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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – Inter Miami’s Leagues Cup title defense continues Thursday night, still without Lionel Messi.

Inter Miami hosts Toronto FC at Chase Stadium in the Leagues Cup Round of 32 on Thursday, and will be broadcast by Apple TV. Messi’s right ankle ligament injury continues to keep him sidelined.

Messi will miss his fifth straight match since getting hurt in the Copa America final on July 14, but it appears his recovery is on track.

“[Leo is] getting better, getting better every day,” Inter Miami coach Tata Martino said Wednesday. “He’s still in the gym, but looks better and better. It’s within the deadlines we’ve been thinking about.”

Inter Miami has won seven of nine matches without Messi since he joined Argentina for Copa America in early June. The club leads all MLS teams with 53 points in the standings.

Follow along here for Leagues Cup highlights from Thursday’s Inter Miami-Toronto match:

Lorenzo Insigne goal: Inter Miami 3, Toronto 2

Inter Miami’s foul trouble has come back to haunt them again in this match. Jordi Alba was penalized for a foul in the penalty area and Toronto’s Lorenzo Insigne has scored his second penalty kick in the match in the 41st minute.

Lorenzo Insigne misses free kick goal: Inter Miami 3, Toronto 1

If this game wasn’t eventful enough: Inter Miami defender Héctor David Martínez was shown a red card for a foul on Toronto’s Prince Owusu. Inter Miami goalie Drake Callender blocked a free kick by Toronto’s Lorenzo Insigne to keep the score 3-1.

The sequence resulted in a free kick, and not a penalty kick because the foul by Martinez happened just outside the penalty area. Still, Inter Miami will finish this match down to 10 men, instead of 11.

Luis Suarez goal: Inter Miami 3, Toronto 1

Three goals before 20 minutes? Not a bad start at all by Inter Miami. This time, Luis Suarez dribbled around a few defenders after Jordi Alba delivered his third assist in the match in the 20th minute.

Lorenzo Insigne goal: Inter Miami 2, Toronto 1

Toronto is on the board after Lorenzo Insigne converted a penalty kick in the 15th minute of this action-packed contest against Inter Miami.

The penalty resulted after Inter Miami defender Chelo Weigandt fouled Toronto’s Derrick Etienne Jr.

Diego Gomez goal: Inter Miami 2, Toronto FC 0

Diego Gomez has scored in the 11th minute, and Inter Miami has stormed to a 2-0 lead against Toronto in their Leagues Cup matchup.

Jordi Alba, the lefty, delivered an assist, his second of the game, with his right foot on the play.

Matias Rojas goal: Inter Miami 1, Toronto 0

How about that for a fast start? Inter MIami’s Matias Rojas scored in the third minute to give his side an early 1-0 lead.

How to watch: Inter Miami vs. Toronto FC live stream

The Inter Miami match against Toronto FC will be available via MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Is Messi playing tonight?

No, Messi remains out of action due to his right ankle ligament injury sustained during the Copa America final on July 14.

Which team would Inter Miami face in Round of 16?

The winner of the Inter Miami-Toronto match will face the winner of Friday’s match between the Columbus Crew and Sporting Kansas City.

What happened the last time Inter Miami played Toronto?

Thursday’s match will be a rematch between both teams: Inter Miami beat Toronto 3-1 without Messi on July 17.

Leagues Cup games on Thursday, August 8

∎Inter Miami CF vs Toronto FC, 7:30 p.m. ET

∎Tigres vs Club Pachuca, 9 p.m. ET

∎Seattle Sounders vs LA Galaxy, 10:30 p.m. ET

∎San Jose Earthquakes vs. Club Necaxa, 11 p.m. ET

Leagues Cup games on Friday, August 9

∎FC Cincinnati vs Santos Laguna, 7:30 p.m. ET

∎Columbus Crew vs Sporting Kansas City, 7:30 p.m. ET

∎Orlando City SC vs Cruz Azul, 7:30 p.m. ET

∎Philadelphia Union vs CF Montreal, 7:30 p.m. ET

∎New England Revolution vs New York City FC, 7:30 p.m. ET

∎D.C. United vs. Mazatlán, 7:30 p.m. ET

∎Toluca vs Houston Dynamo, 8:30 p.m. ET

∎St. Louis City vs Portland Timbers, 8:30 p.m. ET

∎FC Juarez vs Colorado Rapids, 9:30 p.m. ET 

∎Club America vs Atlas, 10 p.m. ET

Leagues Cup results on Wednesday

∎LAFC 2, Austin FC 0

∎Pumas UNAM 2, Vancouver Whitecaps 0

Leagues Cup Dates to Remember

Aug. 12-13: Round of 16

Aug. 16-17: Quarterfinals

Aug. 21: Semifinals

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SAINT-DENIS, France — Noah Lyles’ sprint double quest came up just short. He finished third in the 200 final, clocking in at 19.70 for the bronze medal.

Lyles ran despite testing positive for COVID-19. Following the race, Lyles, who has a history of asthma, received medical attention and collapsed into a wheelchair.

‘I woke up early about 5 a.m. on Tuesday morning and I was feeling really horrible. I knew it was more than being sore from the 100,’ Lyles said after the race. ‘Woke up the doctors and we tested and it came back as positive for COVID. My first thought was not to panic. I’m thinking I’ve been in worse situations. I’ve run with worse conditions, I felt, and we just took it day by day, tried to hydrate as much, quarantined.

‘It’s taken its toll for sure, but I’ve never been more proud of myself to be able to come out here and getting a bronze medal.’

Botswana’s Letsile Tebogo led around the curve and sprinted down the home stretch for a surprising comfortable win, running a 19.46. U.S. sprinter Kenny Bednarek captured the silver with a time of 19.62.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

USA TODAY Sports has everything you need to know for Thursday’s track and field events at Stade de France. Follow along below for live updates throughout the day.

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Noah Lyles positive for COVID-19, receives medical attention

Immediately after winning the bronze medal, Lyles needed medical attention. He was taken off the track in a wheelchair and news later broke that he tested positive for COVID-19 prior to the race.

“It definitely affected my performance,’ Lyles said after the race, adding that he stayed in an offsite hotel and tried to keep his illness ‘close to the chest’ after testing positive on Tuesday. His teammates and opponents did not know he was sick.

Lyles does suffer from asthma, which can make respiratory illnesses worse.

‘Why would we give them an edge?’ He said when asked about the secrecy, adding they also didn’t want everyone to go into a panic and wanted everyone to be able to compete.

‘We can confirm that Noah Lyles tested positive for COVID-19 on Monday, August 5th. In response, the USOPC and USATF swiftly enacted all necessary protocols to prioritize his health, the wellbeing of our team, and the safety of fellow competitors,’ the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee said in a statement. ‘Our primary commitment is to ensure the safety of Team USA athletes while upholding their right to compete. After a thorough medical evaluation, Noah chose to compete tonight. We respect his decision and will continue to monitor his condition closely.’

Lyles later posted on Instagram that he believes it will be the end of his Olympics. He was slated to compete in the 4×100 relay.

Follow the latest updates about Lyles’ condition here.

Grant Holloway wins gold medal in 110 hurdles at Paris Olympics

Team USA’s Grant Holloway won a gold medal Thursday night in the 110-meter hurdles at the Paris Games’ Stade de France with a time of 12.99 seconds.

Other medal winners were Team USA’s Daniel Roberts (silver, 13.09) and Rasheed Broadbell of Jamaica (bronze, 13.09).

Holloway left little wonder why he was ranked No. 1 in the world in the 110-meter hurdles. It was a redemptive moment after he won silver at the Tokyo Games in 2021, missing out on gold by 0.05 seconds, in his first Olympic appearance.

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone crowned with gold in 400 hurdles

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone displayed her dominance once again in the women’s 400-meter hurdles on Thursday.

McLaughlin-Levrone won her second consecutive Olympic gold medal in the 400-meter hurdles, posting another world record time at 50.37. She is the first American woman to win two Olympic gold medals in the event.

Anna Cockrell came in second with a personal-best time of 51.87. Netherlands’ Femke Bol came in third, running a 52.15.

What about the 4×100 relay Noah Lyles is supposed to lead?

Immediately after the race, Lyles said he didn’t know if he would compete in the 4×100 relay Friday. He later took to social media to say he ‘believes’ his Olympics is over.

‘I’m feeling more on the side of letting Team USA do their thing,’ Lyles said on the NBC broadcast after the race. ‘They’ve proven with great certainty that they can handle it without me. If that’s the case, coming off today, then I’m perfectly fine with saying, ‘Hey, you guys go do your thing. You guys have more than enough speed to go get the gold medal.”

Noah Lyles falls short of sprint double, but Americans take 2 medals in 200

The crowd at Stade de France chanted “USA” before the start of the race as Lyles and the rest of the runners got in the blocks. However, Tebogo had the final say and became the first African to ever win the event. Lyles’ U.S. teammate Kenny Bednarek took silver and said he did not know Lyles had COVID, but he was fine with his decision to race.

Lyles came into the Paris Olympics with the top 200 time in the world this year at 19.53. However, he ran a 20.08 to place second in the semifinal and had the third fastest time entering the final. He ran out of lane five and never quite put a full race together before seeing medics.

Lyles earned his first Olympic gold medal in a thrilling photo finish in the men’s 100 last Sunday. 

The 27-year-old sprinter was trying to become the first American male to win the sprint double in 40 years. Carl Lewis won the 100 and 200 at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. Lewis also won gold in long jump and 4×100 relay at the Los Angeles Olympics. 

What happens if a U.S. athlete tests positive for COVID at the Olympic Games?

If a Team USA athlete experiences symptoms of any kind, the USOPC is “going to follow the CDC guidelines for all of infectious disease protocols.”

The USOPC will bring this comprehensive testing equipment to Paris, Finnoff said. 

Although there will be no official isolation or quarantine period imposed, athletes who have tested positive for a respiratory illness will be moved into their own rooms to prevent the spread of infectious diseases between roommates, according to Finnoff. 

“It doesn’t mean [infected athletes] can’t train or compete,” Finnoff said. “We’ll do that based on their symptoms and how they feel, but we do want to prevent [them] from infecting those around them, and we’ll also provide prophylaxis based on what is recommended by CDC guidelines.”

Anna Hall sits third in heptathlon after 200

After winning the women’s heptathlon 200-meter event Thursday night with a time of 23.44, Great Britain’s Katarina Johnson-Thompson leads the standings at the Paris Games with four of seven events complete. Johnson-Thompson has 4,055 points, ahead of Nafissatou Thiam of Belgium (4,077) and Team USA’s Anna Hall (3,956).

In a field of 22, Team USA’s other two women’s heptathlon competitors, Taliyah Brooks and Chari Hawkins, are ranked seventh and 22nd. The heptathlon combines seven events: the 100m hurdles, high jump, shot put, 200m, long jump, javelin and 800m. The long jump, javelin and 800-meter competitions will be held Friday. — Chase Godbread

Who are the top sprinters in the 200 final?

Noah Lyles has the best 200 time in the world this year at 19.53. Kenny Bednarek’s time of 19.59 is the second best time in the world this year. While Letsile Tebogo’s season-best of 19.71 is tied for the third fastest time this year. Erriyon Knighton, who won a silver medal at the 2023 world championships, is also a medal contender.

What’s Noah Lyles’ personal-best time in the 200?

Noah Lyles’ personal-best time in the 200 is 19.31, which is also currently the American record. He set the record in 2022.

Quincy Wilson to make Paris Olympics debut on US 4×400 relay

SAINT-DENIS, France — Quincy Wilson is set to make his Paris Olympics debut.

Wilson received word that he will take part in Team USA’s 4×400 relay team, a person familiar with the situation told USA TODAY Sports. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they aren’t authorized to discuss the relay team.

The men’s 4×400 relay begins Friday at 5:05 a.m. ET.

Wilson was originally selected on Team USA’s 4×400-relay pool after he finished sixth in the open 400 at the U.S. Olympic track and field trial.

The 16-year-old wonderkid broke the under-18 world record in the opening round of the 400, blazing one lap around the track in 44.66 seconds at the trials. Then Wilson bested the time in the semifinals, running a 44.59 to qualify for the finals. The high school record had stood for 42 years before Wilson shattered it twice within a matter of days.  — Tyler Dragon 

Anna Hall third after first two events of women’s heptathlon

Anna Hall is in third place after the first two events of the women’s heptathlon, the 100m hurdles and high jump. Hall’s time of 13.36 seconds ranked seventh in the hurdles, while her high jump effort of 1.89m was third in the field. Taliyah Brooks currently is sixth after a second-place showing in hurdles (13.00 seconds) and eighth in high jump (1.77m). Chari Hawkins was fifth in the hurdles with a time of 13.16 seconds, but she did not mark in high jump, leading her in 22nd position.

USA’s Brandon Miller advances to 800 semis

SAINT-DENIS, France — U.S. middle-distance runner Brandon Miller qualified to the semifinals in the men’s 800, via the repechage round.

Miller ran a 1:44.21 to win the fourth and final heat of the 800. He had the best time of all runners in the repechage round.

The semifinals in the 800 are on Friday.  — Tyler Dragon 

U.S. men’s 4×100 relay makes statement

The U.S. men’s 4×100-relay team made a statement in the opening round of the relay. A team of Christian Coleman, Fred Kerley, Kyree King and Courtney Lindsey got the baton around clean and it was over from there. The men led from start to finish as they crossed the line in 37.47 for the easy victory. Noah Lyles and Kenny Bednarek will likely run in the final for Team USA.

Sha’Carri Richardson, Gabby Thomas lead Team USA to easy opening-round win in 4×100

The U.S. 4×100-relay team had a shaky exchange on the second and third leg between Twanisha Terry and Gabby Thomas that slowed them down a little. However, Sha’Carri Richardson received the baton on the anchor leg and sprinted past Germany to secure the first-round victory for Team USA in 41.94.

Germany took second, running a 42.15 and Switzerland got the last qualifying spot with a time of 42.38. The U.S. women will have to clean up their handoffs, but they are the gold-medal favorite in the relay, especially with Jamaica’s stars not competing in the event. 

Two-time shot put world champ Chase Jackson out

Chase Jackson failed to get out of the opening round of the women’s shot put. Jackson scratched on her first two attempts and needed a third and final throw to advance to the final. But her third throw didn’t come off her hand clean and landed at 57 feet, 9 inches – just short of a qualifying spot.

Jackson was visibly upset after her disappointing opening round. She came into Paris as a gold-medal contender in the shot put. She’s won two straight world championships in the event. Americans Jaida Ross and Raven Saunders both advanced. 

Quincy Hall says he strained leg in 400 final

PARIS — Quincy Hall wasn’t just bobbing his head to propel himself forward Wednesday night, as he raced to gold in the 400-meter final at the Paris Olympics. He was mostly just in pain.

‘I didn’t really want to talk about it, but on the back stretch, I kind of strained my leg,’ Hall said Thursday after the medal ceremony at Stade de France. ‘I just kept running through it. I was like, ‘If I’m going to fall, if I’m going to tear it off, I’m going to fall.’ I just kept going and I finished the race.’

When asked if he’ll be healthy enough to compete in the 4×400 relay, which will take place Friday and Saturday, he said: ‘We’ll see.’

‘I’ve been getting treatment and stuff,’ he said. ‘If not, we have a strong enough team that we can pick and they can do the job without me.’

One of the sprinters who could potentially take Hall’s spot on the relay team is Quincy Wilson, the 16-year-old who is slated to make his Olympic debut in the preliminary round Friday morning.

‘He ready,’ Hall said. ‘He might be young, but age ain’t nothing for him.’ — Tom Schad

American duo advance to 1500m finals

SAINT-DENIS, France — Team USA’s Elle St. Pierre and Nikki Hiltz qualified for the medal finals of the women’s 1,500-meter race at the Paris Games on Thursday, clocking times of 3:59.74 and 3:56.17, respectively. The top six runners in each of two semifinal heats qualified; St. Pierre finished third in Heat 1, Hiltz third in Heat 2. World record holder Faith Kipyegon of Kenya won the first heat with a 3:58.64. The two-time Olympic gold medalist broke the world record a month ago in Paris (3:49.04), and also holds the Olympic record (3:53.11, set at the Tokyo Games in 2021).

American Emily Mackay did not qualify, finishing last in Heat 2 at 4:02.03. The medal race is scheduled for Saturday night.

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The U.S. has reportedly warned Iran a retaliatory attack on Israel for the recent killing of a senior Hamas leader in Tehran would pose a ‘serious risk’ for Iran’s economy and government and likely escalate the months-long conflict between Israel and Hamas. 

A U.S. official told The Wall Street Journal the U.S. has communicated to Iran that the risk of a major escalation is ‘extremely high’ if it carries out a retaliatory attack. 

The official said Tehran has been put on notice ‘that there is a serious risk of consequences for Iran’s economy and the stability of its newly elected government if it goes down that path.’ 

Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh was assassinated in Tehran late last month. Israel was immediately blamed for the assassination after pledging to kill Haniyeh and other Hamas leaders over the terrorist group’s Oct. 7 attack on the Jewish state, which killed 1,200 people and saw hundreds more taken hostage. 

Haniyeh had been in Tehran for the swearing-in ceremony of Iran’s newly-elected president, Masoud Pezeshkian. 

Iran has signaled its intention to strike back at Israel, though the exact scope and timing of a potential attack are not clear. That’s in contrast to Iran’s highly anticipated missile and drone attack on Israel in April in retaliation for Israel killing a senior Iranian paramilitary commander in Syria. 

Another variable at play is the Iranian proxy terrorist group Hezbollah, which has in recent months been escalating attacks on Israel near its border with Lebanon.

Earlier this week, Israel said it carried out an airstrike in southern Lebanon, killing four Hezbollah fighters. 

U.S. officials have insisted that warnings to Iran concern the risks of provoking a military response from Israe and deepening the conflict, and not potential U.S. military action, per the Journal. 

These developments come as Qatari, Egyptian and U.S. leaders have urged Israel to resume talks with Hamas Aug. 15. 

‘It is time to conclude a cease-fire agreement and release hostages and prisoners,’ a joint statement from the three countries Thursday sid.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel will send a negotiating team Aug. 15 to finalize the details of the Gaza cease-fire framework. 

The mediators said the talks would take place either in Qatar’s capital of Doha or Egypt’s capital of Cairo. Last week’s killing of Haniyeh was widely seen as a blow to cease-fire talks. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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PARIS — The U.S. was in trouble against Serbia, and its streak of consecutive Olympic gold medals looked like might at end at four.

Then, the U.S. tightened its defense, found scoring at the right time and overcame a 17-point deficit to beat Serbia 95-91 in the semifinals Thursday.

After beating Serbia twice in the past three weeks – once in a friendly and once in group play at the Summer Games – the U.S. needed a massive fourth-quarter comeback to pull out a victory and advance to the gold-medal game against France. The U.S. is going for its fifth consecutive Olympic gold.

‘We knew it was going to be difficult,’ LeBron James said postgame. ‘We knew Serbia was going to give us everything they had

The U.S. trailed Serbia 76-63 to start the fourth quarter and possession by possession wore down Serbia. Kevin Durant and Devin Booker started the comeback with consecutive 3-pointers early in the fourth quarter, and the U.S. unloaded its offensive firepower.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

The U.S. used a 24-8 run to take a 91-86 lead with 1:41 left in the fourth quarter.

Steph Curry was brilliant for the U.S., scoring a game-high 36 points on 12-for-19 shooting, the best game of the Olympics in a game where the U.S. desperately needed his scoring. James continued his stellar Olympic play and recorded a triple-double with 16 points, 12 rebounds and 10 assists and Joel Embiid added 19 points.

‘It was only a matter of time before he had one of these games,’ James said of Curry. ‘We could see it every day. He puts too much work in not to have a game like this. We wouldn’t want it any other way.

‘It was the perfect time for Chef to come out and do what he did.’

Serbia put together a fantastic game plan and made shots – including 15 3-pointers. Three-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic had 17 points and 11 assists, and Bogdan Bogdanovic scored 20 points.

Team USA trails entering fourth quarter

PARIS – The U.S. briefly cut into Serbia’s double-digit lead and had it down to a two-possession game – only to see Serbia’s lead grow to 76-63 after three quarters.

The U.S. has 10 minutes to make up a deficit in the semifinals if it wants to win a the gold-medal game for the fifth consecutive Olympics.

U.S. guard Steph Curry remained hot and has a game-high 27 points, but Serbia’s hot continued its strong offensive play. Bogdan Bogdanovic and Aleksa Avramovic each have 15 points, and Nikola Jokic has 11 points and 10 assists for Serbia which is 15-for-30 on 3-pointers.

Halftime: Serbia 54, United States 43

PARIS – The U.S. suffered its largest deficit of the Olympics in the first half against Serbia and now faces its toughest test in the final two quarters of this semifinal matchup.

Serbia owns a 54-43 halftime lead and had a 42-25 lead in the second quarter. Strong 3-point shooting put Serbia in a favorable spot. It made 10-of-19 3-pointers, and shot 54% from the field.

The U.S. offense wasn’t bad – 48% from the field, 47% on 3-pointers – but it couldn’t keep up with Serbia’s shooting.

Steph Curry scored 17 of his 20 points in the first quarter, and LeBron James ended the half with nine points, five assists and three rebounds. Joel Embiid has seven points, and Jrue Holiday has five assists. Kevin Durant took just one shot in the first half and did not score. That will be worth watching in the second half as the U.S. tries to cut into the deficit.

Aleksa Avramovic has a team-high 15 points and has made four 3-pointers for Serbia. Bogdan Bogdanovic added 12 points, and three-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic has nine points, seven assists and three rebounds. 

USA down big, entering danger zone vs. Serbia

PARIS — The U.S. is in a dangerous spot, trailing Serbia 42-25 with 6:24 left in the second quarter. It’s the largest U.S. deficit of the Olympics and the Americans are shooting just 40% from the field, allowing 63% shooting.

Serbia leads 31-21 after first quarter

PARIS – Serbia overcame Steph Curry’s hot shooting to open the game with hot 3-point shooting of its down for a 31-23 lead against the U.S. after one quarter.

Curry made five of his first six shots for 14 points and finished the quarter with a game-high 17 points on 6-for-8 shooting, including 5-for-7 on 3s. But Serbia countered Curry’s shooting with five 3-pointers in the quarter. Just four players have scored for the U.S. and only Curry has more than one make.

Aleksa Avramovic has eight points, and Nikola Jokic has six points and five assists for Serbia which had nine assists on 11 made shots.

Steph Curry hot but Serbia up early

PARIS — Steph Curry scored 14 of the first 15 U.S. points on 5-for-6 shooting. He made four of five 3s to start the game, but Serbia leads 23-18 with 3:45 left in the first quarter.

Serbia is torching the nets with the 3-point ball: 5-for-6 to start the game.

USA basketball lineup vs Serbia

United States:

Jrue Holiday
Steph Curry
LeBron James
Joel Embiid
Devin Booker

Serbia:

Nikola Jokic
Bogdan Bogdanovic
Ognjen Dobric
Fili Petrusev
Aleksa Avramovic

Dignitaries in attendance for USA vs Serbia

Adam Silver
Travis Scott
Pau Gasol
Dirk Nowitzki
Carmelo Anthony
Tony Parker
Yannick Noah
Sue Bird
Megan Rapinoe

LeBron wearing bandage in warmups

PARIS — LeBron James is wearing a large band-aid near his left eye in warmups ahead of the semifinals game against Serbia.

James took a left elbow to the eye area from Brazil’s Georginho De Paula with 5:41 left in the third quarter and the U.S. leading 74-51 in Tuesday’s quarterfinals game. James said after the game he was fine.

USA vs Serbia predictions

The U.S. men’s 5×5 basketball team play Serbia for the third time in three weeks in the semifinals. The U.S. defeated Serbia 105-79 in a friendly July 17 and beat Serbia 110-84 July 28 in the first game of Group C play.

“Serbia is really good.” U.S. coach Steve Kerr said. “We can’t get lulled to sleep because we beat them twice. We have to be prepared for their best effort. We’ve got to think about, what are they going to do differently?”

Serbia’s success revolves around two players – three-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic and shooting guard Bogdan Bogdanovic. The U.S. wants to cut off Jokic’s passing lanes and keep Serbia from making too many 3s.

With its roster, the U.S. will put up points. It’s getting enough stops that will determine its success in the semifinals. It’s another important game for U.S. big men Joel Embiid, Anthony Davis and Bam Adebayo.

Predictions:

Jeff Zillgitt: USA 91, Serbia 77

Dan Wolken: USA 83, Serbia 70

2004 teammates LeBron James, Diana Taurasi go for gold

PARIS — LeBron James and Diana Taurasi know that by basketball standards, they’re old. They’re aware because, well, people won’t stop telling them. 

That quip about them being the grandpa and grandma of Team USA? Been there. The comment about them being some of the most seasoned veterans at these games? They’ve heard it before. They are the elder statesman and stateswoman of USA Basketball, longtime pillars who are going for their third and sixth gold medals, respectively. 

James and Taurasi’s Olympic connection is unique, too, because they both made their Olympic debut at the 2004 in Athens. James was 19 then, and Taurasi 22. Taurasi is quick to point out that James ‘skipped a couple,’ along the way though.

— Lindsey Schnell

What channel is USA basketball on today?

The U.S. and Serbia tip off at 3 p.m. ET. USA Network is airing the game on television. The game will be live-streamed on Peacock or Fubo.

USA men’s basketball schedule

Here are the games the U.S. men have played so far.

July 28:USA 110, Serbia 84
July 31: USA 103, South Sudan 86
Aug. 3: USA 104, Puerto Rico 83
Aug. 7:USA 122, Brazil 87

Team USA men’s basketball roster

Steph Curry, Golden State Warriors
Anthony Edwards, Minnesota Timberwolves
LeBron James, Los Angeles Lakers
Kevin Durant, Phoenix Suns
Derrick White, Boston Celtics
Tyrese Haliburton, Indiana Pacers
Jayson Tatum, Boston Celtics
Joel Embiid, Philadelphia 76ers
Jrue Holiday, Boston Celtics
Bam Adebayo, Miami Heat
Anthony Davis, Los Angeles Lakers
Devin Booker, Phoenix Suns

Olympics basketball bracket

Here’s the latest men’s basketball Olympic tournament bracket.

The USA TODAY app brings you every Team USA medal — right when it happens. Download for full Olympics coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and much more.

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PARIS — The French men’s Olympic basketball players didn’t want to leave the court. French fans didn’t want to leave Bercy Arena.

There was too much joy. They wanted the celebration to continue. They wanted to soak in France’s 73-69 victory over Germany in the semifinals and spot in the finals at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

‘Of course, some part of a dream come true,” France’s Victor Wembanyama said. “Big part of a goal we set ourselves months back. It’s a chance to write history even more. Definitely a once-in-a-lifetime goal. Maybe nobody can reproduce that, so we have got to take our chance.”

Significant pressure was on France to medal at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

That pressure subsided with France’s victory, guaranteeing France will medal. Question is, will it be gold or silver? France will play the USA, a 95-91 winner over Serbia, in the gold-medal game Saturday.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

France held off a late Germany rally, and Wembanyama, the rising NBA star, split two free throws, putting France ahead 71-68 with 10.9 seconds left in the fourth quarter. Dennis Schroder made a free throw to pull Germany within 71-69, Isaia Cordinier’s two free throws with 7.4 seconds left put the game out of reach.

‘Incredible, incredible moment,’ Wembanyama said. ‘The fans made it hard for me not to cry. I thank them for being as they are and for enjoying it as much as they do, this chance, this thing that we’re all living.’

After an uneven performance in group play that included a narrow victory over Japan, a bad loss to Germany that resulted in public bickering between Evan Fournier and coach Vincent Collet and reduced minutes for Rudy Gobert, France rebounded in the knockout stage, beating Canada in the quarterfinals and 2023 FIBA World Cup champion Germany in the semis.

‘Some inside stuff that happened between us. We talked it over,’ Fournier said. ‘This team’s got so much heart, we’ve been through so much.’

France finished without a medal at last year’s FIBA World Cup, increasing the pressure to medal this summer.

‘We really wanted to show that last year was an accident,’ Fournier said. ‘We weren’t worth the tournament we had last year, and now we have our fans in front of us, and we gave them everything we have.’

France cranked up the defense after falling behind 28-18 early in the second quarter. From that point to the midway point of the fourth quarter, France outscored Germany 48-25 for a 66-53 lead.

Guerschon Yabusele led France with 17 points and seven rebounds, and Cordinier scored 16 points and collected seven rebounds. Wembanyama, 20, made his presence felt with 11 points, seven rebounds, four assists and three blocks.

France earned silver at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, losing to the U.S. 87-82.

‘We did not play our best game and they have changed a lot since we last saw them,’ Germany’s Franz Wagner said. ‘Give them credit. They made some good adjustments and won the day.’

Schroder led Germany with 18 points, and Wagner added 10 points and eight rebounds.

Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt

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LE BOURGET, France — Sport climbing birthed an Olympic conundrum Thursday at the Paris Games.

Sam Watson, an 18-year-old-American, set a new world record in the men’s speed climb when he completed the 49-foot tall route in 4.74 seconds.

Shortly thereafter, he received an Olympic bronze medal, to go along with his current title of ‘Fastest Climber in the World.’

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It was a teachable moment for those unfamiliar with speed climbing, which is making its debut as a stand-alone medal event at the sport climbing competition. In the sport, Watson and the other climbers pull and propel themselves up the 49-foot tall wall with use of 20 hand holds and 11 foot holds.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

Times determine seedings and world records in sport climbing. But the medalists, and winners in elite contests, are determined by head-to-head races. And it’s a blur, with the quarterfinals, semifinals and finals completed in about 20 minutes.

In his semifinal heat Thursday, Watson slipped and it cost him. He finished in 4.93 seconds and lost the heat to China’s Peng Wu, who finished in 4.85 records and advanced to the final.

Watson, relegated to the bronze medal heat, broke his world record of 4.75 by 1/100th of a second. He set the prior world record of 4.75 during elimination heats.

Moments later, in the final, Indonesia’s Veddriq Leonardo beat Cheng and set a personal best of 4.75 seconds – good enough for the Olympic gold but 1/100th slower than the world record Watson just set.

Sam Watson explains what happened

There were no complaints from Watson about the format used to determine the medal winners. If anything, the “tiny little stumble’’ he had in the semifinals seemed to underscore the nature of a sport.

“Just a couple of millimeters of an error is the name of the game in this sport,’’ Watson said. “No real regrets. I don’t think the pressure got to me or anything like that.’’

The stumble probably cost him 0.2 seconds, enough to make the difference in the head-to-head race against China’s Wu.

Next up for Watson: He said he hopes to drop the world record to 4.6 seconds, and he didn’t sound distressed being the current world record holder but having an Olympic bronze rather than Olympic gold medal.

“I think all of that stuff is external rather than internal,’’ he said. “I had a view of who I am in my mind, and that doesn’t really change related to my performance.’’ 

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

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DecisionPoint tracks 26 market, sector, and industry group indexes, and we monitor moving average crossovers for those indexes as a way to assess the bullish or bearish condition of those indexes. A Silver Cross BUY Signal is generated when the 20-day EMA a price index crosses up through the 50-day EMA, giving us a strong indication that the price index is in a bullish configuration. The left column of following table shows the IT signal status of the indexes we track. The right column is for the longer-term Golden Cross signals (50/200-day EMA crossovers), which are not an issue at this time. This is how the table looked on July 31, 2024:

The next table shows the signal status as of today, and we can see that there is considerable deterioration in the market status. Nine of the indexes have changed from a BUY Signal to NEUTRAL, which is when the 20-day EMA crosses down through the 50-day EMA (Dark Cross) above the 200-day EMA. (It would be a SELL Signal if the 20/50 EMA downside crossover took place below the 200-day EMA.) Of the remaining IT BUY Signals, all but three are liable to switch to NEUTRAL within the next few weeks. The three that look safe (for now) are Consumer Discretionary, Real Estate, and Utilities.

Conclusion: There is broad-based intermediate-term deterioration taking place in the stock market. Not only have nine indexes lost BUY Signals, most of the rest are likely to lose their BUY Signals in a week or so, unless the current rally continues and broadens out.

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Members of the main U.S. transportation regulator grilled Boeing executives Wednesday over the company’s workplace safety culture and allegations of retaliation linked to two employees who were sidelined over a January mishap involving a Boeing 737 Max 9 in which a door plug detached mid-flight.

Jennifer Homendy, chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, or NTSB, directed a series of questions to Boeing’s director of quality, Hector Silva, about employee-manager relationships after Boeing stated that “everybody in the organization” is responsible for safety and that employees are not punished for good faith mistakes. 

“I understand you have an anti-retaliation policy. I also understand that you have a policy for lateral moves.” Homendy said. “So given that it is not intentional — and we just talked about how, when there are safety issues and human error, that you should be welcoming people to speak up — what sort of impression is that giving your employees if you sidelined them and put them in, and I am quoting, ‘Boeing prison, the cage?’ I’m wondering what message that sends?”

Silva responded, “I am not directly involved with those employees,” adding, “I do know that in just culture, you need to address good faith mistakes with nonpunitive solutions. I know we always take action to ensure that product safety is protected.” 

Moments after takeoff on Jan. 5, Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 from Portland, Oregon, to Ontario, California, experienced a rapid decompression when a mid-exit door plug blew off, leaving a gaping hole as passengers clung to their seats and donned oxygen masks while the aircraft made an emergency landing.

A preliminary report found that four bolts intended to secure the door plug had been missing when the accident occurred. 

Boeing has not publicly identified the two door crew members who may be responsible for having forgotten to reinstall the bolts in September before the plane completed manufacturing at Boeing’s Renton, Washington, plant. 

Silva acknowledged that the error should have been caught, at the latest, “prior to the rollout of the airplane.”

Sabrina Woods, an NTSB human performance aviation accident investigator, pressed for answers about how the mistake was not caught.

“Bolts were not reinstalled, but one error in a robust system should not be able to progress all the way over to an accident,” Woods said. “It is in your system. Where should the error have been stopped in its tracks?”

Boeing execs did not respond.

Homendy read additional NTSB interview transcripts that noted a Boeing employee told NTSB investigators, “We got a lot of people that will not, that are not going to speak up because they do, they have been burned by a manager, they have been moved, relocated, pushed out.”

“You mess up, you get moved,” the worker said in the report. “Three minutes late and then you’re moved.” 

Elizabeth Lund, Boeing’s senior vice president of quality, said during Tuesday’s part of the hearing that there are most likely two workers who made the decision to open the door plug and that, as standard practice in an investigation, the workers were initially removed from airplane production and reassigned to a lateral position in pay, benefits and shifts. They are on administrative leave at their own request, Lund said.

The workers were placed in a different building where Boeing builds wings, which the NTSB said in a report workers refer to as “Boeing prison,” Homendy said at Tuesday’s hearing.

Lund said she did not know it was called that. 

Security video of the plane from the plane as it was being manufactured has been rewritten. Boeing officials said the system rewrites video after 30 days.

Lund also detailed steps Boeing has taken to address safety quality issues. Boeing is working on plug sensor changes that will not allow the door plug to fully close if there are any issues until it is firmly secured. Approved design changes are expected to begin within the year, and Boeing will retrofit the fleet once a design is completed.

Boeing committed under oath to work with the NTSB without interference on a safety culture survey of Boeing employees.

Boeing’s new CEO, Kelly Ortberg, assumes his new post Thursday.

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Stocks slipped into the red as markets closed Wednesday, losing gains from earlier in the day as Wall Street failed to recoup losses from Monday’s massive sell-off.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 163 points, or 0.4%. The S&P 500 declined 0.5%, while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.7%.

Earlier in Wednesday’s trading session, the Dow rallied more than 300 points. The broad S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq were also higher on the day before turning negative.

A rollover in Nvidia and other big technology stocks following an early jump led to the major averages rolling over in the afternoon. Nvidia pulled back 3.5%, while shares of Super Micro Computer tumbled more than 20% after the server company’s fiscal fourth-quarter earnings missed analyst estimates. Tesla also lost 3.4% and Meta Platforms shed 0.2%.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield continued its climb and rose 5 basis points to 3.94%. This marked a return to its level prior to the weak jobs numbers on Friday that raised concerns of an economic downturn.

The Cboe Volatility Index, known as Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” was last trading at 28.3 after falling to as low as 22 earlier on Wednesday. The sharp decline from near 65 on Monday indicates investors’ fears are abating, but still remain elevated from their initial levels at the start of the month.

“There’s been some reassurance over the last couple days that things have calmed down a bit. But there are still quite a few unknowns on the horizon, such as how much more unwind there is on the yen carry trade, as well as geopolitical headwinds,” said Charlie Ripley, senior investment strategist at Allianz Investment Management.

On Tuesday, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq each advanced 1%, while the 30-stock Dow added nearly 300 points on Tuesday. On Monday, the Dow and the broad-market S&P 500 posted their worst session since 2022, fueled by recession worries and the unwinding of the yen carry trade.

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A particular type of retail fraud soars during the summer season.

“Wardrobing,” in which a shopper buys an expensive item, wears it with the tags on, and then returns the product for a refund, picks up as shoppers bolster their closets for summer vacations, according to returns management software company Optoro.

“During the summer and cruise season, from July to September, we see wardrobing and overall return rates spike by two-to-three times, with swimwear alone making up between 5% and 15% of returns,” said Amena Ali, CEO of Optoro. “This highlights the fine line between habitual returners and fraudsters.”

Forty percent of 18-to-29-year-olds wardrobe, according to Optoro data.

In a November 2023 Optoro returns survey, 30% of shoppers admitted to buying an item for a specific event, only to return it after the occasion ended.

The challenge for retailers is handling the items when they get them back.

“For seasonal items like cruisewear and swimwear, quick, yet thorough, inspection and restocking are imperative to retain as much value as possible before the season ends,” Ali said. “Time sensitivity is crucial in this fight — ideally, you catch fraud in the moment, or better yet, before it happens.”

Ali warned if products linger in the return process, the delay can lead to significant markdowns or the need to send items to secondary retail channels such as stores like TJ Maxx, discounters, or liquidators.

Ali told CNBC that when a wardrobed item returns to a store or warehouse, the best course of action depends on its value and condition.

“A $10 swim coverup returned in poor condition might not be worth the cost to clean or repair, and would likely instead be routed through recommerce, donations or recycling channels,” said Ali. “It’s imperative that items clearly worn for a summer vacation and returned don’t slip through the cracks to the next customer — protecting brand perception and customer loyalty is paramount.”

Scot Case, executive director of the Center for Retail Sustainability at the National Retail Federation, said wardrobing can drive up costs and waste for retailers if the product can no longer be resold. So retailers are taking action.

“Some retailers are addressing the issue by reducing the amount of time consumers have to return items, by eliminating free returns or by requiring consumers to return items in-store where an employee can examine the item before a consumer receives a refund,” said Case.

Companies like Best Buy, Gap and American Eagle Outfitters use Optoro’s reverse logistics artificial intelligence software to swiftly manage their returns, identify fraud and quickly restock products on store shelves to avoid discounting.

“Time is literally money,” Ali said. “The more quickly you can turn the product, the less likely you will need to discount it. Having a smart disposition system can recover costs and maximize profitability.

Steven Lamar, CEO of the American Apparel and Footwear Association told CNBC that returns, whether due to wardrobing or other reasons, have become a key focus for retailers and brands, especially in the era of e-commerce.

“Supply chain technology, powered by AI, is increasingly being deployed so that consumers can find and enjoy the fashion they want at the right price, the right quality, and the right time,” Lamar said. “As companies build and integrate take back programs to repair and resell used items, returns take on a new role, fueling a new circular market.”

According to Optoro, 30% of the cost associated with a return is transportation. Strategies such as third-party drop-off locations and box-less, label-less returns are being used to cut down these costs.

“AI and software can reduce the number of touches on a returned product by 50%,” Ali said.

Ali said using AI in an end-to-end digitized return system can also help a retailer identify a trusted shopper and get the like-new goods identified and restocked at full price.

Optoro data shows approximately 95% of the goods that cannot return to resale go to a secondary channel. Five percent of products head to a landfill or for donation.

“We see a wide range of numbers in terms of recovery, between improvement of 5% to 45% in certain categories, depending on the brand, but this is significant money when talking to enterprise retailers,” said Ali. “A global shoe manufacturer that was sending a large portion of returned inventory to destroy/recycle, was able to increase their re-commerce to the secondary channels with an improved overall recovery for that segment by 45%.” 

Optoro customers’ top three categories returned were kitchen and dining, men’s shoes and women’s clothing.

Return rates vary both in category and by brand or retailer. Some clients see as high as 40% return rates. Clothing leads the return category at a 25% rate, followed by bags, accessories and shoes at 18%, miscellaneous accessories at 13% and consumer electronics at 12%, according to Statista.

The average value of a returned item for Optoro’s customers is $85. The highest item value reported as returned in the survey was $200.

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