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There is nothing more coveted at the Olympics than a gold medal. But is it even actually gold?

All of the Olympians will compete in the 2024 Summer Games for the chance to stand at the podium and collect a gold, silver or bronze medal. Even though the medals are iconic symbols of athletic excellence, they don’t all look the same. Each version of the Olympics means a new unique twist on the medals and this year is no different.

With the thousands of medals set to begin being awarded, here is everything to know about the 2024 Paris Olympic hardware and the history of gold:

What do the 2024 Paris Olympics medals look like?

2024 Paris Olympics details: Include Eiffel Tower

This year’s medals were designed by Chaumet, a luxury French jeweler. The most significant part of the medals is every one of them includes a piece of original iron from the Eiffel Tower.

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

‘Certain metallic elements have been permanently removed and conserved in this process,’ said the International Olympic Committee. ‘For the Paris 2024 Games, the Eiffel Tower Operating Company is allowing these genuine pieces of Parisian and French history to find glory again.’

The original Eiffel Tower iron used is formed in a hexagon in its iron color with the 2024 Olympic Games logo on it. Six metal appendages on the hexagon also come from the original Eiffel Tower.

On the other side of the medals is the look every medal gets: The Olympic five rings symbol, Nike, the Greek goddess of victory, in front of the Panathenaic Stadium and the official name of the games. But there is a unique feature on this side as well; in addition to the Acropolis of Athens in the distance behind the stadium, the Eiffel Tower is also in the background.

How many gold medals are given out at the Olympics?

With 329 events, at least 329 gold medals will be handed out. This doesn’t including multiple gold medals on team events or ties for first.

Are Olympic gold medals solid gold?

Gold medals aren’t actual gold.

The International Olympic Committee requires that gold medals must be made of at least 92.5% silver, but also have about six grams of gold, so there is some. The silver medal is mostly silver and some iron while the bronze medal is mostly made of copper and with some zinc and iron.

How much are the Olympic gold medals worth?

Not as much as you think. A gold medal is worth approximately $950, according to Forbes. Since it’s not fully made of real gold, it isn’t as expensive.

Do coaches get Olympic medals?

While a coach will get a Super Bowl or World Series ring, coaches don’t get anything if the athlete they coached wins a medal.

Most gold medals won at the Summer Olympics by a single person

Michael Phelps owns the record of most gold medals won in one Summer Olympics. He won eight gold medals in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. He also has the most gold medals by any Olympic athlete all time with 23.

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Artistic gymnastics has been a permanent fixture of the Olympics since the first Games of the modern era in 1896, and it now stands as one of the most anticipated events at the 2024 Paris Olympics. 

The artistic gymnastics competition in Paris will kick off Saturday and conclude Aug. 5. Between the men’s and women’s contests, there will be 14 medal events, including individual apparatus finals, all-around finals and team finals. The top 24 gymnasts in the all-around and the top eight in each apparatus, with a maximum of two gymnasts per country, will qualify for each final.

Simone Biles, the most decorated gymnast of all time, is the clear favorite to win the women’s all-around competition – she has not lost one since 2013 – as well as the floor, vault and beam contests. The 27-year-old Team USA superstar will be joined by a star-studded team of familiar faces in reigning Olympic all-around champion Suni Lee, Jordan Chiles and Jade Carey, all who won Olympic medals in Tokyo. This experienced quartet will also be reinforced by 16-year-old Hezly Rivera, the 2023 U.S. junior champion. In the absence of a Russian team, the team gold is Team USA’s to lose. 

Team USA will send five men to Paris: Brody Malone, Fred Richard, Asher Hong, Paul Juda and Stephen Nedoroscik. The team will look to end a 16-year Olympic medal drought in the team final, with Malone and Richard standing as Team USA’s top contenders for individual medals.

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

Each event will be available to be streamed live on Peacock or NBCOlympics.com. NBC will also air non-live coverage of finals events during its Primetime in Paris evening show. Here’s the full artistic gymnastics schedule for the 2024 Paris Olympic Games with specific information on streaming and broadcasting for each event.

Saturday, July 27

Men’s qualification: Subdivision 1 (includes Team USA), 5 a.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Men’s qualification: Subdivision 2, 9:30 a.m. ET on E, NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Men’s qualification: Subdivision 3, 2 p.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (qualification replay), 9 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

Sunday, July 28

Women’s qualification: Subdivision 1, 3:30 a.m. ET (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Women’s qualification: Subdivision 2 (includes Team USA), 5:40 a.m. ET (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Women’s qualification: Subdivision 3, 8:50 a.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Women’s qualification: Subdivision 4, noon ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Women’s qualification: Subdivision 5, 3:10 p.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
NBC Daytime (non-live coverage of women’s qualification), 5 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (qualification replay), 7 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

Monday, July 29

Men’s team final (medal event), 11:30 a.m. ET on Universo (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (men’s team final replay), 9 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

Tuesday, July 30

Women’s team final (medal event), noon ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (women’s team final replay), 8 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

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Wednesday, July 31

Men’s all-around final (medal event), 11:30 a.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (men’s all-around final replay), 9 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

Thursday, Aug. 1

Women’s all-around final (medal event), 12:15 p.m. ET on NBC, Universo (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (women’s all-around final replay), 8 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

Saturday, Aug. 3

Men’s floor exercise final (medal event), 9:30 a.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Women’s vault final (medal event), 10:20 a.m. ET on NBC, E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Men’s pommel horse final (medal event), 11:10 a.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Replay of the day’s men’s apparatus finals, 4:30 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (women’s vault final replay), 9 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

Sunday, Aug. 4

Men’s rings final (medal event), 9 a.m. ET (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Women’s uneven bars final (medal event), 9:45 a.m. ET (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Men’s vault final (medal event), 10:35 a.m. ET (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (men’s vault final replay), 7 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (women’s uneven bars final replay), 9 p.m. ET on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

Monday, Aug. 5

Men’s parallel bars final (medal event), 5:45 a.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Women’s balance beam final (medal event), 6:36 a.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Men’s high bar final (medal event), 7:30 a.m. ET on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Women’s floor exercise final (medal event), 8:20 a.m. on E (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)
Primetime in Paris (women’s balance beam and floor exercise finals replay), 8 p.m. on NBC (streaming on Peacock, NBCOlympics.com)

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PARIS — They cheered and they cried and they pinched themselves to make sure it was real, and as they watched for their son and brother to sail down the Seine on Team USA’s riverboat Friday, the family of 18-year-old climber Zach Hammer couldn’t have asked for a more perfect city to watch him kick off the Olympic Games.

Gary and Lisa Hammer got engaged in Paris 31 years ago in the Garden of Aphrodite at the Louvre.

They celebrated with a dinner at a restaurant on the banks of the river and brought their growing family back to Paris in 2009 for their 15th wedding anniversary.

Zach, 2 at the time, posed for pictures in front of the Eiffel Tower with his brother, Max, and sister, Maggie, and the family took a cruise down the Seine as their youngest son ran around repeating something incoherently he heard on the children’s show ‘Dragon Tales.’

“It feels almost surreal that 15 years later we’re back for their 30th wedding anniversary watching Zach float down the same river, on a boat,” Maggie Hammer said. “It’s pretty wild.”

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

On Friday, the Hammers (minus Max, who will join them later) watched the parade of nations carrying athletes from every country in this year’s Olympics float down the Seine from an elevated grandstand on the Pont de la Tournelle.

Tickets for the section cost nearly $1,000 each – far cheaper than other seats closer to the procession’s end, near the Eiffel Tower – and put the Hammers a few hundred yards from the restaurant where they celebrated their engagement three decades ago.

Zach is one of the youngest members of Team USA having graduated from Ann Arbor (Michigan) Skyline High earlier this year.

He’s perhaps the most unexpected member of the team’s eight-person climbing group, earning an Olympic bid with a late-season surge in two qualifying tournaments.

“It’s been quite a journey,” Gary said. “A year ago, we didn’t know if we had a shot. We weren’t thinking about it. … We didn’t think Zach was going to make it. He’s young, and in the last year he exploded. He just, he kept getting better.”

Gary (at Vermont) and Lisa (at MIT) competed collegiately in gymnastics, and their children followed in their footsteps at an early age.

But Max, who’s seven years older than Zach, stumbled into a climbing gym next to his gymnastics facility one day when he was 11 and turned his attention almost instantly to the sport.

Maggie and Zach followed, and in the years since their parents became avid climbers, too.

Lisa confessed Friday she was happy her kids left the gymnastics world to pick up what was at the time a non-Olympic sport. She saw the dark side of gymnastics up close, when one of her teammates died of anorexia, and didn’t want her kids chasing a sport for the wrong reason.

“I don’t want Zach to just be achieving, to be striving for achievements,” Gary said. “Life’s not about a lifetime of achieving awards, it’s about doing things you love to do. And if you happen to love what you do and have a peak experience like this, ooh, you’re a lucky person.”

The Hammers spent more than six hours with USA TODAY on Friday, inviting a reporter to walk with them from their temporary residence in Paris at the home of a friend to the opening ceremony, which they watched with several hundred other screaming spectators on the bridge.

Team USA sailor Lara Dallman-Weiss’ parents and the parents of a water polo player from Team Japan also were on the bridge, though none of the families had ever met.

The Hammers, who will travel with Zach and the rest of the climbing team to Barcelona for five days of practice on Saturday, left their apartment around 3 p.m. for a ceremony that began more than four hours later.

They stopped twice for food along the way, not knowing how long the wait would be to wade through thousands of celebration-goers in the streets. They bought two pizzas, two pretzels and a yogurt, and Gary ordered a coppa and tomato sandwich at the first stop called “La Montagnard,” which translated – unbeknownst to him – means “The Mountain Man.”

Gary wore blue and silver tinsel in his hair and he and Maggie had red, white and blue sparkles on their face. All three wore Team USA shirts, and after a 40-minute wait, the group made it past armed security guards and metal detectors into the bridge area.

They sat in red seats in the third row of the grandstand and pulled out umbrellas and raincoats when it rained. They talked with other families sitting nearby, and Gary said he teared up at the start of the ceremony.

“I was just getting emotional about the Olympics, all peoples coming together in the world globally and that Zach was a part of that,” he said. “I think it was just the beginning of the music and I was getting a bunch of emails and texts saying how unreal it was, and then I realized it was real. And I was here, and Zach was a part of it. That was a powerful moment.”

A steady rain started around 5:30 p.m. and lasted well into the night, soaking everyone in attendance but not drenching anyone’s spirits.

Two women walked around in white gowns with “Team Croatia” embroidered on the back, a man in glasses draped a Mexican flag around his neck, and as the boats sailed down the river fans screamed and yelled and waved flags in every boat’s direction.

The Hammers followed Team USA’s boat by the Find My app on Zach’s phone, and they moved out of their seats to the front of the bridge as the boat approached. They couldn’t quite pick Zach out, but they cheered his name and knew he was there, soaking in another cruise down the Seine.

“It still hasn’t sunk in. We’re here. We’re walking to opening ceremonies and it still does not feel like real, like the Olympics,” Maggie said early in the night. “I’ve been telling literally everybody I know, whether they care or not. I’m like, ‘Oh yeah, my brother’s going to the Olympics.’ ”

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Even though TNT is set to lose its NBA media rights after next season, there is a chance Charles Barkley could still be talking ball on TV.

The Basketball Hall of Famer and iconic ‘Inside the NBA’ voice told The Athletic on Friday he will either remain with TNT Sports or listen to offers from ESPN, NBC and Amazon Prime Video for when the new media rights deal kicks in for the 2025-26 season. Barkley is in the third year of a 10-year, $210 million contract with TNT Sports.

“Turner has to come to me ASAP and they have to guarantee my whole thing or they can offer me a pay cut, which there is no chance of that happening and I’ll be (a) free agent,’ he told the outlet. ‘My thing was, ‘Wait, y’all (expletive) up, I didn’t (expletive) up, why do I have to take a pay cut?’

Barkley’s comments are a change of direction from what he said when reports began to surface about TNT losing its NBA media rights. During the 2024 NBA Finals, he said regardless of how the media rights deal played out, the 2024-25 season would be his last on-air.

‘No matter what happens, next year is going to be my last year on television,’ he said. ‘And I just want to say thank you to my NBA family. You guys have been great to me. My heart is full with joy and gratitude.’

Barkley told The Athletic the possibility of retiring from TV remains a possibility, but he is keeping his ears open on any offers he gets. He mentioned ESPN, NBC and Amazon have all been in contact with him, and he would prefer to have the rest of his ‘Inside the NBA’ crew − Ernie Johnson, Shaquille O’Neal and Kenny Smith − still with him.

TNT Sports announced Friday it has taken legal action against the NBA for it being left out of the media rights deal. TNT Sports was given a chance to match Amazon’s offer in the deal, which it did, but the network said the NBA ‘grossly misinterpreted our contractual rights’ in the negotiation process. Barkley had a similar sentiment on social media, calling out the league.

‘Clearly, the NBA has wanted to break up with us from the beginning,’ Barkley wrote. ‘I’m not sure TNT ever had a chance. TNT matched the money. The league knows Amazon and these tech companies are the only ones willing to pay for the rights when they double in the future. The NBA didn’t want to piss them off.

‘It’s a sad day when owners and commissioners choose money over the fans. It just sucks,’ he added.

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Ledecky, who has seven Olympic gold medals, will compete in three individual events and is expected to participate in at least one relay.

She can earn a medal on her first day of competition at Paris La Défense Arena as the women’s 400-meter freestyle heats get underway. The final will be held later in the day, where Australia’s Ariarne Titmus looks to defend her Olympic title.

On Tuesday, Ledecky will start the women’s 1500-meter freestyle heats, where she is the world record holder and is expected to dominate the competition. That final will be held on Wednesday.

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

Ledecky also holds the world record in the 800-meter freestyle and is the three-time defending gold medalist in the event. Those heats will start on Aug. 2, with the final being held the next day.

Katie Ledecky’s swimming schedule

Ledecky’s chase for more gold gets underway on Saturday, July 27. Here’s her complete schedule for events in which she is competing. All times are Eastern:

Saturday, July 27, 5:12 a.m.

Heats: 400 meter free

Saturday, July 27, 2:42 p.m.

Finals: 400 meter free

Tuesday, July 30, 5:44 a.m.

Heats: 1500 meter free 

Wednesday, July 31, 3:07 p.m.

Finals 1500 meter free

Thursday, Aug. 1, 5:56 a.m.

Heats: 4×200 meter free relay

Thursday, Aug. 1, 3:49 p.m.

Finals: 4×200 meter free

Friday, Aug. 2, 5:35 a.m.

Heats: 800 meter Free

Saturday, Aug. 3, 3:08 p.m.

Finals: 800 meter Free

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The lowest point in Jonathan Owens’ life led to the best.

Cut by the Arizona Cardinals ahead of the 2019 NFL season, Owens said he was “heartbroken.” He’d had what he thought was a terrific training camp and was sure he was going to make the team.

“It was a big humbling experience for me,” he told USA TODAY Sports. “First time you get cut in your life. It’s basically somebody telling you you’re not good enough.”

Worse, as one week stretched into two without getting calls from any other teams, the doubts began to creep in. Owens knew he could play. But he was an undrafted free agent who’d spent his rookie year on injured reserve, and he’d heard the stories of guys like him getting cut and then just fading away.

That third week, however, Owens’ agent called. The Houston Texans wanted to bring him in for a tryout later that week.

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

“I packed all my bags, my video games. I knew. It was just one of those things. I wasn’t going to let them send me back home,” Owens said.

There were six other safeties at the tryouts, some of whom were veterans. But Owens was the one they kept.

“That was September 2019,” he said. “I meet Simone seven months later.”

That’s Simone as in Simone Biles, now Owens’ wife. The two met on a dating app, Raya, in March 2020, got engaged in February 2022 and were married in April 2023.

Here’s what to know about Biles’ husband:

What does Jonathan Owens do?

Owens is a safety for the Chicago Bears.

His career is self-made. He was an undrafted free agent out of Missouri Western and signed with the Arizona Cardinals in April 2018. Less than a month later, he tore his ACL and spent his entire rookie season on injured reserve.

He was cut by the Cardinals at the end of training camp in 2019 and signed with the Houston Texans on Sept. 30, 2019. Owens spent most of that season on the practice squad, though he did make his NFL debut Nov. 21, 2019, against Indianapolis.

Owens moved between the Texans’ practice squad and the active roster the next two seasons, playing in 13 games and making two starts. He enjoyed a breakout season in 2022, starting all 17 games for the Texans and ranking second on the team with 125 tackles. He also had one sack.

“I’m a big believer in adversity builds character, builds who you are. Me being someone cut five times — if I was first-round draft pick, I wouldn’t be the person I am today,” Owens said. “I’ve had so many things not go my way, I started to realize I’m stressing about wrong things. Attitude and effort, those are the things you’re going to control. The outcome is going to take care of itself.”

Owens signed with the Green Bay Packers as a free agent in May 2023, days after he and Biles returned from their Mexico wedding. He spent one season there, playing in all 17 games and making 11 starts. In addition to 74 tackles, he had a sack and a forced fumble, and he also recovered a fumble for a touchdown.

“I’m just a little more free-spirited (now) and I think Jonathan has helped. His career, with the uncertainty, has helped. I’ve just tried not to control everything that I can’t control anymore,” Biles said.

How long has Jonathan Owens been in the NFL?

This will be Owens’ seventh season in the NFL. The Chicago Bears are his fourth team, after stops in Arizona, Houston and Green Bay.

‘I always make relationships with the rookies on the team, especially the undrafted rookies because that was me. I see myself in them,’ Owens said. ‘I was cut five times. I didn’t make 53-man roster until my fifth year in the league and now it’s three years in a row. I just want to give guys hope.’

Where is Jonathan Owens from?

He grew up in St. Louis and went to college at Missouri Western, where he was a starter his last two seasons. Owens was second-team all-conference as a senior and also was named Missouri Western’s male student-athlete of the year. He was on the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association academic honor roll all four years.

When did Jonathan Owens and Simone Biles get married?

They actually got married twice. Because they were having a destination wedding in Mexico, they had to get married in the United States first. Their official ceremony was April 22, 2023, at the Harris County Courthouse in Houston, followed by a second wedding May 6, 2023, in Cabo.

Does Jonathan Owens know anything about gymnastics?

He does now! In addition to cheering on his wife, Owens was seen keeping score at some of Biles’ meets this summer.

“My Mom and Dad — (meet organizers) never used to display scores from everybody, so they would take notes and scores of every athlete. At the last meet, Jonathan saw my parents doing it and he was like, `Where’d you get that? I need one of those!’ Because whenever he learns about something, he wants to really dive in,” Biles said after the U.S. championships in June.

“He’s kind of a nerd in that respect. In the best way!” she added. “So if he’s gonna learn about gymnastics, he’s gonna learn about it.”

For Owens, it’s simply a matter of respect.

While he and Biles don’t spend a lot of time talking about their respective athletic careers, he wanted to be knowledgeable when they did, rather than just responding, “Oh, that’s great!” Or, “I’m sorry, tomorrow will be better.”

He’s learned the names of the skills she does, where they are in each of her routines and what makes them difficult. He knows to breathe a sigh of relief when she’s done her wolf turn on beam, a skill that’s been the downfall of many a gymnast, and appreciates why her Yurchenko double pike is such a big deal.

“I just wanted to understand so I can know and have the conversations with her,” Owens said.

Mostly, though, Owens is just a proud husband.

“I just love getting to watch her in her environment,” he said. “She goes up there and does it, every freaking time. Surpasses what she’s supposed to do. I love that. I love that I get a backseat to see it all. I get to witness the greatness. I get to be able to sit back and watch the work she puts in.”

Could Jonathan Owens do any of Simone Biles’ skills?

In a word? No.

‘I know how hard it is,’ Owens said. ‘I appreciate the difficulty of what she’s doing. I would break my freaking neck.’

Will Jonathan Owens be in Paris?

For part of the competition, yes.

Biles said after the Olympic trials that the team gave Owens permission to go to Paris for a few days so he can see her compete. The Bears confirmed that, saying Owens is excused July 29 to Aug. 3. This despite the Bears having a preseason game Aug. 1 against the Houston Texans — the team Owens was playing for when he and Biles met.

‘We respect the Olympics. That’s a big deal,’ Bears coach Matt Eberflus said Monday. ‘He’s supporting the one he loves the most. I think that’s so cool that he gets to do that, we welcome that and it’s going to be awesome.

‘Go USA,’ Eberflus said, drawing laughter.

The time off will allow Owens to see Biles compete in both the team final, where the U.S. women are heavily favored to win gold, and the all-around final, where she’s likely to become only the third woman and first since 1968 to win two Olympic titles. The team final is July 30 and the all-around final is Aug. 1.

‘Anytime we can show up for one another in support, we just get super excited because our schedules don’t align that much,’ said Biles, who goes to as many of Owens’ games as she can. ‘So whenever it does, it’s really important for the both of us to show up in support.’

Paris will be the first time Owens will see Biles compete internationally. Friends and family were not allowed at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, and last year’s world championships were during the heart of the NFL season.

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The opening ceremony of the 2024 Paris Olympics offered a different type of catwalk: the Seine River. 

Paris once again found itself the center of the fashion universe Friday. Unlike the exclusive events of Paris Fashion Week, athletes from around the world participated in the traditional parade of nations loaded onto boats floating down the Seine River.

Each nation wore custom-designed outfits to showcase their nation’s culture to the world. Some nations rose to the challenge wonderfully. Others left us wondering if the fashion police had, like the rest of France, gone on strike.

Here’s a ranking of the 10 most memorable outfits from the ceremony.

1. Mongolia

Designed by power duo sisters Michel and Amazonka Choigaalaa, Team Mongolia’s opening ceremony attire went viral days before the start of Paris 2024, and with good reason. Based on a traditional Mongolian deel, Mongolia’s uniform was a perfect combination of sleek, delicate and fierce with intricately embroidered vests featuring designs that served as a beautiful ode to the country’s heritage. It’s safe to say Mongolia has already won gold before the first medal event of the Games.

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

2. Haiti

Designed by Haitian-Italian designer Stella Jean, the Haitian delegation meant business with their attire. The skirts and pants, based on the artwork of Haitian painter Philippe Dodard, stole the show. 

3. Mexico

Mexico demonstrated exactly how to combine cultural traditions with modern style (some of the countries later on in this list should take note). The team sported street-style white jackets decorated with black patterns and symbols to pay homage to some of Mexico’s most iconic cities. 

4. Egypt

The Egyptian delegation pulled off all-white suits made of Egyptian cotton, complete with a trim in the Egyptian flag’s colors to give a classy, elegant look.

5. The Netherlands

Similar to Mexico, the Netherlands rocked a chic white jacket embellished with orange accents that served as a welcomed break from the characteristically neon orange tracksuits we’ve become accustomed to seeing from the Dutch team (yes, there is such a thing as too much orange, even for a team nicknamed the Oranje).

6. Great Britain

Designed by Ben Sherman, Team GB wore white and navy bomber jackets with shirts adorned with a pattern of a rose, thistle, daffodil and shamrock to represent the national flowers of the nations of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

It was a nice touch, but perhaps an ironic one for a team that couldn’t reach an agreement to attempt to qualify for the men’s soccer tournament as a unified Team GB.

Overall, the outfits weren’t very bold, but (as evidenced by the rest of this list), bold does not always equal better.

7. Australia

This was an Olympic ceremony, not a golf tournament … or tennis match … or dance show? The classic green and gold Aussie color scheme worked well, but the pleated skirt worn by many female athletes missed the mark.

8. USA

Designed by Ralph Lauren, Team USA sported a striped blouse, navy blazer and blue jeans. The get-up could have been worse, but the outfits should have been fit for a team vying for the top spot of the medal table, not a prep contest at a dress-down day at a Connecticut boarding school. Is a navy blue blazer and jeans really the best way to showcase American culture to the world?

9. France

The host nation had the chance to make a definitive case to the onlooking world why France should be considered the fashion capital of the world. It’s safe to say Milan doesn’t need to sweat after the French team showed up in navy suits that closely resembled a stock photo of a flight attendant uniform.

10. The Czech Republic

If you’ve ever wondered if there’s such a thing as too much pattern, the Czech Republic’s uniform answered that question with a resounding yes. Paying homage to the Czech flag, athletes wore red, white and blue gradient polo shirts that were overshadowed by oversized trench coats with a blue splattered ink design that stunned (and not in a good way).

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Haener, 25, did not want to disclose the type of cancer but described it as ‘rare’ for someone his age, though not ‘a life-threatening thing right now.’ He has a consultation scheduled for next Thursday to determine how long he can wait before taking next steps, which will include undergoing a procedure.

“It’s something that just popped up,’ said Haener, who first revealed the diagnosis when asked about a small bandage on his right cheek. ‘And I was kind of worried about it, my family was kind of worried about it. It was just this random odd-looking bump that kept growing. … It popped up, and we needed to go the dermatologist. They removed it, they did a biopsy on it, and it came back last week, right before camp, that it was a rare form of skin cancer for my age, like I said.’

Haener hopes to wait until the team returns from its training camp in Irvine, California, and completes the preseason to undergo the procedure, but he added he wants to be proactive.

‘With these skin cancer things, if you wait, things spread,’ Haener said. ‘So I’ve just gotta get it taken care of.’

All things Saints: Latest New Orleans Saints news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

A fourth-round pick out of Fresno State in 2023, Haener is competing with 2024 fifth-round pick Spencer Rattler to be starting quarterback Derek Carr’s primary backup.

Haener is the second Saints player to disclose a cancer diagnosis since last spring. After signing a three-year contract with New Orleans last offseason, tight end Foster Moreau revealed last March that he had Hodgkin lymphoma. In July, Moreau announced his cancer was in full remission.

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The action from the 2024 Paris Olympics has been underway for a few days, but now it’s time to get what every Olympian wants: medals.

The first medals of this year’s Summer Games will be handed out on Saturday as every country represented in Paris races to take home the most hardware, especially when it comes to gold. There will be 14 gold medals up for grabs in Saturday’s action, which includes two of the best swimmers in the world from Team USA in Katie Ledecky and Caeleb Dressel.

Here’s what to know about the medal count for the 2024 Paris Olympics on the first day of medal events:

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What is the medal count at the 2024 Paris Olympics?

There have not been any medals awarded in the 2024 Paris Olympics yet, but it will change as Saturday goes along.

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

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What Olympic medals are up for grabs Saturday?

Here is what Olympic medals will be contested on Saturday, as well as what time the action start. All times are Eastern:

Shooting

4:30 a.m.: 10m air rifle mixed team bronze medal
5 a.m.: 10m air rifle mixed team gold medal

Diving

5 a.m.: Women’s synchronized 3m springboard final

Cycling road

8:30 a.m.: Women’s time trial
10:34 a.m.: Men’s time trial

Skateboarding

11 a.m.: Men’s street final

Judo

11:18 a.m.: Women -48 kg contest for bronze medal A
11:28 a.m.: Women -48 kg contest for bronze medal B
11:38 a.m.: Women -48 kg final
11:49 a.m.: Men -60 kg contest for bronze medal A
11:59 a.m.: Men -60 kg contest for bronze medal B
12:09 p.m.: Men -60 kg final

Rugby Sevens

1 p.m.: Men’s bronze match
1:45 p.m.: Men’s gold medal match

Swimming

2:42 p.m.: Men’s 400m free final
2:55 p.m.: Women’s 400m free final
3:37 p.m.: Women’s 4x100m free relay final
3:50 p.m.: Men’s 4x100m free relay final

Fencing

2:40 p.m.: Women’s épée individual bronze medal bout
3:05 p.m.: Men’s sabre individual bronze medal bout
3:30 p.m.: Women’s épée individual gold medal bout
3:55 p.m.: Men’s sabre Individual gold medal bout

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Sunday marks 100 days until Election Day 2024.

It also marks one week since President Biden’s political landscape-altering announcement that he was suspending his re-election rematch against former President Trump.

Biden made his move amid mounting pressure from within the Democratic Party for him to drop out after a disastrous performance in last month’s first presidential debate with Trump.

The embattled president’s immediate backing of Vice President Kamala Harris last Sunday ignited a surge of endorsements for the vice president by Democratic governors, senators, House members and other party leaders. Within 36 hours, Harris announced that she had locked up her party’s nomination by landing the verbal backing of a majority of the nearly 4,000 delegates to next month’s Democratic National Convention. 

Former President Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama on Friday became the final major party leaders to endorse the vice president.

Harris also hauled in a staggering $129 million in fundraising following Biden’s announcement, which her campaign touted on Thursday morning.

‘It’s go-time for both sides,’ longtime Republican consultant David Kochel told Fox News.

Besides uniting and exciting Democrats, the replacement of Biden by his vice president as the party’s standard-bearer – which is expected to become official during a virtual roll call of convention delegates that starts on Aug. 1 – has given Harris a bump in public opinion polling.

What was once a margin-of-error race between Biden and Trump had turned into a clear edge for the former president in the weeks after their June 27 debate showdown in Atlanta. However, with Harris now at the top of the ticket and Biden out of the race, surveys indicate it is back to a margin-of-error race.

‘Instead of what was shaping up to be a Trump win, America has a real, bona fide race on its hands,’ veteran political scientist and New England College President Wayne Lesperance said. ‘Game on.’

While Harris faces the monumental task of going from zero to 60 in an extremely condensed timeline, she is not starting from scratch, as she immediately inherited Biden’s large campaign apparatus with its vast ground-game resources in the key swing states.

However, Harris does face a crucial immediate task – choosing a running mate – which could come as early as the next week or two.

Biden and Trump are both well-known commodities to American voters.

However, Kochel, a veteran of numerous GOP presidential campaigns who remained neutral in the 2024 Republican primary, emphasized that most Americans know so little about the vice president’s record and that both the Trump and Harris campaigns are ‘in a race to define’ Harris.

In his first campaign rally since the presidential race was upended, Trump did not waste any time in trying to define his new opponent.

At a rally in the crucial battleground state of North Carolina, the Republican presidential nominee repeatedly took aim at Harris, whom he derogatorily called ‘lying Kamala Harris.’

Trump aimed to paint Harris as the ‘most incompetent and far-left vice president in American history.’

The former president charged that Harris ‘has been the ultra-liberal driving force behind every single Biden catastrophe. She is a radical left lunatic who will destroy our country if she ever gets the chance to get into office.’ 

Additionally, pointing to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an Independent, a far-left champion and two-time runner-up for the Democratic presidential nomination, Trump argued that Harris is ‘more liberal than Bernie Sanders. Can you believe it?’

Throughout his more than an hour and a half stream of comments, Trump repeatedly slammed the vice president over border security and crime, two top issues in the 2024 election.

Trump campaign spokesman and senior adviser Steven Cheung said that the former president’s team was ready to go on offense the moment Harris succeeded Biden as the Democrats’ standard-bearer.

‘There wasn’t any surprise. We were prepared for it. We had all our assets ready. We had all our content ready. It didn’t surprise anyone,’ Cheung told reporters ahead of the Trump rally.

Harris, pushing back, is pointing to her hefty law enforcement résumé as she spotlights Trump’s numerous legal controversies, including his 34 felony convictions two months ago in the first criminal trial of a former or current president.

‘As many of you know, before I was elected as vice president, before I was elected as a United States senator, I was the elected attorney general of California. Before that, I was a courtroom prosecutor. In those roles, I took on perpetrators of all kinds,’ Harris said Monday at an event at her campaign headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware.

‘Predators who abused women, fraudsters who ripped off consumers, cheaters who broke the rules for their own gain. So, hear me when I say I know Donald Trump’s type,’ she emphasized as she pointed to Trump’s multiple lawsuits and criminal cases, many of which are ongoing.

Harris repeated the line of attack the next day at a rally in Milwaukee.

With 100 days to go until Election Day, the rhetoric this past week on the campaign trail is just an appetizer of things to come.

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