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PARIS — Olympic organizers canceled triathlon training for the swimming leg for the second day in a row Monday because of Seine river pollution levels, yet said they were ‘confident’ medal events would be held this week.

Paris 2024 and World Triathlon said in a joint statement that ‘the priority is the health of the athletes.’ They said heavy rainfall in Paris on July 26 and 27 was affecting the pollution in the waterway.

Heavy downpours have exacerbated the Seine’s E.coli bacteria levels. France has spent more than $1.5 billion trying to make sure the Seine is ready for the triathlon and marathon swimming events. The men’s individual triathlon is scheduled to start Tuesday at 8:00 a.m. local time, with the women’s individual event to be held on Wednesday.

E.coli bacteria can be linked to rain. Paris had a very wet spring. The Seine consistently failed water-quality tests until earlier in July. One option for organizers is to delay outdoor swimming events by a day. As a last resort, they will cancel the swimming leg. Marathon swimming could be moved to a river east of Paris.

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

On Monday, a variety of boats and watercraft of all shapes and sizes could be seen from the Pont Alexandre III deck arch bridge that spans the Seine and allows for views of where the Olympic outdoor swimming events will take place. Several of them were filled with people holding long rods with chemistry-beaker-style cups attached to them that they were plunging into the river. Large inflatable dinghies, known as RIBs, moved around orange-and-red race buoys emblazoned with the Paris 2024 logo. At least one jet ski zipped forth and back.

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A total of 17 events will award medals on Monday at the 2024 Paris Olympics, with five golds up for grabs in swimming as the feature attraction.

The Olympic pool at Paris La Défense Arena will host finals in men’s and women’s 200-meter freestyle, plus the men’s 100-meter backstroke and the women’s 400-meter individual medley. In addition, the USA’s Lily King will go for the gold in the women’s 100-meter breaststroke.

Here’s everything you need to know about the medal count for the 2024 Summer Games:

What is the medal count at the 2024 Paris Olympics?

Here’s the overall medal count entering competition on Monday:

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

1. USA — 12 (3 gold, 6 silver, 3 bronze)
2. France — 8 (3 gold, 3 silver, 2 bronze)
T3. Japan — 7 (4 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze)
T3. Korea — 7 (4 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze)
T4. China — 7 (3 gold, 2 silver, 2 bronze)
T6. Australia — 6 (4 gold, 2 silver)
T6. Italy — 6 (1 gold, 2 silver, 3 bronze)
8. Great Britain — 4 (2 silver, 2 bronze)
T9. Kazakhstan — 3 (1 gold, 2 bronze)
T9. Brazil — 3 (1 silver, 2 bronze)
T11. Belgium — 2 (1 gold, 1 bronze)
T11. Canada — 2 (1 silver, 1 bronze)
T11. Sweden — 2 (2 bronze)
T14. Germany — 1 (1 gold)
T14. Hong Kong — 1 (1 gold)
T14. Uzbekistan — 1 (1 gold)
T14. Fiji — 1 (1 silver)
T14. Kosovo — 1 (1 silver)
T14. Mongolia — 1 (1 silver)
T14. Poland — 1 (1 silver)
T14. Tunisia — 1 (1 silver)
T14. Egypt — 1 (1 bronze)
T14. Hungary — 1 (1 bronze)
T14. India — 1 (1 bronze)
T14. Mexico — 1 (1 bronze)
T14. Moldova — 1 (1 bronze)
T14. South Africa — 1 (1 bronze)
T14. Spain — 1 (1 bronze)
T14. Switzerland — 1 (1 bronze)

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What 2024 Paris Olympic events are taking place Monday?

Here are the Olympic medals that will be awarded on Monday, as well as the time the action starts.

(All times Eastern)

Shooting

3:30 a.m.: 10m air rifle women’s final
6 a.m.: 10m air rifle men’s final

Diving

5 a.m.: men’s synchronized 10m platform final

Cycling mountain bike

8:10 a.m.: men’s cross-country

Equestrian

9 a.m.: eventing individual jumping final

Archery

10:48 a.m.: men’s team bronze medal match
11:11 a.m.: men’s team gold medal match

Gymnastics

11:30 a.m.: men’s team final

Skateboarding

11 a.m.: men’s street final

Judo

11:18 a.m.: women -57 kg contest for bronze medal A
11:28 a.m.: women -57 kg contest for bronze medal B
11:38 a.m.: women -57 kg final
11:49 a.m.: men -73 kg contest for bronze medal A
11:59 a.m.: men -73 kg contest for bronze medal B
12:09 p.m.: men -73 kg final

Canoe slalom

11:20 a.m.: men’s canoe single final

Swimming

2:30 p.m.: women’s 400m individual medley final
2:43 p.m.: men’s 200m freestyle final
3:22 p.m.: men’s 100m backstroke final
3:32 p.m.: women’s 100m breaststroke final
3:48 p.m.: women’s 200m freestyle final

Fencing

2:50 p.m.: women’s sabre individual bronze medal bout
3:15 p.m.: men’s foil individual bronze medal bout
3:45 p.m.: women’s sabre individual bronze medal bout
4:10 p.m.: men’s foil individual gold medal bout

Watch the entirety of the 2024 Paris Olympics on Peacock

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Paris Olympic organizers apologized Sunday to people offended during a tableau of the opening ceremony that depicted the Greek god Dionysus and an ancient festival meant to honor him. Critics said it mocked “The Last Supper.”

During Friday’s ceremony, there was a moment on the Debilly Bridge over the Seine when the camera cut to French DJ and producer Barbara Butch, who describes herself as a ‘love activist.’ Butch wore a blue dress with a silver headdress and as the camera panned out, she was flanked by drag queens on both sides. Later appeared a nearly naked man painted in blue − a portrayal of Dionysus, the god of wine-making, vegetation, fertility and ecstasy − on a dinner plate surrounded by food. He then sang as the people around him danced, and it turned into a runway scene where models walked across.

The scene has been met with backlash as people say it mocked ‘The Last Supper,’ the famous painting from Leonardo da Vinci that shows Jesus Christ with his 12 apostles at his last supper, where he announced that one of the apostles would betray him.

Several Christian and Catholic organizations around the world have denounced the moment since then. The French Bishops’ Conference, which represents the country’s Catholic bishops, said in a statement that the scene was a ‘mockery and derision of Christianity’ and it was thinking of religious followers who were ‘hurt by the outrageousness and provocation of certain scenes.’ Well-known Bishop Robert Barron in Minnesota said in a video that it mocked ‘a very central moment in Christianity.’

U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson said on social media that it was ‘shocking and insulting’ to Christian people.

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

Telecommunications provider C Spire also said it was pulling all of its advertising from the Olympics as a result of the scene.

What did Paris Olympic organizers say about controversial segment?

Thomas Jolly, the opening ceremony’s artistic director, said at the International Olympic Committee’s daily briefing at the Olympic Games on Saturday that the moment was not meant to ‘be subversive or shock people or mock people.’ During the opening ceremony, the official Olympic Games social media account said the blue person, played by French singer and actor Philippe Katerine, was Dionysus and it ‘makes us aware of the absurdity of violence between human beings.’

Jolly also said on French TV station BFMTV on Sunday, ‘The Last Supper’ was ‘not my inspiration’ for the segment, and he also spoke about the meaning of Dionysus.

‘The idea was to have a pagan celebration connected to the gods of Olympus. You will never find in me a desire to mock and denigrate anyone,’ he said.

Still, Paris 2024 spokesperson Anne Descamps apologized on Sunday for those offended by the scene.

‘Clearly there was never an intention to show disrespect to any religious group. On the contrary, I think (with) Thomas Jolly, we really did try to celebrate community tolerance,’ Descamps said. “Looking at the result of the polls that we shared, we believe that this ambition was achieved. If people have taken any offense, we are, of course, really, really sorry.”

The IOC said on social media that it took note of the apology from Paris 2024.

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JERUSALEM – The looming Israeli response against the Iran-backed Hezbollah terrorist movement in Lebanon is said to be imminent in response to the group’s rocket attack on a children’s soccer field on Saturday, resulting in the murders of 12 young people. 

Early Monday, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) reportedly executed a drone strike in southern Lebanon, resulting in the deaths of two Hezbollah terrorists. The IDF has not commented on the strike. The IDF drone attacks came after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held a three-hour cabinet meeting on Sunday, during which ministers authorized the prime minister and his minister of defense to determine the ‘manner and timing’ of a military response to the lethal Hezbollah attack.

Danny Danon, Israel’s new ambassador to the United Nations, told ‘Fox and Friends’ host Steve Doocy on Monday that, Israel’s ‘response will be swift, harsh and painful, and we are now picking the targets and I believe in the next few days, and I’m sure Hezbollah will learn their lesson.’ He also said Israel had no ‘intentions of a full war.’ 

U.S. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said that Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke with Israeli President Isaac Herzog on Monday.

 ‘The Secretary reaffirmed the United States’ ironclad commitment to Israel’s security against threats from Iranian-backed terrorist organizations, including Hezbollah. He emphasized the importance of preventing escalation of the conflict and discussed efforts to reach a diplomatic solution to allow citizens on both sides of the border between Israel and Lebanon to return home,’ Miller said.

The Jerusalem Post reported that French President Emmanuel Macron told Netanyahu that France was ‘fully committed to doing everything possible to avoid new escalation in the region by sending messages to all parties in the conflict.’ France, in contrast to other major European powers, Germany and Britain, has not classified Hezbollah’s entire movement as a terrorist entity. Israel and the U.S. have urged France to designate Hezbollah a terrorist organization.

Air France has suspended flights to and from Beirut due to the expectation a major war will unfold. German airline Lufthansa, Swiss International Air Lines and Eurowings have also suspended flights.

Israel’s Druze community is still reeling from the shocking violence carried out by Hezbollah. 

The scenes on Sunday were ones of sadness, shock and devastation as the residents of the mostly Druze village of Majdal Shams buried the young victims of the Hezbollah rocket attack that killed at least 12 and injured some 29 others – mostly ages between 10 and 20 as many of them innocently played soccer on Saturday.

The Druze trace their ancestry back to the Biblical figure Jethro, the father-in-law of Moses. Israeli Druze serve in senior positions in public and military life, and the bond between Jewish and Druze soldiers is referred to as the ‘covenant of blood.’ The Druze speak Arabic but are not Muslim and are very secretive about their religious beliefs, according to the TPS news agency.

Speaking at a press conference on Sunday in Japan, Blinken said ‘I emphasize (Israel’s) right to defend its citizens and our determination to make sure that they’re able to do that,’ ‘But we also don’t want to see the conflict escalate. We don’t want to see it spread,’ according to Reuters.

Blinken also said he was in talks with the U.S. and all but confirmed that it was Hezbollah that fired the rocket from Lebanon. U.S. National Security Council spokeswoman Adrienne Watson said on Sunday, ‘This attack was conducted by Lebanese Hezbollah. It was their rocket, and launched from an area they control. It should be universally condemned.’

The failure to identify the U.S.-designated terrorist organization Hezbollah as the perpetrator of the Saturday massacre in the X post of the American Ambassador to Israel Jack Lew sparked criticism on the social media platform on Sunday.

David Wurmser, a former senior adviser for nonproliferation and Middle East strategy for former Vice President Dick Cheney, wrote in response to Lew’s message on X, ‘If I didn’t know better by your statement, it appears the attack kind of spontaneously happened by an evil missile acting on its own.’

The European Union’s foreign policy head, Josep Borrell, faced similar criticism for not pinning the blame on Hezbollah for its use of an Iranian rocket to murder children.

During an operational briefing on Sunday, Israel’s Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant said of Hezbollah that ‘despite their ridiculous denials … they will bear a heavy price for their actions.’

Hezbollah-linked media was first to report Hezbollah’s boasting about the attack, only for the terror group to later claim it was not them who did it once the barbarity of the attack became clear. The Israelis put the blame squarely on the U.S.-designated terrorist group.

The IDF said approximately 30 projectiles were identified crossing into Israel from Lebanon on Saturday. The U.S.-designated terrorist organization Hezbollah is the de facto ruler over Lebanon. 

Israel’s TPS news agency reported that the IDF raised its readiness for war. During a tour of the area, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi said, ‘We are greatly increasing our readiness for the next stage of fighting in the north, as we are simultaneously fighting in Gaza. We know how to attack even very far from the State of Israel. There will be more challenges, we will raise our readiness.

‘We know exactly where the rocket was launched from. We examined here on the wall of the soccer field the remains of the rocket, and we know to say that it is a Falaq rocket with a 53-kilogram warhead. This is a Hezbollah rocket. And whoever fires such a rocket into an urban area wants to kill civilians, wants to kill children,’ Halevi said.

FDD Iran Senior Fellow Behnam Ben Taleblu said the rocket came from Iran, ‘There should be no surprise that the munition Hezbollah fired at Israel is Iranian in design and origin. After all, when Iranian officials say death to Israel, they mean it. The weapon used in the latest attack is a spin-stabilized artillery rocket called the Falaq-1, which has a range of 10km while carrying a 50kg warhead.’

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President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are calling on Congress to impose term limits and a code of conduct on the Supreme Court while also drafting limits on presidential immunity, a White House official said.

Biden will discuss the proposed reforms during remarks on Monday at the LBJ Presidential Library, in commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act, the official said. Biden also addressed his desire for Supreme Court reform in an op-ed published Monday morning.

‘I served as a U.S. senator for 36 years, including as chairman and ranking member of the Judiciary Committee. I have overseen more Supreme Court nominations as senator, vice president and president than anyone living today,’ Biden said in the op-ed, published by the Washington Post. 

‘I have great respect for our institutions and separation of powers. What is happening now is not normal, and it undermines the public’s confidence in the court’s decisions, including those impacting personal freedoms. We now stand in a breach,’ Biden wrote.

Biden’s reforms would eliminate any immunity a former president enjoys for crimes committed while in office.

Harris, who is running for president, endorsed the push. ‘Today, there is a clear crisis of confidence facing the Supreme Court as its fairness has been called into question after numerous ethics scandals and decision after decision overturning long-standing precedent,’ she said.

Regarding the Supreme Court, Biden wants to impose a term limit of 18 years for justices. Once fully adopted, it would allow presidents to appoint new justices at a cadence of once every two years.

Biden argued the new Supreme Court code of conduct should require justices to ‘disclose gifts, refrain from public political activity, and recuse themselves from cases in which they or their spouses have financial or other conflicts of interest.’

‘President Biden and Vice President Harris look forward to working with Congress and empowering the American people to prevent the abuse of Presidential power, restore faith in the Supreme Court, and strengthen the guardrails of democracy,’ the White House official said.

The op-ed represents Biden’s first major policy push since formally announcing his withdrawal from the 2024 presidential race earlier this month.

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Since President Joe Biden dropped out of the 2024 presidential race and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris as his successor, the House Republican leadership has instructed its members to keep quiet about a most glaring Harris weakness: the repulsive identity politics that catapulted her to the White House.  

As then-candidate Biden proudly proclaimed in 2020, he picked Harris as his running mate because she is a Black woman. Biden’s submission to the gender and racial preferences at the heart of the Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) agenda was a brazen attack on merit, and the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, a few weeks ago offers a poignant reminder of the perils of hiring the unqualified.  

Secret Service director Kimberly Cheatle, who recently resigned under pressure, famously focused not on fitness for the job, but on sex, vowing to achieve 30% female recruits for the Secret Service by 2030. As videos from the Trump rally in Butler show, multiple female agents were obviously far too short to shield the 6’3′ Trump with their bodies, and some handled their weapons clumsily.  

In the aftermath of this tragedy, hiring based on woke criteria such as sex or ethnicity has rightly come under ridicule. This practice deserves even higher scrutiny when the highest office of the land is at stake.  

Harris — who has never won a single vote in an open election as a presidential candidate — not only introduces herself with ‘my pronouns are,’ but is also the No. 1 advocate of ‘equity’ in the Biden administration.  

Harris and most Democrats in charge around the country have now, perversely, decreed racial equality — the great achievement of the civil rights movement — to be racist. What matters is no longer equal opportunity, but equal outcome. As Harris herself announced on social media in the 2020 election, only ‘equity’ — meaning, the same results for everyone — will do. 

Biden bought into this grotesque ideology when he pledged to only pick a Black woman as a running mate, and that he would prioritize appointing Black women to high positions — each time the focus being on ‘woman’ and ‘Black,’ not on qualifications, experience or competence. Thanks to this ‘equity,’ the country has a female Supreme Court justice who cannot say what a woman is.  

The pernicious ideology of racial equity is also the animating force behind reparations, racial preferences, critical race theory taught to children at schools and the defund-the-police movement. Harris herself promoted bail funds for BLM rioters in 2020.  

As with any DEI hire, incompetence is the likely result, and incompetence is what Harris has delivered.  

As Biden’s ‘border czar,’ she oversaw (perched far from the Southern border), the invasion of nearly 10 million illegal aliens from around the world and counting. 

Skyrocketing inflation, out-of-control crime, or the fentanyl epidemic? Americans cannot think of a single contribution from Harris in addressing these serious issues in the past three-and-a-half years.  

The pernicious ideology of racial equity is also the animating force behind reparations, racial preferences, critical race theory taught to children at schools and the defund-the-police movement. Harris herself promoted bail funds for BLM rioters in 2020.  

Nor can they point to any Harris accomplishments in foreign policy. From Russian President Vladimir Putin’s ongoing war on Ukraine that threatens to engulf major parts of Europe, the Iranian mullahs’ open declaration to literally destroy Israel and then the United States, and a bellicose China growing ever more impatient with the status quo across the Taiwan Strait, Harris has shown no proficiency in confronting aggression and war around the world. When Americans look to their current vice president, they see not strength or wisdom but the vapid self-congratulations of DEI ideology.

Kamala Harris, born to an Indian mother and a Jamaican father who met at the University of California at Berkeley (one of America’s top universities), has made a lucrative career of pretending to be marginalized. If Harris does, in fact, become the Democratic presidential nominee in August, American voters should reject her and the moral bankruptcy of the DEI ideology that brought her to national prominence. This DEI candidate has no business being president of the United States, and Republicans should not be afraid to say so. 

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Warner Bros. Discovery sued the National Basketball Association on Friday as it tries to maintain broadcast rights for a package of live games.

“Given the NBA’s unjustified rejection of our matching of a third-party offer, we have taken legal action to enforce our rights,” the company’s TNT Sports unit said in a statement. “We strongly believe this is not just our contractual right, but also in the best interest of fans who want to keep watching our industry-leading NBA content with the choice and flexibility we offer them through our widely distributed WBD video-first distribution platforms — including TNT and Max.”

The media company seeks to prevent the NBA from awarding the rights to Amazon, whose games package Warner Bros. Discovery tried to match, or aims to win monetary damages.

The NBA said Wednesday it had reached agreements with Disney, Comcast’s NBCUniversal and Amazon on three different packages of games, ending its nearly 40-year relationship with Warner Bros. Discovery’s Turner Sports. The 11-year media rights deal is worth roughly $77 billion — a massive increase over the previous agreement as the value of live sports booms.

In response to the suit, NBA spokesman Mike Bass said “Warner Bros. Discovery’s claims are without merit and our lawyers will address them.”

Warner Bros. Discovery said earlier this week it submitted paperwork to the league to match one of the packages, which people familiar with the matter identified as the $1.8 billion-per-year group of games earmarked for Amazon. The tech giant’s deal includes regular-season games, the in-season tournament, and some playoff games. The NBA granted Warner Bros. Discovery matching rights when it signed its previous media deal in 2014. The provision is meant to give an incumbent company the right of last refusal to maintain its position as a media partner.

But Warner Bros. Discovery’s decision to match the Amazon package, rather than the $2.5-billion-per-year NBCUniversal agreement, caused the league to say Wednesday that the matching rights are invalid. Warner Bros. Discovery’s offer for that package involves airing the NBA games on its cable network TNT and simulcasting them on its streaming service, Max. That’s not an apples-to-apples comparison to Amazon Prime Video, which is a streaming-only service, the league argued.

Warner Bros. Discovery argued in a court filing Friday that its matching rights should still apply to the Amazon package because many of the games in that package previously aired on cable TV.

“The MRE (Matching Rights Exhibit) further provides that, ”[i]n the event that TBS Matches a Third Party Offer that includes Cable Rights” and no other Incumbent matches, then TBS shall have the exclusive right and obligation to exercise the Cable Rights provided for (and on the same terms set forth) in the Third Party Offer,” Warner Bros. Discovery wrote in its court filing. “That is exactly what happened here: Amazon made an offer for Cable Rights as defined in the MRE, and TBS matched it. But, in breach of the Agreement, the NBA has refused to honor TBS’s match.”

In a letter the NBA sent to Warner Bros. Discovery on Wednesday, the league pointed to the contractual language of the 2014 matching rights as its reason for rejecting the offer.

The NBA cited the clause: “In the event that an incumbent matches a third party offer that provides for the exercise of game rights via any specific form of combined audio and video distribution, such incumbent shall have the right and obligation to exercise such game rights only via the specified form of combined audio and video distribution (e.g. if the specific form of combined audio and video distribution is internet distribution, a matching incumbent may not exercise such games rights via television distribution).”

CNBC’s David Faber on Thursday reported Warner Bros. Discovery had moved to sue the NBA.

In 2022, Warner Bros. Discovery Chief Executive Officer said that his company did not “have to have the NBA” if the economics weren’t sound.

 “With sport, we’re a renter,” Zaslav said at a Nov. 2022 investor conference. “That’s not as good of a business.”

Still, Friday’s lawsuit expounded on the value of the NBA to Turner Sports. Owning NBA rights is valuable to the health of Warner Bros. Discovery’s cable TV business, which has suffered in recent years as millions of Americans cancel traditional pay TV in favor of a bundle of streaming services.

“NBA games drive significant viewership and ratings, as consumers are more likely to watch games live, in real time. This, in turn, affects the price TBS and WBD can charge to their advertisers and downstream distributors that license TNT for transmission to their customers,” the company wrote in the complaint. “NBA distribution rights thus give both TBS and WBD the ability to grow their brands and reach a larger group of consumers that only NBA games bring. NBA telecast rights also give TBS and WBD a competitive advantage over other programmers, particularly when negotiating with other leagues for sports rights.”

Warner Bros. Discovery argued the NBA brings “intangible and incalculable benefits” to the company’s business and asked for “preliminary and permanent injunctive relief to prohibit the NBA from licensing these unique and irreplaceable rights [to Amazon],” while adding that if “equitable relief is not granted,” it expects “monetary damages” from the NBA.

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NANTERRE, France — The moment that Torri Huske has never forgotten is now three years old, but it drives her to this day. With 15 meters to go in the 100 butterfly at the 2021 Tokyo Olympic Games, she was winning. The race was hers. 

And then it wasn’t. In those last few moments, Huske didn’t drop to second. Or third. No, when she touched the wall and turned to see the scoreboard, she was fourth. She was out of the medals, just off the podium, by 1/100th of a second.

“I’m not going to lie, that was devastating,” Huske said Sunday at the 2024 Summer Olympics. “It really fueled me and I think that did make me better.”

Those three years have gone by quickly, so much so that before she knew it, Huske was touching the wall at the 50-meter mark of Sunday’s 100 butterfly at another Olympic Games, and this time, she wasn’t first. She was third, .21 of a second behind her American teammate and world-record holder Gretchen Walsh. She had 50 meters to go to rewrite the ending to her story. 

There is nothing more exciting in a swimming race than watching someone reel in the person ahead of them. Spectators and even those watching on TV at home see it happening before the leader fully knows what’s going on. There’s a momentum to it that makes it feel almost inevitable, even as it still seems impossible. 

And so it was for Walsh and Huske, both 21, born less than two months apart, as they churned through the water in lanes 4 and 5, side by side, fighting to the finish. Huske was now right beside Walsh. Here came the wall. Their hands reached for it. 

And then…

‘You can kind of see out of the corner of your eye but you never really know for sure,” Huske said. “I first saw the light by the block.”

The red light in her lane went off 4/100ths of a second before Walsh’s. She turned to see the scoreboard. She had done it. She had won the gold medal. Her time was 55.59 seconds; Walsh’s was 55.63. 

“Seeing that was just very surreal,” Huske said afterward. “It’s just very overwhelming when you’ve been dreaming of this moment for so long and then it finally becomes a reality. It’s like I didn’t even know how to process it. I felt like I was hyperventilating a little bit maybe. I feel like my body just had a reaction. I felt like I couldn’t control anything that was going on, it was just all happening so fast.”

Huske’s mouth was open. She looked surprised, shocked and so very happy. She put her hand over her mouth as Walsh, who set the world record in this event just last month at the U.S. Olympic trials, reached across the lane rope to hug her.

“I was definitely nervous before,” Walsh said. “I feel like there was a lot of pressure on me just having gone the world record and the Olympic record last night. It was definitely a fight to the finish. Seeing the 1-2 up there was amazing. I’m so proud of Torri and so proud of myself.”

It was the first time a country had a gold-silver finish in the women’s 100 butterfly at the Olympics since the old East Germany did it in Seoul in 1988. 

Over the past year, Huske has worked particularly hard on the “back half” of her 100 fly, “because that’s been a weaker point in my stroke,” she said. She is known for having the fastest start off the blocks in every race, launching herself into a very quick first 50, then fading a bit at the end, as she did in Tokyo. 

“I think I did a good job with that,” Huske said about that final 50, smiling.

While Walsh was one of the stars of last month’s Olympic trials, Huske, a former U.S. record-holder who has been taking a gap year from Stanford, was flying under the radar, which turns out to be a very good place to be heading into an Olympics. 

But then Huske came to Paris and something started happening. She had the fastest split among the U.S. swimmers in the women’s 4 x 100 freestyle relay Saturday, helping the Americans win the silver medal. 

And then came Sunday and the 100 fly, where she was behind, until she wasn’t. 

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WESTFIELD, Ind. — Colts owner Jim Irsay made his first public appearance since last season on Sunday, riding onto the practice fields at Grand Park in a golf cart and meeting with the local media.

Irsay has been rehabilitating his body after a string of recent surgeries that began with a fall at his Carmel home, according to the owner.

He was found unresponsive at his home on Dec. 8 and hospitalized. In January, the Colts released a statement saying Irsay was dealing with a severe respiratory illness at the time.

Irsay told FOX59 that he’s had another surgery since that time, and he’s spent months rehabilitating his body, making Sunday’s training camp appearance a milestone for the owner.

“It’s great to see you guys, to hear the fans and be out here,” Irsay said. “I know, sometimes, what our players could go through, in terms of the rehab that I did. I’m feeling great. Trying to get this left leg stronger, which it will.”

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Irsay’s rehabilitation remains ongoing.

“It’s frustrating, because the left leg just doesn’t have the push-off yet that I need,” Irsay said. “I can stand up and those sort of things, but in terms of walking, it’s hard to say exactly how far I’m away from that, but I’m not far. God knows I’ve been working hard just to bring myself back, because man, it’s hard work. I’m just grateful. … I’m just thankful I have the type of injury I can heal up and get 100% again.”

Irsay has been in conversations with general manager Chris Ballard and head coach Shane Steichen throughout his physical ordeal, and he has been working hard to return to his normal public activity.

Next week, he will present former Colts defensive end Dwight Freeney for Freeney’s Hall of Fame induction, the third time he has performed the honor for a former Colt, adding incentive for a man who has been working hard to restore his healthy.

“We all relate, in life, to quality of life and enjoying our health,” Irsay said. “It’s always tough when you have a setback like that. I’ve had injuries through the years with my training for marathons and powerlifting and playing football, but this one feels good just to be back, feels real timely to be back. I’m just very thankful to be feeling better and being out here.”

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Cavan Sullivan’s record as the the youngest person to debut in a major North American pro sports league lasted less then two weeks.

On Sunday night, McKenna ‘Mak’ Whitham made her debut for NJ/NY Gotham FC at 14 years, one day.

Whitham came on in the 80th minute against the Washington Spirit in a NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup match, which Gotham won 1-0.

The forward is nearly a full year younger than Sullivan, who was 14 years and 293 days when he came on for the Philadelphia Union earlier this month.

On Friday, Gotham announced it had signed Whitham to a pro contract, effective Jan. 1. It also signed the U.S. youth international to a national team replacement contract, which allowed her to be eligible for Sunday’s Summer Cup match.

Whitham has been training with Gotham throughout 2024 after joining the club’s preseason as a non-roster invitee. At 13, the forward scored the winning goal for Gotham against Deportivo Cali in a preseason match in Colombia.

In February, Whitham made headlines by signing a name, image and likeness (NIL) deal with Nike, becoming the youngest athlete in any sport to sign an NIL deal with Nike.

Who are the youngest players to play American professional team sports?

Here are the youngest players to debut in American sports leagues (since 1970, according to the Elias Sports Bureau):

➤ NWSL: McKenna ‘Mak’ Whitham (NJ/NY Gotham FC on July 28, 2024) – 14 years, 1 day

➤ MLS: Cavan Sullivan (Philadelphia Union on July 17, 2024) – 14 years, 293 days

➤ NBA: Andrew Bynum (Los Angeles Lakers on Nov. 2, 2005) – 18 years, 6 days

➤ NHL: Patrick Marleau (San Jose Sharks on Oct. 1, 1997) – 18 years, 16 days

➤ MLB: David Clyde (Texas Rangers on June 27, 1973) – 18 years, 66 days

➤ WNBA: Maria Stepanova (Phoenix Mercury on June 11, 1998) – 19 years, 108 days

➤ NFL: Amobi Okoye (Houston Texans on Sept. 9, 2007) – 20 years, 91 days

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