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PARIS — The track and field bromance that took center stage at the Tokyo Olympics is once again in the spotlight three years later.

Gianmarco Tamberi of Italy and Qatar’s Mutaz Barshim shared the gold medal in the high jump at the last Summer Games. The pair, whom are adversaries on paper but also friends thanks to nearly 15 years of competing against one another in the same meets, decided to share the gold rather than do a jump-off to decide a winner – taking advantage of a loophole in the World Athletics rulebook.

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The reaction was priceless, with Tamberi leaping onto Barshim and wrapping himself around the Qatari. Video of the scene quickly went viral and the sharing of gold was seen as a celebration of sportsmanship.

On Wednesday, during high jump qualifying at the Paris Olympics, the duo was back at it in the heartwarming sense. Barshim began his run for liftoff over the bar but pulled up lame and immediately grabbed for his left calf. Tamberi was the first person to Barshim’s side on the ground and helped him stretch the calf.

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

The extent of Barshim’s injury is unknown, but he did qualify for the final by clearing 2.27 meters. The Eurosport broadcast speculated that the discomfort was due to cramping.

Tamberi has not been without his recent ailments, too. He posted a picture of himself in a hospital bed Sunday and said he was dealing with kidney issues. That delayed his arrival in Paris but he also qualified for the final.

‘Probably a kidney stone,’ wrote Tamberi, who said he experienced a ‘stabbing’ pain in his side.

He said after qualifying Wednesday that he felt ‘much better’ and that his body temperature had returned to normal. He said there is ‘99.9 percent’ chance the Paris Games are his final Olympics.

The 12-person high jump final will take place Saturday. And Tamberi hopes Barshim will be OK by then.

‘I need him on the field,’ Tamberi said. ‘I have to be fit myself but I want him to be there in the competition.’

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

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Since men’s basketball became an Olympic sport in 1936, the United States has dominated the rest of the world, winning 16 of the 20 gold medals.

Team USA has also won the last four gold medals and is in the semifinals of the Paris Olympic tournament after rolling through group play and an impressive quarterfinal victory over Brazil. Led by LeBron James, Kevin Durant, and Anthony Edwards, the United States has won every game by at least 17 points. Edwards leads the team in scoring during the Olympics at 16.7 points per game.

Host country France, which won the silver medal at the Tokyo Games in 2021, and Serbia, which took silver in 2016, are looking for their first gold medals in men’s basketball. Germany has never medaled in men’s basketball.

A look at the men’s basketball 5×5 results:

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

Group play results

July 27 

Australia 92, Spain 80

Germany 97, Japan 77

France 78, Brazil 66

Canada 86, Canada 79

July 28

South Sudan 90, Puerto Rico 79

United States 110, Serbia 84

July 30

Spain 84, Greece 77

Canada 93, Australia 83

France 94, Japan 90 (OT)

Germany 86, Brazil 73

July 31

Serbia 107, Puerto Rico 66

United States 103, South Sudan 86

Aug. 2

Brazil 102, Japan 84

Greece 77, Australia 71

Canada 88, Spain 85

Germany 85, France 71

Aug. 3

United States 104, Puerto Rico 83

Serbia 96, South Sudan 85

Quarterfinals

Aug. 6

Germany 76, Greece 63

Serbia 95, Australia 90 (OT)

France 82, Canada 73

United States 122, Brazil 87

Semifinals

Aug. 8

Germany vs. France

United States vs. Serbia

Bronze medal game

Aug. 10

Semifinal losers

Gold medal game

Aug. 10

Semifinal winners

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We are down to the knockout round of the women’s 5×5 basketball tournament at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Team USA continues to roll through its opponents, but there are still a few teams left before the overwhelming favorites make their case for a gold medal. Boasting WNBA stars like A’ja Wilson, Breanna Stewart, Brittney Griner and Sabrina Ionescu, Team USA won each of its group stage games by an average of nearly 20 points.

Here’s everything you need to know about the women’s 5×5 basketball bracket at the 2024 Paris Olympics:

Women’s basketball group stage results at the 2024 Paris Olympics

July 28

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

Spain 90, China 89
Serbia 58, Puerto Rico 55

July 29

Nigeria 75, Australia 62
Germany 83, Belgium 69
France 75, Canada 54
United States 102, Japan 76

July 31

Spain 63, Puerto Rico 62
Serbia 81, China 59

August 1

Germany 75, Japan 64
Australia 70, Canada 65
France 75, Nigeria 54
United States 87, Belgium 74

August 3

China 80, Puerto Rico 58
Spain 70, Serbia 62

August 4

Belgium 85, Japan 58
Nigeria 79, Canada 70
United States 87, Germany 68
Australia 79, France 72

Women’s basketball bracket for 2024 Paris Olympics

Women’s Olympic basketball bracket

Quarterfinals

Belgium 79, Spain 66
Australia 85, Serbia 67
Germany vs. France: Wednesday, August 7 at 12:00 p.m. ET
United States vs. Nigeria: Wednesday, August 7 at 3:30 p.m. ET

Semifinals

Belgium vs. Germany or France: Friday, August 9 at 11:30 a.m. ET
Australia vs. United States or Nigeria: Friday, August 9 at 3:00 p.m. ET

Bronze medal game

TBD vs. TBD: Sunday, August 11 at 5:30 a.m. ET

Gold medal game

TBD vs. TBD: Sunday, August 11 at 9:30 a.m. ET

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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SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, France — It wasn’t the cigarettes, Charley Hull said.

It was an injury and the subsequent rust on her game, according to Hull, that caused her to shoot a dreadful 9-over-par 81 in Wednesday’s opening round of the Olympic women’s golf tournament.

Hull, 28, who’s playing for Great Britain and is No. 11 in the world golf rankings, has gotten a lot of attention for her smoking habit. She normally smokes on the golf course during rounds, she has said, but won’t be allowed to during the Olympics.

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

Asked Tuesday if she thought that will affect her performance this week at Le Golf National, Hull told reporters, ‘I think it will. Because it relaxes me a little bit. But it is what it is.’

To begin Wednesday’s first round, Hull double-bogeyed the course’s opening par-4. She then added seven more bogeys with no birdies.

Afterward, she said her poor round had nothing to do with the fact she couldn’t smoke on the course.

‘Definitely not,’ Hull said. ‘It’s because I’ve been injured.’

Hull said she hurt her shoulder weeks ago falling while getting out of the shower before a flight back to Europe from the United States. Tests revealed no serious injury, Hull said, except arthritis in her shoulder and the fact she has been sidelined. She has only played one tournament since the end of June, and she missed the cut.

‘I feel a bit rusty,’ Hull said, ‘because obviously, it’s been five weeks since I’ve last played properly a four-day event. Hopefully, I’ve got the rust off me and I’m looking forward to hopefully shoot (expletive) 9 under tomorrow.’

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NEW YORK — Chino Lopez, aka B-boy Action, took a page out of Wilt Chamberlain’s book. His breaking crew, the New York City Breakers, didn’t own a video camera in the beginning of 1984. But they owned a still camera and had a pen and paper.

‘We the New York City Breakers see the Olympic Games as our future,’ the message begins. ‘We see break dancing as a future Olympic sport, and ourselves as pioneers in making this dream a reality.’

Every member of the group signed the piece of paper. Lopez posed with it. Forty years later, as breaking is about to make its debut at the 2024 Paris Olympics, Lopez’s dream turns into reality – and brings an art form for kids trying to survive in the South Bronx to the biggest stage in international sports. 

‘When people started breaking, it made people stop … and watch’

The Bronx burned around them in the projects. As kids, they were scared, said London Reyes, a member of the New York City Breakers during the group’s heyday of the 1980s.

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

‘You had crack, you had heroin, you had gangs that were running the streets, and they didn’t allow people to go from block to block,’ Reyes told USA TODAY Sports. ‘And when this dance started to be created, it demanded respect, attention.’

By now, the story of DJ Kool Herc elongating the breaks in the beat – hence the term breaking – long enough for people to drop to the floor and start dancing is well-chronicled, and the DJ born in Jamaica, who moved to the Bronx as a 12-year-old with his family in the late 1960s, was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2023. The breaks he invented became known as the ‘go off,’ a phrase that has found life generations after its origination. 

 For the racial minorities of the South Bronx, this became their life force.  

‘We didn’t know why we were here,’ Reyes told USA TODAY Sports. ‘And so we did things to create attention, like ‘I’m somebody important. Look at me. I’m not a nobody. I’m a somebody.’ And that’s the importance of this art form.

‘When people started breaking, it made people stop what they were doing and watch.’

The burnt-down buildings became their playgrounds. They danced in basements, hallways, outside on the concrete. The best days were when they found cardboard to lay down. Reyes’ mother became legitimately concerned for her child when he removed all of the furniture from his bedroom to practice breaking. Watching him spin on his head made her even more worried.

‘We caught the attention of the media because they were looking at this like, ‘What is wrong with this kid?” Reyes said. 

They listened to music from artists such as Baby Huey and Sly and the Family Stone and, of course, James Brown. To this day, ask a breaker what music he or she loves to dance to – the answer will likely involve Brown. That’s because of the drum beats from Brown’s drummer, Clyde Stubblefield. 

The draw to ‘B-boy culture,’ Reyes said, was that it allowed a person to find out who they really were. They had to live it, dress it, breathe it, dance it. 

‘There are some B-boys out there that don’t dress in the traditional B-boy style because they didn’t grow up in the seventies. So they’re not going to rock the hat like this necessarily,’ said Reyes, pointing to his cap with the bill slightly turned to the side. ‘But they might rock a stiletto, they might rock a beanie, they might rock a baseball cap twisted all the way around. They’re going to do something slightly different that fits their persona.’

And there was just something about the bravado from a Bronx B-boy – or B-girl. Even back then, breaking was for everybody.

As Reyes put it: ‘That, ‘Yeah, what up dog? What’s up baby?’ They fell in love with that person, that attitude like, ‘Yo, let’s go get him. Serve that dude.”

‘That little flavor, that little twist to it, that’s what made people say, ‘What are they doing?” Reyes said. ‘Just because you could do headspins and windmills doesn’t make you a B-boy. What makes you a B-boy is your persona. That persona has to transcend. And people have to feel that.’

Soon enough everybody knew what breaking was. It went from the Bronx to Manhattan and Brooklyn. From New York to Florida. From the U.S. to Mexico and Japan and Europe. 

‘We came from the streets in Black and brown communities,’ said Sunny Choi, aka B-girl Sunny, who will represent the U.S. in Paris. ‘Breaking has really kind of globalized, and now we have this extremely, beautifully diverse world.’

Movies like ‘Breakin” and ‘Beat Street’ and ‘Style Wars’ popularized the dance. Crews such as the Breakers, Rock Steady Crew and Dynamic Rockers were earning invites from television programs. The New York City Breakers performed in front of President Ronald Reagan in 1984, and Lopez even challenged the United States men’s gymnastics team, which went on to win gold at the Los Angeles Games that summer, to a floor competition.

‘It was just everywhere,’ Reyes said. ‘You had toys, you had lunchboxes, posters.’

The New York City Breakers wanted to add a layer of professionalism to it all. But as hip-hop went mainstream, the thinking became that if a group looked like they could dance, they could be hired. Along the way, the culture was lost.

‘We were kids. We were still in school,’ Reyes said. ‘It wasn’t until the adults came in and ruined everything. That’s when the exploitation came in. That’s when it became more about the money and less about the craft.’

Eventually, people started speaking and singing over the break beats Herc had invented in the mid-1970s and other DJs had started making later in the decade. Rap music was born.

‘Now it dominates the music charts,’ Reyes said. ‘Again, right out of the South Bronx.’

Pioneers have mixed opinions on breaking as an Olympic sport

The early groups are referred to as the ‘OGs’ in the breaking world. The current generation idolizes them. The respect is real.  

‘I get a lot of inspiration from the elders, from this dance,’ said U.S. Olympian Victor Montalvo, aka B-boy Victor.

They had names like Mr. Freeze, Frosty Freeze, Prince Ken Swift and Crazy Legs.

Not all ‘OGs’ are pleased that breaking is now an Olympic sport – or considered a sport at all. 

‘I think some of ’em feel hurt,’ Reyes said. ‘Some of ’em feel like they got left behind. Some of ’em feel like they don’t have respect. Some of it is self-inflicted, and some of it is business.’

Reyes, who worked in Nike’s basketball entertainment division for more than a decade, speaks at high schools and universities occasionally. He’ll ask who has seen ‘Beat Street,’ for example. Not one hand goes in the air.

‘Because nobody was alive,’ Reyes said. ‘So we have to move on.’

The breaking world needs a new ‘Beat Street’ – and the ‘Step Up’ movies don’t count. 

A lot of the OGs are not involved in the Olympic movement because they refuse to evolve, Reyes said. They want things to be the way it was in the 1970s and ’80s. But in this reality, Reyes added, everybody wins.

‘This is a beautiful thing, and I encourage the people to embrace it,’ he said. ‘It’s important. This is history in the making, and we’re not kids anymore, so let’s embellish it. Let’s live it. Let’s breathe it. Let’s enjoy it while we can, because we may not be around tomorrow.’

Breaking became more than an activity once Red Bull started sponsoring it. The first ‘Lords of the Floor’ competition in 2001 eventually turned into the popular BC One competition, the biggest international breaking showdown each year.

Breaking is not on the 2028 Los Angeles Games program. For it to be excluded in an Olympics hosted by the country it was born in gives Reyes mixed feelings.

‘It says that we’re still in the infant stage and we are still learning, right?’ Reyes said. ‘We’re learning the business part of it now. Because the truth is, you have to raise money. You need money to travel, to compete, to train, and we’re still behind on that.

‘Other countries are maybe a little ahead of us on that. So we have to regroup and we have to be honest with ourselves. We have to say, even though it started here, (it) doesn’t mean that we’re the gatekeepers.’

Legendary battles put breaking into pop culture and elevated its status

The competitive aspect to breaking has existed since its beginning in the form of ‘battles,’ the climaxes of those movies from the ’80s.

Battles took place at New York locations such as Poe Park or Cedar Park. Crews would take the subway to Orchard Beach. The beauty of breaking is that it could go down anytime, anywhere – even the Place de la Concorde in Paris at the 2024 Olympics. 

‘We didn’t need anything. Just music. And music was free,’ Reyes said. ‘All you had to do (was) buy the batteries for the radio. That was it.’

The battles that will live on forever went down at New York City venues such as the Roxy Theater, Roseland Ballroom and Fun House. One of the most famous battles, Reyes said, was between the Rock Steady Crew and the Dynamic Rockers at the Lincoln Center in 1981. Rock Steady and The Floor Masters went at it at a place called The Grill in Manhattan. The Dynamic Rockers challenged The Floor Masters on a television show called ‘That’s Incredible!’ – the tape made its way to Mexico, where Victor Montalvo’s father paid one peso to watch the recording. 

There’s also the battle that ended up airing in ‘Beat Street.’

‘That was a real battle,’ Reyes said. ‘It wasn’t like ‘Cut, makeup, please.’ It was just ‘let the cameras roll.’ Whatever happens, happens. Which is why ‘Beat Street’ is considered such a legendary movie.’

At the Olympics, competitors won’t go against one another in ‘crews.’ It’s one-on-one. But the spirit of breaking will be the same, Reyes said.

‘It started with predominantly Puerto Ricans and Blacks in the community, and you can trace it all the way back to the music from the rock dance,’ Reyes said.

Reyes has organized a youth competition called ‘Battle of the Boroughs’ for 25 years. The battles are, ideally, held quarterly but take place at least once per year.

‘We want to provide opportunity for all young people,’ Reyes said. ‘We want to build their character. We want to build their spirit. We want them to know that anything is possible.’

Calling it the ‘new lacrosse,’ Reyes has been petitioning school districts in Westchester County, immediately north of New York City, to make it an official sport.

His pitch is simple. 

‘I said, ‘Did you know breaking was in the Olympics?” Reyes said.

The lack of expense and equipment appeals to administrators. All that is required is a shirt, floor space, maybe a hat or an elbow pad.

‘It is affordable and anybody can do it. You don’t have to be seven feet tall, you don’t have to bench 500 pounds,’ Reyes said. ‘All you have to do is be creative. And we’re all creative.’

Looking back, Reyes admits maybe the Breakers talked a big game with their Olympic-sized proclamation.

‘It wasn’t like it happened a week later,’ he said.

But Chino Lopez’s prediction, with photographic proof, eventually came to fruition. 

‘This shows that we had this vision, that we really believed in this,’ Reyes said. 

Reyes is thankful that he and his former crewmates are alive to see breaking reach the Olympics. He and Kid Nice and Icy Ice and Action are all excited to see their teenage dream come to life right before their own eyes.

‘Who would’ve ever thought?’ Reyes said. ‘I still can’t believe it.’

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The transfer portal has made tracking quarterbacks harder than ever. It’s also simplified offseason competitions across the Bowl Subdivision, as many quarterbacks mired in battles for the starting role will simply leave for another program and an easier path to the top of the depth chart.

There are still several competitions still undecided as college football gears up for the start of the regular season, That includes at the defending national champions, Michigan, which has to find the successor to J.J. McCarthy after last year’s unbeaten finish.

Another team with an unsettled battle is Auburn, which desperately needs to beef up its offense after struggling to get off the ground in Hugh Freeze’s first season.

Michigan

Contenders: Alex Orji (Jr.), Jack Tuttle (Sr.), Davis Warren (Sr.)

Orji is the favorite to replace McCarthy after a strong spring, moving ahead of Warren and Tuttle despite making just one pass attempt in the past two seasons. Far more athletic and explosive than either of these other two options, Orji could bring a new and interesting dimension to the Wolverines’ offense. If new coach Sherrone Moore would rather lean on experience, Tuttle has spent five seasons in the Big Ten and looked good in reserve last year, hitting on 15 of 17 attempts in limited duty behind McCarthy.

Projected winner: Orji. Tuttle has a higher floor but Orji could be the most dynamic Michigan quarterback since Denard Robinson.

Ohio State

Contenders: Devin Brown (So.), Will Howard (Sr.)

Howard was brought in from Kansas State with the expectation that he’d replace former starter Kyle McCord, who transferred to Syracuse. After a slow start to his career with the Wildcats, Howard was one of the top passers in the Big 12 after taking over midway through the 2022 season. Brown lost last summer’s competition with McCord but is back for another attempt at grabbing one of the premier starting jobs in the FBS. While Howard is still the favorite, Brown will remain in the mix until Ryan Day makes his decision at some point this month.

Projected winner: Howard. He’s ready for the Big Ten after throwing for 24 touchdowns with another nine on the ground a year ago.

Auburn

Contenders: Hank Brown (RS Fr.), Holden Geriner (So.), Payton Thorne (Sr.)

After struggling in Hugh Freeze’s first season, Auburn is banking on increased experience in Freeze’s scheme to bolster an underperforming passing game. Thorne had a solid three-game stretch last October and November but was otherwise off the mark, finishing with 16 touchdowns and 10 interceptions as the Tigers ranked last in the SEC and 121st nationally in yards per game. That’s forced Thorne to re-win the job this offseason, a task made easier by the fact that neither Brown not Geriner has made much of a move up the depth chart.

Projected winner: Thorne. He’ll keep the seat warm for true freshman Walker White, a top recruit and the future of the position for Freeze and the Tigers.

North Carolina

Contenders: Jacolby Criswell (Sr.), Conner Harrell (So.), Max Johnson (Sr.).

Harrell replaced Drake Maye for last year’s bowl loss to West Virginia, showing off both a big arm and the need for more seasoning. That led Mack Brown and UNC to pull in a pair of transfers: Criswell, who began his career with the Tar Heels before losing a competition to Maye and leaving for Arkansas, and Johnson, a reliable and productive starter at LSU and Texas A&M. Johnson threw 35 touchdowns against eight interceptions in two years with the Tigers and had five 200-yard games in a row for A&M in 2023 before suffering a season-ending injury in early November.

Projected winner: Johnson. He protects the football and has shown he can run an offense; reliability is never a bad thing, even if Harrell and Criswell would bring more to the table as runners.

Coastal Carolina

Contenders: Noah Kim (Sr.), Ethan Vasko (So.)

Grayson McCall’s transfer to North Carolina State seemed to open the door for Vasko, who appeared in eight games and threw for 779 yards and seven scores with one interception a year ago. Bringing in Kim from Michigan State is a good thing. While he was just average (or worse) after being tapped as the Spartans’ starter heading into 2023, Kim’s arrival creates a much-needed competition for the job that will help Tim Beck pick the best fit for his system.

Projected winner: Vasko. A deeper understanding of this scheme and a somewhat proven track record — Vasko played very well against James Madison and led the Chanticleers to a bowl win — gives him the edge.

Brigham Young

Contenders: Gerry Bohanon (Sr.), Treyson Bourguet (So.), Jake Retzlaff (Jr.)

Retzlaff has the advantage of knowing the offense after starting the final four games of last season. Also of note: Retzlaff completed just 50.4% of his throws with three touchdowns and three interceptions as the Cougars lost all four games. The job is open, in other words. Bohanon is a proven producer who played at an all-conference level at Baylor before transferring to South Florida, missing last season due to a shoulder injury. If healthy, he has the mix of talent and experience that BYU needs to scratch out six wins and another bowl bid. Bourguet joins the competition from Western Michigan but is running third heading into fall camp.

Projected winner: Bohanon. As long as he’s healthy, Bohanon is the best choice.

Boise State

Contenders: Maddox Madsen (So.), Malachi Nelson (RS Fr.)

Madsen left the spring as the projected starter but will have to put together a strong August to fend off Nelson, a former five-star recruit who couldn’t quite rise up the depth chart at Southern California. Madsen is the known commodity after throwing for 1,191 yards and nine scores as a freshman in 2023. But there’s a sense of untapped potential around Nelson, an elite prospect who could develop into the best passer in the Mountain West.

Projected winner: Madsen. For now, Madsen has to be seen as the favorite. But a sloppy fall camp or early struggles in September could easily shift Nelson into the starting role.

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SAINT-DENIS, France — Some athletes adopt the mindset that they don’t lose, they learn. Jamaican sprinter Kishane Thompson is one of those athletes.

USA TODAY Sports got a chance to interview Thompson at Nike’s Athletes House in Paris in the aftermath of a thrilling 100-meter final.

Thompson, who still owns the best 100 time in the world this year, came into the Paris Olympics as a gold-medal favorite. But he came in second behind Noah Lyles by five-thousandths of a second in the most competitive men’s 100 final in Olympics history during which all eight runners finished under 10 seconds for the first time ever, according to World Athletics.

The race was so close that Lyles thought Thompson had won.

‘I did think Thompson had it at the end,’ Lyles said. ‘I went up to him when we were waiting and I said, ‘I think you got that one big dog.”

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

Thompson told USA TODAY Sports, that he wasn’t sure who had won immediately after the race.

‘Honestly, I wasn’t sure if I won. I knew it was close between first and second,’ Thompson said. ‘I know I cleared the person on my exact right, and I saw I was in front of the person on my left. But I wasn’t too sure if I got it. It was that close.’

Nobody inside Stade de France knew who won until the photo view results were displayed on the video board seconds after the race.

Thompson was disappointed when the results were finally shown, but the 23-year-old has a positive outlook on the outcome in what was his inaugural Olympic experience.

‘I have a mentality where, I know it will hurt because I didn’t get the win. Naturally everyone wants to win when they line up. But I just got to take a loss as a win,’ Thompson explained. ‘It’s my first Olympics and first major moment like this. I wouldn’t change anything. I just got to learn from it. I’m not looking back. I’m looking forward. It’s done.’

Thompson said he learned three things from the race.

‘Honestly, I have to be more patient with myself. Two, I have to be more aware of the end part of my race. When it’s that tight at the finish, I have to learn to lean more. But three, for me, I just have to separate myself from the field so that can’t happen,’ he said with a smile.

But most of all, the Olympic silver medal motivated the Jamaican sprinter who still has several years, and possibly more Olympic and world championship 100 finals in front of him.

‘More motivated (and) hungry,’ Thompson said, ‘all of it.’

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PARIS — An Australian athlete has been taken into custody by French authorities for attempting to buy cocaine, according to reports.

The Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office told 9News Australia an unidentified member of the men’s field hockey team was involved in an alleged ‘cocaine transaction at the foot of a building in the city’s 9th arrondissement’ Tuesday. Police officers witnessed the incident, according to the 9News report.

French media outlets first reported news of the detainment, according to Reuters and the Associated Press.

The Australian Olympic Committee confirmed an arrest to Reuters but did not confirm the player’s identity. But the Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office statement said the alleged buyer was born in September 1995. According to team records, there is one player on the Olympic roster born that month.

The committee said no charges had been filed. USA TODAY reached out to the delegation for further comment.

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

‘The AOC is continuing to make enquiries and arrange support for the team member,’ the committee said in its initial statement to Reuters.

The International Olympic Committee said during its daily news conference Wednesday it had no knowledge of the incident.

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Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, accused Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz of dodging his military service and misleading the country about his veteran status on Wednesday.

Vance made the statement while taking questions from reporters at a campaign rally in Detroit. A reporter asked Vance about Walz’ attempt to frame him as a member of the elite who attended an Ivy League school.Yea

‘I came from a family where nobody in my family had ever gone to law school. I grew up in a poor family. The fact that Tim Walz wants to turn it into a bad thing, that I actually worked myself through college, through law school and made something myself –  to me, that’s the American dream. And if Tim Walz wants to insult it, I think that’s frankly pretty bizarre,’ Vance said before launching into an attack on Walz.

‘As a marine who served his country in uniform when the United States Marine Corps, when the United States of America asked me to go to Iraq to serve my country, I did it. I did what they asked me to do it, and I did it honorably,’ he said. ‘When Tim Walz was asked by his country to go to Iraq, you know what he did? He dropped out of the army and allowed his unit to go without him, a fact that he’s been criticized for aggressively by a lot of the people that he served with.’ 

Vance continued, ‘I think it’s shameful to prepare your unit to go to Iraq, to make a promise that you’re going to follow through, and then to drop out right before you actually have to go.’

Vance went on to highlight comments from Walz on gun control, saying the governor had used his questionable military history in an attempt to push gun restrictions.

‘He said, ‘We shouldn’t allow weapons that I used in war to be on America’s streets.’ Well, I wonder, Tim Walz, when were you ever in war? When was this? What was this weapon that you carried into war, given that you abandoned your unit right before they went to Iraq, and he has not spent a day in a combat zone? What bothers me about Tim Walz is the stolen Valor garbage,’ Vance said.

Vance also urged reporters to hold Walz and Vice President Kamala Harris accountable. Harris has not taken questions from the press in the 17 days since President Biden dropped out of the 2024 presidential race and endorsed her.

Former President Trump has accused Harris of hiding behind her teleprompter even as Biden ‘hid in his basement.’

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There are only a few days left in the 2024 Paris Olympics, which means the race to win the most medals in the Summer Games is nearing the finish line.

There will be 17 events handing out gold on Thursday, with bronze medal competitions also taking place. One of the headliners for the day is the men’s 400-meter final, which will feature three Americans, including the No. 1-ranked runner in the event in Quincy Hall. He’ll face the No. 2-ranked racer in Matthew Hudson-Smith of Great Britain in what should be an exhilarating event.

The United States will look to strengthen its lead in the medal count after it overtook China for the most gold medals in this year’s Games. Here’s what to know about the medal count for Day 12 of the 2024 Paris Olympics:

What is the medal count at the 2024 Paris Olympics?

Here’s the overall medal count as Wednesday’s action begins. The U.S. remains on top with 86 total medals and leads in gold medals with 24. Here are the top 10 countries overall:

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

1. USA — 86 (24 gold, 31 silver, 31 bronze)
2. China — 59 (22 gold, 21 silver, 16 bronze)
3. France — 48 (13 gold, 16 silver, 19 bronze)
4. Great Britain — 46 (12 gold, 15 silver, 19 bronze)
5. Australia — 35 (14 gold, 12 silver, 9 bronze)
6. Japan — 29 (11 gold, 6 silver, 12 bronze)
T7. South Korea — 26 (11 gold, 8 silver, 7 bronze)
T7. Italy — 26 (9 gold, 10 silver, 7 bronze)
9. Netherlands — 19 (8 gold, 5 silver, 6 bronze)
10. Canada — 18 (6 gold, 4 silver, 8 bronze)

To see the full list, click here.

What Olympic medals are up for grabs Wednesday?

All times Eastern.

Marathon

1:30 a.m.: race walk mixed relay final

Sport climbing

6:55 a.m.: women’s speed final 

Weightlifting

9 a.m.: men’s 61kg
1:30 p.m.: women’s 49kg

Skateboarding

11:30 a.m.: men’s park final 

Cycling track

12:25 p.m.: men’s team pursuit bronze 
12:33 p.m.: men’s team pursuit gold 
12:57 p.m.: women’s team pursuit gold 

Track & field

1 p.m.: women’s pole vault final 
2:25 p.m.: men’s discus final 
3:20 p.m.: men’s 400m final
3:40 p.m.: men’s 3,000m steeplechase final

Artistic swimming

1:30 p.m.: team acrobatic routine

Wrestling

1:30 p.m.: MGR 77kg bronze medal match
1:55 p.m.: MGR 77kg final
2:05 p.m.: MGR 97kg bronze medal match
2:30 p.m.: MGR 97kg final
2:50 p.m.: WFS 50kg bronze medal match
3:15 p.m.: WFS 50kg final

Taekwondo

2:19 p.m.: women – 49kg bronze medal contests
2:35 p.m.: men – 58kg bronze medal contests
2:51 p.m.: women – 49kg bronze medal contests
3:07 p.m.: men – 58kg bronze medal contests
3:23 p.m.: women – 49kg gold medal contest 
3:39 p.m.: men – 59kg gold medal contest

Boxing

3:30 p.m.: women’s 71kg, semifinal
3:46 p.m.: women’s 71kg, semifinal
4:02 p.m.: men’s 50kg, semifinal
4:18 p.m.: men’s 50kg, semifinal
4:34 p.m.: men’s 66kg, semifinal
4:51 p.m.: men’s 66kg, semifinal

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