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PARIS – Stop the bullying, says Algerian boxer Imane Khelif.

Khelif, who was dragged into controversy over gender eligibility criteria at the Paris Olympics, has spoken out for the first time since the Games began. She and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-Ting have been subjected to abuse on social media and inaccurate online speculation about their sexes even though the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has said they both have met all criteria and that there’s no question they are women.

“I send a message to all the people of the world to uphold the Olympic principles and the Olympic Charter, to refrain from bullying all athletes, because this has effects, massive effects,” Khelif said in an interview with SNTV, according to The Associated Press. “It can destroy people, it can kill people’s thoughts, spirit and mind. It can divide people. And because of that, I ask them to refrain from bullying.”

Dan Wolken: Unhinged controversy around Olympic boxer Imane Khelif should never happen again

Khelif and Yu-Ting have advanced to the semifinals at the Olympics, ensuring they’ll win at least bronze medals.

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

“I don’t care about anyone’s opinion,” Khelif said in Arabic. “I came here for a medal, and to compete for a medal. I will certainly be competing to improve (and) be better, and God willing, I will improve, like every other athlete.”

The Russian-back International Boxing Association drummed up the so-called issue last week. The IBA, which is not recognized by the IOC and has no role in Olympic boxing, stripped Lin (gold) and Khelif (bronze) of their 2023 World Championship medals after the organization claimed they failed gender eligibility tests. The IOC and others have raised concerns about the veracity of those tests. 

Thomas Bach, president of the IOC, said this week there’s never been any doubt that Lin and Khelif are cisgender women and he urged ‘really everyone to respect these women, to respect them as women, as human beings.’ The IOC also said the two boxers are victims of an arbitrary decision by the IBA.

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“I know that the Olympic Committee has done me justice, and I am happy with this remedy because it shows the truth,” Khelif said while also acknowledging the pressure surrounding the ordeal. “…I am in contact with my family two days a week. I hope that they weren’t affected deeply.

“They are worried about me. God willing, this crisis will culminate in a gold medal, and that would be the best response.”

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PARIS – The U.S. men’s 5×5 basketball team needs Jayson Tatum.

Coach Steve Kerr made that clear right after he sat Tatum in the 2024 Paris Olympics opening victory against Serbia.

Tatum’s benching dominated a news cycle, but he handled it like a pro. ‘It’s not about one individual player,’ Tatum said. ‘The competitor in you wants to play, obviously, but I’m not here to make a story and make it about myself.

“It’s definitely a humbling experience, right? Win a championship, new contract, cover of (NBA) 2K, and then you sit a whole game. There’s a lot you can take from me, right? Be frustrated that you want to play as a competitor, but maybe have some empathy for some of the guys on my team that don’t always get to play or play spot minutes.’

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

Since not playing against Serbia, Tatum has been in the starting lineup, and he had his best performance in the final game of group play with 10 points, 10 rebounds and two steals against Puerto Rico.

‘He’s obviously a talented guy, and the FIBA game is different for everybody,’ Kerr said. “All these guys are used to getting 20 shots a game, and so everyone has to adapt a little bit, and Jayson has done a great job of trying to adapt and contribute in different ways than he’s used to, and I thought he did a really good job of that (against Puerto Rico).”

He was aggressive and active on rebounding, and Team USA faces a rebounding challenge against Brazil in Tuesday’s quarterfinals matchup (3:30 p.m. ET). The winner plays the winner of Serbia-Australia in Thursday’s semifinals.

Through the three games of group play, Brazil is top offensive rebounding team at 13 per game.

‘It all starts with defense and rebounding,’ Kerr said. ‘I’m not really that concerned about offense other than let’s take care of the ball, let’s get our spacing right. We’re playing off our defense, that’s for sure. It’s important to focus on keeping that identity now that you’re in a different phase.

‘We’re playing the best teams now and defense, defense, defense. A big part of that is completing the possession with the rebound. Brazil is going to try to maul us on the glass. They’re going to send a bunch of guys just trying to steamroll us in there and get offensive rebounds and pick out 3s, that sort of thing. You got to be prepared for the physicality.’

Brazil big men Bruno Caboclo and Cristiano Felicio, both former NBA players, average 3.7 and 2.3 offensive rebounds, and guard-forward Gui Santos, who plays for Kerr’s Golden State Warriors, averages 2.0 offensive rebounds.

Certainly, Joel Embiid, Anthony Davis, Bam Adebayo, LeBron James and Kevin Durant will need to collect rebounds. But Tatum can be a difference-maker.

‘I’ve been an above average rebounder people would say the past couple of years,’ Tatum said. ‘Just trying to have an impact on this team. Being 6-9, that’s an advantage that I bring when I’m on the court. Just be out there and be myself.’

It’s been a great year for Tatum. He won a title with Boston in June, signed a five-year $315 million max extension with the Celtics and joined the Olympic team shortly after.

‘It’s been a whirlwind,’ Tatum said. ‘Winning an NBA championship – whatever I thought it would be like, it’s 10 times better. You work so hard to accomplish a goal. Us falling short a couple of times made it that much sweeter. I’m still enjoying it. I am. It feels amazing to be a champion.’

Now, he’s three victories from winning a gold, and would join his Celtics and Olympics teammates, Derrick White and Jrue Holiday, as NBA champs and gold medalists in the same year.

The Olympics may have not started the way he wanted. ‘As a competitor, you want to play but I’m not holding any grudges,’ Tatum said.

But it can end the way he wants − with his second gold after winning one at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

‘You never know when you’re going to be out there,’ Tatum said. ‘Most important thing is that we win. That’s all that matters.’

Interactive graphic: Want to train like an Olympic champion? Start with this expert advice.

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PARIS — There are more than 10,000 seats in Bercy Arena, and almost every single one of them was filled Monday afternoon for the balance beam final at the 2024 Paris Olympics. But if you were expecting raucous cheers or thumping music in the background, you would’ve been disappointed.

As each of the each competitors mounted the beam, the arena went almost completely silent − save for the occasional cough or the click of a camera. NBC analyst Laurie Hernandez said on the broadcast that you could’ve heard a pin drop.

‘I did hear a pin drop, actually,’ she joked several minutes later.

For American audiences, the story of this event was that 11-time Olympic medalist Simone Biles surprisingly failed to make the podium after falling off the beam, as did compatriot Suni Lee. But what made the whole event strange was that unnerving silence − and even the unusual attempts by some spectators to shush those who clapped or cheered after big moments in each routine.

Biles and Lee each got some shushes from the crowd while cheering for each other, which they agreed was ‘annoying,’ Lee said.

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

‘You’re trying to stay in your zone, and then people start cheering and then the shushing gets louder, so really, they should be shushed because they’re louder,’ Biles said after the beam and floor finals. ‘It was really weird and awkward. And we’ve asked several times if we can have some music, or some background noise, so I’m not really sure what happened there. But, yeah, not our favorite. None of us liked it.’

It seems almost tortuous to inject silence into the Olympic balance beam final. What’s worse than trying to flip and leap across a wooden beam that is four inches wide, in front of a global television audience, with a gold medal at stake? How about doing it as 10,000 people stare at you silently?

At most major gymnastics meets in the United States, multiple events are going on concurrently so gymnasts are always competing with the white noise of random chapping and cheering. At the most recent world championships in Antwerp, Belgium, there was at least some light music playing in the background.

A spokesperson for the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) said the silence was part of the ‘sports presentation plan at Paris 2024,’ and the international federation does not have any requirements or rules as they pertain to background noise or music. The Paris 2024 organizing committee did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment.

‘Even watching the other finals, I was like, ‘It’s a little too quiet in here,” said Lee, who placed sixth in her final event at these Games. ‘When I was up there, I was like, ‘People can probably hear me breathing.’

‘It adds to the stress, just because yes, you’re the only one up there, but it just makes you feel like you’re the only one up there. I was feeling the pressure.’

The silence also made any small noises − Biles mentioned ‘Android ringtones going off’ and ‘the photo flickers’ − seem amplified.

‘Each gymnast has their own way to interpret the atmosphere, and likes a different type of atmosphere,’ Brazil’s Julia Soares said through a translator. ‘It’s my first (Olympic) final, but for my experience, when the gymnasium is quiet, any noise can bother and can interfere.’

It all made for a very jarring and unusual experience − the biggest stage in the sport, and one of its most exciting moments, but without the musical energy and soundtrack of applause that is so common at similar events in swimming, track and field and most other major Olympic sports.

‘I’ve competed in France a long time and it was the first time that I heard anybody shush,’ said Biles’ coach Cecile Landi, who grew up in France. ‘So it was really strange. I don’t know if they thought the athletes wanted it to be quiet. I can tell them now: No. They did not. They do not like it.’

It was telling that, minutes after the final concluded, USA Gymnastics posted a GIF of Jordan Chiles smiling and alluded to the last final of the day: Floor exercise, where tumbling routines are set to music.

Fortunately, the national governing body wrote, that ‘guarantees that there will be music played during the routines.’

‘Yeah,’ Biles said. ‘It was an odd beam final.’

Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @Tom_Schad.

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PARIS – Kristen Faulkner became the first American woman to medal in road racing in 40 years on Sunday, and her Paris Olympics aren’t over yet.

Faulkner, who gave up a lucrative career in venture capital to begin cycling full-time in 2020, has one more competition left on her Olympic docket: Team pursuit, which begins Tuesday at the National Velodrome.

Faulkner pulled away from the field to win by 59 seconds Sunday in a 158-kilometer race that took her through the streets of Paris, into Versailles, across the elevated French countryside and back to Paris again.

In team pursuit, she will race on a track with three of her American teammates against racers from other countries. Chloe Dygert, Olivia Cummins, Jennifer Valente and Lily Williams also are on the Team USA that is a medal favorite after winning a bronze in the event at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

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

Dygert also competed in Sunday’s road race, and said Faulkner’s growth as a track racer has helped her excel in both disciplines.

‘She’s put a lot of work in and she’s doing a lot of track and I think that has really helped her,’ Dygert said.

Qualifying in team pursuit is Tuesday, and the competition concludes Wednesday with first-round matches followed by the finals round.

Faulkner was a late add to the road race field after Taylor Knibb gave up her spot in the race to focus on her other events − triathlon, triathlon relay and cycling time trial. Faulkner said she simulated competing in the road race and team pursuit 48 hours apart during her training to prepare for her Olympic schedule and only decided to stay in the road race after discussions with her coaches about her medal chances and ability to perform at a high level in team pursuit on short rest.

On Sunday, she said felt ‘quite strong throughout the day’ and after making a climb early in the race decided, ‘I’m going to go for it and just continue in the race and try to earn a medal.

‘So that’s what we did,’ she added. ‘And I still feel, hopefully as soon as I get home I can start my recovery process and earn another medal with team pursuit cause we have a really strong team and yeah, I want to walk away with two medals.’

Contact Dave Birkett at dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him on X and Instagram at @davebirkett.

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PARIS — Vincent Hancock has another medal to add to his collection.

Hancock and Austen Jewell Smith teamed up to earn a silver medal in team skeet shooting Monday at the Chateauroux Shooting Centre. This is the first year team skeet shooting has been contested at the Olympics.

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Hancock and Smith lost in the finals of Monday’s team event to the Italian team of Diana Bocosi and Gabriele Rossetti, 45-44. China took bronze.

Hancock is a four-time Olympic gold medalist having won men’s skeet in 2008, 2012, 2020 and this year. Smith, in her second Olympics, won bronze in women’s skeet Sunday.

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

The four-time gold medalist is one of just seven Olympians in history to earn at least four gold medals in an individual event. The other Americans on the list: Carl Lewis (long jump), Michael Phelps (200m individual medley), Katie Ledecky (800 meter freestyle swimming) and Al Oerter (discus).

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

Italy tied the qualification world record with a score 149 in the qualification round.

The U.S. swept skeet shooting gold in Tokyo, with Hancock winning the men’s competition and Amber English winning the women’s.

Team skeet marked the final shooting event at this year’s Olympics.

Contact Dave Birkett at dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him on X and Instagram at @davebirkett.

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Second gentleman Doug Emhoff’s ex-wife released a statement defending her ex after he confessed to having an affair with a nanny during their marriage.

‘Doug and I decided to end our marriage for a variety of reasons, many years ago,’ Kerstin Emhoff told the Washington Post in a statement Saturday. ‘He is a great father to our kids, continues to be a great friend to me and I am really proud of the warm and supportive blended family Doug, Kamala, and I have built together.’

Emhoff admitted to having an affair with a nanny shortly after the Daily Mail published a report last week that the second gentleman had an affair with his daughter’s nanny and got her pregnant. The nanny’s close friend told the outlet that she did not keep the baby, but did not elaborate further. 

‘During my first marriage, Kerstin and I went through some tough times on account of my actions. I took responsibility, and in the years since, we worked through things as a family and have come out stronger on the other side,’ Emhoff told CNN last week of the affair. 

Emhoff and his first wife were married from 1992 to 2008 and share two adult children. Vice President Kamala Harris married Emhoff in 2014, and helped co-parent his children, who call their stepmom ‘mommala.’ 

The divorce cited ‘irreconcible differences’ as the motivation behind parting ways, the New York Post reported. 

Harris knew about the affair before they married, and the Biden 2020 campaign knew about it when it was vetting her for Biden’s vice presidential pick, CNN reported. 

Despite the affair and divorce, Kerstin Emhoff has posted supportive messages regarding her ex-husband’s second wife. 

‘LFG!!!! It’s time for democrats to put their differences aside and find common ground. We can’t give up and lose to DJT. ALL HANDS ON DECK!! Kamala Harris for President!’ she posted to her Instagram account, accompanied by a Time cover of Harris following President Biden dropping out of the 2024 race. 

‘For over 10 years, since Cole and Ella were teenagers, Kamala has been a co-parent with Doug and I,’ she told CNN last month in defense of Harris. 

‘She is loving, nurturing, fiercely protective and always present,’ she continued. ‘I love our blended family and am grateful to have her in it.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the vice president’s office for comment on the matter, but did not immediately receive a reply. 

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Vice President Kamala Harris is facing the most significant decision of her quarter-century political career – choosing a running mate to join her on the Democratic Party’s national ticket.

And an announcement of her decision is expected in the coming hours – ahead of the first rally by Harris and her running mate Tuesday evening in Philadelphia.

It’s the crucial moment in the most consequential stretch for Harris in the two weeks since she replaced President Biden at the top of the Democrats’ 2024 ticket.

The vetting, screening and interviewing of running mates normally takes months. But these are far from normal times for the Democrats, and Harris is facing an extremely compressed timetable.

Harris stayed in the nation’s capital this weekend, meeting in-person with Govs. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania and Tim Walz of Minnesota, and Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona, three of the roughly half-dozen running mate contenders, Democratic sources confirmed to Fox News.

Among those also in contention, according to sources, are Govs. Andy Beshear of Kentucky and JB Pritzker of Illinois, and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

Ahead of her meetings with the contenders, Harris was briefed by a vetting team led by former Attorney General Eric Holder.

The rollout of the announcement is not known, but it’s likely it could come through a video introduction, similar to how Biden announced Harris as his running mate four years ago. But the Harris campaign’s plans could be upended on Monday or Tuesday by a media leak of the announcement.

It’s been mostly smooth sailing for Harris since Biden’s blockbuster announcement amid a rising chorus of calls from fellow Democrats to end his re-election bid following a disastrous debate performance in late June against former President Trump.

A party eager to keep Trump, the GOP presidential nominee, from returning to the White House quickly unified behind Harris. The vice president experienced a surge in contributions and more than doubled Trump in July fundraising, and volunteers flocked to Biden-turned-Harris campaign offices.

And the small but telling lead that Trump had built over Biden in the weeks following the late June debate instantly vanished, as the latest national and key battleground state polls indicated a margin-of-error race between Harris and the former president.

But the smooth sailing could potentially turn into choppier seas.

While Harris and her team have remained mostly quiet about the naming of a vice presidential nominee, allies of the contenders have been advocating on their behalf and interest groups within the party have been increasingly making their wishes known. 

The announcement by Harris in the coming hours will likely disappoint some of those supporting candidates who weren’t named as the running mate, and could exacerbate policy divisions between the moderate and progressive wings of the party that have been papered over the past two weeks.

Harris and her to-be-named running mate will team up on Tuesday at a rally in Philadelphia to kick off an ambitious and jam-packed swing state tour through Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona and Nevada, the seven battlegrounds that will likely determine the outcome of the presidential election.

The vice president drew over 10,000 at her first major rally since taking over for Biden at the top of the Democrats’ ticket, last week at the Georgia State Convocation Center in Atlanta. 

It was the first time this cycle that the Democratic ticket drew a crowd comparable to the large audiences Trump has been regularly drawing for much of his more than year-and-a-half long campaign to return to the White House. And the size and energy of Harris’ crowds during this week’s swing state tour will be closely monitored.

Trump and his running mate – Sen. JD Vance of Ohio – held a rally at the same venue in Atlanta on Saturday, where the former president continued his relentless attacks and insults of Harris.

In social media posts earlier on Saturday and at the rally, Trump charged Harris had a ‘low IQ’ and was ‘dumb,’ and accused her of lacking ‘mental capacity.’

The Harris campaign, firing back on Sunday morning, claimed that Trump was ‘weak… struggling… panicking… and Donald Trump is running scared.’

Harris has yet to sit for a major interview since taking over for Biden, and the Trump campaign is turning up the criticism.

‘Kamala Harris is too afraid to answer media questions and cannot lead us in these troubled times,’ Vance charged in a social media post on Monday.

Vance plans to tail Harris as part of the Trump campaign’s plan to bracket the vice president and her running mate on their initial swing state tour.

Sources in the senator’s political orbit confirmed to Fox News that Vance will be in Philadelphia on Tuesday as the vice president kicks off her campaign swing. 

Harris will start the week by formally landing the party’s presidential nomination, as a virtual roll call run by the Democratic National Committee concludes at 6 p.m. ET. But there’s no drama, as the vice president was the only candidate to qualify for the roll call.

The roll call kicked off on Thursday and DNC Chair Jaimie Harrison announced on Friday that Harris had clinched the nomination by winning the votes of a majority of delegates to the party’s nominating convention, which gets underway in two weeks in Chicago.

While the past two weeks have been smoother than many expected, the Harris campaign is well aware there are still three months to go until the November election.

Battleground states director Dan Kanninen emphasized that ‘it is the task of the Harris campaign to turn the unprecedented energy behind the Vice President into action.’

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Israeli officials are leaving no options off the table as they consider the possibility of hitting Iran with a preemptive strike while Jerusalem stares down threats in every direction. 

Following a Sunday meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his chief security officials from the defense ministry, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), Mossad and Israel’s internal security agency Shin Bet, local reporting said preparations were being made should an attack be launched by Iran or its proxy terrorist organizations. 

Concerns over Israeli security have once again mounted following last week’s assassination of Hezbollah military chief Fuad Shukr in Beirut and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran.

Israel has not claimed credit for the killing of Haniyeh, though Iran and Hamas have both blamed Jerusalem for the attack and have vowed retaliation.

Israeli reports said there would need to be ‘airtight’ proof that Iran was planning an attack before it would carry out a preemptive strike, though an additional meeting Monday between top defense officials signaled Jerusalem is on heightened alert. 

Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant visited an Israeli Air Force (IAF) command center, where he met the commanding officer, Gen. Tomer Bar, and other top officials to go over Israel’s air defense readiness and its potential offensive capabilities, Israel’s Ministry of Defense confirmed to Fox News Digital. 

‘Our enemies are carefully considering their every move because of the capabilities you have demonstrated over the past year. Nevertheless, we must be prepared for anything – including a swift transition to offense,’ Gallant said. 

Border towns in northern Israel have also been put on alert as officials also prepare for the potential of an all-out war with Hezbollah. 

Mayors were reportedly issued an ‘Updated Scenario’ by the IDF that broke down what the outbreak of war could look like, including a three-day-long power outage, days of unreliable water supply, disconnected landlines for up to eight hours, disrupted cellphone communications for up to 24 hours, and brief interrupted access to radio and internet connections, reported the Times of Israel. 

The document also predicted that up to 40% of Israel’s workforce may be unable to work for the duration of the conflict and service providers from outside conflict areas are expected to become inaccessible. 

The document did not appear to include an estimated timeline for how long such a conflict is expected to last. 

Security officials have warned that heavy rocket fire is expected, with substantial payloads ranging from warheads containing roughly 100 pounds of explosives – like the rocket that killed 12 children after it hit a soccer field in Majdal Shams last month – to 10 times that amount. 

Maj. Gen. Ori Gordin, the IDF commander of the Northern Command, also met with regional officials on Sunday to address troop preparedness in the north.

‘I want you to know that our future offensive plans are ready, and we are prepared, across all units, including me down to the last soldier,’ he told local authorities, according to a statement provided by the IDF. ‘We have targeted and destroyed a lot in the last 10 months, but we still have work to do, we are determined and committed. 

‘We are determined to change the situation here in the north and bring our residents back home,’ he added. 

It is unclear how many Israeli citizens have been evacuated from northern Israel, though some estimates range as high as nearly 80,000.

While some evacuees are reportedly being housed in hotels, plans are being made to shelter others in Jerusalem-based schools, while tent cities are also being erected in the south.

IDF officials reportedly said previously erected safe houses remain effective protective shelters from Hezbollah rocket fire and Shin Bet has prepared an underground shelter in Israel’s capital city for Netanyahu and other top officials.

The bunker, first built 20 years ago, has been made fully operational by the internal security agency, is capable of sustaining hits from a ‘range of existing weaponry,’ and has command and control capabilities, reported the Times of Israel Sunday. 

The bunker – which has not been used in the previous 10 months since war broke out – is also connected to the Defense Ministry’s Tel Aviv headquarters.

Fox News Digital’s Yonat Friling contributed to this report.

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The average rate on the popular 30-year fixed mortgage dropped 22 basis points to 6.4% Friday, according to Mortgage News Daily. That is the lowest rate since April 2023. The 15-year fixed rate fell to 5.89%, its lowest level since early May 2023.

The drop followed a weaker-than-expected monthly employment report, which sent bond yields falling fast. Mortgage rates loosely follow the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury.

“Between [Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome] Powell’s equivocal openness to “multiple cuts” in 2024 on Wednesday and this morning’s sharply weaker jobs report (something Powell didn’t even know about on Wednesday), the more aggressive rate cut narrative is quickly coming into focus,” wrote Matthew Graham, chief operating officer at Mortgage News Daily. 

There are still two inflation reports and another employment report before the Fed’s September meeting, Graham noted, adding, “If they don’t offer strong counterpoints to recent data, the rate cut cycle has not only begun, but it will likely involve a certain sense of urgency.”

The 30-year fixed rate started the week at 6.81%, so the drop in just the past five days is dramatic. The recent high was 7.52% in late April, and home sales have been falling ever since. Buyers were battling not just high interest rates but high home prices and a lack of supply. Supply has since improved, but prices are still overheated.

The difference in just a few months is stark when it comes to affordability. In April, a buyer looking to purchase a $400,000 home with a 20% down payment and a 30-year fixed mortgage would have been facing a monthly payment of about $2,240, not including insurance and property taxes. Today, that monthly payment would be about $2,000. More buyers would also qualify for the loan at today’s lower rates.

Mortgage applications to purchase a home have been running about 15% below where they were at this time last year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. This latest drop could kickstart demand.

“The market is moving ahead of the Fed, bringing down longer-term rates including those for mortgages, which should lead to both more home purchases and a pickup in refinance activity,” wrote Mike Fratantoni, chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association, in a news release.

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Scottie Scheffler’s thrilling comeback victory, rallying from four shots back during the final round at the Paris Olympics, was one for the ages.

Of course, it came at the expense of Jon Rahm, the 54-hole leader, who let that lead slip away by shooting a 39 on the back nine. This allowed Scheffler to win gold and left Rahm out of medal contention. Tommy Fleetwood captured the silver medal, and Hideki Matsuyama took home the bronze.

That led to the chatter on social media – and on the Golf Channel, where analysts did not hold back on Rahm’s performance.

‘That was just about the wildest back nine that you could ever imagine, ever predict,’ analyst Brandel Chamblee said. ‘Jon Rahm with a four-shot lead in the gold position, Scottie Scheffler six back, making the turn, from the gold position, and wins gold – without a playoff. One shoots 29, Jon Rahm shoots 39.

‘I’m gonna put that down as one of the biggest collapses – chokes of the year,’ he added. ‘Probably right up there with Rory McIlroy coming down the stretch at the U.S. Open.’

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

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Rahm’s round ended with two bogeys after making birdie on No. 16.

‘Jon Rahm looked so solid the first three-and-a-half rounds, leading the field in fairways hit, leading the field in driving distance, leading the field in greens in regulation,’ Chamblee said. ‘But the demon that has plagued him over the last about year is that double cross. And we saw it a little bit at the 8th, but it visited him notably on the back nine in several key instances.’

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