women’s title after scoring a silver in the American Olympic-distance Championships the week before. Sereno was sixth out of the water in the 750 m swim, and stayed in contention on the 20 km bike phase, but ran away from the field in the 5 km run, clocking 17:55, fastest in the field, to win in 1:01:44. Canada’s Emy Legault was second in 1:02.:02 and Argentine Romina Biagioli was third in 1:02:13.

Matthew Wright (BAR), fourth at the Americas Olympic-distance Championships, used a strong bike phase to take the lead in the men’s race, , and then out-distanced American Chase McQueen on the run, 14:46 to 14:57 to win in 53:46 to 53:54. Mexico’s David Nunez was a distant third in 54:10. Carter Stuhlmacher of the U.S. was eighth (54:43) and Luke Anthony was 11th (54:59).

● Volleyball ● The U.S. hosted the NORCECA men’s championship in Charleston, West Virginia and won the title, sweeping Canada in the final, 25-20, 25-14 and 25-22. It’s the U.S.’s 10th title all-time (second to Cuba’s 16) and first since 2014.

Cuba won the bronze medal with a 25-15, 25-14, 25-16 sweep of the Dominican Republic.

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TSX REPORT: USOPC review commission asked to change Stevens Act on grass-roots; Macron says no Russian flags at Paris 2024

Tom Farrey of the Aspen Institute, speaking at the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics (Photo: C-SPAN video screenshot)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. CSUSOP asked to change Stevens Act on youth sports
2. Macron: no Russian flags at Paris 2024
3. U.S. faces Germany in FIBA Worlds semis Friday
4. Kuss maintains La Vuelta lead as Molano wins Stage 12
5. Ealey wins in Brussels; main meet on Friday

● The public hearing of the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics included a lengthy session on grass-roots sports in the U.S., with calls for more attention to this area and more support – possibly Federal, possibly local – for coaching, access and governance, in the absence of any kind of national sports policy. More support was requested for Paralympic and for deaf athletes.

● French President Emmanuel Macron said in an interview he did not want to see any Russian flags waving in Paris during next year’s Olympic Games, but said that the question of Russian or Belarusian athletes was up to the International Olympic Committee.

● The FIBA World Cup will finish this weekend, with the U.S. facing Germany – as it did in a pre-World Cup exhibition – in one semifinal and Canada playing Serbia in the other.

● American Sepp Kuss continues to lead the Vuelta a Espana after a sprinter’s stage, but faces two daunting climbing stages on Friday and Saturday that will go a long way to determining whether he can be the first American winner since 2013.

● World Champion Chase Ealey won the women’s shot held in downtown Brussels at the Memorial Van Damme, with the main portion of the meet on Friday, with world-record tries expected in the men’s 2,000 m and women’s 200 m.

World Championships: Weightlifting (fifth Worlds golds for China’s Chen) ●

Panorama: Salt Lake City 2002 (Hoberman arch restored and stands again) = Athletics (Estes sues USATF for defamation) = Football (Spain appoints new women’s coach) = Wrestling (new UWW streaming service, but no live coverage in the U.S.) ●

1.
CSUSOP asked to change Stevens Act on youth sports

The final panel of Wednesday’s public hearing of the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics in Washington, D.C. focused on sports at the grass-roots level, rather than Olympic-level athletes, with calls for re-writing the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act and for public funding.

Tom Farrey, the founder of the Aspen Institute’s Sports & Society Program, told the nine Commission members present about the research he originally did for his 2008 book, Game On: The All-American Race to Make Champions of Our Children:

“When you peel back the layers, I found a failure of sports governance, of policy. I wrote a chapter on the 1978 Amateur Sports Act, which tasked the U.S. Olympic Committee and affiliated [National Governing Bodies] with (a) selecting and supporting teams that represent our country, and (b) coordinating and developing participation opportunities, down to the community level.

“But it was an unfunded mandate. And within a few years, the USOPC was telling Congress explicitly that it can’t both get Americans off the couch and onto the podium, that it lacked the resources and the authority to do so. And they were right. And I think it’s time we listened.”

Farrey pointed to the “Children’s Bill of Rights,” developed by the Aspen Institute’s Project Play initiative with contributions from – among others – the U.S. Center for SafeSport and the Center for Sport and the Law at the University of Baltimore School of Law, led by Commission co-Chair Prof. Dionne Koller, and endorsed by the USOPC and others. Speaking of the USOPC, the National Governing Bodies and other organizations involved in elite sport:

“What most haven’t done, and can’t do under the current Sports Act, is change their business model to prioritize mass participation and support for quality programs. They are beholden to corporate sponsors more interested in media stars, who can draw eyeballs to products.

“That’s why each NGB submits a high-performance plan to the USOPC, which then distributes more than $110 million annually to help podium-potential athletes. It’s a commitment to individual excellence, which is good. But it’s also a recipe for dysfunction without an even greater commitment to systems excellence.

“What we need is for every NGB to submit a ‘grass-roots performance plan,’ or a ‘GPP’ as I would call it. A ‘grass-roots performance plan’ would include a strategy and reporting – verified by a third party – on efforts to grow participation rates, to recruit youth from under-represented populations, to improve coach quality, to partner with schools, to prevent all forms of abuse – emotional, physical and sexual – put whatever you want in there … and raise another $110 million, or $500 million that gets distributed based on the quality of the NGB’s ‘GPP.’

“Then, re-distribute much of that money to community programs that align with best practices and deliver results.”

And Farrey noted that the USOPC does not have to be the instigator, coordinator or monitor of such an effort:

“If the USOPC does not want, or is not a good fit for the grass-roots role any more, then oversight needs to go to another entity.”

He suggested it could be part of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, or a quasi-governmental entity akin to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, or something new. But:

“That body should be guided by a national sports policy, which we don’t have. … Public and private funding streams should be identified to support this essential work. …

“Re-write the Amateur Sports Act and center the needs of youth and communities, and watch everything that sits on top of that base flourish: more athletes, better athletes, and, yes, more Olympic and Paralympic inspiration.”

Asked directly about the changes needed to the Stevens Act, he explained:

“The law is not written in a manner that allows them to have a sufficient level of authority over the grass roots. It just says ‘coordinate amateur sports activity, set some national goals,’ but how? I mean, this was language that was written nearly 50 years ago. It was our first attempt at sport governance in this country. It was a start, but we can do much better.”

Farrey also noted that in the dozen other countries he has studied, the National Olympic Committees are not tasked with mass participation development; it’s handled by another entity which is focused just on that. And in response to a question, he said that a state or local organization could also be effective, instead of creating a national one.

Funding? Farrey suggested looking not just at direct public funding, but other models tied elsewhere, such as the British use of a portion of funds in the national lottery, or perhaps a portion of revenues from the rapidly-expanding sports betting programs being adopted by each state.

Jeremy Goldberg, the head of LeagueApps, agreed: “It is also clear that there is no coherent youth sports system in this country. First there is a lack of governance, with no real structure or standards that stewards youth sports experiences in this country.”

But his solution was more money from the Federal government:

“There is an important role for the private sector. The focus of any strategy should be recognizing and supporting organizations at the grass roots that are key agents of change. … For organizations to have this kind of change, there’s a level of knowledge, training and professionalism that is required, as well as the accountability that goes with it. …

“The Federal government should be allocating more resources to support the needs of the very organizations that are working directly with kids. An example of what is needed is H.R. 8552 … that bill authorizes $75 million in grant funding to go directly to youth sports non-profits.”

A related panel dealing with the Paralympics and the U.S.A. Deaf Sports Federation (USADSF) also asked for more money for their athletes and programs, possibly also from the public sector, or through a funds-sharing mechanism such as the national lottery in Great Britain.

Jeff Mansfield, the President of the USADSF pointed out that the Amateur Sports Act of 1978 did not make any allowance for special support for deaf athletes, and the current USOPC alignment with the International Paralympic Committee has left deaf athletes – who participate in a separate multi-sport event, the Deaflympics – on their own, especially compared to Paralympians supported by the USOPC. He asked for an amendment to the Act to require the USOPC to assist deaf athletes in the same way.

At the elite-sport level, within the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee, even when fully-funded athlete support staff are added, it doesn’t always work.

Elizabeth Ramsey, since 2020 the first, full-time Executive Director of the Team USA Athletes’ Commission, explained that because the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act (as amended) created the Athletes Advisory Council (now the Athletes’ Commission) as a part of the USOPC, the credibility and outreach ability of her team are too limited and it cannot obtain commercial sponsors or other outside funding; moreover:

“Because Team USA AC is not a legally independent body, it has been challenging for our athlete representatives, and myself, and staff, to form trusting, quality relationships with some of the athletes it serves to represent. Many athletes still believe I work for the USOPC, and therefore, sometimes believe I do not have the athlete’s best interests in mind in making decisions. …

“We believe the Act should be amended to give Team USA AC independence from the USOPC, while still being recognized by the USOPC as the official representative body of Team USA athletes. We’re a completely independent body, disconnected from the USOPC, Team USA AC would be able to gain more athlete trust, have the autonomy to make decisions that benefit athletes without oversight from the USOPC.”

Ramsey did not indicate whether such freedom would then remove the USOPC’s requirement to provide funding as it does now.

Opening speaker Dr. Victoria Jackson, an associate professor of history at Arizona State, noted the endless road ahead of not just the USOPC, but sports as a whole in the U.S.:

“Trust, it turns out, depends upon a hard backstop of regulation, coordination, transparency and accountability through checks on power, something that the American sports ecosystem does not have.”

2.
Macron: no Russian flags at Paris 2024

French President Emmanuel Macron told the French all-sports newspaper L’Equipe in a Thursday story that Russian flags should be banned from Paris 2024, but that the question of participation is up to the International Olympic Committee.

“Of course, there can be no Russian flag during the Paris Games, I think there is a consensus on that matter. Because Russia, as a country, is not welcome at a time where it has committed war crimes and deported children …

“The real question, that the Olympic organisation should decide upon, is what place can be given to the Russian athletes … an issue that should not be politicized.

“I want the Olympic world to make a conscious decision, and I have every confidence in [IOC president] Thomas Bach.”

He also said that Ukrainian representatives should be involved with the IOC in discussions on this question.

Macron and Bach have met on the matter; Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo has been clear that she does not favor Russian or Belarusian athlete participation at the Paris 2024 Games.

3.
U.S. faces Germany in FIBA Worlds semis Friday

Two teams that know each other will face off for the second time in 20 days in Friday’s second semifinal of the FIBA World Cup at the Mall of Asia in Pasay, Philippines.

The U.S. men’s national team staged a second-half comeback to beat Germany, 99-91, in an exhibition game in Abu Dhabi (UAE), on 20 August, with guard Anthony Edwards (Timberwolves) going wild with 34 points.

The game was tied at 26 at the quarter, then the Germans seized control, leading 54-46 at halftime. The bulge expanded to 71-55 in the third, but the Americans mounted a 16-3 charge to get within 74-71 in the fourth. Germany pushed out to a 86-77 with 6:58 left, but an 18-0 burst left the U.S. in front by 95-86 and it ended at 99-91.

The U.S. has a 13-0 record vs. Germany in international play, but the Germans are the last unbeaten team in the tournament, with a 6-0 record, beating Japan, Australia and Finland in their first group, then drilling Georgia and Slovenia in the second group stage before an 81-79 thriller over Latvia in the quarters.

The Germans are led by front-court brothers Franz and Mo Wagner, who both play for the Orlando Magic, and Raptors guard Dennis Schroeder.

The first semi will have Canada (5-1) and Serbia (5-1), with the winners to play for the title on Sunday and the losers to meet in the third-place game, also on Sunday. By virtue of being the top two teams from the Americas, the U.S. and Canada have now qualified for the Paris 2024 Olympic tournament, as have Germany and Serbia as the top two European teams.

The U.S. has won this tournament five times, while Serbia has played in one final, losing to the U.S. in 2014. Germany won the bronze in 2002 in its only trip to the semis; this is the first appearance in the semifinals for Canada.

4.
Kuss maintains La Vuelta lead as Molano wins Stage 12

The mostly-downhill 12th stage of the 2023 La Vuelta a Espana finished with the expected mass sprint, and a win for Colombian Juan Sebastian Molano, who covered the 150.6 km route from Olvega to Zaragoza in 3:23:35.

He made it to the line ahead of Australian Kaden Groves, already a winner of two stages this year, and Boy van Poppel (NED). It’s Molano’s second career win at the Vuelta a Espana, as he also won a stage in 2022.

Race leader Sepp Kuss of the U.S. stayed with the other contenders and was part of the 89 riders who all received the same time as Molano. Defending champ Remco Evenepoel (BEL) was 24th, Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) was 25th, Kuss 36th and Primoz Roglic (SLO) was 43rd.

Kuss maintains a 26-second lead on Marc Soler (ESP), 1:09 on Evenepoel, and 1:32 on Roglic. The next two stages are both difficult, with Friday’s 134.7 km, triple-ascent stage ending at the 2,115 m Col de Tourmalet in the French Pyrenees, followed by another triple-peak stage on Saturday, with another uphill finish to Larra-Belagua. We’ll know a lot more about who the eventual winner will be by the rest day on Monday.

At the Simac Ladies Tour in the Netherlands and Belgium, a win for Dutch star Lotte Kopecky has given her the lead after the second stage, an Individual Time Trial in and around Leuven.

Kopecky was third in the Prologue, then 14th in the mass sprint in Stage 1 won by Italy’s Elisa Balsamo in and around Gennep (NED), then took control in the 7.1 km flat time-trial route in Leuven (BEL).

She won in 8:59, two seconds up on Riejanne Markus (NED) and 11 seconds ahead of Britain’s Zoe Backstedt and Anna Henderson. Kopecky now sits two seconds up on Markus and 0:13 up on Dutch star (and defending champ) Lorena Wiebes. The race finishes on Sunday.

5.
Ealey wins in Brussels; main meet on Friday

American Chase Ealey, who defended her world title in the women’s shot put in Budapest, who again in Thursday’s city-center competition at the Memorial Van Damme in Brussels (BEL), the penultimate Diamond League meet of the season.

Ealey stood fourth after the first round and stayed there until the fifth, when she unleashed the only throw of the competition over 20 m, at 20.05 m (65-9 1/2) and that proved to be the winner. Canada’s Sarah Mitton, the Worlds silver winner, was runner-up again at 19.76 m (64-10), with world leader Maggie Ewen of the U.S. third with her first-round toss of 19.64 m (64-5 1/4).

Fellow Americans Adelaide Aquilla got a seasonal best of 19.20 m (63-0) in fifth, and Jessica Woodard was ninth at 18.82 m (61-9).

Friday’s meet will be shown in the U.S. on NBC’s Peacock streaming service from 2:00 p.m. Eastern time and replayed on Saturday on CNBC from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. Eastern.

There are some noteworthy possible record attempts. Norway’s two-time Worlds 5,000 m and Olympic 1,500 m winner Jakob Ingebrigtsen is expected to try for the very good 2,000 m world mark of 4:44.79 by Morocco’s Hicham El Guerrouj from 1999. That’s essentially running 56.8 per lap for five laps: a 3.47.2 for 1,600 m and then another lap in 56.8!

Jamaica’s 200 m superstar Shericka Jackson, now a two-time World Champion, is aiming for the 21.34 world mark by American Florence Griffith-Joyner from the 1988 Seoul Games. She got close in the Worlds final in 21.41, and said in the pre-meet news conference:

“At the World Championships I was so close to the world record. Just a little wind and I would have been the world-record holder. But my coach and I have spoken and we are going after it this year. I hope to get it tomorrow. And if I do, then that will probably ease a little pressure off me going into Eugene. But if not, we have another shot at Eugene.

“There’s no perfect race but I just want to run a good race tomorrow and put everything in place, because we are right there, we are so close, we are knocking on the door. And tomorrow we will have Jamaican weather – and it’s a new track. Tomorrow is definitely supposed to be one of those good days! My mind is feeling good, my body is ready, and that’s the best thing I can put together. Anything is possible tomorrow.”

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Weightlifting ● Tokyo Olympic champion Lijun Chen won his fifth World Championships gold in the men’s 67 kg class at the 2023 World Weightlifting Championships in Riyadh (KSA).

Chen won all three sections, taking the Snatch at 153 kg, the Clean & Jerk at 180 kg and the total at 333 kg, 12 clear of runner-up Eko Yuli Irawan (INA: 321 kg), who won his eighth career Worlds medal across five different classes from 2007-23! Armenia’s Gor Sahakyan was third at 312 kg in total.

No U.S. lifters competed in this class. Chen now has Worlds wins at 62 kg in 2013 and 2015 and at 67 kg in 2018-19-22-23. Competitions continue through the 17th.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2002: Salt Lake City ● Another legacy of the 2002 Winter Games was presented in a new location on 29 August, as the Hoberman Arch was unveiled at the Salt Lake City International Airport.

The arch was the backdrop of the Medals Plaza at the 2002 Winter Games and had been in storage, waiting for a permanent home. The history:

“The arch was designed by artist, architect and engineer Chuck Hoberman and was inspired by Utah’s natural stone arches. The semi-circular aluminum structure resembles the form and movement of a human iris and weighs approx. 31,000 pounds. It is made up of 4,000 individual pieces put together as 96 connected panels with 13,000 steel rivets. The panels vary in size with the largest being 5-feet-wide by 9-feet-high.

“At the time of its construction, the arch was the largest unfolding structure in the world.”

Staged at the University of Utah’s Rice-Eccles Stadium after the 2002 Games, it was eventually removed, and then parts were stolen while it was being stored in an open lot. The restoration and adaptation for its new location was handled by artist Gordon Huether of Napa, California.

● Athletics ● Jim Estes, a long-time USA Track & Field staff member and a current member of the USATF Board of Directors filed suit in Marion County, Indiana against USA Track & Field, chief executive Max Siegel and chief operating officer Renee Washington, claiming:

“James Estes has been defamed by communications that attribute Estes’ professional misconduct as the sole reason for the disqualification the Chattanooga Sports Commission’s bid for to host the 2024 U.S. Olympic Marathon Team Trials. This is simply not true.”

The 17-page complaint states that Siegel “intentionally and repeatedly made false verbal and written statements asserting professional misconduct by the Plaintiff,” that Washington’s “breach of duties were the actual and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries,” and that USATF’s “breach of duties were the actual and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries.”

The prayer is for compensatory and punitive damages and asks for a jury trial.

The 2024 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials were awarded by USATF to Orlando, Florida, to be held on 3 February 2024.

● Football ● Spain appointed Montse Tome as its new women’s national team coach, replacing Jorge Vilda, who was dismissed in the continuing furor over the medal presentation ceremonies following the FIFA Women’s World Cup last month and the conduct of national federation head Luis Rubiales.

Tome has been an assistant coach with the national team since 2018. She was a midfielder for three different clubs in Spain from 2002-13 and appeared four times for the Spanish national team from 2003-05.

● Wrestling ● United World Wrestling is the latest federation to offer its own streaming service, called UWW+, through which “an individual will get access to video on demand, the biggest wrestling events of the season – including the world and continental championships and the Ranking Series events – captivating docuseries, exclusive off-the-mat content and much more.”

Unfortunately, the UWW site notes that live content on this service is not available in the U.S., due to existing broadcast agreements. Maybe in the future.

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TSX REPORT: Accountability, money, SafeSport worries highlight USOPC review hearing; IOC postpones LA28 added-sports announcement!

Former baseball and hockey players union chief Don Fehr testifying at Wednesday's USOPC review commission hearing (C-SPAN screen shot)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Accountability, money and SafeSport concerns at CSUSOP hearing
2. Stunner: announcement of LA28 added sports postponed
3. Spain’s Hermoso files complaint with prosecutors vs. Rubiales
4. Canada eliminates Serbia, Germany vs. U.S. in FIBA World Cup
5. Herrada wins La Vuelta stage 11; Kuss still in the lead

● The public hearing of the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics took place on Wednesday, with improvements in governance noted, but significant questions about the U.S. Center for SafeSport. In a key moment, former baseball and hockey player union chief Don Fehr said that an “athlete union” is not a simple solution to athlete issues, and requires significantly more thought to achieve a mechanism that works for both parties.

● The International Olympic Committee announced that Friday’s Executive Board meeting would not be taking up the added sports for the Los Angeles 2028 Games and that the news conference meant to reveal them was postponed. There are significant questions which have not been resolved, with the total number of athletes in Los Angeles possibly a key item.

● In Spain, midfielder Jenni Hermoso, who was infamously kissed during the medal ceremonies of the FIFA Women’s World Cup last month, filed a complaint against suspended Spanish federation President Luis Rubiales, as required under Spanish law.

● At the FIBA World Cup in the Philippines, Germany edged Latvia, 81-79, and will face the U.S. in the semifinals. Canada clubbed Slovenia, 100-89, as both Canada’s Dillon Brooks and Slovenian star Luca Doncic were ejected in the fourth quarter.

● American Sepp Kuss retained his lead in the Vuelta a Espana, finishing in a group of overall contenders as Stage 11 was won with a late solo by Jesus Herrada of Spain.

World Championships: Weightlifting (China and Chinese Taipei take golds in Riyadh) ●

Panorama: Beijing 2022 (U.S. representation request turned down) = Paralympics (2022 report shows finances steady) = Russia (Sports Ministry says Russia allowed to compete in 26 of 39 disciplines, but more than 100 athletes have left) = On screen (modest ratings for FIBA World Cup games) = Athletics (Lyles to run 100 m at Diamond League final) = Swimming (a new name: Maximus Williamson) ●

1.
Accountability, money and SafeSport concerns at CSUSOP hearing

Wednesday’s much-awaited public hearing of the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics in Washington, D.C. was sober and thoughtful, with more critical comments about the U.S. Center for SafeSport than about the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee.

Only nine of the 14 members of the Commission were present to ask questions of the 18 witnesses who testified across five panels, many of whom echoed repeated themes of accountability, athlete safety and support, and, of course, money.

USOPC chief executive Sarah Hirshland said as part of her prepared remarks that “In recent years, we have made significant strides in athlete safety, representation, mental health, and inclusivity. We have spearheaded transformative changes within our governance including increasing athlete representation on our board of directors and across our governance committees and investing in the strength and efficacy of the Team USA Athletes’ Commission.”

Significantly, witnesses from other panels agreed that the performance of the USOPC has improved under Hirshland’s guidance, although each had ideas on multiple improvements still needed.

While the hearing was devoid of anything resembling contentiousness, the intensity in the room was raised during the third panel, with a 45-minute opening segment with former Major League Baseball and National Hockey League Players Associations’ head Donald Fehr, and attorney Ed Williams, both of whom have been involved with the USOPC for decades.

Fehr reflected on his 1996-2003 stint as a (then) USOC Public Sector Director, and his role in reviewing the Salt Lake City bid scandal in advance of the 2002 Olympic Winter Games in looking to the future:

“What you need to do is create a different governmental framework that works , and then entrust the people operating that framework to solve the problems, and hold them accountable if they don’t. …

“I offer several ideas. These are not specific recommendations for legislation, or for amendments to the USOC constitution or bylaws. They are concepts, and if this commission decides that fundamental reform is needed, here are some idea you could consider.

“First, recognize that the USOPC Board is not, in any normal sense, responsible to anyone. There are no shareholders, there are no bondholders, there are no owners. … The Board members are accountable only to themselves, and I don’t even have any idea how their performance is measured or by whom.

“The first question then is, who is the constituency to which the Board owes allegiance? I suggest it’s the athletes because I can’t think of another one.

“Second, the athlete’s voice on the Board needs to be enhanced or empowered. The way it’s been structured throughout my tenure, the athletes can always be outvoted on every issue. Among the things that could be considered would be to increase the vote of the athletes to 50%. Second, I would eliminate, in whole or in part for the athlete representatives, the requirement that the athlete representative have been an athlete within some defined period of time. … You have to trust the athletes to make the choice, and I would also give them the right to remove a Board member they name, if they believe that Board member is not acting in their interests.

“An alternative to this would simply be to give the athletes a veto power over certain key decisions – CEO, other officers, budgets – things like that. I think the athletes ought to have the right to audit any Olympic organization any time they want, to make sure it’s working right. …

“I therefore would suggest that thought be given to establishing some sort of mechanism to consider what kind of arrangements or agreements are appropriate to make sure the athletes are protected, they they are treated fairly and the conditions under which they train and compete are appropriate and that their contribution to the USOPC and their own NGB is recognized.

“For various legal reasons, I’m not here suggesting a traditional union; happy to talk about if anyone’s interested. But I believe people can work this out. … You have to empower the athletes and then you have to trust them.”

Commission co-Chair Han Xiao, a former elected head of the then-Athletes’ Advisory Council, asked the question directly: why not a union? Said Fehr:

“I don’t want to suggest it isn’t viable. I do want to suggest that we’re not in a position to make that judgement. First of all, unions normally require employees; that whole relationship would have to be redefined or statutory authorization for some different kind of arrangement would have to be made that requires the Congress.

Second, the way the current law normally works, you don’t say, OK, we’re going to have a union, you have to bargain. … I don’t know whether the agreement should be all athletes with the USOPC, the national teams with their local governing body, individuals with respect to the various federations, or what the circumstance would be. That takes a lot of time and effort to work out.

“Third, the way the labor law works in the U.S. – with two exceptions: public employee unions and the Railway Labor Act which governs railways and airlines – is it operates on the adversary system. The theory is you’re supposed to bargain in good faith. No one actually knows what that means until after the fact.

“But then either side – management or labor – can resort to concerted action. Either side, management or labor can resort to concerted action, that is to threaten a lockout, or to threaten a strike, or to engage in one or the other. Normally, you have ongoing businesses in which the employees might be able to work elsewhere and the customers might be able to buy other products. There’s competitors.

“You don’t have that very much in the professional sports leagues, but in the Olympic Movement, if you look at the Olympic Games, for example, you’ve got two Games every four years, one opportunity every four years for each athlete, unless somebody, I suppose, is both winter and summer.

“Unless that needs to become the focal point of the dispute – what are we going to do for this [Games] – you ought to find some other mechanism. I don’t know if there is one, but my suggestion was that that to be examined. There are all kinds of models for arbitration of various things and mediation that might make sense.”

Williams endorsed the idea of an “Inspector General” to provide oversight of the USOPC, and asked that the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act be amended “to provide the same due process to athletes that the Sports Act requires NGBs to provide athletes” and to educate National Governing Bodies on providing due process in disciplinary and eligibility issues. And he was adamant that NGB compliance, especially for athlete well-being, must be better monitored, and that an “attorney athlete advocate” be available at no cost to athletes.

The U.S. Center for SafeSport was heavily discussed during the hearing, with chief executive Ju’Riese Colon explaining that when it was opened in 2017, it received about 300 complaints in the first year, but 5,500 last year, 4,300 so far this year, on the way to perhaps 7,000 in total by the end of 2023.

She stated that more funding is needed, beyond the $20 million that the USOPC is statutorily mandated to provide each January, which made sense when adopted in 2020, but not now.

Colon pointed to the 1,900 persons on the current sanctioned list and said that the backlogs of cases have been clearing and the time it takes for cases to be handled is coming down.

However, Pat Kelleher, the Executive Director of USA Hockey and head of the National Governing Bodies (NGB) Council, expressed concerns:

“The Center’s completions of cases by ‘administrative closure,’ which has reached in excess of 70%, must be addressed and we strongly believe government funding and oversight of the Center, along with a fresh look at the statute, would improve its operational effectiveness, and confidence in the Center by others.”

Grace French, founder of The Army of Survivors, was clear:

“SafeSport has not been a support or a place of trust for athletes to this point. The survivors we talk to are all frustrated with the process, and felt there was no transparency, nor was there good communication about their cases and investigations. This extends to SafeSport’s reputation in the sports world.”

Scott Gray, the safe-sport coordinator for Minnesota Hockey added:

“Substantive changes in its practices and procedures must occur, to improve our ability to respond and resolve misconduct in a fair and timely fashion with all aspects of due process taken into consideration.”

He then highlighted several areas of change, including “the response and resolution process is far too slow,” sometimes taking more than a year. In his view, the Center should narrow its jurisdiction to abuse cases which also require mandatory reporting to law enforcement, “and most NGBs are capable of handling the less serious cases in a prompt fashion, and in many cases, can and should be handled by the coach or the local program leadership.”

Gray noted that “the vast majority of cases the Center takes jurisdiction over result in a determination of ‘administrative closure,’ meaning the Center has determined that no action should be taken. NGBs are made aware of this result, but are not allowed to learn the underlying facts of the initial complaint, or if we were already aware, the Center’s exclusive jurisdiction prohibits the NGBs from taking any action on their own.”

He asked that if the Center ‘administratively closes’ a case, it should cede jurisdiction to the relevant NGB for its own review and response: “The high rate of administrative closure erodes confidence among our constituents to the extent that concerned participants and parents don’t want to make a report to the Center because they feel nothing ever happens.”

There’s more to unpack from this hearing, more in coming posts.

2.
Stunner: announcement of LA28 added sports postponed

The International Olympic Committee posted a surprise notice on its Web site on Wednesday afternoon, Lausanne time about its upcoming Executive Board meeting that included:

“One of the agenda items originally planned for the IOC EB was a report by the IOC Olympic Programme Commission on the sports programme for the Olympic Games LA28. Due to ongoing discussions between the IOC and the Organising Committee, the Olympic Programme Commission has not yet had the opportunity to hold its meeting to prepare its final recommendation for the IOC EB.

“As a consequence, the sports programme for the Olympic Games LA28 will be discussed during a later IOC EB meeting, to take place at a date to be decided.”

No news conference will be held on Friday, although the Executive Board meeting will be held to begin shaping the agenda for the IOC Session in India in October.

There’s no indication of what the issues are regarding added sports to the 2028 Olympic program in Los Angeles. One question certainly being discussed is the impact of adding – potentially – four team sports to the LA28 program if the chatter about cricket and flag football, in addition to baseball and softball is true.

If so, then using the team sizes for the T20 Cricket World Cup in 2022, the flag football tournament at the 2022 World Games in Birmingham, Alabama and the Tokyo Olympic baseball and softball tournaments, the impact is significant:

● 180 in Cricket: 15 players x 12 teams (6 men/6 women)
● 192 in Flag Football: 12 players x 16 teams (8/8)
● 144 in Baseball: 24 players x 6 teams at Tokyo 2020
● 90 in Softball: 15 players x 6 teams at Tokyo 2020

That’s 606 athletes against the hard cap of 10,500, or 5.8% of the quota. Add to this the already-agreed 28 sports, plus – potentially – boxing (252 in Paris), modern pentathlon (72 in Paris) and weightlifting (120 in Paris) – that’s another 444, for 1,050 more than for the sports already announced – and space is an issue.

Moreover, the existing agreement to host surfing, skateboarding and sport climbing, require additional venues not in the bid plan from 2017, and more venues will be needed for any added team sports. These things add up.

3.
Spain’s Hermoso files complaint with prosecutors vs. Rubiales

Spanish midfielder Jenni Hermoso, 33, the object of the now-infamous kiss from then-Royal Spanish Football Federation chief Luis Rubiales during the medal ceremonies of the FIFA Women’s World Cup final on 20 August, has now filed a formal complaint.

According to the Spanish prosecutor’s office:

“Jennifer Hermoso filed an express complaint for the facts that you all know.

“The national court’s prosecutor’s office will file a complaint as soon as possible. The statement took place at the state attorney general’s office to protect the privacy of the victim.”

The complaint was reportedly filed on Tuesday. Rubiales has insisted the incident was consensual with Hermoso, 33, but in a social media post, Hermoso has stated (translated from the original Spanish):

“I felt vulnerable and a victim of an impulse-driven, sexist, out of place act without any consent on my part. Simply put, I was not respected.”

She added that Rubiales’ claims of her consent are “categorically false and part of a manipulative culture that he himself has generated.”

The prosecutors will now determine what facts are applicable and what case, if any, will be filed. Rubiales is presently serving a 90-day suspension by FIFA’s disciplinary committee, and is being investigated by the Spanish national tribunal for arbitration in sport (TAD).

4.
Canada eliminates Serbia, Germany vs. U.S. in FIBA World Cup

Two more wild quarterfinals at the 19th FIBA World Cup, now finishing in the Philippines, with Canada and Germany moving on.

The Canada-Slovenia game matched NBA stars including scoring ace Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Thunder) and Mavericks superstar Luka Doncic, but became so physical that 50 fouls were called, and Doncic was ejected.

First it was Canadian guard Dillon Brooks (Rockets) who was ejected with 7:06 to play in the final quarter for a second technical foul for on-floor comments to Slovenian guard Klemen Prepelic, followed by Doncic arguing a non-call on a fallaway jumper with 6:37 remaining and receiving a second technical, with Canada leading 92-77.

The game was tied at half at 50-50, but the Canadians sprinted to a 30-21 third quarter advantage and an 80-71 lead going into the fourth. Canada’s edge extended to 16 several times before a late Slovenian rally closed to 11 and led to the 100-89 final.

Gilgeous-Alexander led once again with 31 points on 8-12 from the field and 14-16 from the line and a team-high 10 rebounds. He’s now averaging 25.0 points in 30.4 minutes per game, plus 7.2 rebounds and 5.0 assists. Fabulous.

Forward R.J. Barrett (Knicks) had 24 points and nine rebounds, and guard Nickeil Alexander-Walker (Timberwolves) added 14 points.

Doncic had 26 points on 8-20 shooting, with Prepelic scoring 22 and guard Zoran Dragic scoring 10. Slovenia was held to 43.9% from the floor while the Canadians shot 50.8%.

This is the best-ever showing for Canada in a FIBA World Cup and they’re on to the semis to face Serbia on Friday (8).

The Germans, now the only undefeated team in the tournament, came down to the wire with Latvia, up 36-34 at half, 62-59 at the end of three and finally winning, 81-79, on two free throws by Daniel Theis with 49 seconds to play to take an 81-77 lead.

Germany led by as much as 14 with 6:42 to go, but Latvia closed on a 17-7 run to make it close. A layin by guard Arturs Zagars closed the gap to two with 0:33 to play, but Thunder forward Davis Bertans missed a three-point try with two seconds left to allow the German escape.

Magic guard Franz Wagner scored 16 for the winner, and brother and Magic teammate, forward Mo Wagner, had 12. Guard Andreas Obst had 13 and forward Johannes Thiemann scored 10, with Germany shooting only 40.0% from the field. Zagars led Latvia with 24 points on 9-17 shooting, with Bertans adding 20 and forward Rolands Smits scoring 14; Latvia shot 44.6% from the floor.

Germany (6-0) now gets the U.S. on Friday, with the winner advancing to the championship match on Sunday.

5.
Herrada wins La Vuelta stage 11; Kuss still in the lead

The uphill finish at the end of stage 11 of the 78th La Vuelta a Espana saw Spain’s Jesus Herrada execute a final sprint in the last 150 m to win in 3:29:17 on Wednesday, but with American Sepp Kuss remaining in the overall lead.

Herrada broke away from an eight-rider pack in the final 2 km of the 163.2 km route to win from Roman Gregoire (FRA: +0:03) and Andreas Kron (DEN: +0:08). The overall contenders were in a pack five minutes behind, and finished 5:50 behind the winner.

That left Kuss in the lead for the fourth straight stage, with 26 seconds on Marc Soler (ESP), 1:09 on defending champ Remco Evenepoel (BEL) and 1:36 on two-time champ Primoz Roglic (SLO).

Stage 12 on Thursday is mostly downhill, with one rise in the middle and looks to be for the sprinters. True misery comes on the climbing stages on Friday and Saturday.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Weightlifting ● China picked up its second win of the 2023 World Weightlifting Championships in Riyadh (KSA), as Tokyo Olympic champ Fabin Li won the men’s 61 kg class.

Li had prior Worlds golds in this class from 2019 and 2022, and won the Snatch section at 141 kg with his second lift, was second in the Clean & Jerk (167 kg) and won the overall title with 308 kg.

Italy’s European Championships runner-up, Sergio Massidda, 21, took silver at 302 kg (also second in Snatch at 137 kg) and China’s Hongjie Ding won the bronze at 301 kg. American Hampton Morris missed all three tries in the Snatch, but continued and won the Clean & Jerk segment at 168 kg, one more than for Li! He did not receive an overall place.

In the women’s 55 kg battle, Chinese Taipei’s Guan-ling Chen was the clear winner, taking all three sections with 91-112-203 kg. Runner-up Rohelys Galvis (COL) was second in all three, lifting 90-111-201 kg total. Mexico’s Irene Borrego won the bronze at 199 kg. No Americans were entered in this class.

The Worlds continue through the 17th.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2022: Beijing ● The Court of Arbitration for Sport denied the request by the U.S. Figure Skating Team to have an observer present during the appeal of the Kamila Valieva case on 26-29 September.

USA Today’s Christine Brennan posted a copy of the letter, which included:

“On behalf of the Panel, who has considered your request as well as the Parties’ comments on such request, please be advised that such request is denied on the grounds that, pursuant to R57 of the Code of Sports-related Arbitration, the proceedings take place in camera and that none of the Parties requested a public hearing.”

● International Paralympic Committee ● The IPC’s annual report for 2022 was published, showing increased expansion for the movement, especially from the Beijing 2022 Winter Paralympic Games.

The financial report showed the IPC with €28.84 million in assets and €17.25 million in reserves, (€1 = $1.07), at roughly the same level as before the pandemic.

Income for 2022 was €24.16 million, in line with prior years and expenses were €24.15 million for a surplus of €14,987.

● Russia ● Sports officials claimed that Russian athletes are presently being allowed to compete – in some form – in 26 of 39 Olympic disciplines.

At a meeting of the sports ministry board, Minister Oleg Matytsin emphasized continuing contact:

“We need to understand what role Russia will be playing in the world of sports in 5-10 years to come, to start today establishing cooperation with the IOC and international federations.

“We need to define the perspective regarding the future elections as well as the status of our participation in tournaments. The next year will be a landmark year.”

Deputy Sports Minister Alexey Morozov reported that “as many as 55 Olympians have changed their sports citizenship and this figure exceeds 100 if we include non-Olympic sports.”

● On Screen ● Two games of the FIBA World Cup were shown on U.S. cable television last week, both at 8:30 a.m. Eastern with reasonable results for the time of day:

● 28 Aug. (Mon.): 191,000 for USA-Greece on ESPN2
● 03 Sep. (Sun.): 334,000 for USA-Lithuania on ESPN2

An interesting rating came from the 30 August women’s volleyball match in Lincoln, Nebraska, where a record crowd of 92,003 filled Memorial Stadium to see Nebraska 3-0 win over Nebraska-Omaha. The match was televised on the Big 10 Network and drew an impressive audience of 518,000!

The biggest audience of the week was for Sunday night’s Florida State-LSU college football match on ABC, which drew 9.165 million viewers.

● Athletics ● Good news from World 100-200 m champ Noah Lyles, who tweeted Tuesday:

“I’m Coming to @nikepreclassic

“Let’s go out with a [explosion emoji]”

● Swimming ● A name to watch, and an easy one to remember:

Maximus Williamson.

He’s a 17-year-old swimmer from Texas, who is tearing up the World Aquatics World Junior Championships ongoing in Netanya (ISR). Williamson has already won the men’s 200 m Medley in 1:57.29, to move to no. 11 on the 2023 world list and no. 3 in the U.S.

Among American male teens, only Michael Phelps was faster at that age.

But his 100 m Free relay legs have set swimming fans afire: 47.78 – with a flying start – on the second leg of the U.S.’s winning men’s 4×100 m Free Relay, 47.74 on the anchor of the winning Mixed 4×100 m Medley Relay, and 48.38 on the opening leg of the Mixed 4×100 m Free Relay that eventually won silver!

Maximus Williamson. He still has the men’s 100 m Freestyle to come on Saturday.

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For our updated, 787-event International Sports Calendar (no. 3) for 2023 and beyond, by date and by sport, click here!

TSX REPORT: Cricket (and flag football) at LA28? U.S. crushes Italy, Lithuania loses in FIBA World Cup; Qatar spent $330 million to get its FIFA World Cup!

Rai Benjamin anchors the winning 4x400 m relay for the U.S. in Doha in 2019 (Photo: IAAF/World Athletics)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

1. Report: Cricket to be proposed as added sport for LA28
2. U.S. crushes Italy in FIBA World Cup quarters, 100-63
3. Spain’s RFEF apologizes “to the football world,” fires Vilda
4. Story: Qatar paid $330 million to get 2022 FIFA World Cup
5. Only 35% of U.S. tracksters were better at Worlds than Nationals

A British newspaper report said that cricket would be submitted by the LA28 organizers as an added sport for 2028, as long as flag football could also be added? Behind all of this are questions about added revenue potential for LA28 from cricket-crazy nations such as India and Pakistan.

At the FIBA World Cup now rushing to the finish in the Philippines, the U.S. stomped Italy, 100-63, in its quarterfinal while Lithuania – which beat the U.S. on Sunday – was itself eliminated from championship contention by Serbia, 87-68!

The Royal Spanish Football Federation’s Acting President posted a letter of apology for the actions of suspended President Luis Rubiales, and also fired women’s national team coach Jorge Vilda, less than three weeks after having won the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

● A detailed online story which included data from court filings showed that Qatar’s effort to win the right to stage the 2022 FIFA World Cup was successful, thanks in significant part to payments to voters totaling $330 million from a Qatar National Bank account in London.

● A TSX analysis of the results of U.S. athletes at the 2023 World Athletics Championships showed that only 35% of the American team achieved better results in Budapest than they did at the U.S. national championships the month prior. That may not sound great, but it’s actually pretty good, but the year-after-year championship load is being called into question as unsustainable.

World Championships: Rowing (2023 Worlds underway) = Weightlifting (Vietnam and China win on day 2; U.S. gets first medal) ●

Panorama: Winter Games 2030 (details emerge on Swiss national hosting plan) = International Olympic Committee (new ESports commission announced) = Germany (Center for Safe Sport project roadmap released) = Aquatics (Russians call World Aquatics entry regs “absurd”) = Athletics (Mexico Marathon disqualifies 11,000 for course cutting?) = Cycling (U.S.’s Kuss leads La Vuelta after stage 10 time trial) = Football (FIFA monitoring Mali federation chief now indicted) = Volleyball (souvenir beach Worlds ball now available) ●

1.
Report: Cricket to be proposed as added sport for LA28

A Monday report on The Times (London) said that cricket would be proposed by the LA28 organizing committee for inclusion as an added sport for the 2028 Olympic Games.

However, the addition of cricket would come with an agreement to also add Flag Football, a non-contact version of American Football championed by the National Football League.

Baseball and softball are also expected to be asked for by LA28, with the details slated to be released on Friday during a news conference at the close of an International Olympic Committee Executive Board meeting.

Cricket has only been on the Olympic program once, in 1900 in Paris. Flag Football has never been in the Games, but American Football has been a demonstration sport in St. Louis in 1904 (sort of) and was a demonstration sport at the 1932 Games in Los Angeles between western and eastern all-star teams, that drew 41,643 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

The International Cricket Council (ICC) has pitched a six-team tournament for men and women in the compact Twenty20 (T20) format, which includes one inning for each team, with a maximum of 20 overs per inning.

A Sportico.com story in May reported that the ICC projected that if T20 were included for 2028, that television rights for India alone would rise from the reported $12 million now for Paris 2024 to $201 to $268 million for Los Angeles, and that the organizing committee would benefit from that. Of course, the IOC owns all television rights to the Games, and would have to agree to share increased from markets such as India, Pakistan and others.

The Los Angeles 2028 organizers have already agreed on a 28-sport program, with boxing, modern pentathlon and weightlifting possibly to be added at the IOC’s discretion. That’s a potential total of 31 sports and if baseball + softball, cricket and flag football were added, that’s 34, all against a hard cap of 10,500 athletes. That means that for these added sports, the number of athletes in other sports would have to be reduced.

All of this is expected to become clear on Friday, with the IOC scheduling a news conference at 5:30 p.m. Central European Time (11:30 a.m. Eastern), available live on the IOC’s YouTube channel.

2.
U.S. crushes Italy in FIBA World Cup quarters, 100-63

Crazy things happen in tournaments, like the FIBA men’s World Cup ongoing in the Philippines.

On Sunday, the U.S. was out-fought, out-played and lost to Lithuania, 110-104, in their final game of the second group stage, with both teams moving on to the quarterfinals.

On Tuesday, the U.S. crushed Italy, 100-63, to move on to the semifinals, while Serbia stomped Lithuania, 83-67 and eliminated them from the championship bracket. What?

The opponents for the Americans and Serbs will be determined on Wednesday, when Germany and Latvia meet (with the U.S. next) and Canada plays Slovenia, with the winner getting Serbia.

The U.S. knew it had to play better from the start against Italy, after getting drubbed by Lithuania, 31-12, in the first quarter. So this time, it was the U.S. in charge with a 24-14 lead after the quarter and then a 22-10 second quarter to move to a 46-24 halftime lead. The Italians were held to just 24% shooting from the field, including 5-17 in the opening quarter.

Guard Tyrese Haliburton (Pacers) said defense was the key:

Teams aren’t going to miss by themselves. Once they see the first couple go in, they play with a lot of confidence and we obviously saw that with Lithuania. We just wanted to set the tone from the jump and make them play at our pace because nobody plays better at our pace than us.”

He had a team-high five assists and made six three-pointers on the way to 18 points off the bench, second-best on the team to 24 from forward Mikal Bridges (Nets), on 8-11 shooting, including 4-6 from three-point range. Reserve guard Austin Reaves (Lakers) had 12, as the U.S. shot 53.7% for the game, 47.2% from the three-point line and out-rebounded Italy, 51-33.

The Italians were led by forward Simone Pontecchio (Jazz) with 18, but shot only 30.7% from the field and just 7-38 from three-land.

A 13-0 U.S. run in the second quarter effectively put the game away, and then a third-quarter scoring explosion – 37-20 – gave the Americans an insurmountable 83-44 lead going into the fourth.

The Lithuanians came in as one of only two undefeated teams left – Germany is the other – and had a 25-24 lead on the Serbs – who had lost to Italy – at the end of the quarter. But a 25-13 second quarter gave the Serbs a 49-38 halftime lead, which was extended to 73-55 at the end of three, on the way to a 87-68 victory.

Where the Lithuanians had flummoxed the U.S. with crisp passing, three-point shooting and interior rebounding, that didn’t work against the Serbs. Lithuania shot only 42.9% for the game and was only 9-28 from the three-point line, compared to 55.0% shooting for Serbia and 63.2% on shots inside the three-point line. Moreover, Serbia won the rebounding battle, 33-28, holding Lithuania to just eight offensive rebounds.

Against the U.S., Lithuania shot 52.8% for the game, 56.0% from three and had 18 offensive rebounds and 43 in all.

The Serbs got 21 points from Hawks guard Bogdan Bogdanovic on 9-13 shooting, 17 points from reserve center Filip Petrusev (76ers) and 11 from guard Stefan Jovic. Lithuania had four in double figures, led by forward Tadas Sedekerskis (14) and guard Rokas Jokubaitis (13).

Italy and Lithuania aren’t done yet; they will now move to the bracket for places 5-8; neither will have qualified for Paris 2024 from this tournament and will have play in the spring for an Olympic berth.

3.
Spain’s RFEF apologizes “to the football world,” fires Vilda

The Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) went on the offensive on Tuesday, first issuing a public letter of apology from Acting President Pedro Rocha, and then firing national women’s team coach, Jorge Vilda, just 16 days after his club won the FIFA Women’s World Cup in Australia.

Rocha’s 12-paragraph letter included a direct reproach of elected President Luis Rubiales, also noting that investigations are continuing at multiple levels:

● “The Royal Spanish Football Federation, through its President, Mr. Pedro Rocha, considers it is essential to present the most sincere apologies to the football institutions (FIFA, UEFA, FAs), the players, especially the players of the Spanish National Football Team and the English National Football Team, all stakeholders involved in football and the fans around the world, for the totally unacceptable behavior of its highest institutional representative during the final of the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 and in the moments that followed.”

● “The RFEF wants to convey to the whole of society and to the whole of world football its deepest regret for what has happened, which has tarnished our national team, our football and our society.”

● “Winning the World Cup was one of the proudest moments in the history of the Spanish Federation and one of the most important moments of Spanish sport and of women’s football. The actions of Mr. Rubiales both at that moment and in the following hours are not acceptable under any circumstances and for this reason the RFEF immediately withdrew from its website all those inappropriate and meaningless communications that did not value what was achieved by the National Team and did not take into account the statements of the player about these facts.”

Rocha pledged further cooperation with the Spanish authorities and FIFA:

“The RFEF is providing all the documentary and administrative support required by both disciplinary bodies in order to have a definitive resolution as soon as possible to repair the damage caused.”

A formal review of the internal practices and procedures of the federation has been initiated as well.

A separate announcement confirmed the dismissal of Vilda as the women’s national team coach and sports director, explaining:

“The Royal Spanish Football Federation, in one of the first renewal measures announced by President Pedro Rocha, has decided to part ways with Jorge Vilda’s services as the sports director and head coach of the women’s national team, a position he took on in 2015. The RFEF appreciates his work leading the national team and his role as the highest sports authority for the women’s teams, as well as the successes achieved during his tenure, culminating in the recent World Cup victory. We highly value his impeccable personal and sporting conduct, as he has been a key figure in the significant growth of women’s football in Spain. Throughout his extensive tenure, Vilda has been a promoter of respect and sportsmanship values in football.”

There was no condemnation of Vilda in the statement, in view of his multiple successes on the field, but as a supporter of Rubiales and his central position in the walk-out of 15 players from the national squad in 2022, his position had become untenable. Not all of the complaints of the 15 were specifically about Vilda, but of the team’s overall environment, and was met with a stern rebuke from Rubiales and the RFEF. Some changes were eventually made and eight of the 15 agreed to be available to play in the Women’s World Cup, and three eventually did.

Rubiales, meanwhile, continues to fight on, with the FIFA and Spanish governmental inquiries in process.

4.
Story: Qatar paid $330 million to get 2022 FIFA World Cup

A lengthy story from the online magazine Tablet details how the Qatari government managed a successful effort to win the final vote to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup:

“Qatar National Bank (QNB) documents, included in a filing made by a Philadelphia-based policy organization fighting a subpoena from a former Qatari-hired American lobbyist, reveal the secret cost of Qatar’s bid to put on the biggest sporting event on Earth. The documents record over 210 million pounds in payments, then worth over $330 million, to members of the FIFA committee who voted on which country would host the 2018 and 2022 tournaments in late 2010. They list specific names, bank account numbers, and amounts of money received.

“The record of payments comes in the form of a balance sheet for an account at QNB belonging to the Qatar Diplomatic Mission in London. Between February of 2009 and December of 2010, the account paid over 350 million pounds ($553 million) to some 22 individuals, with the majority of the money going to 14 members of the FIFA executive committee, the body which chooses the host countries for the organization’s flagship event. Some of the payments went to close family members, although a majority of them were direct to committee members.”

Qatar was selected over Australia, Japan, South Korea and ultimately, the U.S., in the fourth round of voting, 14-8, by the 22-member FIFA Executive Committee on 2 December 2010. Qatar received 11, 10, 11 and 14 votes in the four rounds of balloting.

According to the story, the biggest payments went to Russian Vitaly Mutko, the country’s sports minister from 2008-16 and the head of the successful Russian bid for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, later Deputy Prime Minister from 2016-20. He received a payment of £46.0 million (then $72.6 million U.S.) In February 2019 and £21.5 million (then $34.0 million U.S.) on 20 December 2010, just 18 days following Qatar’s selection as the 2022 World Cup host.

Qatar spent, by its own account, $8 billion on the ultimately-successful 2022 World Cup, with many billions more in public construction works which were completed between 2010-22.

5.
Only 35% of U.S. tracksters were better at Worlds than Nationals

The U.S. team was once again dominant at the World Athletics Championships in Budapest (HUN), winning 29 medals to 12 for next-closest Jamaica and scoring 277 points in the placing table, vs. 139 for Jamaica and 112 for Kenya.

And yet, a TSX analysis of performances shows that only 35% of the U.S. team performed better at the Worlds than at the USA Track & Field Nationals in Eugene, Oregon.

This is not unusual, but it points out the difficulty faced by American athletes, trying to make the Worlds team amid a super-competitive environment at home. The statistics, showing the number of athletes whose performance in their final round of competition at the Worlds was better (or the same) as their final-round performance in Eugene:

Men’s events:
● 35.0%: Running (10.5 out of 30)
● 29.6%: Field/Dec. (8 of 27)
● 100%: Walk (1 of 1)
● 33.6%: Total (19.5 of 58)

Women’s events:
● 36.7%: Running (11 out of 30)
● 37.5%: Field/Hep. (9 of 24)
● 0.00%: Walk (0 of 0)
● 37.0%: Total (20 of 54)

Totals:
● 36.7%: Running (21.5 out of 60)
● 37.5%: Field/Multi (17 of 51)
● 100%: Walk (1 of 1)
● 35.3%: Total (39.5 of 112 )

In comparison to the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021, the U.S. did better in 2023 – a lot better – than the Olympic squad that won 26 medals (7-12-7):

● 31.3%: Men (17.5 out of 56 better at Games than Trials)
● 21.9%: Women (12.5 out of 57)
● 26.6% : Total (30 out of 113)

The U.S. in Budapest also did very well – overall – in comparison to the Rio 2016 Olympic team, competing in a home hemisphere, that won 32 medals (13-10-9):

● 42.1%: Men (24 out of 57 better at Games than Trials)
● 23.7%: Women (13.5 out of 57)
● 32.9%: Total (37.5 out of 114)

So, what can we take from this? One is to look at the timing of the U.S. nationals (or Olympic Trials) vis-a-vis the World Champs or Olympics:

● 2023: 41 days between U.S. selection and Worlds
● 2021: 33 days between U.S. trials and Olympics
● 2016: 33 days between U.S. trials and Olympics

(The 2022 Worlds in Eugene, being a home-country meet is ignored as not comparable.)

No one knows what the situation will be for 2024, as while the dates for Paris 2024 are fixed, the dates and location of the 2024 U.S. Olympic Trials have not been announced!

Then again, what works in terms of days between the selection meet and the Worlds or Olympics might not matter, in view of the current workload. Said U.S. 400 m hurdles star Rai Benjamin, the Olympic silver winner in 2021 and Worlds silver and bronze winner in 2022-23, after this year’s U.S. Nationals:

“It’s hard to maintain this level of competitiveness, and running fast. You’ve got to see that it’s taking its toll on everyone. We’ve had championships back-to-back [2021-22-23]; dudes are hurt; it’s hard to do this, at this level, and keep everyone happy.

“Everyone’s like, ‘hey, you guys need to compete against each other,’ and it’s just like, dude, you can’t peak, every single year, especially U.S. athletes, where, we don’t have the discretion of saying, like, ‘yeah, Rai, we like you, you’re on the team, man.’

“That does not happen here. So, you have to come out here [to nationals], peak here, peak again in August, and then we have turn around next year and do the same thing again? It’s impossible.”

Battling injuries for much of the year, Benjamin won the U.S. title again with a spectacular 46.64, then ran 48.35 (heat), 47.24 (semi) and 47.56 in the final at the Worlds for bronze. And there will be major championships for the next two years in 2024 (Olympics) and the 2025 Worlds in Tokyo.

So, what about those who didn’t have to compete in Eugene, as their Worlds entry was assured? That would be the 11 Americans who were defending champions (10) or a Diamond League winner (1). They certainly did not all meet with success:

● 1 of 4 men got their season’s bests at Worlds (25%)
● 3 of 5 women got or equaled their season’s best at Worlds (60%)
● 2 did not compete at Worlds due to injury or training issues

So, that’s four of nine (44.4%) who got a season’s best or equaled it in Budapest after not having to compete in Eugene: congratulations to Grant Holloway, Athing Mu, Katie Moon (=) and Chase Ealey, plus an honorable mention to Ryan Crouser, whose 23.51 m (77-1 3/4) Worlds winner was just short of his world-record throw of 23.56 m (77-3 3/4) in May.

Getting a bye, then, is not necessarily the answer either.

In terms of global balance, an important measure for World Athletics, retired USATF performance chief Duffy Mahoney broke down the World Championships medals by region:

● 55: (20-18-17) North & Central America + Caribbean
● 47: (16-15-16) Europe
● 26: (9-8-9) Africa
● 9: (3-2-4) Asia
● 6: (1-2-3) Oceania
● 5: (1-3-1) South America

In terms of points for places 1-8, a much better indicator of depth:

● 622: Europe (28 nations scored)
● 574: North & Central America + Caribbean (13)
● 301: Africa (12)
● 132: Asia (10)
● 66: South America (6)
● 65: Oceania (2)

Europe’s demise as a track & field power has been widely written about, but at least based on Budapest, is hardly the case.

≡ WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS ≡

● Rowing ● The 2023 World Rowing Championships are underway in Belgrade (SRB). Finals in the Paris 2024 Olympic classes will be held on Saturday and Sunday.

● Weightlifting ● Asia swept the top places at Wednesday’s events at the 2023 World Weightlifting Championships in Riyadh (KSA), with the U.S. also getting its first medal.

In the men’s 55 kg class, Vietnam went 1-2 with Lia Gia Thanh sweeping the Snatch, Clean & Jerk and total at 123-146-269 kg, ahead of teammate Ngo Son Dinh, who lifted 117-144-261 for the silvers. Thai Thada Somboon-uan won the bronze in all three phases, at 116-143-259 kg.

It’s the second gold ever for Vietnam in a weightlifting Worlds, after Kim Tuah Thach in the men’s 56 kg class in 2017.

China’s Huihua Jiang repeated as champion at 49 kg, lifting 95-120 (world record)-215 kg (world record) to win all three stages of the event, ahead of teammate and 2018 champ Zhihui Hou (95-116-211 kg). Jiang now owns the Worlds golds, from 2019-22-23, and Hou won her fourth Worlds medal (1-2-1).

China has now won this class in 12 of the 16 championships it has been held.

American Jourdan Delacruz was fourth after the Snatch (88 kg), but lifted 112 kg in the C&J for a total of 200 kg and the bronze medal. It’s her first Worlds medal, after finishing 13th and ninth at 55 kg in the 2018 and 2019 championships, and seventh at 49 kg in 2022. Fellow American Hayley Reichardt finished sixth overall at 189 kg (82 + 107).

The championships continue through the 17th.

≡ PANORAMA ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2030: Switzerland ● A report on the Swiss plans for a 2030 Winter Games bid revealed the event spread across the country, with the opening and closing at the famed Letzigrund Stadium in Zurich, with 14 competition sites distributed among nine cantons.

Housing would be at seven different sites, with the largest in Zurich. Competition sites would include alpine skiing at Crans-Montana, ice hockey in Lausanne, sliding sports at St. Moritz and a temporary speed skating oval in Bern.

A full feasibility study is due in October, with a decision to follow on whether to move forward, possibly with a national referendum.

● International Olympic Committee ● The IOC announced the members of its 33 commissions on various topics, made up mostly of its own members, but also some outsiders. Of note was the formation of a new group, the ESports Commission, chaired by Union Cycliste Internationale President David Lappartient of France, who has been the IOC’s liaison with the electronic gaming community.

● Germany ● A new, national “Center for Safe Sport” – Zentrum für Safe Sport – program was announced by the German Interior Ministry, with a projected start in 2026. A 76-page plan was released, with the structure to resemble that used against doping, centered on a “Safe Sport Code.”

A staff of 46 is envisioned at the start, with costs estimated at €6 million per year, starting with the development phase in 2024 (about $6.44 million U.S. today). Exactly who pays and how much, between the federal government, local governments and the German National Olympic Committee (DOSB) is still to be determined.

This is a far smaller project than the U.S. Center for SafeSport, which is mandated by Congress to receive $20 million annually from the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee.

● Aquatics ● Russian reaction to the World Aquatics regulations for the return of individual Russian and Belarusian athletes to competition was as expected: furious at any restrictions of any kind. Russian Swimming Federation head Vladimir Salnikov, himself a four-time Olympic gold medalist, noted Tuesday the requirement for signed declarations from athletes:

“When and where we will see the declarations, it is not yet known, but the fact that they will appear has been confirmed.

“The conditions for accepting athletes are even tougher than those proposed by the IOC. Why? I can’t explain this. Everyone hides behind concern for the athletes, but why then is it about the admission of only one person to the discipline? There is no explanation for this, apparently, we will find out later. So far this is not subject to understanding and comprehension.”

Dmitry Volkov, a breaststroke star who won three medals across two Olympics in 1988 and 1992 told the Russian news agency TASS:

“The conditions imposed on Russian athletes for participation, personally, cause me only a feeling of indignation, I am disappointed with the actions of my colleagues from World Aquatics and the International Olympic Committee.

“This is absurd, a direct violation of human rights, a direct disregard for the equal rights of competitors and absolute discrimination based on nationality. There is nothing in our athletes, including those who play for CSKA and Dynamo, that would contradict the charter of World Aquatics and the IOC. I wonder why we haven’t flooded them with lawsuits so far and why human rights activists haven’t done it.”

A World Aquatics comment was that the first event at which Russian or Belarusian “neutrals” would be expected to be able to compete would be next February’s World Aquatics Championships in Qatar.

● Athletics ● From the Spanish site Marca.com:

“Around 11,000 competitors have been disqualified from the 2023 Mexican Marathon after their tracking data showed that they did not complete the required distance of 42.195 kilometres.

The Mexico City race organizers were seeing significant irregularities in runners crossing each of the 5 km checkpoints during the race, after multiple anonymous complaints were made. Wow.

● Cycling ● The pre-race favorites gained some ground on American Sepp Kuss, continues as the leader in the 78th Vuelta a Espana after Tuesday’s Individual Time Trial.

The winner of the flat, 25.8 km route in Valladolid was two-time World Time Trial champ Filippo Ganna of Italy, in 27:39, with 2023 World Time Trial gold medalist Remco Evenepoel (BEL) second at 27:55 and two-time Vuelta winner Primoz Roglic (SLO) third at +0:36.

Kuss, a climber, finished 13th at +1:29, and remains in the overall lead, with a 26-second lead over Spain’s Marc Soler, and now 1:09 over Evenepoel and 1:26 on Roglic after 10 stages.

Stage 11 should be better for Kuss, with an ending climb to the 1,721 m Laguna Negra in Vinuesa in north-central Spain. The race continues through the 17th.

● Football ● Last week, the national football federation of Mali re-elected Mamoutou Toure by a 61-1 margin, only for him to be arrested on corruption charges after being indicted for “attacking public property as well as forgery and use of forgery and complicity,” to the tune of $28 million.

FIFA had representatives present to observe the election and is “closely following” the situation, as Toure is also a member of the FIFA Council.

● Volleyball ● Another step forward in merchandising for volleyball, with a first-ever, limited-edition souvenir Beach Volleyball World Champs Mexico Mikasa match ball now available, at $129.

In and of itself, not that important, but a continuing sign of the rising sophistication of the Volleyball World program, a joint venture of the FIVB federation and its private-equity investor, CVC Partners.

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