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Second gentleman Doug Emhoff, the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris, admitted Saturday to having an extramarital affair during his first marriage after a bombshell report by the Daily Mail reported he got his children’s nanny pregnant.

‘During my first marriage, Kerstin and I went through some tough times on account of my actions,’ Emhoff said in a statement to CNN regarding his first wife, Kerstin Emhoff. ‘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 did not return Fox News Digital’s requests for comment. 

Emhoff and his first wife were married from 1992 to 2009, and they share two adult children — Cole, 29, and Ella, 25, who they co-parented with stepmom Harris. 

The affair ended the marriage, according to the Daily Mail, which reported the nanny was also a teacher at Emhoff’s children’s school. The report said the woman, who Fox News Digital is not naming, did not keep the baby, though it is unclear what happened to the baby, or if Emhoff has ever been involved in the child’s life.

Emhoff, now 59, was an entertainment lawyer, and his wife was a movie producer when their marriage ended in 2009. Sources told the Daily Mail the pregnant nanny had to leave her job as a teacher at The Willows, an elite private elementary school in Culver City, California, where she had also taught the Emhoff children.

Harris met Emhoff in 2013, when she was serving as California attorney general, and they married in 2014. 

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. 

‘Doug and I decided to end our marriage for a variety of reasons, many years ago,’ Kerstin Emhoff said in a statement to CNN. ‘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 is often seen with Harris, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, on the campaign trail. 

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With its season opener against Bucknell just 28 days away, Navy football continued its preparations for the 2024 campaign with a practice on a customarily hot, muggy August day in Maryland.

On this day, though, the Midshipmen’s training could afford a quick, welcome and well-deserved break.

Among the Navy players on the practice field Saturday was Chreign LaFond, a junior defensive end whose older sister, Thea, was competing that day in the triple jump at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

As the practice continued, LaFond was called over by Midshipmen coach Brian Newberry, who had a bit of news for him.

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

“Your sister just won a gold medal,” he said.

Upon getting the message, LaFond was mobbed by his teammates, with Navy capturing the heartwarming moment on video and posting it on social media.

Representing the Caribbean island nation of Dominica, where she was born, Thea LaFond earned the gold medal with a national record jump of 15.02 meters, besting silver medalist Shanieka Ricketts of Jamaica and her jump of 14.87 meters.

LaFond’s medal was the first in Dominica’s Olympic history. A track and field standout at the University of Maryland from 2012-16, LaFond had previously competed at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro and 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Chreign LaFond, whose listed hometown on the Navy roster is Silver Spring, Maryland, played in seven games last season for the Midshipmen, had two tackles in 2023, including 0.5 for loss, and one quarterback hurry.

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The Miami Dolphins’ spending spree this offseason continued on Saturday when they signed All-Pro wide receiver Tyreek Hill to a restructured $90 million deal.

The deal includes no new added years, and the 30-year-old Hill will receive $90 million over the next three seasons, including $65 million in guarantees.

His four-year deal now includes $106.5 million in fully guaranteed money, the most of any receiver in NFL history.

Hill’s new deal comes one day after he was voted the league’s best player by his peers, the first time a wide receiver has received that honor.

Hill had 1,799 receiving yards and 13 touchdowns last season for Miami, earning his third first-team All-Pro selection in the past four seasons.

All things Dolphins: Latest Miami Dolphins news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

In May, the Dolphins signed wide receiver Jaylen Waddle to a three-year, $84.75 million contract extension, and earlier this week, the team signed quarterback Tua Tagovailoa to a four-year, $212.4 million extension with $167 million guaranteed.

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The Paris Olympics rolled on Saturday with some of Team USA’s biggest names winning gold to cement their legacies as all-time greats.

Gymnast Simone Biles took gold in the women’s all-around for the second time in her career, her seventh gold and 10th medal overall. And she’s not ruling out competing in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

In the pool, Katie Ledecky won her fourth consecutive Olympic gold in the 800-meter freestyle, completing her week with her fourth medal in Paris and 14th in her Olympic career. In track, American sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson won silver in the 100, losing out to Saint Lucia’s Julien Alfred –  who claimed her country’s first-ever Olympic medal.

Elsewhere, the U.S. women’s soccer team advanced to the semifinals with an extra-time win over Japan and the men’s basketball team routed Puerto Rico.

Torri Huske secures win for Team USA mixed 4×100 medley relay

NANTERRE, France — Relays at the Paris Olympics have galvanized the crowd at Paris La Défense Arena, and Saturday’s mixed 4×100-meter medley relay was no different, as the United States stormed ahead to win gold.

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

The Americans finished first with a time of 3:37.43 in a world record, while China won silver in 3:37.55 and Australia won bronze in 3:38.76.

The world record previously belonged to Great Britain at 3:37.58.

The mixed medley relay — added to the Olympic swimming lineup at the 2021 Tokyo Games — requires a bit more strategy than the others with two men and two women competing on each team. For Saturday’s final, Team USA’s lineup was Ryan Murphy (backstroke), Nic Fink (breaststroke), Gretchen Walsh (butterfly) and Torri Huske (freestyle).

— Michelle Martinelli

Katie Ledecky wins gold in 800-meter freestyle

NANTERRE, France —Katie Ledecky, the greatest female swimmer of all time, won her fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal in the 800-meter freestyle Saturday night, completing her week with her fourth medal in Paris and 14th in her Olympic career. 

Ledecky’s time of 8:11.04 defeated Australian Ariarne Titmus. American Paige Madden took the bronze.

This was a victory of the moment, but also one 12 years in the making. Ledecky first won the Olympic 800 in a big surprise as a 15-year-old water bug in London in 2012. She won it by a mile in Rio in 2016. She held off Titmus to win it again in Tokyo in 2021. And now this, the four-peat, the first time a woman has won any swimming race in four consecutive Olympics.

Michael Phelps is the only other person to do it, in the men’s 200 individual medley, from 2004-2016. – Christine Brennan

US women reach 3×3 hoops semifinals

PARIS – Their Olympics couldn’t have started any worse, but the U.S. women’s 3×3 basketball team has turned its fortunes around just in time to chase a medal.

The U.S. has won five straight games since an 0-3 start and beat China, the world’s No. 1-ranked team, twice on Saturday.

“Those first couple games I just didn’t think our effort was where it needed to be,” Cierra Burdick said after the women’s first win Saturday. “3×3 is a different sport. As much of it can come down to schemes and tactics, a lot of it is just effing wanting it more and gritting it out and working harder and tougher than your opponents and I think we lacked that the first couple games and I think now we’re starting to realize how hard it is to actually get wins.” — Dave Birkett

Why was Alex Walsh disqualified in the 200-meter?

American Alex Walsh originally finished in bronze medal position but was disqualified after officials ruled she made a bad turn on her backstroke leg. Walsh won a silver medal in the 200 IM at the Tokyo Olympics. – Michelle R. Martinelli

Olympic swimming: Kate Douglass earns silver in 200-meter IM

NANTERRE, France — Canadian swimmer Summer McIntosh won her fourth medal and third gold at the Paris Olympics, finishing first in the women’s 200-meter individual medley Saturday at Paris La Défense Arena. 

McIntosh out-touched Americans Kate Douglass and Australia’s Kaylee McKeown, winning in an Olympic-record time of 2:06.56. Douglass earned silver with a time of 2:06.92 and McKeown bronze in 2:08.08. – Michelle R. Martinelli

Americans Ryan Crouser, Joe Kovacs finish with gold and silver

SAINT-DENIS, France — Ryan Crouser told USA TODAY Sports he was going for the Olympic three-peat. He did just that and cemented himself as the best shot putter of all time.

The U.S. shot putter won his third consecutive Olympic gold medal with a throw of 75 feet, 1¾ inches. He’s the only shot put thrower in history to win three Olympic gold medals in the event.

Team USA’s Joe Kovacs finished second, throwing 69 feet, 4¾ inches and Jamaica’s Rajindra Campbell came in third with nearly an identical mark but it wasn’t enough to overtake Kovacs.

U.S. loses 4×400 mixed relay in heartbreaking fashion

SAINT-DENIS, France — The U.S. mixed relay lost the 4×400 mixed relay – but just barely.

The Netherlands’ Femke Bol used a tremendous kick in the last 100 to pull in front of American Kaylyn Brown just before the finish line, finishing in 3:07.43. The Americans, a team made up of Vernon Norwood, Shamier Little, Bryce Deadmon and Brown, settled for silver after running 3:07.74.

Great Britain finished third, claiming the bronze, at 3:08.01.

Fans excited for Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone’s 400-meter hurdle race are likely familiar with Bol. Bol is also a 400 hurdlers, and McLaughlin-Levrone’s biggest competition for gold in Paris. – Lindsay Schnell

Gretchen Walsh advances to 50-meter freestyle final, angling for third medal

NANTERRE, France — American swimmer Gretchen Walsh advanced to Sunday’s women’s 50-meter freestyle final, touching the wall in 24.17 seconds in Saturday’s semifinals at Paris La Défense Arena. The 21-year-old first-time Olympian enters the final seeded second, behind Swedish swimmer and world record holder Sarah Sjöström.

Sjöström, who won the 100 freestyle earlier this week, set an Olympic record in the second semifinal with a time of 23.66. Sjöström now owns the six fastest 50-meter times in history.

Walsh already has two silver medals at the Paris Olympics, her first Games, in the women’s 4×100-meter freestyle relay and the 100-meter butterfly behind fellow American and gold medalist Torri Huske. She finished eighth in the 100-meter freestyle.

Three-time Olympian Simone Manuel swam earlier Saturday in the 50 free prelims, but with her time of 24.87, she tied for 18th, missing the top 16 semifinals in her only individual event. Manuel, who turned 28 Friday, is a seven-time Olympic medalist, including winning two silver medals at the Paris Olympics in the women’s 4×100 freestyle and 4×200-meter freestyle relays. – Michelle Martinelli

Hailey van Lith comes through for Team USA 3×3 women’s basketball

Hailey van Lith scored six points and made a big 3-pointer with just under 3 minutes to play as the U.S. women beat China, 14-12, for their fourth straight win in three-on-three basketball Saturday.

With the win, the women advance to bracket play, where they’ll face China in a play-in game later tonight.

The U.S. opened the Olympics with three straight losses but has rallied for consecutive victories over Spain, France, Canada and China.

They finished 4-3 in pool play, in a four-way tie for second behind top-seeded Germany.

The winner of tonight’s U.S.-China game will play Spain in a semifinal game Monday.

‘I think I was probably the most frustrated out of the group (with our start),’ Cierra Burdick said. ‘But just trying to stay optimistic and knowing that when I look back on our World Cup last year, we lost our first game against Canada, too, and I just saw the strides that we made in the time that we were together. So I looked back on that experience and i just believed that the same would happen with this group as we continued to get more reps and chemistry and time together. I knew that we would find a flow and some momentum.’

Dearica Hamby added four points and five rebounds for the U.S. – Dave Birkett

American Jahmal Harvey confused by quarterfinal defeat

VILLEPINTE, France — Team USA boxer Jahmal Harvey lost his featherweight quarterfinal to Munarbek Seiitbek Uulu of Kyrgyzstan but left the ring bewildered by the result.

‘I don’t know what (the judges) seen,’ Harvey said. ‘I thought I fought a good fight. Used my jab, check-hooked him off. I stuck to the game plan. I did what I needed to do. I thought I won every round. I controlled it. That’s boxing.’

Harvey, a 21-year old who won gold at the 2021 World Championships in Serbia and the 2023 Pan Am Games in Chile, believed he had a good shot at becoming the first American men’s boxer to win Olympic gold since Andre Ward in 2004. 

Instead, his run ends with three of the five judges scoring it 29-28 for Seitbek Uulu while two had Harvey as the winner. 

‘He held so much, he just lunged in with all his punches,’ Harvey said. ‘He landed no clean shots. Even if he did land something clean it didn’t mean nothing because he jumped in and held. It’s not a clean in your stance punch.’

Despite being disappointed in the judging, Harvey said he was proud of his performance and would consider trying again in 2028. – Dan Wolken

Sha’Carri Richardson advances to finals in 100 meter

The women’s 100 semifinal featured a couple major surprises.

Sha’Carri Richardson got a slow start in her heat and had to play catch-up. Richardson caught most of the other sprinters but Julien Alfred of Saint Lucia was too far in front. Alfred led the race from start to finish and crossed the line in first with a time of 10.84.

Richardson placed second at 10.89 to get the second qualifying spot.

However, the biggest shock was a late scratch from Jamaican sprint legend Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. – Tyler Dragon

When does Sha’Carri Richardson run 100 semifinals?

The semifinals in the women’s 100 is at 1:50 p.m. ET. There are three heats in the semifinal. The top two in each heat, plus the next two fastest times advance to the final. USA TODAY Sports is providing live updates and more from Richardson’s semifinal heat.

U.S. sprinter Melissa Jefferson won her heat to head to the finals.

Will Simone Biles compete in 2028 Olympics? ‘Never say never’

PARIS — Simone Biles lives rent-free in the heads of her critics. And she’s considering re-upping her lease.

Minutes after winning gold on vault – that’s her third of the Paris Olympics, for those counting, and seventh overall – Biles left the door open to competing at the Los Angeles Games in 2028. Or, rather, she didn’t close it.

“Never say never. The next Olympics is at home, so you just never know,” she said Saturday night, before starting to laugh. “But I am getting really old.” – Nancy Armour

USA vs. Puerto Rico: Team USA moves on in dominant fashion

A balanced scoring attack led by six players in double figures delivered the U.S. men’s 5×5 basketball team to a 104-83 victory over Puerto Rico Saturday in the final game of Group C play for both teams. Anthony Edwards scored a team-high 26 points, Joel Embiid had 15 points, Kevin Durant had 11 and Jayson Tatum and Anthony Davis each 10 points. LeBron James added 10 points, eight assist and six rebounds.

A 44-41 U.S. lead in the second quarter ballooned to 64-45 at halftime, and the U.S. kept tacking on the points while limiting Puerto Rico. The U.S. finished 3-0 in Group C and likely will play Brazil in the quarterfinals. – Jeff Zillgitt

Team USA men’s water polo stays hot, advance to quarterfinals

The U.S. men’s water polo team advanced to the quarterfinals with a 12-7 over Montenegro in group play Saturday. Hannes Daube scored five goals in the Group A match to lead the Americans. – Ellen Horrow

Olympic beach volleyball: Budinger, Evans can advance to elimination rounds

In beach volleyball, Americans Chase Budinger and Miles Evans will play Australia’s Thomas Hodges and Zachery Schubert in the “Lucky Loser” round on Saturday at 2 p.m. PT (11 p.m. in Paris). If they win, they advance to the elimination rounds.

American Stephen Nedoroscik wins bronze on pommel horse

Stephen Nedoroscik became just the fourth American man since World War II to win an Olympic medal on pommel horse Saturday, barely holding on to win bronze.

Less than a week after becoming an internet phenomenon with his medal-clinching performance in the team final, Nedoroscik turned in a largely clean routine in the apparatus final to record a score of 15.300 – one tenth of a point better than Max Whitlock of Great Britain, the two-time defending Olympic champion in this event.

While Nedoroscik’s difficulty score of 6.400 wasn’t quite as high as the men who took gold and silver – Rhys McClenaghan of Ireland and Nariman Kurbanov of Kazakhstan – his execution score of 8.900 was good enough to secure the bronze. Tom Schad

USA vs. Puerto Rico basketball: Team USA up big at half

The U.S. owned a 64-45 lead against Puerto Rico at halftime of their men’s 5×5 basketball Group C game. Puerto Rico kept the score close for much of the half with solid shooting and owned a 25-17 lead in the first quarter. But the U.S. talent and depth began to wear down Puerto Rico. The U.S. bench outscored Puerto Rico’s reserves 27-16, and the U.S. closed the final four minutes of the second quarter on a 20-4 run.

Anthony Edwards has 12 points, Kevin Durant, Steph Curry and Jayson Tatum each have eight points, and LeBron James has eight points, six assists and four rebounds. Jose Alvarado leads Puerto Rico with 13 points. – Jeff Zillgitt

USA women’s soccer beats Japan, advance to semifinal

The USWNT is one step closer to securing their first Olympic gold medal since 2012.

They only needed one goal to seal the win over Japan on Saturday: It was off the left foot of Trinity Rodman in extra time, sending Team USA to the semifinals on Tuesday.

Simone Biles adds vault gold medal to trophy room; Jade Carey medals

Fresh off winning the all-around gold medal for the second time, further cementing her status as the greatest gymnast of all time, Simone Biles turns her focus on the individual disciplines.

On Saturday, Biles secured the gold medal in the vault event, holding off rival Rebeca Andrade of Brazil in the event. Team USA’s Jade Carey finished third for bronze.

USA men’s basketball tips off against Puerto Rico

LeBron James, Kevin Durant and the rest of the United States men’s hoops squad faces off against Puerto Rico in group play on Saturday afternoon. USA TODAY Sports provides live updates, highlights and more from the tilt.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

USWNT heads to extra time vs. Japan

PARIS — We are going to extra time at Parc de Princes. After five minutes of extra time in the second half and 90 other minutes, there has yet to be a goal. The next will likely decide which squad moves on to the semifinals.

If there is no goal, then the competition will move to penalty kicks. The U.S. had a flurry of chances in the box during stoppage time but couldn’t move any of the shots around Japanese defenders and threaten the goalkeeper.

Trinity Rodman was knocked down in the box on a chance that would have been the best chance of the game for the U.S. but the ref kept her whistle in her pocket. 

Olympics soccer overtime rules

Knockout stage soccer games at the Paris Olympics go to 30 minutes of extra time (two 15-minute halves) if a match finishes tied. If things remain tied after the additional 30 minutes, the winner is determined by penalty kicks.

In recent years, the USWNT was eliminated in penalties in the 2023 World Cup and the quarterfinals of the 2016 Olympics, but won a shootout in the quarterfinal of the Tokyo Games.

Americans secure a bronze medal in boxing

American boxer Omari Jones ensured himself of winning no less than a bronze medal after a second straight dominating victory in the men’s ‘welterweight division as he advanced to the semifinals.

In Olympic boxing, each losing semifinalist is awarded a bronze medal.

But on Saturday, after a beating Bulgaria’s Rami Kiwan on points by unanimous decision in the quarterfinals, Jones expressed confidence about becoming the first American boxer to win gold since Andre Ward did it in 2004.

“It’s my turn now,’’ he said.

Jones, a 21-year-old from Florida, opened the tournament with a victory by unanimous decision over Taiwan’s Chia Wei Kan in the round of 16.

On Tuesday, will face Uzbekistan’s Asadkhuja Muydinkhujaev in the semifinals in the 157-pound division. – Josh Peter

American Vincent Hancock makes Olympic history on Saturday

American skeet shooter Vincent Hancock entered the pantheon of Olympic icons on Saturday.

Hancock, competing in the men’s skeet shoot, earned his fourth medal in the individual skeet shooting event. He becomes the sixth Olympian in history to earn a medal in an individual event, and just the fourth American to do so.

Americans Michael Phelps (200 meter individual medley), Carl Lewis (long jump) and Al Oerter (discus) each earned four medals in their individual events. The others: Paul Elvstrom (Denmark, sailing one-person class) and and Mijain Lopez (Cuba, Greco-Roman heavyweight) round out the exclusive club.

Earlier, Hancock called his shot.

“I know that, if I do my absolute best, I’m going to win. There’s no doubt that what I’ve done in practice and what I’ve done in past competitions has led me to understand and believe that (if) I come out here and shoot perfect, or as close to perfect as possible, then nobody’s going to beat me,’ Hancock told USA TODAY Sports. ‘But, I still have to go out there and just do it, right? That’s kind of the whole thing about it – you’ve got to go out there and do it.”

Do it he did.

American swimmer Katie Ledecky can also join the club on Saturday when she performs in the 800 meter freestyle.

USA women’s soccer tied with Japan 0-0 at halftime

PARIS — A scoreless first 45 minutes in the quarterfinals here at Parc de Princes means that whoever moves on to the semifinals between the United States and Japan will be decided in the second half – or extra time or penalties. 

The U.S. managed four shots with two on net, but rarely put together their successful attacking combinations into legitimate success. Japan’s first shot came in the 34th minute and it had another golden chance three minutes later during a nervy sequence for the Americans, but they came away unscathed. 

Midfielder Rose Lavelle has been a bright spot for the U.S., while team captain Lindsey Horan continues to struggle, particularly with her passing. – Chris Bumbaca

Snoop Dogg in attendance for USWNT vs. Japan

PARIS — The most popular man of the (unofficial) Team USA delegation, Snoop Dogg, was in attendance for the U.S. women’s soccer match vs. Japan.

Around the 12th minute, “D-O-Double-G” appeared in the mezzanine section near midfield. The crowd of American fans nearby went berserk and started chanting “King Snoop!” – Chris Bumbaca

Olympic skeet shooting: Pair of Team USA shooters advance to final

Americans Connor Prince and Vincent Hancock are heading to the gold medal stage of skeet shooting.

Prince finishes at the top of the chart with a score of 124 to head to the final, while Hancock’s 123 ranked fourth.

Hancock has an opportunity to win his fourth gold medal in skeet shooting, which would make him the sixth Olympian to win four gold medals in the same individual event. He would join Carl Lewis (long jump), Al Oerter (discus) and Michael Phelps (swimming) as the only Americans to accomplish that feat. Katie Ledecky, who races in the 800 meter freestyle on Saturday night, can also join those ranks.

120-year US men’s swimming streak on the line

Bobby Finke qualified for the 1500 meter freestyle final with a six-place finish (14:45.31). The final is scheduled for Sunday night. If the reigning Olympic champion in the event doesn’t win, the American men will go without an individual Olympic swimming gold medal for the first time since 1900. The exception, of course, is the 1980 Moscow Olympics, which the U.S. boycotted.

Meanwhile, Gretchen Walsh swam the third fastest time in the morning 50 meter freestyle (24.37) to advance to this afternoon’s semifinal.

American’s take home silver in men’s doubles tennis

PARIS — Team USA’s Austin Krajicek and Rajeev Ram had to settle for silver in tennis men’s doubles, losing Saturday’s final to Australia’s Matt Ebden and John Peers in a tiebreaker.

Krajicek and Ram seemed to have control of the match, up a set and a break, but couldn’t close the door. That meant the match was decided in a third set tiebreaker, which didn’t go well for the Americans.

Digging an early hole with uncharacteristic errors, the Americans couldn’t quite come all the way back and Australia celebrated a 6-7, 7-6, 10-8 victory.

Ram and Krajicek hadn’t dropped a set the entire tournament before Saturday, collecting a commanding and historic win over Spanish superstars Rafael Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz in the process. − Dan Wolken

Is Simone Biles competing today? Live updates

Yes. Simone Biles will compete in the vault final today at 10:20 a.m. ET. Biles, who is considered one of the top vaulters in the world, has had a busy week. She started with a gold medal performance Tuesday in the women’s gymnastics team final and then followed that up with a gold medal Thursday in the individual all-around. Follow along here.

USWNT without top defender again

PARIS – For the second straight game (really 2.5 matches total), the U.S. will be without one of its top defenders. 

Tierna Davidson will miss the quarterfinals as she continues to heal from a leg contusion she suffered against Germany halfway through the second match of the tournament. Emily Sonnett has taken her place in one of the center back positions. 

In positive injury news for the U.S., reserve Jaedyn Shaw is back after missing the group stage with a leg injury. Croix Bethune, who’d replaced Shaw on the 18-person roster, is back to being a reserve. − Chris Bumbaca

IBA says it will award prize money to Italian boxer

PARIS — The International Boxing Association says it will award Italy’s Angela Carini $50,000 after the Italian boxer abandoned her bout against Algeria’s Imane Khelif at the Olympics.

The abrupt conclusion of the fight, which ended 46 seconds into the bout and with Carini in tears Thursday, inflamed controversy over gender eligibility that has ensnared Khelif at the Paris Games.

The Russian-backed IBA, which made the announcement of the award for Carini on Saturday, has helped stoke controversy over gender eligibility for the women’s boxing competition at the Olympics. Carini said after the fight that she got hit too hard by Khelif to continue. − Josh Peter

USA women’s soccer team vs. Japan: Live updates

The United States women’s national soccer team opens the knockout rounds of the 2024 Paris Olympics today with a match against Japan. The Americans are looking to win their first Olympic gold since 2012, and so far USA’s big three of Mallory Swanson, Trinity Rodman and Sophia Smith have been producing big results and look to keep that up today. Follow along here.

Team USA men’s beach volleyball players part ways with coach mid-Games

PARIS − In a stunning move, Team USA beach volleyball teammates Andy Benesh and Miles Partain have parted ways with coach Mike Placek in the midst of Paris Olympics.

At some point after the duo defeated Morocco 2-0 in preliminary Pool D play on Tuesday, and before their 2-1 win over Brazil on Thursday, a decision was made for Placek to step aside. Benesh and Partain defeated Brazil’s George Wanderley and Andre Loyola 21-17, 14-21, 15-8 in afternoon play without Placek. − Chase Goodbread

Noah Lyles gets second in surprising 100 opening heat

SAINT-DENIS, France — After receiving the loudest ovation of any sprinter in the race, Noah Lyles got a surprising second in the opening round of the 100 with a time of 10.04. Lyles didn’t get a good start and had to play catch up for much of the race.

Louie Hinchliffe of Great Britain won the race in 9.98, Lyles placed second and Shaun Maswanganyi of South African finished third (10.06).

The top three in each heat, plus the next three fastest times advance to the semifinals on Sunday. − Tyler Dragon

Noah Lyles to run in opening round of 100

SAINT-DENIS, France — Noah Lyles is set to make his Paris Olympics debut Saturday.

The U.S. sprinter will run in the opening round of the men’s 100. Lyles is slated to run in the third heat. He will run in lane six.

Lyles is a gold-medal contender in both the 100 and 200 in Paris. He is the defending world champion in both events.

Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson and Oblique Seville are also threats to win the 100. Thompson’s 9.77 is the top time in the world this year. Defending Olympic champion Marcell Jacobs of Italy and Kenya’s Ferdinand Omanyala should be in the mix for a spot on the podium as well.

The opening round of the men’s 100 is scheduled for 5:55 a.m. ET.

Before his first race, Lyles tweeted he is ready to go. 

Team USA rowing men’s eight takes bronze medal

VAIRES-SUR-MARNE, France − Team USA rowing picked up its second medal of the Games on Saturday when the men’s eight team took bronze with a time of 5:25.28 to reach the podium along with Great Britain (gold, 5:22.88) and the Netherlands (silver, 5:23.92) at Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium.

Team USA held the third position after the 500-, 1,000- and 1,500-meter marks of the 2,000-meter race, but couldn’t make up the deficit on the Netherlands to take silver.

Team USA includes Henry Hollingsworth, Nick Rusher, Christian Tabash, Clark Dean, Chris Carlson, Peter Chatain, Evan Olson, Pieter Quinton. − Chase Goodbread

Olympics schedule today

Here are some Olympic schedule highlights. Peacock is streaming every sport and event live as it unfolds in Paris.

(All times Eastern)

Gymnastics has individual finals for men’s floor exercise (9:30 a.m.), women’s vault (10:20 a.m.) and men’s pommel hose (11:16 a.m.). NBC is airing. See the latest Olympic gymnastics results and highlights.
Swimming heats start at 5 a.m. The finals, including Katie Ledecky in the women’s 800m free and Caeleb Dressel in the men’s 100m fly, are airing on NBC. USA Network is airing the heats. NBC is airing the finals.
Track and field prelims, heats, repechage rounds and qualifying rounds start at 4:05 a.m. and run through 2:10 p.m. Finals start with men’s shot put (1:35 p.m.) and pick back up at 2:20 p.m. with women’s triple jump, 4×400 mixed relay (2:55 p.m.), women’s 100m (3:20 p.m.) and men’s decathlon 1,500m (3:45 p.m.) E! is airing the morning session. NBC is airing the finals and semifinals.
Women’s soccer enters the quarterfinals today with four matches: 9 a.m., 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.
Basketball has four group stage games, two on the women’s side first, then two on the men’s side to wrap the day: China vs. Puerto Rico (5 a.m.), Serbia vs. Spain (7:30 a.m.), U.S. vs. Puerto Rico (11:15 a.m., NBC), Serbia vs. South Sudan (3 p.m.). (Follow live updates, results and highlights of USA vs. Puerto Rico.)
Men’s golf continues play with Round 3 starting at 3 a.m.
The tennis slate includes gold medal match for women’s singles and men’s doubles as well as bronze medal match for men’s singles. All start at 6 a.m.
The 3×3 basketball slate has four pool play games starting at 11:30 a.m. and running through 1:05 p.m. Play-in games are later in the afternoon.
Other sports in action:Archery, badminton, beach volleyball,, boxing, canoe slalom, equestrian, fencing, field hockey, handball, judo, rowing, sailing, shooting, table tennis, volleyball and water polo.

How to watch Olympics today

NBC is airing and streaming the Paris Olympics from all angles: Peacock is streaming every sport and event live as it unfolds; NBC, USA Network, CNBC and E! are carrying various live events and replays throughout the day. Here are 6 tips and tricks for getting the most out of Peacock during the Olympics.

Medal count today

Our 2024 Paris Olympics medal count tracker updates after every single medal event.

Which U.S. teams are playing at the Olympics today?

(All times Eastern)

The U.S. men’s basketball team plays Puerto Rico in group play at 11:15 a.m. NBC is airing.
The U.S. men’s golf team continues play with Round 3, which starts at 3 a.m. Round 3 tee times for American golfers: Wyndham Clark, 3:33 a.m.; Collin Morikawa, 5:17 a.m.; Scottie Scheffler, 6:06 a.m.; Xander Schauffele, 6:39 a.m. Golf Channel is airing.
The U.S. women’s field hockey team faces South Africa in pool play at 7:15 a.m. USA Network is airing.
The U.S. men’s water polo team faces Montenegro in group play at 10:35 a.m. USA Network is airing.
The U.S. women’s 3×3 basketball team faces China in pool play at 1:05 p.m.
The U.S. women’s soccer team plays Japan in the quarterfinals at 9 a.m. USA Network is airing.

What Olympic medals can be won today?

(All times Eastern)

Gymnastics: men’s floor final (9:30 a.m.), women’s vault final (10:20 a.m., NBC), men’s pommel horse final (11:10 a.m.)
Track & field: men’s shot put (1:35 p.m.) women’s triple jump (2:20 p.m.), 4x400m mixed relay 2:55 p.m.), women’s 100m final 3:20 p.m.), men’s decathlon 1,500m (3:45 p.m.) NBC is airing the finals.
Swimming: men’s 100m fly (2:30 p.m.), women’s 200m IM (2:59 p.m.), women’s 800m free (309 p.m.), mixed 4x100m medley relay (3:33 p.m.) NBC is airing the finals.
Tennis: men’s singles bronze, women’s singles gold, men’s doubles hold (6 a.m.)
Fencing: women’s sabre team bronze (1 p.m.), women’s sabre team gold (2 p.m., E!)
Equestrian: Dressage team grand prix special (4 a.m.)
Cycling road: men’s road race (5 a.m.)
Boxing: women’s 60kg semis (11:38 a.m. and 4:08 p.m.)
Badminton: women’s doubles bronze (9 a.m.), women’s doubles gold (10:10 a.m.)
Table tennis: women’s singles bronze (7:30 a.m.), women’s singles gold (8:30 a.m., USA Network)
Shooting: 25m pistol women’s final (3:30 a.m.), skeet men’s final (9:30 a.m.)
Rowing: women’s single sculls final A (4:18 a.m.), men’s single sculls final A (4:30 a.m.), women’s eight final A (4:50 a.m.), men’s eight final A (5:10 a.m.)
Judo: mixed team bronze A (10 a.m.), mixed team bronze B (10:40 a.m.), mixed team final (11:20 a.m.)
Archery: women’s individual bronze (8:33 a.m.), women’s individual gold (8:46 a.m., E!)

Olympic swimming schedule today

(All times Eastern)

Heats for the following events start at 5 a.m.: women’s 50m free and 4×100 medley relay; men’s 1,500m free and 4x100m medley relay
Semifinals for the following events start in the afternoon: women’s 50m free (2:37 p.m.)
Today’s finals: men’s 100m fly (2:30 p.m.), women’s 200m IM (5:01 p.m.), women’s 800m free (5:08 p.m.), mixed 4x100m medley relay (3:34 p.m.)

Olympic swimming today: What to watch

Olympic track and field schedule today

(All times Eastern)

Men’s decathlon events: 110m hurdles (4:05 a.m.), discus throw for group a (4:55 a.m.), discus throw for group b (6 a.m.), pole vault (7:40 a.m.), javelin throw for group a (1:10 p.m.),  javelin throw for group b (2:10 p.m.), 1,500m (3:45 p.m.)
Qualifications: Men’s pole vault (4:10 a.m.)
Preliminary rounds: Men’s 100m (4:35 a.m.)
Repechage rounds: Women’s 800m (5:10 a.m.), men’s 1,500m (1:35 p.m.)
Round 1s: Men’s 100m (5:45 a.m.)
Semifinals: Women’s 100m (1:50 p.m.)
Finals: Men’s shot put (1:35 p.m.), women’s triple jump (2:40 p.m.), 4x400m mixed relay (2:55 p.m.), women’s 100m (3:20 p.m.)

Olympic track and field today: What to watch

Medals in the women’s 100 meters will be decided along with the men’s shot put and men’s decathlon. In shot put, American Ryan Crouser has won the last two Olympic gold medals.

How Noah Lyles plans to become track’s greatest showman

Track and field’s new superstar? Noah Lyles wants to be a legend, and the Paris Olympics could be his showcase. Here’s how he planned for this moment. — Tyler Dragon

Olympic gymnastics today: What to watch

In the women’s individual events, Simone Biles has a chance to add to her Olympic medal haul if she reaches the vault finals as expected.

How Simone Biles does Yurchenko double pike, the world’s hardest vault

Simone Biles is the most decorated gymnast of all time, earning her the GOAT title – the Greatest Of All Time.

But what really makes Biles unique is her ability to change the sport by attempting feats that most men wouldn’t even try. Five skills bear her name: two on the floor, two on the vault, and one on the balance beam — Nancy Armour and Janet Loehrke

Olympic archery today: What to watch

Casey Kaufhold, a 20-year-old from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, is a favorite to win a medal in the women’s individual event. She won gold at the Olympic test event in Paris last year and the Pan American championship in April.

Olympic gymnastics today: What to watch

In the women’s individual events, Simone Biles has a chance to add to her Olympic medal haul if she reaches the vault finals as expected.

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SAINT-DENIS, France — The fastest woman in the world isn’t Sha’Carri Richardson or Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. It’s Saint Lucia’s Julien Alfred.

Alfred shocked the world by winning the women’s 100 final at the Paris Olympics in rainy conditions at Stade de France. The Saint Lucian sprinter ran a national record 10.72 to win gold.

It’s the first ever Olympic medal for Saint Lucia.

‘It means a lot to me,’ Alfred said. ‘I definitely knew that Saint Lucians would be watching and hoping that they would get their first Olympic gold medal and first Olympic medal. And it came as a gold. I’m sure they are celebrating right now.’

Sha’Carri Richardson placed second with a 10.87 and Melissa Jefferson’s time of 10.92 was good enough for bronze.

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

Alfred revealed that she woke up early Saturday morning and wrote down ‘Julien Alfred, Olympic champion.’ It turns out her note to self came to fruition.

‘I think just believing in myself and trusting I could do it is what really mattered to me,’ Alfred said.

Richardson was the heavy favorite going into the final. Her time of 10.71 set at the U.S. Olympic Trials is the fastest time in the world this year. But Alfred upset Richardson to win gold at her first ever Olympics.

The women’s 100 final was missing plenty of star power due to the absence of Jamaica’s three stars. Elaine Thompson-Herah suffered a season-ending Achilles injury, Shericka Jackson withdrew from the 100 just before the Olympic track and field competition was set to begin and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce shockingly scratched just before the start of the semifinal.

Alfred, who competed collegiately for the University of Texas, had the third fastest time in the world entering the Paris Olympics. She won the 100 at the 2022 NCAA track and field championships while with the Longhorns. 

The 2022 NCAA champion is now an Olympic champion, and the first Olympic medalist in Saint Lucia’s history.

How Julien Alfred shocked the world

SAINT-DENIS, France — Julien Alfred looked the best through the qualifying rounds.

Alfred beat Sha’Carri Richardson in the semifinal and carried the momentum into the final.

The Saint Lucian runner got out the blocks fast and had an early lead. She extended her lead during her drive and acceleration phases. At 60 meters, Alfred had a stride lead ahead of Richardson and the rest of the sprinters. Then Alfred’s speed maintenance to close final 20 meters to the finish line was too much for the rest of the competitors to handle.

All Alfred’s phases in rainy conditions were superior to any other sprinter in the women’s 100 final.

‘I’m thinking of God, my dad, who didn’t get to see me. He passed away in 2013. Dad, this is for you. I miss you. I did it for him, I did it for my coach and God,’ Alfred said.

USA settles for silver in 4×400 mixed relay

SAINT-DENIS, France — The U.S. mixed relay lost the 4×400 mixed relay — but just barely.

The Netherlands’ Femke Bol used a tremendous kick in the last 100 to pull in front of American Kaylyn Brown just before the finish line, finishing in 3:07.43. The Americans, a team made up of Vernon Norwood, Shamier Little, Bryce Deadmon and Brown, settled for silver after running 3:07.74.

Great Britain finished third, claiming the bronze, at 3:08.01.

Fans excited for Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone’s 400-meter hurdle race are likely familiar with Bol. Bol is also a 400 hurdlers, and McLaughlin-Levrone’s biggest competition for gold in Paris. — Lindsay Schnell

Weather for women’s 100 meters

SAINT-DENIS, France — Weather could be a factor Saturday. It is sprinkling at Stade de France and in the low 70s.

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce’s late scratch due to injury

In a video posted on social media, Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, who was a late scratch in the 100-meter semifinals, appears to be explaining to someone why she’s being denied access to the warm-up area.

‘She said they changed the rule yesterday,’ Fraser-Pryce says in the video. ‘How you going to change the rule and then not say? So you’re asking all the athletes who, for whatever reason, don’t stay in the (athlete) village, they can’t come through the gate? We came through this gate yesterday and went through security and it was OK. They want us to go all the way up to where everybody is exiting … that’s crazy!’

In an email, the Paris 2024 press office confirmed to USA TODAY Sports that, ‘in reference to videos circulating online, Paris 2024 can confirm that some athletes tried to enter the warm-up track at Stade de France through the wrong gate. They were redirected to the correct entrance and were able to access the venue.”

Reuters spoke with Jamaican chef de mission Ian Kelly, who told the outlet Fraser-Pryce was ‘not able to compete due to an injury sustained during her final warmup.’ Kelly did not provide details about the injury.

The 100 was going to be Fraser-Pryce’s only individual event at the 2024 Paris Games, as she did not qualify in the 200. (She won silver in the 200 at the 2012 London Olympics.) If healthy, she could still run in the 4×100 relay, where the Jamaicans are the defending gold medalists. — Lindsay Schnell

When is women’s 100 final?

The final in the women’s 100 is at 3:20 p.m. ET.

Julien Alfred heads to 100 final with top time

Saint Lucia’s Julien Alfred beat Sha’Carri Richardson in her second semifinal heat, and it turns out she has the fastest time (10.84) entering the final.

Richardson and Jamaica’s Tia Clayton both ran a 10.89 to have the second-fastest times of the semis. Great Britain’s Daryll Neita posted a 10.97 and Team USA’s Melissa Jefferson ran 10.99 to round out the top five fastest times entering Saturday’s final.

Sha’Carri Richardson advances to 100 finals

The women’s 100 semifinal featured a couple major surprises.

Sha’Carri Richardson got a slow start in her heat and had to play catch-up. Richardson caught most of the other sprinters but Julien Alfred of Saint Lucia was too far in front. Alfred led the race from start to finish and crossed the line in first with a time of 10.84.

Richardson placed second at 10.89 to get the second qualifying spot.

However, the biggest shock was a late scratch from Jamaican sprint legend Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. 

Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce late scratch for 100 semifinals

SAINT-DENIS, France —  Jamaican star Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce was scratched from the women’s 100 meters just before the women’s semifinal.

Fraser-Pryce was not among the women on the track in the second semifinal heat. She was supposed to run in lane five.

Fraser-Pryce is a two-time Olympic gold medalist in the 100.

When does Sha’Carri Richardson run 100 semifinals?

The semifinals in the women’s 100 is at 1:50 p.m. ET. There are three heats in the semifinal. The top two in each heat, plus the next two fastest times advance to the final.

Medal favorites in the women’s 100

Richardson is the gold-medal favorite in the women’s 100, especially after Jamaican star Shericka Jackson scratched from the race earlier this week.

Richardson’s main competition for gold is expected to be Jamaican veteran sprinter Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, Ivory Coast’s Marie-Josée Ta Lou Smith and Julien Alfred of Saint Lucia.

Fraser-Pryce, 37, is a three-time Olympic champion. She won the 100 at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and at the 2012 London Games. She has eight Olympic medals in her standout career.

Ta Lou Smith had the top qualifying time in the opening round at 10.87 and Fraser-Pryce’s 10.92 was the second fastest time of the first round.

Alfred ran a 10.95 and has the fifth fastest time entering the semifinals. Alfred’s season-best time of 10.78 is the third fastest time in the world this year.

Richardson, Fraser-Pryce and Alfred are in semifinal heat two, which promises to be an exciting race.

What other events is Sha’Carri Richardson running in at Paris Olympics?

Richardson is running in the 100 and 4×100 relay at the Paris Olympics.

Richardson placed fourth in the 200 at the U.S. Olympic track and field trials and didn’t qualify for the Olympics in the event.

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SAINT-DENIS, France — The U.S. 4×400 mixed relay team broke the world record in the opening round, but the final had a different outcome at the Paris Olympics.

After breaking the world record in the preliminary round, the USA’s Kaylyn Brown was caught on her anchor leg by Netherlands’ Femke Bol with about 10 minutes to go.

Bol then passed Brown and crossed the line in 3:07.43 to win the mixed relay for the Netherlands. Brown and Team USA’s team featuring Vernon Norwood, Shamier Little, Kaylyn Brown and Bryce Deadmon came in second at 3:07.74. Great Britian rounded out the top with at 3:08.01.

The U.S. team led nearly the entire race but Bol, who runs the 400-meter hurdles, was too strong on the final leg.

“I just went for it,’ Bol said after the race. ‘We just wanted a medal this time, we didn’t think it would be gold, just a medal. Well, we got gold and are the Olympic champions. It is absolutely crazy for a small country like ours.”

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

Team USA had previously set the 4×400 mixed relay record last year at the 2023 world championships before they broke the mark again during the qualifying round. However, they settled for a silver medal in Paris.

The mixed relay was first introduced at the 2017 IAAF World Relays. Team USA finished third in the 4×400 mixed relay at the Tokyo Olympics, which was the first mixed relay competition at an Olympic Games.

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 — Simone Biles has captured another gold medal at the 2024 Paris Olympics, this one in the women’s vault final on Saturday. It’s her third gold medal of these Games, after leading the U.S. to gold in the team final and winning gold in the all-around final.

“Not many people in the world can do it to this level, so once we’re out here, the floor is our stage. It just feels so freeing for us. We’re in our element, we’re having fun and doing what we love to do,” Biles said. “I think that’s why I love it so much.”

Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade won silver, her second silver and third medal overall of these Games. Biles’ teammate Jade Carey won bronze, her second medal here and third of her career.

‘This medal means everything to me,’ Carey said. ‘It was one of my biggest motivators to get back here.’

For her career, it’s Biles’ seventh gold and 10th medal overall, extending her record of most Olympic medals by an American gymnast. Biles also won gold on vault at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

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

In the last individual final event of the day, USA’s Stephen Nedoroscik took home bronze in the pommel horse final. ‘It’s just been unbelievable,’ he said after. ‘I’ve just consistently been on top of the world for like a week now.’

USA TODAY Sports brought you all the live results, scores and highlights. Check it out.

Simone Biles leaves the door open to compete at 2028 Olympics in LA

Minutes after winning gold on vault – that’s her third of the Paris Olympics, for those counting, and seventh overall – Simone Biles left the door open to competing at the Los Angeles Games in 2028. Or, rather, she didn’t close it.

“Never say never. The next Olympics is at home, so you just never know,” she said Saturday night, before starting to laugh. “But I am getting really old.”

Simone Biles vault score

Add another gold medal to Simone Biles’ collection. Biles won her second Olympic title on vault Saturday, adding to the gold she won in 2016. It’s also her 10th Olympic medal and seventh gold. At these Paris Games alone, Biles has already won three medals, all of them gold. And she still has the balance beam and floor exercise finals Monday. 

The gold was a given after Biles did her signature Yurchenko double pike, which is so difficult few men are even doing it. She followed with one of the best Chengs she’s ever done, getting so much hang time the U.S. men’s basketball team that came to watch her in the all-around final would be impressed.

Those vaults gave her a combined score of 15.3, more than 0.300 ahead of Rebeca Andrade of Brazil, who won gold on vault in both Tokyo and at last year’s world championships.

Pommel horse guy Stephen Nedoroscik wins bronze

‘It’s just been unbelievable,’ he said after winning bronze. ‘I’ve just consistently been on top of the world for like a week now.’

While Nedoroscik’s difficulty score of 6.400 wasn’t quite as high as the men who took gold and silver — Rhys McClenaghan of Ireland and Nariman Kurbanov of Kazakhstan — his execution score of 8.900 was good enough to secure the bronze.

Jade Carey vault score

Jade Carey won her second Olympic medal of the Paris Games, taking bronze in vault Saturday afternoon. Carey, 24, finished a solid third behind Biles and Andrade. She hit a Cheng, which is the second-hardest vault being performed today, with her first vault for a score of 14.733. Then she landed an incredibly clean double-twisting Yurchenko with her second attempt to jump ahead of An Chan-ok of North Korea, who took fourth.

This is the only apparatus final for which Carey qualified, though she was also part of the U.S. team that won gold Tuesday. Carey said in qualifying that she had been dealing with an illness and was struggling to keep food down, though her mom said on NBC a few days later that the Oregon State product was feeling better. Saturday’s bronze gives Carey the third Olympic medal of her career; she also won gold at the 2021 Tokyo Games. 

Rebeca Andrade vault score

Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade scored a combined 14.966 on vault, putting up a 15.100 on her first and 14.833 on her second, which earned her silver.

Women’s vault final scores

Each gymnast performs two vaults and their final score is an average of the two. Here are the scores as they come in. Simone Biles went fourth, Jade Carey went go last.

Simone Biles, USA: 15.300 (15.700 on first, 14.900 on second)
Rebeca Andrade, Brazil: 14.966 (15.100 on first, 14.833 on second)
Jade Carey, USA: 14.466 (14.733 on first, 14.200 on second)
An Chang Ok, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea: 14.216 (14.066 on first, 14.366 on second)
Valentina Georgieva, Bulgaria: 13.983 (14.100 on first, 13.866 on second)
Elsabeth Black, Canada: 13.933 (14.100 on first, 12.633 on second)
Yeo Seojeong, Republic of Korea: 13.416 (14.166 on first 12.666)
Shallon Olsen, Canada: 13.366 (14.100 on first, 12.633 on second)

Men’s pommel horse final scores: Ireland’s Rhys McClenaghan wins gold

Here is are scores for the men’s pommel horse final: Ireland’s Rhys McClenaghan (15.33), Kazakhstan’s Nariman Kurbanov (15.433), USA’s Stephen Nedoroscik (15.300), Great Britain’s Max Whitlock (15.200), Ukraine’s Oleg Verniaiev (14.966), Japan’s Takaaki Sugino (14.933), Republic of Korea’s Hur Woong (14.300), Netherlands’ Loran de Munck (13.733).

Men’s floor final scores: Philippines’ Carlos Edriel Yulo wins gold

Carlos Yulo made sure the Philippines’ first gymnastics medal was worth the wait. Yulo won gold in the Olympic floor exercise final. In addition to being the Philippines’ first medal in gymnastics, it’s also only the second gold a Filipino athlete has won in any Olympics. When the last competitor’s score was posted, Yulo burst into tears and sank to the floor. As he left the competition floor, he waved at a fan who was holding a Philippines’ flag. Artem Dolgopyat of Israel won the silver medal and Jake Jarman of Britain claimed the bronze. No American man was in the floor final. 

Simone Biles vault: Yurchenko double pike 

The Biles II is also known as the Yurchenko double pike, one of five moves named after Simone Biles. Vaults are categorized by “families,” which are based on the entry. On Yurchenko vaults, a gymnast does a roundoff onto the takeoff board and a back handspring onto the table. Biles then follows it with a double somersault in the piked position. Few men even try this vault, which is so difficult because of the power it takes to get two somersaults as well as its lack of a bailout. If something goes awry, more likely to land on her head or neck than her knees.

Biles began doing this vault in 2021 but didn’t do it at a worlds or Olympics until the 2023 world championships. With a 6.4 difficulty value, it is the hardest vault in the women’s code. The most difficult vault commonly executed by other gymnasts is valued at 5.6, eight-tenths lower than the Biles II, so doing it gives Biles a huge scoring advantage.

The rest of the field: Ukraine’s Illia Kovtun (14.533), Kazakhstan’s Milad Karimi (14.500), Great Britain’s Luke Whitehouse (14.666), Spain’s Rayderley Zapata (14.333), China’s Zhang Boheng (13.933).

How many Olympic medals does Simone Biles have?

Biles now has won 10 Olympic medals. Seven of her medals are gold.

How many Olympics has Simone Biles been in?

The 2024 Paris Olympics are Simone Biles’ third Olympic Games.

How does gymnastics scoring work?

A gymnastics routine gets two scores: One for difficulty, also known as the D score or start value, and one for execution. Every gymnastics skill has a numerical value, and the D score is the sum total of the skills in a routine. The execution score, or E score, reflects how well the skills were done. A gymnast starts with a 10.0, and deductions for flaws and form errors are taken from there. Add the D and E scores together, and that’s your total for an apparatus. (Vault scores will always be higher because it’s a single skill.)

US womens gymnastics schedule

The U.S. women’s gymnasts team will compete in these event finals.

Simone Biles: all-around, vault, floor exercise, balance beam.
Suni Lee: all-around, uneven bars, balance beam.
Jordan Chiles: floor exercise.
Jade Carey: vault.

How high can Simone Biles jump?

During her floor routine at Olympic gymnastics trials, Simone Biles jumped 12 feet in the air at one point.

Apparatus finals for gymnastics at Olympics

Here is the remaining gymnastics schedule at the Paris Olympics.

Sunday, Aug. 4: Still rings final, uneven bars final, men’s vault final.
Monday, Aug. 5: Parallel bars final, balance beam final, high bar final, women’s floor final

Olympic gymnastics results

Men’s team final: Japan won gold, China won silver and the U.S. won bronze.
Women’s team final: Simone Biles and the U.S. women’s gymnastics team won gold.
Men’s all-around final: Japan’s Shinnosuke Oka won gold. Boheng Zhang and Ruoteng Xiao of China earned silver and bronze, respectively. USA’s Paul Juda finished 14th, Frederick Richard finished 15th.
Women’s all-around final:Simone Biles won gold, Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade won silver, Suni Lee won bronze.

What are the twisties in gymnastics?

Biles missed most of the Tokyo Olympics after developing a case of “the twisties,” which caused her to lose her sense of where she was in the air and jeopardized her physical safety.

Simone Biles’ husband

Simone Biles is married to NFL player Jonathan Owens, who will be at the all-around final today. At the team final on Tuesday, he sat with Biles’ parents and wearing a T-shirt with ‘BILES’ on it and a huge photo of his wife in action on it. He landed in Paris on Tuesday morning. 

During the first rotation of Monday’s team final, Owens was seen with a pen in hand, possibly recording scores, as Biles performed her vault routine. Mic’ed up on NBC’s broadcast, Owens let out a healthy “let’s go!” after Biles recorded a 14.900 on the vault, the highest score among the three U.S. gymnasts.

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NANTERRE, France — Canadian swimmer Summer McIntosh won her fourth medal and third gold at the Paris Olympics, finishing first in the women’s 200-meter individual medley Saturday at Paris La Défense Arena. 

McIntosh out-touched American Kate Douglass and Australia’s Kaylee McKeown, winning in an Olympic-record time of 2:06.56. Douglass earned silver with a time of 2:06.92 and McKeown bronze in 2:08.08.

American Alex Walsh originally finished in bronze medal position but was disqualified for not completing the backstroke leg fully on her back, a World Aquatics representative confirmed. Walsh took the silver in the 200 IM at the Tokyo Olympics.

McIntosh has been one of the swimming stars in Paris after winning gold medals in the 400 individual medley and 200-meter butterfly and silver in the 400-meter freestyle.

Douglas had won gold earlier at the Paris Games in the 200-meter breaststroke and earned silver with the U.S. women’s 4×100-meter freestyle relay team. Bronze medalist McKeown swept the backstroke events earlier this week to make Australian swimming history.

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

In Friday’s semifinal, Walsh was the top qualifier, followed by McIntosh and Douglass in second and third, respectively. The trio was more than a second faster in the semifinal than Great Britain’s Abbie Wood in fourth.

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PARIS – Their Olympics couldn’t have started any worse, but the U.S. women’s 3×3 basketball team has turned its fortunes around just in time to chase a medal.

The U.S. has won five straight games since an 0-3 start and beat China, the world’s No. 1-ranked team, twice on Saturday.

“Those first couple games I just didn’t think our effort was where it needed to be,” Cierra Burdick said after the women’s first win Saturday. “3×3 is a different sport. As much of it can come down to schemes and tactics, a lot of it is just effing wanting it more and gritting it out and working harder and tougher than your opponents and I think we lacked that the first couple games and I think now we’re starting to realize how hard it is to actually get wins.”

The U.S. outscrapped China in the final game of pool play Saturday, winning 14-12 to finish in a four-way tie for second place in the eight-team pool. Germany went 6-1 to earn the one seed, and the U.S., Spain, Canada and Australia all won four games.

The U.S. team of Hamby, Burdick, Hailey van Lith and Rhyne Howard beat Spain, France, Canada and China in pool play.

“We just weren’t like making our lives easy (early on in the tournament),” said Howard, the Atlanta Dream guard who hit a game-winning 3-pointer to beat Canada in pool play. “We were doing things that we were working and then going away from it. Like you could tell we don’t know each other as well as some of the other people here, but every day we’ve continued to stick together and thug it out.”

In the knockout round game Saturday, the U.S. broke open a 7-6 game with four straight points to take a comfortable 11-6 lead with less than six minutes to play. In 3×3 basketball, field goals are worth one point, 3-pointers are worth two and games are 10 minutes long, or the first team to 21.

Hamby started the run with a 3-pointer, made a second driving basket and had an assist on a Burdick basket.

After the game, she told the Olympic news service she “would not change a single thing that has happened” on the way to the medal round.

“We needed those three losses to wake us up and while we may be more talented, we had to figure out a way to dig deep and compete,” she said.

Burdick, who finished with five points and eight rebounds, called the U.S.’s three-game losing streak to start the tournament “a wakeup call.”

“That was the wake-up call that we needed and better to have it earlier than later,” she said.

Canada beat Australia in the other play-in game Saturday, 21-10, and will face top-seeded Germany in Monday’s semifinals.

The U.S. beat Spain for its first win Aug. 1, and Spain lost its final game of pool play, 18-15, to Germany on Saturday.

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

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Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, on Saturday called former President Trump’s offer to debate Vice President Kamala Harris on Fox News in September a ‘masterstroke.’

‘I think it’s great,’ Trump’s vice presidential pick told SiriusXM’s ‘Breitbart News Saturday.’In some ways, it’s a masterstroke because, of course, the Kamala campaign has been saying for a long time that President Trump is afraid to debate Kamala Harris, which, of course, is absurd because the last time he debated their nominee, that nominee withdrew two weeks later.’ 

President Biden pulled out of the race and endorsed Harris as the nominee last month after his weak debate performance in late June drew concerns from Democrats.

Late Friday night, Trump wrote on Truth Social, ‘I have agreed with FoxNews to debate Kamala Harris on Wednesday, September 4th. The Debate was previously scheduled against Sleepy Joe Biden on ABC, but has been terminated in that Biden will no longer be a participant, and I am in litigation against ABC Network and George Slopadopoulos, thereby creating a conflict of interest. 

‘The FoxNews Debate will be held in the Great Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, at a site in an area to be determined. The Moderators of the Debate will be Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum, and the Rules will be similar to the Rules of my Debate with Sleepy Joe, who has been treated horribly by his Party – BUT WITH A FULL ARENA AUDIENCE!’

Trump and Biden had previously been scheduled to debate on Sept. 10 on ABC. 

Vance said Trump has ‘fairly’ said about the previously scheduled debate, ‘I’m not going to do a debate before the Democratic National Convention because maybe they’ll switch out their nominee again.’ 

The Democratic National Convention is scheduled for Aug. 19-22. 

The Ohio senator added that Trump was ‘throwing down the gauntlet of ‘I was willing to go to CNN,’ which is far more hostile to him than any network would be to Kamala Harris, and ‘Kamala Harris, why don’t you come and agree to a debate.

‘The thing that we’ve learned about Kamala, Matt, over the last four years, is she’s incredibly bad if she’s not scripted, right?’ 

Vance added that the final reason he’s thinks ‘it’s so smart for the president’ to want an audience at the debate is ‘he really feeds off of human beings, which is like natural and normal for a political leader.

‘You’re supposed to lead people, and to lead people you actually have to sort of like people and engage with them well,’ he said. ‘So, him having a crowd for this debate, I think, is really important because it will show his natural leadership ability. And it also shows, frankly, that people are kind of turned off by Kamala Harris. So, I think it’s good. Hopefully, it happens, and hopefully Kamala Harris agrees to it. If she doesn’t, then, clearly, she’s the one who’s afraid to debate.’

Harris hit back at Trump’s offer for a new debate on X Saturday, writing, ‘It’s interesting how ‘any time, any place’ becomes ‘one specific time, one specific safe space.’ I’ll be there on September 10th, like he agreed to. I hope to see him there.’

In the spring, Trump had called on Biden for a debate ‘any time, any place.’ 

‘Donald Trump is running scared and trying to back out of the debate he already agreed to and running straight to Fox News to bail him out,’ Harris campaign communications director Michael Tyler told Fox News Digital. ‘He needs to stop playing games and show up to the debate he already committed to on Sept 10.’

Tyler said Harris would be at the previously scheduled ABC debate ‘one way or the other to take the opportunity to speak to a primetime national audience. We’re happy to discuss further debates after the one both campaigns have already agreed to. Mr. Anytime, anywhere, anyplace should have no problem with that unless he’s too scared to show up on the 10th.’

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