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Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill was revealed Friday night as the best player in the NFL as voted on by his peers in NFL Network’s annual countdown of the league’s top 100 players.

Hill is the first wide receiver, and fourth non-quarterback (joining Adrian Peterson, J.J. Watt and Aaron Donald), and to be ranked No. 1 in the top 100 countdown, which is in its 14th season.

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, San Francisco 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey, Kansas City Chiefs quarterback PatrickMahomes and Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett rounded out the top five.

Hill’s league-leading 1,799 yards receiving in 2023 were a career high for the eight-time Pro Bowler and five-time All-Pro selection. Hill has surpassed 1,000 yards receiving in six of his eight NFL seasons. His 13 touchdown receptions also led the NFL in 2023, which was the third season he scored double-digit touchdowns.

In all, there were 20 wide receivers on the Top 100 list for 2024, the most of any position ahead of linebackers (17) and quarterbacks (16).

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Top 100 Players of 2024: Complete list

Tyreek Hill, WR, Miami Dolphins
Lamar Jackson, QB, Baltimore Ravens
Christian McCaffrey, RB, San Francisco 49ers
Patrick Mahomes, QB, Kansas City Chiefs
Myles Garrett, DE, Cleveland Browns
Chris Jones, DT, Kansas City Chiefs
Trent Williams, OT, San Francisco 49ers
T.J. Watt, LB, Pittsburgh Steelers
Travis Kelce, TE, Kansas City Chiefs
Maxx Crosby, DE, Las Vegas Raiders
Fred Warner, LB, San Francisco 49ers
Josh Allen, QB, Buffalo Bills
CeeDee Lamb, WR, Dallas Cowboys
George Kittle, TE, San Francisco 49ers
Jalen Hurts, QB, Philadelphia Eagles
Dak Prescott, QB, Dallas Cowboys
Micah Parsons, LB, Dallas Cowboys
Justin Jefferson, WR, Minnesota Vikings
Roquan Smith, LB, Baltimore Ravens
C.J. Stroud, QB, Houston Texans
A.J. Brown, WR, Philadelphia Eagles
Penei Sewell, OT, Detroit Lions
Amon-Ra St. Brown, WR, Detroit Lions
Dexter Lawrence, DT, New York Giants
Jalen Ramsey, CB, Miami Dolphins
Mike Evans, WR, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Nick Bosa, DE, San Francisco 49ers
Brock Purdy, QB, San Francisco 49ers
Khalil Mack, LB, Los Angeles Chargers
Deebo Samuel, WR, San Francisco 49ers
DaRon Bland, CB, Dallas Cowboys
Quincy Williams, LB, New York Jets
Puka Nacua, WR, Los Angeles Rams
Jordan Love, QB, Green Bay Packers
Josh Hines-Allen, LB, Jacksonville Jaguars
Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Miami Dolphins
Quinnen Williams, DT, New York Jets
Sauce Gardner, CB, New York Jets
Joe Burrow, QB, Cincinnati Bengals
Davante Adams, WR, Las Vegas Raiders
Lane Johnson, OT, Philadelphia Eagles
Matthew Stafford, QB, Los Angeles Rams
Kyle Hamilton, S, Baltimore Ravens
Demario Davis, LB, New Orleans Saints
Ja’Marr Chase, WR, Cincinnati Bengals
Antoine Winfield Jr., S, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Aidan Hutchinson, DE, Detroit Lions
Jared Goff, QB, Detroit Lions
Derrick Henry, RB, Baltimore Ravens
Rashan Gary, LB, Green Bay Packers
Keenan Allen, WR, Chicago Bears
Patrick Surtain II, CB, Denver Broncos
Zack Martin, OG, Dallas Cowboys
Jonathan Allen, DE, Washington Commanders
Brian Burns, LB, New York Giants
Stefon Diggs, WR, Houston Texans
Justin Simmons, S, free agent
Christian Wilkins, DT, Las Vegas Raiders
Bobby Wagner, LB, Washington Commanders
Raheem Mostert, RB, Miami Dolphins
Justin Madubuike, DT, Baltimore Ravens
Bradley Chubb, LB, Miami Dolphins
Jaylen Waddle, WR, Miami Dolphins
Patrick Queen, LB, Pittsburgh Steelers
Jordan Poyer, S, Miami Dolphins
Brandon Aiyuk, WR, San Francisco 49ers
Terron Armstead, OT, Miami Dolphins
Danielle Hunter, DE, Houston Texans
Cooper Kupp, WR, Los Angeles Rams
Amari Cooper, WR, Cleveland Browns
Laremy Tunsil, OT, Houston Texans
Garrett Wilson, WR, New York Jets
Jeffery Simmons, DT, Tennessee Titans
Jessie Bates, S, Atlanta Falcons
Justin Herbert, QB, Los Angeles Chargers
Dre Greenlaw, LB, San Francisco 49ers
Trey Hendrickson, DE, Cincinnati Bengals
Kyren Williams, RB, Los Angeles Rams
Minkah Fitzpatrick, S, Pittsburgh Steelers
Sam LaPorta, TE, Detroit Lions
Kirk Cousins, QB, Atlanta Falcons
Montez Sweat, DE, Chicago Bears
Derwin James, C, Los Angeles Chargers
DK Metcalf, WR, Seattle Seahawks
Tristan Wirfs, OT, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Saquon Barkley, RB, Philadelphia Eagles
Haason Reddick, LB, New York Jets
Chris Lindstrom, OG, Atlanta Falcons
Budda Baker, S, Arizona Cardinals
DeVonta Smith, WR, Philadelphia Eagles
Tariq Woolen, CB, Seattle Seahawks
Aaron Rodgers, QB, New York Jets
Harrison Smith, S, Minnesota Vikings
Trevor Lawrence, QB, Jacksonville Jaguars
Julian Love, S, Seattle Seahawks
Dion Dawkins, OT, Buffalo Bills
Terry McLaurin, WR, Washington Commanders
Cameron Heyward, DT, Pittsburgh Steelers
Lavonte David, LB, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Zaire Franklin, LB, Indianapolis Colts

Previous No.1-ranked players on NFL’s ‘Top 100’

2023: PatrickMahomes

2022: Tom Brady

2021: PatrickMahomes

2020: Lamar Jackson

2019: Aaron Donald

2018: Tom Brady

2017: Tom Brady

2016: Cam Newton

2015: J.J. Watt

2014: Peyton Manning

2013: Adrian Peterson

2012: Aaron Rodgers

2011: Tom Brady

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Continuing a monthlong run of utter dominance, Snell pitched a no-hitter against the Cincinnati Reds, striking out 11 batters in a 3-0 victory for the San Francisco Giants.

Snell, 31, was not quite perfect, walking three batters and needing 108 pitches to navigate eight innings. But he was not to be denied in the ninth.

He punched out Santiago Espinal on a curveball to start the inning, got Jonathan India on a tapper to the mound and ended the game by getting Elly De La Cruz on a fly ball to right field, his teammates mobbing him on the infield at Great American Ballpark.

Friday’s 114-pitch effort capped off a remarkable five-start run for Snell, who ever since coming back from his second stint on the injured list this season has been untouchable: He’s given up two earned runs in 33 innings – a 0.55 ERA – and has struck out 41 batters to 10 walks.

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It’s been a roller coaster for Snell, the reigning National League Cy Young Award winner, in his five months with the Giants. He remained unsigned throughout the winter as hopes for a long-term contract after his award-winning 2023 evaporated.

Snell eventually signed with San Francisco on March 18 for a $32 million salary this season and a $30 million player option for 2025.

As the Giants struggled to a sub-.500 record most of the season, Snell twice spent time on the IL, and as his run of dominance coincided with the Giants’ midseason struggles, rival contenders hoped he’d land on the trade market.

But the Giants held Snell, GM Farhan Zaidi saying the club had the best rotation in the league, and Snell proved them right.

It’s been four years since he was yanked from Game 6 of the 2020 World Series after 5 1/3 innings for the Tampa Bay Rays. Now, he owns the 18th no-hitter in Giants franchise history, and the third in the majors this season, following Houston’s Ronel Blanco and San Diego’s Dylan Cease.

‘What a feeling, man,’ Snell said on the Giants’ postgame show. ‘First time going nine innings. What a way to do it.’

Snell mixed his blazing 97 mph fastball with his trademark big-looping curve, throwing the heater 53 times and the curveball 40 times. He walked a pair in the fifth, but got out of that brief jam with a lineout double play, and was extremely efficient as the game got deeper.

Snell retired the game’s last 13 batters, getting over a big hurdle by dotting a full-count fastball on the inside corner to catch Jeimar Candelario looking for his 10th strikeout to start the seventh. He needed just 11 pitches to retire the last eight batters of the game.

And end a night so rich in significance for a pitcher who’s won a Cy Young Award in each league, yet still had demons to slay.

‘They can’t say it anymore,’ he told reporters in a jubilant Giants clubhouse. ‘Complete game, shutout, no-hitter – leave me alone. Just let me pitch.’

Friday, they did just that, until there were no more outs to get – and no hits on the scoreboard.

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Freedom is what drew Linda Moroz to the United States. It was also why windsurfing intrigued her. 

Using the elements of wind and water to move, the combination of power and finesse, the athleticism, those were all enjoyable to her, too. But being out on the water, going fast, “the sense of freedom,” she said, was the hook.

Vlad Moroz discovered windsurfing in his native Czechoslovakia in the late 1970s. His dad made him a primitive board – a wooden plank connected to a sail – modeled off one they saw in a magazine. When he moved to California a few years later, he saw people flying across Berkeley Marina. 

“I was like, ‘I got to do this,’” Vlad Moroz told USA TODAY Sports. 

Windsurfing brought Linda and Vlad, two refugees who fled Czechoslovakia separately, together in a foreign land. And nearly 40 years later, windsurfing – and that pursuit of freedom – is why their daughter, Daniela Moroz, represents the best chance for Team USA’s first gold medal in sailing since the 2008 Beijing Games. 

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

“They’ve really lived out the American dream, I think,” Daniela Moroz said about her parents. “They want me to do the same in the sense of they want me to just keep working hard, but be enjoying what I’m doing. And then we kind of know success will come with that.” 

“Success” has come early and often for the six-time world-champion who is only 23 years old. Moroz will be part of kiteboarding’s debut as a sailing discipline at the Olympics. 

Track and field Olympics schedule: Every athletics event at Paris Olympics and when it is

“A lot of times, when people think of sailing, they think of grandpa sipping champagne on a yacht,” Moroz said.

What Moroz does could not be more different. 

“It’s super-high performance,” she said. “It’s fast, it’s really technical and really hard, just physically, to do, and you need to be so in tune with the wind and the waves.” 

The burnout hits

Moroz saw the burnout coming. Winning everything for six straight years, most of that while still a teenager, will do that. She won six formula kite world championships in a row (2016-2022 there was no 2020 competition due to COVID-19). 

Moroz was 15 when she won her first world championship and became the youngest recipient and first female kiteboarder to receive the US Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year award, an honor she’s received four times. 

While juggling high school, she kept winning, and Moroz attended the University of Hawaii to compete for the Rainbow Warriors’ sailing team. She stepped away from school – and the pre-class surf sessions and post-studying hikes – to pursue Paris two years ago but plans on returning after the Games.

“It is not real life there,” she said.

A dose of reality hit Moroz last year. She overtrained. The allure of racing evaporated. Even though she loves kiteboarding, she felt herself falling out of it. By finishing third at the Olympic Test Event in July 2023, she qualified for the 2024 Paris Olympics. All she wanted to do was go home and sleep. Moroz finished fifth at the world championships. It took all of her willpower to not break down before going on the water, she said. 

A lengthy winter break commenced. She’s spent time with a sports psychologist since and done traditional therapy. Journaling has also been helpful. 

“I was speaking to myself so horribly and, to think I was still trying to compete at my best while speaking to myself in that way and in the way I was feeling, I was like, ‘How was I even doing that?’” Moroz said. “And compared to how I feel now and how I talk to myself now and how I am so much more aware of these things.” 

And Moroz said she is in a much better place, mentally, entering the Olympics. The excitement of the Olympics has her buzzing and itching to get back on the water for her next training sessions. She’s spent most of 2024 in training and living in Marseille, France, where the sailing events at these Summer Games take place.

Moroz is mature enough to know her life is not like many others her age. 

Olympic men’s basketball bracket: Standings, what to know, what’s next at Paris Olympics

“I’m just like, ‘Oh yeah, I’m just living in the south of France for the summer, having my croissants and baguettes every morning and going out sailing every day.’ That’s so cool,” she said. “And I think it’s easy to forget that.”

In many ways, Moroz is an average 23-year-old; she is a Swiftie and listens to “All Too Well (10 Minute Version)” before every race. She likes dirty chai lattes, plays tennis and swims. Both tennis and swimming have their sailing benefits; the quick reaction time and technicality of tennis, the strength and fitness that allows her to keep her kite in the air on days with little wind from swimming.

She’ll fire up Mario Kart after a long day on the water. 

“You might think this is dumb,” Moroz said. “But there’s a lot of parallels with sailing, actually.” 

The timeless video game emphasizes the importance of a good start to evade the chaos, which comes with the territory of with uncharted and uncontrollable variables. Being hit with a shell is like an unfortunate shift of the wind that helps people behind pull ahead. 

“It’s fun because you can socialize, and not spend too much energy,” Moroz said. 

Which is a concern of hers when she’s not on the water. Moroz has been trying to keep weight on – Linda has dutifully taken on the role in the weeks before the Olympics to make sure her caloric intake is high enough – to the point she purchased an e-bike so she can still enjoy bike rides with her boyfriend while minimizing exertion. Otherwise, she would try too hard to go faster than him. 

“I am super competitive too, so whatever I’m going to be doing, I’m going to be going all out,” Moroz said.

The need for speed

If Moroz didn’t kiteboard, she would be a downhill ski racer. 

“I just love going fast,” Moroz said, sounding like a Ricky Bobby impersonator. 

Moroz’s parents took her skiing as a child to Heavenly Mountain by Lake Tahoe, where she learned how to ski. When the Moroz family wasn’t in the mountains, they were by the water. 

Summer trips revolved around windsurfing and the beach. 

“She was definitely a water person,” Vlad Moroz said. “She always loved being in the water.” 

When she was 11, Daniela Moroz tried kiteboarding – a sport that had been growing in popularity in watersports circles – for the first time. Sandy Parker, who operates a kiteboarding school called “Kitopia” out of Sherman Island, California, was Moroz’s instructor and previously had been skeptical of teaching kids because kiteboarding can be dangerous. Quick thinking and decisiveness are must-have attributes. Moroz was a natural and soaked up Parker’s information. 

“She acted like she was 14 or something,” Parker told USA TODAY Sports. 

Parker started a racing clinic that met every other Thursday at the St. Francis Yacht Club. She encouraged Linda to bring Daniela, who would be competing against teenagers. The early wins were finishing the races. Then she started beating some kids. And more kids. And then everyone, even the guys. 

Sailing is a male-dominated sport, Moroz said, although at the Olympic level it is gender-equitable. Regardless, Parker made sure Moroz had the right mindset. 

“Don’t worry about beating the women,” she told her, “I want you to beat the men. Because that was really the only competition that we had at the time.”

Moroz had a few timing advantages that helped propel her to the top of kiteboarding. She started racing as foiling became popular and benefited from the level playing field as racers learned that type of board. Moroz also hails from the Bay Area, which is one of the most intense places to learn to kiteboard, Parker said. 

“If you can kite in the Bay Area, or even the delta where I teach, everything is so much easier,” Parker said. “She definitely got some intense training through the lessons at the delta.” 

Learning how to race beyond Crissy Field under the Golden Gate Bridge, Moroz became adept at dealing with other factors beyond the wake and the wind. Strong tides, tanker traffic and ferries make it all the more difficult. 

Somebody told Linda to take Daniela to Baja in Mexico for the Hydrofoil Pro Tour stop there. It lined up with Daniela’s spring break, and she finished second as a 14-year-old. The next year, the Hydrofoil circuit stopped in San Francisco during Moroz’s summer break, and Moroz also competed in Mauritius that August. There, she defeated Russian Elena Kalinina, who was then considered the top women’s kiteboarder. 

That result implored Moroz to tack on another stop to the schedule and compete at the world championships. And in September 2016, Moroz, then 15 years old, bested the rest of the field in China for her first title. Vlad Moroz accompanied her to China, but he felt uncomfortable the entire time being back in a Communist country. 

The American Dream

Leaving Czechoslovakia – which split into two states, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, after the fall of the Soviet Union – was not easy. There was no legal emigration. At the time, it was easier to go through former Yugoslavia, because its borders to Austria and Italy were not as well-guarded.

Both Linda and Vlad went through Yugoslavia. How they did it was quite different. 

“I decided to basically backcountry ski from Yugoslavia to Italy,” Vlad Moroz said. 

It was February, and the snow offered him the chance to strap into some skis once he had advanced close enough to the legal border crossing on a main highway. He went through the woods and to the West. A few hours later, he was in Italy. 

“I know some people got arrested trying to cross, but I was lucky enough that I avoided the guards,” Vlad Moroz said. 

Linda Moroz’s childhood in Czechoslovakia included activities such as ballet and rhythmic gymnastics. But she knew that if she truly wanted to be in control of her life as an adult, she had to leave. Her family took risks by taking vacations to West Germany. She realized that what she had been told about non-Soviet countries was a lie.

“Because there’s always somebody listening,” Linda said of her childhood.

There was no internet, so Linda and a group of four friends decided the U.S. Embassy in Yugoslavia was their best bet. They could only take a backpack and pretend they were departing for a two-week trip. Bringing a winter jacket would have been suspicious because it was July. Her four-person traveling party hitchhiked from Zagreb to Belgrade, where they were told a refugee camp could take them. They waited there for six months. One of her friends had an uncle living in San Francisco, so that was where they were sent. 

Linda was about to turn 19 as she traversed the world. Vlad made his escape when he was 23 – the same age Daniela is now. Growing up, she didn’t grasp the significance of her parents’ journeys. 

“The more you kind of learn about it in school and in history classes, then the more you realize what a different time that was and just how crazy it all is,” Moroz said. “Or for my dad, I can’t imagine cross country skiing across the Austrian mountains to freedom. It is just crazy.”

One day, near the marina used by the Cal Sailing Club in Berkeley, Linda heard two brothers speaking Czech – they introduced her to windsurfing. Vlad also settled in the Bay Area and his interest in the “flying” people also led him to this mini-Czech community.   

“For some reason, we ended up like four Czechs at this Berkeley Marina,” Linda said. 

This is how Linda and Vlad met. They were friends for years prior to dating. They wed in 1993 and Daniela arrived in 2001. 

When Moroz’s parents immigrated, Czechoslovakia was a different place than it is now, as is the case with the U.S., Vlad Moroz said. Daniela grew up knowing the Czech Republic as the place her grandparents lived; Linda’s two closest friends still live there, and they often returned as a family. At this point, Linda considers California home. She has been in the U.S. for 40 years and left before she was 20. To her, the “American Dream” is expressing one’s opinion freely without fear of persecution. 

“That, to me, means freedom,” she said. 

Vlad’s idea of the “American Dream” isn’t as rosy. He thought it was not needing to be rich to enjoy life. 

“I feel, unfortunately, that’s not the case anymore,” he said. 

Vlad always told Daniela about the bubble she grew up in. America is not like other places. California is not like other places in America. 

“I think she understands it way better now after she’s been traveling a lot of places,” Vlad Moroz said.

None of that diminished the gratitude he has for his life. He is a retired engineer who spends most of his days on the water now. And his daughter is representing the U.S. at the Olympics. 

“It’s incredible. Because, in a way, (the U.S.) made me who I am,” Linda Moroz said. “And now she will experience it as her home country and, and you know, represent my dream in a way, my real country in a way. So it just means a lot.”

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The newest statue of late Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant pays honor to the special bond between him and his daughter, Gianna.

The Lakers and the Bryant family unveiled the second of three planned statues outside the team’s home Crypto.com Arena on Friday. The statue is of Kobe and Gianna Bryant when they attended a Lakers game and the father embraced his daughter. The statue also has angel wings behind the Bryants. In front of the statue is a plaque that reads ‘Gianna Bryant, Inspirational Icon for Girls in Sports’ and ‘Kobe Bryant, Proud Supporter of Women in Sports,’ and a quote from Bryant.

‘Gianna is a beast. She’s better than I was at her age. She’s got it. Girls are amazing. I would have five more girls if I could. I’m a girl dad,’ it reads from the ‘most valuable girl dad.’

Vanessa Bryant explains meaning of statue

The statue unveiling came on the special day of Aug. 2, 2024, also known as 8/2/24, which is the combination of Bryant’s jersey numbers in the NBA (8 and 24) and Gianna’s number when she played basketball (2).

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Kobe and Gianna died in a helicopter crash on Jan. 26, 2020.

‘We merged two iconic courtside moments of Kobe and Gigi,’ Vanessa Bryant said in a private ceremony, according to the Lakers. ‘Gianna has her gorgeous smile on her face and Kobe is kissing the top of her head while wearing the Philadelphia Eagles beanie that Gigi gifted him for Christmas. He’s also wearing a WNBA hoodie he wore courtside to the game with Gigi. Kobe was the first NBA player to wear that orange hoodie to a big game and that was to show his support for Gigi’s dreams and for women across all sports. That was a moment he shared with Gigi that will always be a powerful representation of the movement towards equality that was always so important to our family.

“Kobe was the ultimate girl dad and Gigi was the ultimate daddy’s girl,’ she added. 

The wife of the basketball Hall of Famer said the statue should serve as a reminder to continue to help young girls achieve greatness in sports, and let them know they can not only do anything a boy can do, but also be greater at it.

‘If young girls can see professional women play, they know they have the potential to be them. They know those ambitions aren’t just dreams but will become a reality. Let’s build up the next generation of athletes. It’s what Gigi and Kobe would want us to do,’ Vanessa Bryant said.

The statue will be available for public viewing Saturday morning.

Three statues are planned to be put up outside of the Lakers’ home arena. The first one, unveiled in February, shows Bryant wearing the No. 8 jersey in a pose from his 81-point game, a pose Vanessa said he chose. The third, which has does not have a date for its unveiling, will be of Bryant in his No. 24 jersey.

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CLERMONT, Fla. – Sitting underneath the sun on a humid central Florida day, Keisha Caine Bishop reminisced when her once teenage sons, Josephus and Noah Lyles approached her with an inconceivable proposition.

“In 10th grade they wanted to go professional out of high school and I was like are you crazy,” Caine Bishop recounted to USA TODAY Sports.

Noah and his younger brother weren’t crazy. In July of 2016 when Noah was 19 years old, he and his younger brother, Josephus, 18 at the time, turned professional and signed a contract with Adidas instead of competing collegiately for the University of Florida.

“I had to go back and apologize,” Caine Bishop said. “I realized that’s not fair to kill somebody’s dream, especially if they are willing to do the work, and they were willing to do the work.”

Noah and Josephus have been running professionally since.

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

Noah’s blossomed into the fastest man in the world. At the 2023 track and field world championships, Noah accomplished the coveted sprint double by winning the 100-meter dash with a time of 9.83 seconds and the 200 after crossing the finish line at 19.52. He was also a member of Team USA’s gold-medal winning 4×100-relay team. He was the first American to accomplish the world championship sprint double since Tyson Gay in 2007.

Noah doubled down on his fastest man in the world status when he equaled his personal-best 100 time of 9.83 and won gold at the 2024 U.S. Olympic track and field trials. A few days later, he broke the trials meet record and clocked a world-leading time 19.53 in the 200 to solidify his spot in both events at the Paris Olympics.

“Right now, he’s a world champion in the 100 and 200 meters,” Noah’s coach, Lance Brauman, told USA TODAY Sports. “We are trying for him to be the best sprinter he can be.”

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Journey to Paris

A pivotal juncture in Noah Lyles’ life came in preparation for the Tokyo Olympics.

The COVID-19 pandemic coupled with racial injustices across America caused Lyles to fall into depression. He sought the help of therapists and was prescribed antidepressant medication. When the postponed Tokyo Olympics got underway in 2021, Lyles had just gotten off his antidepressants.

A gold-medal favorite in the 200 meters, Lyles took home a bronze medal in his signature event. Overall, the Tokyo Olympics was a disappointing for the U.S. men’s track and field team, which saw the men’s squad earn only two gold medals.

“It was a challenge because I was coming off my antidepressant medication. It was tough to find the balance of getting excited and staying calm throughout the year,” Lyles said to USA TODAY Sports.

Lyles has since been open about his bout with depression.

“It’s present but it’s not uncontrollable. It’s not to the point where I need medication to aid me and helping (me) to find the right mental stability. I still have two therapists who I talk to very constantly,” Lyles said. “Now, not only do I believe I’ve figured out how to get through hard times like that and reaching out for help and keeping people I need close to me, I’ve also figured out how to evolve.”

Lyles’ mother, who also has clinical depression, is proud of her son for using his platform to speak about his depression because of the positive impact it will have, especially in the Black community where there remains a stigma attached to mental health. According to WebMD, for Black people who have depression, it typically tends to be more severe, persistent and more difficult to treat. Yet, just one out of three Black adults with mental illness get treatment for it.

“It makes me so angry in the Black community,” Caine Bishop said. “That’s still the mindset. We have to get rid of the stigma. … So yes, it makes me extremely proud. I don’t want anybody to struggle the way I struggled.”

‘Ignited a fire

Lyles has six world championship gold medals. He’s won three consecutive world championship titles in the 200. But his resume is void of an Olympic gold medal. The trials and tribulations in the buildup to the Tokyo Olympics have motivated him.

Lyles broke the American record in the 200, running a personal-best time of 19.31 the next year in 2022, and four of his six world championship gold medals have come after the Tokyo Olympics.

“After getting the (Olympic) bronze, I feel like that ignited a fire that I’m still running on to this day,” Lyles said. “Since then, I’ve been grabbing golds left and right (and) broke (the) American (200) record.”

The fire is still raging rapidly for Lyles, and he has no plans to extinguish it for the foreseeable future.

Earlier this year on the heels of the 2023 world championships, Noah inked an extension with Adidas that in overall value made the deal the richest contract in the sport of track and field since Usain Bolt.

The Bolt distinction is relevant. Bolt is track and field’s most recent mega star. Lyles aspires to reach a similar status.

Like Bolt, Lyles is a showman on and off the track. He most recently made an Olympic trials entrance with hip-hop legend Snoop Dogg and revealed Yu-Gi-Oh! trading cards under his uniform prior to winning two gold medals to qualify for the Paris Olympics.

The attention Lyles is creating is strategic. It helps increase track and field’s popularity − ratings for the 2024 track and field trials was up 38% from the previous trials in 2021 − and simultaneously puts more eyeballs on the fastest man in the world.

“Oh yeah, that was the goal the whole time. It was very calculated. It didn’t happen by accident. …We’ve planned this for years. We’ve made sure not only people know my name in this sport but outside of it,” Lyles said. “Some things are a little more random, like how much attention some comments get, but also using that to my advantage. Knowing that people have more eyes on me, means that I can direct them in the direction that I want them to go and that’s the important part that I see.

‘As much as I am a track and field athlete, I’m just as much a marketer. And I see myself as a big brand. For the brand to be successful, I have to keep gaining and opening up to new territory. Anything I do, I want to do to the best of my ability. …There have been tons of people who have run fast. But how many can you say were very marketable? Even if you look at some of the champions who you’ve had of late, they’ve held the title, but what have they done with it? I take my job of holding the title of world’s fastest man right now very serious.”

Chasing Usain Bolt

It’s ironic that Lyles’ favorite French word isbibliothèque,” which is library in English. Lyles doesn’t speak French nor is he an avid library goer, but he likes the pronunciation of the word.

Bolt rewrote the track and field record books before he retired in 2017. Bolt’s times of 9.58 in the 100 and 19.19 in the 200 are world records. The Jamaican superstar, whose last Olympics was in 2016, owns eight Olympic gold medals.

Lyles wants what Bolt has: Olympic gold medals and world records.

“It’s very motivating. You can’t claim to be the greatest without having an Olympic gold medal to go with it,’ he said.

Lyles’ personal-best times are 9.81 in the 100 and the American record he set in the 200 (19.31). Italy’s Lamont Marcell Jacobs ran a 9.80 in the 100 to win the gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics. In the 200, Canada’s Andre De Grasse sped through the finish line in 19.62 to top the Olympic podium.

If Lyles runs new personal bests in each event, he’ll likely be the first male sprinter to achieve the Olympic sprint double since Bolt did it at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics (Bolt also won gold as a member of Jamaica’s 4×100 relay team in Rio). 

“The best of the best have some things in common. They are internally driven,” Brauman said. “They want to be the best that they can be. They want to be great because it fulfills them more so than anything from the outside.”

Brauman and Lyles have emphasized strength training in preparation for the Paris Olympics. The extra strength will enable Lyles to apply more force into the track, which will help him improve his start and acceleration. 

“His No. 1 strength is his top end speed. He’s very technically good at top speed, which enables him to maintain it. Not only top end speed but speed maintenance,” Brauman said. “I’d say that first 30 is where we are putting a lot of emphasis in. That’s where he has the biggest gap to continue to improve.

“We’re gonna do the things we think we need to do to have him ready to run as fast as he’s capable of running.”

Lyles hopes his increased strength will help him be crowned an Olympic champion for the first time, and maybe even have a chance at Bolt’s world records. He wants to be a track and field legend, like Bolt. Lyles, who turns 27 on July 18, doesn’t plan on Paris being his final Olympics, either. He yearns to compete at 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles and perhaps the 2032 Olympics.

He’s motivated to go down as one of the greats and have his name etched in books inside the bibliothèque. 

“I want to be the best at track and field,” Lyles said. “I also want to be the most recognized athlete in track and field.”

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“I’d like to be performing better,” he said. “I’m not. I trained to go faster than the times I’m going. I know that so, yeah, it’s tough, a little heartbreaking, a little heartbreaking for sure.”

In the final of the men’s 50 freestyle, an event in which he set the Olympic record in winning the gold medal at the last Olympics, Dressel finished a disappointing sixth. His time of 21.61 seconds was well off the 21.07 he swam three years ago, and also slower than the 21.41 he swam at the U.S. trials in June. 

He soon was back in the pool for the semifinals of the 100 butterfly, another event he dominated in Tokyo, setting the world record while winning another of his five gold medals at those Games.

He finished fifth in his heat. He ended up 13th overall. Only the top eight made Saturday’s final. He was out. His time Friday night of 51.57 seconds was nearly half a second too slow for eighth place. And it was extremely slow for him; Dressel swam 49.45 seconds in Tokyo and 50.19 seconds at the U.S. trials six weeks ago.

“Very obviously not my best work,” he said. “I had a real lot of fun though, I can honestly say that. It hasn’t been my best week, I don’t need to shy away from that. The racing’s been really fun here. Walking out for that 50, 100 fly, it’s special, I don’t want to forget that. I’d like to be quicker, obviously, yeah, not my week, that’s alright.”

Dressel, 27, who has taken time away from his sport and spoken openly about his struggles with the pressures and mental health challenges he has faced, said no matter how grueling the evening had been, he was finding happiness in it. 

“Just seeing the moment for what it is instead of relying on just the times,” he said. “I mean, that’s a good bit off my best, good bit off my best right there and it felt like it. I think just actually enjoying the moment, I’m at the Olympic Games, I won’t forget that.”

The year after the Tokyo Olympics, Dressel pulled out halfway through the 2022 world championships and didn’t swim for eight months. He came back for the 2023 U.S. world championship trials but failed to make the team. 

“There’s so much pressure in one moment, your whole life boils down to a moment that can take 20, 40 seconds,” Dressel said at those trials. “How crazy is that? For an event that happens every four years. I wouldn’t tell myself this during the meet, but after the meet, looking back, I mean, it’s terrifying.

“The easiest way to put it, my body kept score. There’s a lot of things I shoved down and all came boiling up, so I didn’t really have a choice. I used to pride myself on being able to shove things down and push it aside and plow through it. It worked for a very long time in my career. I got results from 17, 19, 21, until I couldn’t do that anymore. So it was a very strange feeling. … It wasn’t just one thing where I was like I need to step away, it was a bunch of things that kind of came crumbling down at once and I knew that was my red flag right there, multiple red flags, there was a giant red flag.”

Because he has been so open about his struggles, he was asked if he thought he would have been able to be having fun while swimming these times were it not for the work he has done since Tokyo. 

“Nope, I wouldn’t be at this meet,” he said. “I probably would have been done swimming a long time ago to be honest. Still a work in progress, still have hopeful years ahead of me looking forward to, but a lot went into this just to be here.”

That said, all was not lost. Dressel won a gold medal with the U.S. men’s 4 x 100 freestyle relay last weekend, swam the prelims for the U.S. mixed medley relay that qualified fastest for the final and will swim in the men’s medley relay this weekend. 

“Tough day, tough day at the office,” he said. “That’s alright, let’s get ready for the relay.” 

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PARIS – There’s a term we use a lot in sports for people who have a natural gift so unique, and so far above what we expect to see even from the best athletes in their field, that they immediately stand out as different.

We call them freaks.

I’ve been thinking about that a lot ever since the usual bad-faith actors began to attack a young woman – yes, woman – from Algeria, needing little more than a short video clip, a vague piece of propaganda from a discredited and Russian-backed sports organization and their own biases about what a female body is supposed to look like.

It’s the story that has, at least for a little while, taken over the Olympics. And it was probably a predictable one in these times when culture warriors and grifters have managed to elevate an agenda against transgender people into a political issue, saying over and over that men will take over women’s sports – even though there is no actual evidence that this is happening anywhere in the world beyond some isolated, outlier incidents.

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But this is what they do. They search for these things, blow them up on social media without any context and exploit them for outrage, clicks and political talking points to distract from actual issues that impact people’s lives.

Imane Khelif was a perfect target. Even among female boxers, she stands out for her musculature and jawline. She undoubtedly landed a big punch against Italy’s Angela Carini, who abandoned the fight in less than a minute, and it is jarring on video even though any competent world-class boxer could have dealt a blow to an opponent who dropped their hands and exposed their chin the way Carini did.

No matter, it only took seconds for corners of the internet and the press with loud megaphones to conclude that a man had knocked out a woman at the Olympics. And they had a vague claim from a boxing organization called the IBA that Khelif failed a gender test last year to back them up.

So off we went. The British tabloid press, in particular, and right-wing blogs in America had their story: Shoot first, ask questions later.

Of course, it only took a handful of hours for that narrative to fall apart.

Khelif is and has always been a woman from Algeria, a Muslim country where there are no LGBTQ rights, and sex-reassignment procedures and medications aren’t a thing. The IBA is a puppet organization for the Kremlin that disqualified Khelif from a tournament in 2023 with no due process, a few days after she beat a promising Russian boxer, claiming that she had failed a gender test despite competing in the sport for years without any controversy. The IBA, having been stripped of any role in Olympics boxing because of ethical issues, has every reason to sow chaos and discord at these Olympics – a typical Russian move.

If anything, Khelif’s story is remarkable, coming from a rural village and selling scrap metal to afford bus fare so she could train to be a boxer, even though her father disapproved. Now, a misguided global outcry and harassment from bigots could very well force her to withdraw from the Olympic boxing tournament just so this will all go away.

Nobody in the sport wants to touch this now. On Friday, the other boxer banned by the IBA for a supposed gender test, Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting, won her featherweight match by unanimous decision in the round of 16 and sped past the media without doing interviews. One of her coaches said a few words about the fight in Chinese but generally shrugged at other questions. Lin’s opponent from Uzbekistan was crying and left the building quickly. A few other boxers said they would only talk about their bouts.

So that’s where things are. But what we need to talk about is where they’re going

Is this what every Olympics is going to be now? A hunt for people who might have relatively obscure conditions that make them look a certain way or help them perform a certain way lest they be accused of being transgender, spark international hysteria and potentially ruin lives? What kind of Olympics would that be?

That’s why the idea of “freaks” in sports seems so relevant in a way that I’d never quite thought about before this controversy.

We don’t question why someone grows to 7-foot tall with unnatural agility for their size. We don’t give a second thought to someone having naturally greater lung capacity than their competitors to get them to the finish line first in a marathon. We don’t say that someone has an unfair advantage in the swimming pool because they have abnormally massive feet to propel them or because their body makes far below the average amount of lactic acid.

What we say is that they hit the genetic lottery. We call them freaks, and we mean it as a compliment.

But that doesn’t seem to apply when it comes to women whose bodies might make more testosterone than their competitors, or whose chromosome structure might look like a man’s even though they have women’s body parts and are considered women in every other possible way.

This stuff, by the way, isn’t particularly uncommon when you’re talking about elite athletes, and it’s definitely not new. In a recent podcast from Scientific American, reporter Rose Eveleth talked about how as soon as women were allowed to run track in the Olympics in 1928, those who looked more masculine were eyed with suspicion.

According to Eveleth, newspapers even wrote at the time that Japan’s Hitomi Kinue “should be playing for the Chicago Bears.”

So this kind of thing eventually leads to women being made to have their naked bodies inspected before they were allowed to compete. When they figured out that wasn’t a good idea, chromosome tests became the standard.

But that led to other problems, including a decent number of women showing up to competitions with no idea their biology was different only to find out – surprise! – that they have male chromosomes. It could also work the other way: There are men with female chromosomes, so how do you keep them out of women’s competitions if that’s the standard?

That kind of testing ended in 1999, and the idea of a test to ensure that only an XX chromosome female can compete in women’s sports is not where this discussion is going to end up.

“I don’t think anyone wants to see a return to some of those scenes,” IOC spokesman Mark Adams said. “This is a minefield. Everyone wants a black and white explanation. That explanation does not exist.”

Some sports have come to an agreement on how these so-called “differences in sex development” are regulated in their sports through testing, testosterone suppression drugs and other means. But where’s the line of what’s fair?

And, more broadly, do we really need one at all? If a woman’s natural biology helps her become great at sports, is that something we should be messing with? We certainly don’t do it with men.

These are the kinds of moral, scientific and intellectual questions we should be asking ourselves in the wake of this women’s boxing fiasco. Sadly, the anti-trans crusaders are more focused on issues that don’t really matter on any significant scale and making pariahs out of women who have done absolutely nothing wrong.

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Simone Biles and Team USA have had a busy week, starting with their gold medal performance Tuesday in the women’s gymnastics team final. Biles then followed that up with her gold medal Thursday in the individual all-around.

Biles appeared to tweak her calf during warm-ups on the floor exercise during qualifiers Sunday but has not appeared to be hampered by the injury in either team or all-around finals. Biles, 27, has more Olympic medals than any American gymnast in history and will have more chances to add to her total in the event finals, where she will compete in the vault, balance beam and floor exercise — starting with vault on Saturday.

Here’s everything you need to know about Biles’ schedule for Saturday.

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

Is Simone Biles competing today?

Yes. Simone Biles will compete in the vault final at the 2024 Paris Olympics on Saturday, Aug. 3. Biles, who is considered one of the top vaulters in the world, is a strong contender to medal.

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How did Simone Biles fare in the individual all-around final Thursday?

Simone Biles competed in the all-around final Thursday. She won her second gold medal of the Paris Games and her second career all-around gold after winning in the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Who has more Olympic medals than Biles?

Biles won her ninth Olympic medal Thursday, after earning gold in the all-around final. Swimmers Katie Ledecky won her 13th career Olympic medal on Thursday to set a new record for most all-time by an American woman. Swimmers Natalie Coughlin, Jenny Thompson and Dara Torres each have 12 total Olympic medals, tied for second most by American women. Track and field star Allyson Felix won 11 medals, including seven golds.

The woman with the most Olympic medals is gymnast Larisa Latynina. Competing for the Soviet Union, Latynina won 18 total medals, including nine golds, across the 1956, 1960 and 1964 Olympics.

Full Olympics gymnastics schedule for Saturday, August 3

Men’s floor exercise final: 9:30 a.m. ET
Women’s vault final: 10:20 a.m. ET
Men’s pommel horse final: 11:16 a.m. ET

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Katie Ledecky has already become the most decorated American woman in Olympic swimming history, but she’ll have one more opportunity at the 2024 Paris Olympics to add to her trophy case. 

After dominating and winning gold in the 1,500-meter freestyle in an Olympic-record time, taking silver in the 4×200-meter freestyle relay and bronze in the 400-meter freestyle, Ledecky will swim in the final of perhaps her signature event, the 800-meter freestyle, on Saturday night.

She will go for her fourth consecutive Olympic gold in the same event, a feat no female swimmer has ever accomplished.

Ledecky’s reign of dominance is so unprecedented that she was both the youngest woman (she was 15 at London in 2012) and the oldest woman (24 at Tokyo 2020) to win Olympic gold in the event. 

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

What event will Katie Ledecky compete in today?

Ledecky’s final race of the 2024 Paris Olympics is the women’s 800-meter freestyle final. 

She finished first in her qualifying heat on Friday.

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When will Katie Ledecky compete today?

The women’s 800-meter freestyle final is scheduled to start at 3:09 p.m. ET (9:09 p.m. in Paris).

Katie Ledecky’s 800 free results at the Olympics

2012 London: Gold (8:14.63)
2016 Rio de Janeiro: Gold (8:04.79, set current world record)
2020 Tokyo: Gold (8:12.57)
2024 Paris: Final set for Aug. 3

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The Pro Football Hall of Fame will immortalize another class in Canton, Ohio, on Saturday.

Seven players will join those already enshrined at the iconic museum in northeastern Ohio to bring the total number of Hall of Famers to 378. As part of the festivities, the enshrinees will make induction speeches, be presented with the busts that will enter the Hall of Fame museum and be wearing their golden jackets, which will have been presented at the Gold Jacket Dinner the night before.

Members are chosen by the Hall of Fame Selection Committee, which consists of a media member from each city with an NFL team (including two in New York and Los Angeles to match their two teams), as well as 17 at-large delegates and one representative from the Pro Football Writers of America. The Hall of Fame Selection Committee meets annually shortly before the Super Bowl to elect new members, who are announced during the NFL Honors ceremony.

Here’s everything you need to know about the 2024 Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinement ceremony:

When is the Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinement ceremony?

The members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024 will be enshrined in a ceremony Saturday, Aug. 3 at noon ET at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium in Canton.

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What channel is the Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinement ceremony on?

The enshrinement ceremony for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024 will air on both NFL Network and ESPN.

How can I stream the Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinement ceremony online?

Viewers can stream the Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinement ceremony at NFL.com and ESPN.com and also on the NFL Network and ESPN apps. Streaming also available on Fubo.

Who is going into the Pro Football Hall of Fame?

Dwight Freeney, defensive end/linebacker (Indianapolis Colts, 2002-12; San Diego Chargers, 2013-14; Arizona Cardinals, 2015-16; Seattle Seahawks, 2017; Detroit Lions, 2017)

Randy Gradishar, linebacker (Denver Broncos, 1974-83)

Devin Hester, return specialist/wide receiver (Chicago Bears, 2006-13; Atlanta Falcons, 2014-15; Baltimore Ravens, 2016; Seahawks, 2016)

Andre Johnson, wide receiver (Houston Texans, 2003-14; Colts, 2015; Tennessee Titans, 2016)

Steve McMichael, defensive tackle (New England Patriots, 1980; Chicago Bears, 1981-93; Green Bay Packers, 1994)

Julius Peppers, defensive end/linebacker (Carolina Panthers, 2002-09; Bears, 2010-13; Packers, 2014-16; Panthers, 2017-18)

Patrick Willis, linebacker (San Francisco 49ers, 2007-14)

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