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PARIS — Brittney Griner knows the face she presents to the world is often a mask. 

She knows what you see — the goofy grin, the 6-foot-9 big kid who loves skateboarding and off-roading, the intimidating shot-blocker on the basketball court — is only a fraction of the truth. 

To outsiders it looks like Griner has moved on quickly from her 10-month detention in Russian custody, a terrifying and isolating stretch of time that would’ve broken most people. When she poses for photos with fans, easily banks in an eight-footer, it looks like things are back to normal. But they’re not, and she’s not. 

Griner will begin play early next week in her third Olympics, a defensive anchor for the team trying to bring home its record eighth consecutive gold medal. Griner, a member of the Tokyo and Rio teams, already has two gold medals in the sport. But she knows this one would feel different. 

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

“What BG’s gone through in the last couple years is obviously unprecedented,” said Diana Taurasi, Griner’s teammate both in the Olympics and with the Phoenix Mercury. “To be able to put this jersey back on, to be at opening ceremony last night, Obviously I’m pretty close with BG and I know she feels grateful, thankful … for her to be able to come back, to get on that flight to come overseas, it was a big moment for her in a lot of ways. But I’m glad she did it, because she’s a remarkable person.

“I know we see her on the court as being this intimidating, dominant force but I always say she’s the person with the biggest heart. That’s why people went to bat for her so hard.” 

Just 22 months ago, when the Americans headed to Australia for the 2022 Women’s World Cup, USA Basketball announced that no one would wear Griner’s No. 15 jersey — they were saving it for her, believing she would return home safe some day. 

She’ll put that jersey on Monday when the U.S. takes on Japan in the first game of pool play in the city of  Lille, along France’s northern border. It will be the third time she’s worn the jersey since she returned; she played in the USA’s 117-109 loss to the WNBA All-Stars on July 20 and on July 23 in the USA’s 84-57 win over Germany in its final tune up before the Olympics. 

But it will be the first time she’s worn it on an international stage, with people again watching her from all over the world — just like they did when she was locked up in Russia.

“It’s always with me, and there’s definitely moments of like, oh wow this could be totally different — I could be seeing this beautiful view through bars,” Griner said Saturday from USA practice. “It doesn’t go away. It makes you appreciate everything a little bit more too.” 

Stepping aboard her first international flight to head to the Olympics wasn’t hard she said. The train ride to Lille was another story though. That’s a nod to the numerous times she was shoved in a train in Russia and not told where she was going. Cramped, terrified and losing hope — “it’s a dangerous thing to have,” she said Saturday — she often had to wait until she reached her destination to get even a scrap of information. 

It’s no wonder she’s so grateful to be here. And her resilience hasn’t been lost on her teammates or coaches. 

“It’s remarkable, when you think about that personal, deeply painful situation that our entire league felt, but for her personally — the despair, loss of hope, things that she went through, it’s remarkable that she is who she is today and playing this game back abroad, playing in the Olympics,” added USA coach Cheryl Reeve. “I think often about how difficult that must be because BG will always put on the face that you see. But we know that there is a lot more than she’s working through. We’ve been mindful … that she might look OK but there’s clearly emotions with this.”

Griner, for her part, is trying to tune out those emotions as best she can and “tell myself we don’t have time for that” if she wants to win her third consecutive gold. But that’s not always possible when you’re representing your country, she said. After all, this is the woman whose father is a military veteran and lifetime police officer. Her father’s service inspired Griner, who before she found basketball, thought she’d go into the military, too.  

The Olympics have so far served as a reunion of sorts for Griner. The coaches of her Russian team UMMC Ekaterinburg, Miguel Mendez and Luis Rey, are coaching the Spanish national team, and she got to see — and hug — them for the first time since February 2022. Friday night during the opening ceremony, numerous athletes, from the U.S. and beyond, approached Griner to tell her how happy they were to see her. That they’d followed her journey, prayed for her safe return. Their message resonated. 

“At the end of the day we’re all athletes, we’re all in this together, and it’s bigger than sports,” Griner said. “You hear that a lot. Now I understand it.”

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France, Spain and Japan took commanding leads in their respective groups, while USA Soccer, Argentina and Egypt have gotten back into the mix after victories on Saturday.

France leads Group A, Spain leads Group C and Japan is atop Group D – all with six points. A win or draw when men’s soccer resumes action on Tuesday would assure each country will advance to the knockout round.

USA Soccer is second in Group A behind France with a two-goal differential over New Zealand, and will next face Guinea with a chance to advance.

Group B will bring the intrigue: All four teams – Argentina, Ukraine, Morocco and Iraq – have three points after two matches.

Check out these Paris Olympics men’s soccer scores and highlights from Saturday’s games:

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

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Olympic men’s soccer games today: Scores

Group B — Argentina 3, Iraq 1
Group C — Spain 3, Dominican Republic 1
Group B — Ukraine 2, Morocco 1
Group C — Egypt 1, Uzbekistan 0
Group D — Paraguay 4, Israel 2
Group A — U.S. 4, New Zealand 1
Group A — France 1, Guinea 0
Group D — Japan 1, Mali 0

CHRISTIAN PULISIC: Is Pulisic playing at the Olympics? Here’s the answer

FINAL: USA Soccer 4, New Zealand 1

Djordje Mihailovic, Walker Zimmerman and Gianluca Busio scored in the first half, while Paxten Aaronson added another goal in the second half to help USA Soccer win 4-1 against New Zealand.

The four goals scored is an Olympic record for USA Soccer, while the victory is the first Olympic win since the Beijing Olympics in 2008.

USA Soccer responded nicely after its 3-0 loss to host France in their opener earlier this week.

France leads Group A with 6 points, ahead of USA Soccer and New Zealand (3 points), and Guinea (1 point).

Final: Argentina back on track after 3-1 win vs. Iraq

Their first game was memorable for all the wrong reasons. But Argentina is back on track at the Paris Olympics. Thiago Almada, Luciano Gondou and Ezequiel Fernández each scored goals to help Argentina beat Iraq 3-1 on Saturday.

It was a far cry from the dramatic, 2-1 loss they endured to Morocco earlier this week after fan interference and a two-hour VAR disallowing a goal and draw.

Final: Spain 3-1 win over Dominican Republic

Fermín López, Álex Baena and Miguel Gutiérrez scored as Spain cruised to a 3-1 win over the Dominican Republic. Spain takes command in Group C with six points ahead of Egypt, Uzbekistan and DR.

FINAL: France wins 1-0 vs. Guinea after Kiliann Sildillia’s goal

Kiliann Sildillia’s stellar header in the 75th minute was enough to help France win 1-0 against Guinea. France leads Group A with six points, while USA Soccer has three points in second place and a two-goal edge over New Zealand. Guinea is in last place with a point.

FINAL: Japan wins 1-0 vs. Mali after Rihito Yamamoto’s goal

Rihito Yamamoto’s sliding, put-back goal in the 82nd minute fuels Japan’s 1-0 victory against Mali. Japan also withstood a late penalty goal missed by Mali in stoppage time to win.

Japan leads Group D with six points, while Paraguay is second with three points. Mali and Israel trail with one point each.

France vs. Guinea, Japan vs. Mali scoreless in the second half

The matches are scoreless in the second half.

FINAL: Paraguay 4, Israel 2

Fabián Balbuena’s header in stoppage time, and Fabian Fernandez’s goal three minutes later fueled Paraguay’s 4-2 win over Israel on Saturday.

Japan leads Group D with 4 points, ahead of Paraguay (3 points), Mali (2 points) and Israel (1 point).

Jesse Randall goal: New Zealand on the board, down 4-1 vs. USA Soccer

Jesse Randall has scored in the 78th minute for New Zealand, spoiling a clean sheet for USA Soccer.

Paxten Aaronson goal: USA Soccer up 4-0 over New Zealand

USA Soccer has set a record for goals scored in an Olympic match: Paxten Aaronson’s left boot in the 58th minute has given USA Soccer a 4-0 lead over New Zealand.

The previous record was three goals scored, in a 3-0 win against Costa Rica in the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.

Gianluca Busio goal: USA Soccer takes 3-0 lead over New Zealand

USA Soccer is off to a red-hot start, with Gianluca Busio scoring in the 30th minute, to take a 3-0 lead over New Zealand.

The score total, just 30 minutes into the game, matches USA Soccer’s all-time high for goals scored in an Olympic game. They beat Costa Rica 3-0 in the group stage at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.

Walker Zimmerman goal: USA Soccer takes 2-0 lead over New Zealand

Walker Zimmerman was in the right place at the right time, in front of the net to score in the 12th minute to help USA Soccer take a 2-0 lead on New Zealand.

Djordje Mihailovic goal: USA Soccer takes early 1-0 lead over New Zealand

Djordje Mihailovic converted a penalty kick in the fourth minute, and USA Soccer has an early 1-0 lead against New Zealand. The goal is the first U.S. men’s Olympic goal scored in nearly 16 years, since the Beijing Olympics.

Final: Ukraine 2, Morocco 1

Ihor Krasnopir’s goal in stoppage time led Ukraine to a 2-1 victory over Morocco.

The updated standings in Group B: Argentina (4 points), Morocco, Ukraine and Iraq (3 points each).

Final: Egypt 1, Uzbekistan 0

Ahmed Koka scored in the 11th minute, and Egypt hung on to beat Uzbekistan 1-0.

The updated standings in Group C: Spain (6 points), Egypt (4 points), Dominican Republic (2 points), Uzbekistan (2 points).

Is Christian Pulisic playing in the Olympics?

No, Christian Pulisic is not playing with USA Soccer after his Copa America run with the U.S. Men’s National Team.

Here’s more on Pulisic and the Olympics.

Is Messi, Neymar or Mbappe playing at the Olympics?

No. Messi is not playing with Argentina. Neymar is not playing with Brazil. And Kylian Mbappe is not playing with France.

The Olympic soccer tournament is an under-23 affair, despite three players over the age of 23 allowed on each team.

Messi has an ankle injury after Copa America, but was not going to play. Neymar is still recovering from knee surgery. Mbappe, although healthy, is with Real Madrid.

Ezequiel Fernández goal: Argentina 3, Iraq 1

Argentina will cruise to victory in their second match after Ezequiel Fernández scored in the 85th minute to secure a 3-1 lead over Iraq.

Luciano Gondou goal: Argentina 2, Iraq 1

Luciano Gondou’s header in the 62nd minute has given Argentina a 2-1 lead over Iraq in the second half.

Spain 3, Dominican Republic 1

Fermin Lopez opened scoring for Spain in the 24th minute, but the Dominican Republic responded with a 38th-minute goal from Angel Emmanuel. Then, disaster struck and the DR received a red card. Edison Azcona was forced to exit the match after kicking up at an opponent. They will play a man down the rest of the match. Spain retook the lead in minute 55 with a goal from Alejandro Baena. Miguel Gutiérrez scored in the 70th minute for Spain.

Aymen Hussein goal: Argentina 1, Iraq 1

Aymen Hussein’s header against Argentina’s right post was impossible for the goalkeeper to reach. Ahmed Hassan with the assist in stoppage time before halftime.

Thiago Almada goal: Argentina 1, Iraq 0

Thiago Almada shot from the left side to open scoring in the 13th minute. Julián Álvarez got the assists after chesting the ball down to the ground for Almada.

Argentina vs. Iraq, what to expect

Argentina was a gold-medal favorite entering the Olympics but finds itself in a difficult position entering this match after the video reply fiasco during their group play opening loss to Morocco.

A win is a must to get back into position to advance past the group stage, so Argentina will be coming out motivated. Iraq beat Ukraine in its opener, so it atop the Group B table with Morocco, both with three points.

Explaining Argentina vs. Morocco offside, VAR mess

Unruly soccer fans disrupted an Olympic match between Argentina and Morocco on Wednesday, turning a 2-2 draw to a 2-1 win for Morocco after Argentina’s late goal scored was disallowed after video review.

The chaotic scene created shockwaves, especially with players from both teams re-emerging to finish the match in an empty stadium after a delay of about two hours.

Referees took away the equalizer from Cristian Medina, after VAR showed Argentina was offside. The teams played for three minutes and 15 seconds after VAR completed its review and disallowed the goal.

‘The biggest circus I’ve ever seen in my life,’ Argentina coach Javier Mascherano said.

Why is men’s soccer a U-23 event at the Olympics?

The rule came to be in advance of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. At the time, the Olympics was undergoing fundamental changes, shifting from a strictly amateur event to one that allowed professional athletes to compete (the 1992 Games, perhaps most famously, featured the ‘Dream Team’).

Given that switch, FIFA, world soccer’s governing body, put various barriers in place for players competing in the Olympics, which it didn’t want to possibly usurp the World Cup as the premier international soccer showcase. One of those measures was an age restriction. Additionally, since the Olympics are not a FIFA-sanctioned competition, club teams have the right to deny a player from taking part. Many clubs will forbid their players from competing in the Olympics and the Euros or Copa America in a single summer.

This reality makes men’s soccer drastically different than women’s soccer at the Olympics, as the women’s side has no such age limits. Read more.

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The UFC is back across the pond for another highly-anticipated pay-per-view: UFC 304.

The United Kingdom is where Saturday’s fight night will go down — and there will be championships up for grabs. The event is headlined by a rematch years in the making between Leon Edwards and Belal Muhammad as Edwards puts his welterweight title on the line. The co-main event sees Tom Aspinall defending the interim heavyweight championship in his home country against Curtis Blaydes. In total, there will be 14 bouts that should equal an exciting night for what will likely be a raucous English crowd.

Follow USA TODAY Sports here for all the results and top highlights from UFC 304:

Sam Patterson vs. Kiefer Crosbie

Another quick finish, this time by submission.

Sam Patterson landed quality strikes on Kiefer Crosbie before he took him down. It was clear Crosbie didn’t have much time left, and Patterson got the arm triangle executed. Crosbie tapped out to give Patterson his seventh win by submission in 12 victories.

Mick Parkin vs. Lukasz Brzeski: result

This one didn’t need the entire first round to finish as Mick Parkin got a knockout victory in his home country.

After three minutes of feeling each other out, Parkin got his golden chance when he landed an over-the-top right hand on Lukasz Brzeski’s head. After that it was blow after blow from the England-native. Brzeski backed into the cage and was dropped, and that was all the referee needed to see to end the bout.

Shauna Bannon vs. Alice Ardelean: result

Shauna Bannon landed some early strikes but Alice Ardelean surprised her opponent with a takedown. Ardelean has yet to win by submission and she wasn’t able to do much on the ground, but Bannon countered with an arm bar attempt that nearly connected. Ardelean recovered with neither fighter able to take advantage in the first round.

The second round started like the first with Bannon successfully landing strikes, including a combination attack. Ardelean got another takedown but there wasn’t much done. The third round was much more strike-based and Ardelean was cut. Bannon landed some quality strikes, yet none were enough to take out Ardelean and the fight came down to the judges.

Bannon won by split decision. Even though Ardelean had the takedowns and no submission attempt was officially record, Bannon landed 130 strikes − with 60 significant hits to the head − while Ardelean had only 76 strikes.

When is UFC 304?

Early prelims: 6 p.m. ET.
Prelims: 8 p.m. ET.
Main card: 10 p.m. ET.

UFC 304 live stream

Early prelims for UFC 304 can be streamed via the UFC Fight Pass and ESPN+. The prelims will air on ESPN2 and ESPN+. The pay-per-view card can be purchased via ESPN+.

How much is UFC 304 PPV?

The main card of UFC 304 is $79.99.

Where is UFC 304?

UFC 304 will take place at Co-op Live in Manchester, England.

UFC 304 fight card

Main card

UFC Welterweight Championship: Leon Edwards (c) vs. Belal Muhammad
UFC Heavyweight Interim Championship: Tom Aspinall (c) vs. Curtis Blaydes
Lightweight: King Green vs. Paddy Pimblett
Middleweight: Christian Leroy Duncan vs. Gregory Rodrigues
Featherweight: Arnold Allen vs. Giga Chikadze

Prelims

Featherweight: Nathaniel Wood vs. Daniel Pineda
Women’s strawweight: Molly McCann vs. Bruna Brasil
Bantamweight: Jake Hadley vs. Caolan Loughran
Light heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas vs. Marcin Prachnio

Early prelims

Welterweight: Oban Elliott vs. Preston Parsons
Flyweight: Muhammad Mokaev vs. Manel Kape
Welterweight: Sam Patterson vs. Kiefer Crosbie
Heavyweight: Mick Parkin vs. Lukasz Brzeski
Women’s strawweight: Shauna Bannon vs. Alice Ardelean

UFC 304 odds

Odds according to BetMGM

UFC Welterweight Championship: Leon Edwards (-275) vs. Belal Muhammad (+225)
UFC Heavyweight Interim Championship: Tom Aspinall (-400) vs. Curtis Blaydes (+310)
Lightweight: King Green (-110) vs. Paddy Pimblett (-110)
Middleweight: Christian Leroy Duncan (-135) vs. Gregory Rodrigues (110)
Featherweight: Arnold Allen (-250) vs. Giga Chikadze (+195)
Featherweight: Nathaniel Wood (-450) vs. Daniel Pineda (+333)
Women’s strawweight: Molly McCann (-350) vs. Bruna Brasil (+275)
Bantamweight: Jake Hadley (+195) vs. Caolan Loughran (-250)
Light heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas (-165) vs. Marcin Prachnio (+135)
Welterweight: Oban Elliott (+140) vs. Preston Parsons (-165)
Flyweight: Muhammad Mokaev (-190) vs. Manel Kape (+160)
Welterweight: Sam Patterson (-500) vs. Kiefer Crosbie (+350)
Heavyweight: Mick Parkin (-550) vs. Lukasz Brzeski (+400)
Women’s strawweight: Shauna Bannon (-190) vs. Alice Ardelean (+160)

Leon Edwards vs. Belal Muhammad: Tale of the tape

Tom Aspinall vs. Curtis Blaydes: Tale of the tape

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FIFA deducted six points from the Canadian women’s national soccer team playing in the 2024 Paris Olympics soccer tournament and fined them $226,000 for using drones to spy on opponents.

Canadian Soccer Association coaches Beverly Priestman, Joseph Lombardi, and Jasmine Mander were also suspended from taking part in any football-related activity for one year.

FIFA said that the Canadians violated Article 13 of the Disciplinary Code, which covers offensive behavior and violations of the principles of fair play, and Article 6.1 of the OFT Regulations after two assistant coaches were caught using drones to spy on New Zealand’s practices before their first game.

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

The governing body of world soccer said Priestman and the two assistants were ‘responsible for offensive behavior and violation of the principles of fair play.’

The Canadians won the Olympic title in 2021 at the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Games, and Priestman was suspended and then removed from the Olympic tournament.

With interim coach Andy Spence, Canada beat New Zealand 2-1.

The Canadians still have a chance to advance in the tournament, but they must win every game in Group A and hope to advance by accumulating points in the standings. Their next game is against France on Sunday before they take on Colombia on Thursday.

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SAINT-DENIS, France — Ashleigh Johnson knows that when one thinks of water polo, they typically do not think of Black athletes, and they definitely do not think of rappers. 

But along with her new No. 1 fan, Johnson is trying to change that. 

Johnson, widely considered the best goalie in the sport, saved 10 of 14 scoring attempts from Greece as the Americans cruised to a 15-6 win Saturday in the first game of women’s water polo pool play at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Team USA’s Jenna Flynn led all scorers with four goals on six attempts at the Olympic Aquatics Centre.

The Americans are going for their fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal with an unusual new hype man in 65-year-old rapper Flavor Flav. And yes, you read that right.

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

Flav, who bragged Friday about scoring on Johnson when he hopped in the pool with the U.S. women for a crash course in his new favorite sport, has signed a five-year sponsorship deal with both men’s and women’s teams. He was poolside Saturday decked out in red, white and blue, his water polo cap in place and his (waterproof) clock necklace the flashiest accessory in the crowd. Surely he loved the Americans’ 7-0 start, a dominant overall performance that coach Adam Krikorian described as “as good of a fourth-quarter game as we’ve played in some time.” 

Perhaps it was the influence, and presence, of Flav? Johnson is open to any and all possibilities as it relates to the sport’s newest ambassador. 

“Yes, he’s a little bit out of the (normal water polo demographic),” Johnson said, laughing. “But I was on TikTok the other day and I saw his team posted the video of him with our team — and it was all kids commenting. They’re learning who he is and learning who we are, and I think the confluence of both of us inspires a new interest in both of us.”

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For years, Johnson has been the only Black member of water polo’s senior national team. Since being named to her first Olympic team at the age of 21, she’s become an outspoken advocate for more diversity it not only her sport, but all water sports. 

“I don’t think people of color have had adequate access to aquatic spaces, and you can see it in the way our sport looks, see it in the way swimming looks,” she said. “It’s not representative of the U.S. in terms of diversity. One of the biggest barriers for people of color in water spaces, not just water polo, is the story that they don’t belong here. So talking about it and saying you do, seeing a man who’s a rapper, who’s not even part of this space get so passionate and invested in a team like ours, I think is life changing. 

“I think that’s one of those things that breaks down a barrier.” 

Flav agrees, saying he doesn’t consider water polo a sport that belongs to just one group of people. 

“I think by me jumping in the water with Ashley, it can probably enhance more Black people to play water polo,” he said. “Not too many Black people are playing it right now.”

Recently, Johnson attended the youth football game of a family friend. She was struck by how unifying the sport was. 

“The way the Black community comes around football, that’s what I want around water polo,” she said. “Not everyone plays, but everyone loves it, everyone has someone in it and belongs there. It felt like, you step in and you’re part of the (football) family. 

“That’s what I want water polo to feel like for people of color.” 

The Olympics, she said, are the perfect platform to grow the sport. Add in a rapper who has more than 800,000 combined followers on his various social media sites, and there’s no telling what might happen. Johnson is ready to “re-write the story” of water polo. 

“I’ve already seen ripple effects,” she said. “The jokes that have come out of it, the humor, the enjoyment, that’s super cool. The pool isn’t somewhere that we’re scared or don’t belong; it’s somewhere we have fun, somewhere we come together, where we cheer, we support.” 

And … we rap? 

Yes, Johnson said, she is absolutely fine with Flav working up a new song that involves a mention of his score on her. 

“I’m pushing for that,” she said. “Pleas make that a song lyric. I would love it.” 

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PARIS — The leader that he is, what Team USA’s men’s 5×5 basketball coach Steve Kerr told reporters this week was constructive criticism he already shared with the team.

Even though the U.S. went 5-0 in exhibition games before the start of the 2024 Paris Olympics, it wasn’t perfect – a near-loss to South Sudan and a close victory against Germany highlighted concerns.

Kerr pointed out the U.S. didn’t play with enough force, energy or pace, was too lackadaisical offensively and defensively at times and settled for bad shots. ‘That’s a recipe for failure,’ he said.

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After watching video of the Germany game, Kerr said, ‘The tape was tough to watch. So we know we’ve got to play a lot better at both ends and I’m confident that we will.’

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

The U.S. opens Group C play Sunday (11:15 a.m. ET) against Serbia, but it’s not the same Nikola Jokic-led Serbian squad the U.S. beat 105-79 on July 17 in Abu Dhabi. Starter Bogdan Bogdanovic (Atlanta Hawks) and key reserves Nikola Jovic (Miami Heat) and Nikola Milutinov didn’t play in that game.

‘We have another level. I think we have another two levels that we didn’t get to, but it’s a collaboration always,’ Kerr said.

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USA-Serbia men’s basketball starting lineups

Kerr has started LeBron James, Steph Curry and Joel Embiid and rotated players through the other two spots in the exhibition games. U.S. star Kevin Durant, who didn’t play in the Olympic tune-up games due to a sore calf, is expected to play and could start.

Here are potential starting lineups:

USA starting lineup

LeBron James (Los Angeles Lakers)
Devin Booker (Phoenix Suns) or Kevin Durant (Phoenix Suns)
Steph Curry (Golden State Warriors)
Jrue Holiday (Boston Celtics)
Joel Embiid (Philadelphia 76ers)

Serbia starting lineup

Ognjen Dobric
Filip Petrusev
Bogdan Bogdanovic (Atlanta Hawks)
Aleksa Avramovic
Nikola Jokic (Denver Nuggets)

What to watch for Serbia

It starts with Jokic, the Denver Nuggets’ three-time NBA MVP including in 2023-24, but Serbia has other players with size, and it can make 3-pointers. Serbia will try to control pace, play smart, limit turnovers, be physical and use ball movement and cutting to break down the U.S. defense. In exhibition games, Serbia lost to the U.S. and Australia but beat France, Greece and Japan. But it also tried to conceal what it will do once the Olympics begin.

What to watch for the USA

The U.S. must match the physicality of Serbia, which puts the focus on the U.S. big men – Joel Embiid, Anthony Davis and Bam Adebayo. Kerr mentioned pace, and the U.S. thrives in transition. The Americans are more athletic and have a considerable edge there.

The U.S. was even with its opponents in 3-pointers made in the five exhibition games. If it’s hitting 3s, getting stops and playing in the open court, the U.S. is tough to beat. Also, regardless if Durant starts or not, pay attention to Kerr’s rotations – who is on the court together and for how long.

‘One word is force,’ Kerr said. ‘If we play with force at both ends – our cutting, sprinting, boxing out, no back cuts, physicality, we do all those things, that’s one level. The next level beyond that is the confidence that goes with it. … We’re confident if we play with force, that will translate at both ends.’

USA-Serbia prediction

USA 96, Serbia 84

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VILLENEUVE-D’ASCQ, France – France phenom Victor Wembanyama put on a show for the home crowd in his Olympics debut.

The 7-foot-4 Wembanyama soared for dunks, blocked shots and made steals with his eight-foot wingspan, energizing the home fans and leading France to a 78-66 victory over Brazil on Saturday in Group B of men’s 5×5 basketball at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Wembanyama, who plays for San Antonio Spurs, had 19 points, including 14 in the first half, nine rebounds, four steals and three blocks.  He was 7-for-13 from the field and left points on the court, going 4-for-7 on free throws. 

On a France team with experience and Olympic medalists, the 20-year-old Wembanyama was the best player on the court – a force offensively and defensively

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“I like the way they’ve tried to install me in the system,” Wembanyama said.

He demurred talking about his performance.

“It’s about sacrifices, I’d say. We’re all here for a purpose,” he told reporters in English after answering questions in French.

His coach and teammates had no problem talking about his game.

France coach Vincent Collet noticed mid-week that Wembanyama had butterflies about the Olympics.

“I think for the first time of his career he was a little bit stressed,” Collet said. “This week, I would say three days before the game, I felt he was a little bit stressed. So, we talk together and everybody, with teammates, rest of the staff, we try to help him and I think he’s so mature day by day he got better with that and he just wanted (the Olympics) to start.”

French fans filled Pierre Mauroy Stadium – a soccer stadium 140 miles north of Paris that has been converted into a massive basketball and handball arena with a capacity for 27,000 fans at the Summer Games – and they were not disappointed.

Especially with the NBA’s 2023-24 Rookie of the Year.

He scored 11 points in the second quarter as France eliminated a 23-15 deficit and took a 39-36 lead into halftime. During a 40-second stretch late in the second quarter, he had two massive dunks, including one that had the Internet abuzz with its otherworldly Space Jam qualities.

“For Victor, the main thing was to go inside where he is sure to dominate every time,” Collet said.

On the first of two big dunks late in the first half, he received a pass in the low post from Nic Batum. Batum cut baseline, giving Wembanyama room to operate with the basketball. Wembanyama spun to his right almost to the opposite low-post position in which he caught the ball, and out of nowhere dunked with his left hand.

‘That dunk he had, I’m pretty sure his head was above the rim. I couldn’t believe it,” Evan Fournier said.

Said Batum: ‘I was like, ‘Wow.’ I don’t know why he dunked that one.’

Wembanyama scored just five points in the second half, but had an assist, two steals and two blocks in the third quarter as France took control of the game.

‘The thing with Wemby, he can do so many things, so sometimes it’s almost like a burden because he doesn’t focus on one thing,” Fournier said.

It’s a burden that France − with its medal expectations − will accept.

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VERSAILLES, France – The pack of British tabloid journalists were standing to the side, waiting for the writers from publications like Horse & Hound or The Chronicle of the Horse to finish getting the rundown of how JL Dublin – or ‘Dubs,’ as rider Tom McEwen calls him – performed in his first Olympic dressage test.

The reporters had little use for this conversation, some of them even silently making faces to each other, mocking the softness of the questions. They were merely biding their time until McEwen, part of Great Britain’s gold medal-winning team in Tokyo, took two steps to his left so that they could get what they came for.

Tom, congratulations on your performance today. For those of us that don’t watch the sport every week, can you reassure us that what we see out there – the beauty of it – is matched behind the scenes?

Of all the scenes that unfolded Saturday at the equestrian complex they have built here just beyond the famous gardens of Versailles Palace, this one was the most instructive about the moment this sport finds itself in.

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Unlike Thoroughbred racing, which was once among the biggest sports in America but now has to fight tooth-and-nail for its survival amidst an avalanche of cynicism about how horses are treated, eventing was never really meant for large-scale audiences.

It is really more of a hobby than a sport – a niche within a niche – and those who participate in it or follow it regularly only do so because they really love horses.

Which is what makes the cascading scandal that ensnared Britain’s six-time Olympic medalist Charlotte Dujardin so hard to process – and why people involved in the post are so flat-footed in addressing it.

They’ve never really had to defend what they do and how they do it to the outside world. But now at the 2024 Paris Olympics, after a 2-year old video surfaced of Dujardin using a long whip during a teaching session as a frightened horse tried to run away from getting lashed, the outside world has arrived and they’re not quite sure what to do about it.

‘I would invite every single one of you to come round and have a look at the yard, an hour, a week, a day, whatever it took – and you can see actually what you see, the beauty of here is what happens every single day at home,’ McEwen said. ‘These horses are looked after as kings and queens. Obviously it’s come as a massive shock to all of us what’s come to light. But actually I think it’s really important for the rest of us to put a shining light on our amazing sport.’

There’s little doubt McEwen believes this; believes in the good of the sport, believes that Dujardin’s videotaped transgression was a one-off rather than a systemic problem. But there’s just one major problem that dressage will probably learn the hard way, much like horse racing over the last decade.

You can talk about how well the horses are treated all day long. You can blame the media for focusing on the outliers rather than the bigger picture. You can tell the people with no skin in the game that they don’t really understand.

It doesn’t matter.

When cynicism takes hold about how human beings treat animals in pursuit of money or Olympic medals, good luck trying to change the narrative. We’ve seen it in horse racing every time there’s a catastrophic breakdown on national television: Just because it’s part of the game does not mean it will be acceptable to the public.

And once that cycle of denial and bargaining begins while more horrors come to light – rare as they may be − it only leads to one place: Reputational ruin that might take generations to recover.

‘I live off the sport,’ said Germany’s Julia Krajewski, who won the individual eventing gold in Tokyo. ‘I’m a coach, I bring up young people, and I try in whatever we do to put the horse first. You have to work every day, give everything, want to go for everything − but you have to give absolutely no care for the medal if you feel that it’s too much for the horse. That’s different from other sports where you can push yourself to the limit. We have to say we push ourselves, but we’d never push the horse. I think we all want to show the world that it’s possible. But we all have to do it together.’

It’s an uncomfortable thing to talk about here, especially in light of Dujardin’s prominence. But avoiding the conversation isn’t the answer.

It starts with honesty: Is this happening? How widespread is the problem? What actually goes on in the stable when nobody’s watching? How often do you hear about the kinds of horrifying incidents that are now popping up with semi-regularity around equestrian eventing?

But it’s not a conversation a lot of people here want to have. To McEwen’s credit, he as willing to stand in front of reporters and engage – at least until the press agent for Great Britain’s team stepped in.

‘We are here 110% behind horse welfare, and these horses are looked after incredibly,’ he said. ‘I definitely don’t condone at all Charlotte’s behavior, but she has put her hand up to it and she’s owned it and realistically it’s not really for me to say. It’s for the course, the process and the people to decide what punishment she should be getting for her actions and she’s a human being as well so we have to respect her rights as well.

‘I think that’s enough on that,’ the press agent said. ‘I think that’s enough on that now. Any more questions on the test today?’

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No, there weren’t. Because in the big picture, the test for McEwen and JL Dublin doesn’t really matter. If things keep going the way they’re going – three major, big-deal figures in dressage over the last eight months have now been suspended due to videos of horse abuse being turned in – there may not be many more Olympics left for these people.

‘We just have to keep doing a good job by our horses and showing that we look after them well and that they enjoy their job,’ said American Liz Halliday, who made her Olympic debut Saturday. ‘I think that’s what the public needs to know, and I try and push that on my own social media, that these horses that don’t do it unless they love it. There’s no horse here that will go out of that start box unless they love it. It just simply doesn’t happen.’

Sorry, but that’s not going to be good enough. Horse racing trotted out the same lines for years, and it didn’t make a dent of difference. Now, instead of reveling in the beauty of the sport, too many people have to hold their breath every time that 20-horse field goes around the first turn on Derby Day worrying that something catastrophic might happen.

Horse racing can hang on and limp along because it still makes a lot of money for a lot of people. Equestrian, by comparison, is an eminently replaceable sport that would do well to understand how few people would miss it if it went away from the Olympics. That’s how thin the margin is.

They need to figure out a way to talk about this mushrooming problem. They need to figure out how to root out and severely punish anyone who hurts animals so that the public can have the same confidence these elite competitors do in the value of their competition. They need to stop the abuse. And they need to do it now.

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Italian high jumper Gianmarco Tamberi went viral at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics when he shared gold in the men’s high jump.

Less than 24 hours into the 2024 Paris Olympics, Tamberi has found himself back in the headlines — but this time for a different reason.

The three-time Olympian on Saturday issued an apology via social media to his wife, Chiara Bontempi, after losing his wedding ring during Friday’s opening ceremony on the Seine river, where he was the Italian flag bearer. As noted by ABC News, the two have been married for two years.

‘I’m sorry my love, I’m so sorry. Too much water, too many kg lost in the past few months or maybe the uncontrollable enthusiasm of what we were doing,’ Tamberia said. ‘ …. I followed her with a glance until I saw her bouncing inside the boat. A Glimmer of Hope … But unfortunately the bounce was in the wrong direction and floating more than a thousand times in the air I saw her dive into the water like that was the only place she wanted to be.

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‘But if it was meant to happen, if I’m really going to lose this faith, I couldn’t imagine a better place. It will stay ever in the riverbed of the city of love, flown away while I tried to carry the Italian tricolor as high as possible during the opening ceremony of the most important sporting event in the world.’

Tamberi went on to say that Friday’s events can serve as an opportunity to renew his vows with his wife and inspiration to come home ‘with even bigger gold.’

‘I think there might be a huge poetic side to yesterday’s misdeed, and if you want, we’ll throw yours into the river, too, so they’ll be together forever,’ Tamberi said. ‘And we’ll have one more excuse to, like you’ve always asked, renew our vows.’

The 2024 Paris Olympics is the third Olympic Games that Tamberi is competing in for Italy. Tamberi was part of one of the biggest storylines of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, when he shared gold with Qatar’s Mutaz Barshim in the men’s high jump. Both jumped 2.37 meters in the air.

With the gold medal finish, Tamberi became just the second Italian to win gold in the high jump at the Olympic Games, joining Sara Simeoni, who won gold at the 1980 Moscow Olympics.

Track and field competition does not start in Paris until Thursday, Aug. 1, with the men’s and women’s 20-kilometer race walk. Men’s high jump starts on Wednesday, Aug. 7, where Tamberi is favored to defend his gold medal.

This time, as he did in Tokyo, he will do so without a ring on his finger.

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Venezuelans head to the polls on Sunday for their first full presidential election in over a decade after opposition parties ended their boycott and coalesced around a single candidate in hopes of ousting the current regime. 

‘The de facto opposition leader Maria Corina Machado has galvanized the Venezuelan people to the point that both Chavistas and anti-Chavistas in Venezuela want a change,’ Joseph Humire, the executive director of the Center for a Secure Free Society (SFS), told Fox News Digital. 

‘But changing the president is not enough,’ Humire cautioned. ‘Regardless of who is Venezuela’s next president, the criminal system embedded in Venezuelan institutions will adapt and continue operating. An internal effort is necessary but insufficient to dismantle the Venezuela Threat Network.’

‘Yet, this doesn’t take away from what Maria Corina has done regardless of the outcome on Sunday – give Venezuelans another chance,’ he added. 

Opposition supporters have backed Edmundo Gonzalez, who had an overwhelming lead over the incumbent Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro heading into the weekend, according to the BBC. Maduro has warned that a defeat for his United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) would result in a ‘bloodbath.’

PSUV led a coalition that holds 256 of the 277 seats in the country’s National Assembly, and has control over Supreme Tribunal of Justice courts and the National Electoral Council. The opposition could never unite behind a single candidate, and parties boycotted the 2018 election because of accusations that free and fair elections were not possible under Maduro’s government. 

Humire on social media platform X posted polling data that showed expected results based on low or high levels of expected voter participation, in both cases showing Maduro getting around half as many votes as Gonzalez would get.

Humire speculated that Maduro must either engage in massive fraud to steal the election or strike a deal to stay in power.

Demonstrations held Thursday ahead of the vote drew thousands to the capital, where Maduro claimed his opponents promoted violence while he wanted only peace, and the opposition faced an uphill battle to get their message out: State television did not broadcast any of the opposition rally, according to The Associated Press. 

And Reuters reported that Venezuelans abroad have struggled to register to vote as bureaucratic hurdles have kept all but a small fraction of voters from being ready for Sunday. 

Maduro succeeded Hugo Chavez as leader of the PSUV following the latter’s death and assumed office in 2013, and the party has remained in power for over a quarter of a century, making the election on Sunday a potentially pivotal point for the whole country. 

‘Against all odds, overcoming the immense geopolitical occupational forces present in Venezuela, the criminal enterprise in power and the entrenched cleptocratic regime … Sunday’s election could mark the beginning of the end of the most disastrous political catastrophe in our country’s history,’ Isaias Medina III, former U.N. Security Council diplomat and Harvard Mason fellow, told Fox News Digital. 

‘Should this happen, the ensuing development and growth of our nation will be unparalleled, driven by Western-minded policies with allied nations that will rectify the 21st-century socialist aberrations entrenched over the last two decades in the richest country in the region,’ Medina said. ‘Like a city on a hill, a free Venezuela shall shine again.’ 

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