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Milwaukee Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo made history for Greece carrying his country’s flag during the opening ceremony of the 2024 Paris Olympics. He is the first Black athlete to bear the Greek flag for the Games.

The opening ceremony began at 1:30 p.m. ET Friday along the Seine River.

Ahead of the ceremony, Antetokounmpo spoke to the Olympic News Service about what it means for him to be an Olympic athlete and carry the flag.

Being flagbearer for Greece makes family proud

‘It’s a huge honour for me as an athlete to be a part of something this big, to be around the best athletes in the world. It’s huge,’ Antetokounmpo said, according to the Olympic News Service. ‘I know that my family is very proud of me and the things I’ve accomplished, and being the first black flagbearer (for Greece) is a huge honour.’

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

Qualifying for Paris 2024 was a dream

‘I’ve always wanted to be a part of the Olympic Games, be part of the Olympic Village and be around all the best athletes,’ he said. ‘It was a dream of mine, and playing with my team and being able to accomplish it was a huge moment for us as athletes, and for the country too.’

Being chosen to carry the flag ‘speaks volumes’

‘I definitely appreciate it,’ he said. ‘It speaks volumes for all the hard work I’ve put into my career, the way I carry myself on and off the court. I was happy that I was even considered and happy that I was voted to do it.’

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Mere hours before the start of the Paris Olympics, a series of pre-dawn arson attacks targeted high-speed rail service across France early Friday, leaving travelers confused and disrupting service ahead of the opening ceremony.

The attacks took place between 1 a.m. and 5:30 a.m. Paris time, the BBC reported. They targeted electrical cables and train signal boxes on three lines of the SNCF, the state-owned railway service. A ‘large number of trains’ were diverted or canceled, SNCF said on X.

As many as 800,000 passengers were affected by the attacks, according to the SNCF, which said the incident was intent on ‘paralyzing the network,’ USA TODAY reported. The opening ceremony is expected to take place as planned, with greater security.

Learn more: France rolls out extra security.

No injuries were reported. No one has taken responsibililty for the attacks. Prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation, the Guardian reported.

Damage was found in signal boxes on lines connecting Paris to Lille, Bordeaux and Strasbourg, Reuters reported. Authorities prevented a fourth attack on the Paris-Marseille line.

Many train routes will have to be canceled and repairs would last “at least all weekend,” SNCF told Agence France-Presse. The railway service asked passengers to delay trips and stay away from train stations, Le Monde said. 

SNCF was expected to announce a new transportation plan soon, the BBC said.

Attackers started fires in wire bundles containing multiple fiber-optic cables, Le Monde reported, quoting SNCF CEO Jean-Pierre Farandou. The executive said hundreds of workers would be needed to manually repair the cables one at a time.

Rail disruptions included Eurostar trains running between Paris and London. Other international train routes into France from Germany were also experiencing delays.

The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee said that no American athletes were affected by the train disruptions because they were mostly traveling on buses.

Source: USA TODAY Network reporting and research; Reuters

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Editor’s note: FollowOlympic opening ceremony live updates.

PARIS — Simone Biles is going for a six-pack.

Biles will attempt a skill on uneven bars that no one’s done yet, the International Gymnastics Federation said Friday. If successful, it would be the sixth skill named for Biles and would give her one on every event. She has two skills each on vault and floor exercise, and one on balance beam.

Skills are named for the first gymnast who does them successfully at a major international meet. Biles begins competition at the Paris Olympics on Sunday with qualifications, but she could do it at any point during the Games to have it named for her.

The skill is described as ‘a clear hip circle forward with 1 1/2 turns to handstand,’ according to the FIG, and is a variation of a skill first done by Canadian gymnast Wilhelm Weiler. In plain English, starting in a handstand position on the upper bar, Biles would dip her body below and around the bar and then rise back into a handstand. She would then do 1 1/2 pirouettes before coming to a stop in a handstand position.

Meet Team USA: See which athletes made the U.S. Olympic team and where they are from

Biles is likely to do the new skill at the beginning of her uneven bars routine, according to the FIG. It’s been valued as an E, which would give it a difficulty value of 0.5 points.

If Biles completes the skill, she’d be the only active female gymnast to have at least one skill named for her on all four apparatuses.

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Rap artist Snoop Dogg strutted with the Olympic torch through the suburbs of Paris before the opening ceremony on Friday.

The Grammy-nominated Snoop, who will provide commentary as a special correspondent throughout the Olympic games, walked through the streets of Saint-Denis as the final torchbearer. French actress Laetitia Casta and French rapper MC Solaar also carried the torch in Saint-Denis.

“I look at this as a prestigious honor and something I truly respect. I would have never dreamed of nothing like this,” he said earlier this week. “I’m going to be on my best behavior. I’m going to be on my best athleticism. I’ll be able to breathe slow to walk fast and hold the torch with a smile on my face, because I realize how prestigious this event is.”

Snoop, who was dressed in a white Olympic tracksuit and gold sneakers, will hand the torch off and it will be carried the Olympic cauldron during the opening ceremony, which was held outside a stadium for the first time in Summer Games history.

Get Olympics updates in your texts! Join USA TODAY Sports’ WhatsApp Channel

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

The Olympic torch started its procession to France in May after spending 12 days in Greece. Florent Manaudou, who won a gold medal in the men’s 50-meter freestyle at the 2012 London Games, was the first person to receive the flame after it arrived in France.

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PARIS − The use of drones by Canadian soccer teams to spy on opponents appears to trace back well before these 2024 Olympic Games, including an attempt during this summer’s run to Copa America semifinals by the country’s men’s national team.

That’s according to Canada Soccer CEO Kevin Blue, who on a media call Friday said he had heard anecdotes that suggest ‘a potential long term and deeply embedded, systemic culture of this type of thing,’ according to quotes published by Canadian Soccer Daily.

In a shocking and scandalous prelude to the Paris Olympics, women’s national team coach Bev Priestman has been removed and two staff members – assistant Jasmine Mander and analyst Joseph Lombardi – sent home by the Canadian Olympic Committee amid allegations of drone surveillance by the team.

TSN reported that Lombardi was caught by French police retrieving a drone that had been flying over practice being conducted by the women’s team from New Zealand, Canada’s opening Olympic opponent.

‘Team support members immediately reported the incident to police, leading to the drone operator, who has been identified as a support staff member of the wider Canadian women’s football team, to be detained,’ the New Zealand Olympic Committee said in a statement.

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

Canada beat New Zealand 2-1 on Thursday.

The revelations in France are expanding suspicions about the Canadian men’s soccer program as well as the women’s team. TSN cited two unnamed sources as saying both had participated in such activity for years, including the 2021 Olympics, during which the Canadian women won gold.

On Friday, Blue told reporters that he was aware of attempted drone use during the recently played men’s Copa America tournament in which Canada outperformed its CONCACAF rivals and finished fourth behind only Argentina, Colombia and Uruguay.

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Eight Major League Soccer teams will be in action as the Leagues Cup tournament begins with five games on Friday night.

The Leagues Cup tournament, in its second edition, is a midseason tournament featuring teams from MLS and LIGA MX in Mexico. In all, 47 total teams will play 77 matches in a World Cup-style tournament.

The teams have been divided into 15 groups with three teams each, with the group stage beginning Friday and running through Aug. 6. The top two clubs from each group will advance to the knockout stages, which begin Aug. 7-9. The championship match will be played on Aug. 25.

Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami won the first Leagues Cup last year, but Messi won’t be in action when the club begins its title defense Saturday.

Here’s what you need to know about the five Leagues Cup matches tonight. Follow along here for live updates, news and highlights when the matches begin:

WHAT IS LEAGUES CUP? Explaining MLS vs. Liga MX World Cup-style tournament

LEAGUES CUP SCHEDULE: Times, TV, live stream, groups for MLS vs. Liga MX tournament

How to watch Atlanta vs. DC United Leagues Cup live stream

The Atlanta United vs. DC United match begins at 8 p.m. ET with a free live stream on Apple TV.

How to watch Orlando vs. Montreal Leagues Cup live stream

The Orlando City SC vs. CF Montreal match begins at 8 p.m. ET with a live stream on MLS Season Pass via Apple TV.

How to watch Pumas vs. Austin FC Leagues Cup live stream

The Pumas vs. Austin FC match begins at 9 p.m. ET and will be broadcast in English on FS1, with a free live stream on Apple TV. The game will also be available in Spanish on UniMas and TV Azteca.

How to watch Seattle vs. Minnesota Leagues Cup live stream

The Seattle Sounders FC vs. Minnesota United FC match begins at 10 p.m. ET with a live stream on MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

How to watch LAFC vs. Club Tijuana Leagues Cup live stream

The Los Angeles Football Club vs. Club Tijuana match begins at 11 p.m. ET with a live stream on MLS Season Pass via Apple TV.

Leagues Cup dates to remember

Here are the key schedule dates for the Leagues Cup:

Group Stage: July 26-August 6
Round of 32: August 7-9
Round of 16: August 12-13
Quarterfinals: August 16-17
Semifinals: August 20 or 21
Final and third-place match: August 25

What are the 2024 Leagues Cup groups?

East Region

East 1: FC Cincinnati, New York City FC, Querétaro
East 2: Orlando City SC, Atlético San Luis, CF Montréal
East 3: Tigres UANL, Puebla, Inter Miami CF
East 4: Philadelphia Union, Charlotte FC, Cruz Azul
East 5: New England Revolution, Nashville SC, Mazatlán
East 6: Pachuca, New York Red Bulls, Toronto FC
East 7: Atlanta United, Santos Laguna, D.C. United

West Region

West 1: CF Monterrey, Pumas UNAM, Austin FC
West 2: Chivas Guadalajara, San Jose Earthquakes, LA Galaxy
West 3: St. Louis City SC, FC Dallas, Juárez
West 4: Toluca, Sporting Kansas City, Chicago Fire FC
West 5: Club León, Portland Timbers, Colorado Rapids
West 6: Seattle Sounders FC, Minnesota United FC, Necaxa
West 7: Los Angeles FC, Vancouver Whitecaps FC, Tijuana
West 8: Houston Dynamo FC, Real Salt Lake, Atlas

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Former President Trump claimed on Friday that conflicts in the Middle East could escalate into a third World War if he loses the 2024 election.

The Republican nominee for president made those remarks as he met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at his Mar-a-Lago resort home. Netanyahu traveled to Florida to meet with Trump after meeting with President Biden and presumptive Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris in Washington, D.C., earlier this week, following his Wednesday address to a joint session of Congress.  

At Mar-a-Lago, Trump told reporters that Harris is ‘worse’ on Middle East issues and claimed Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza could expand into a wider regional conflict if she succeeds Biden, who announced Sunday that he would not seek re-election. 

‘We’ll see how it goes. But if it all works out, if we win, it’ll be very simple. It’s all going to work out. And very quickly,’ Trump said. ‘If we don’t, you’re going to end up with major wars in the Middle East. And maybe a third World war. You are closer to a third World War right now than at any time since the Second World War. We’ve never been so close because we have incompetent people running the country.’ 

Trump’s remarks come amid a reported diplomatic flare-up between Harris and Netanyahu which occurred after their meeting Thursday. 

In comments after the meeting, Harris said she told the Israeli prime minister that she ‘will always ensure that Israel is able to defend itself, including from Iran and Iran-backed militias such as Hamas and Hezbollah.’ 

‘I also expressed with the Prime Minister my serious concern about the scale of human suffering in Gaza, including the death of far too many innocent civilians. And I made clear my serious concern about the dire humanitarian situation there,’ she added, calling for an end to the war and the release of all hostages held in Hamas captivity. 

Harris’ criticisms of Israel’s conduct in the Gaza war reportedly irked Netanyahu, according to Axios, who has repeatedly said fighting must continue until Hamas is eliminated, even if hostages are released. 

Asked about Harris’ comments Friday, Netanyahu told reporters Israel still hopes for a cease-fire deal.

‘We’re trying to get one. And I think, to the extent that Hamas understands that there’s no daylight between Israel and the United States, that expedites the deal. And I hope that those comments don’t change that,’ Netanyahu said. 

The Mar-a-Lago meeting is face-to-face contact Netanyahu has had with Trump since the Republican nominee left the White House in 2020. Their relationship strained when Netanyahu congratulated President-elect Biden on his victory that year, which prompted Trump to call out the Israeli leader. ‘I haven’t spoken to him since,’ Trump told Israeli journalist Barak Ravid that year. ‘F–k him,’ the former president added.

Now, Netanyahu is making an effort to make amends and secure Trump’s support for Israel in the war against Gaza, should the Republican candidate return to the White House after the November election. 

In Trump’s home, the Israeli leader presented him with a photo of one of the Bibas toddlers, children who are still held captive by Hamas terrorists in Gaza.

Netanyahu said the picture was given to him by the toddlers’ grandfather, who asked him to share it with Trump. 

‘Wow, that’s very moving,’ Trump said, accepting the photograph. ‘We’ll get that taken care of.’ 

Protesters gathered in West Palm Beach, Florida, to greet Netanyahu as his plane landed. The prime minister’s visit to the nation’s capital earlier this week sparked pro-Hamas demonstrations, which featured antisemitic slogans, calls for Israel’s eradication, vandalism and heated confrontations with D.C. police.   

In his address to Congress, Netanyahu accused Iran of funding the protests and tore into the demonstrators, who have demanded an immediate cease-fire between Israel and Hamas.

‘I have a message for these protesters. When the tyrants of Tehran, who hang gays from cranes and murder women for not covering their hair, are praising, promoting and funding you, you have officially become Iran’s useful idiots,’ Netanyahu said Wednesday. 

‘Some of these protesters hold up signs proclaiming gays for Gaza. They might as well hold up signs saying ‘Chickens for KFC.’ These protesters chant ‘From the river to the sea.’ But many don’t have a clue what river and what sea they’re talking about.’

The war in Gaza has raged since Hamas’ mass slaughter of nearly 1,200 people, including more than 30 Americans, in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Hamas continues to hold more than 100 hostages in Gaza, including eight Americans.

Fox News Digital’s Benjamin Weinthal and Greg Norman contributed to this report. 

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Vice President Kamala Harris got her start in politics at age 29, when she was just out of law school, at the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office, where she met a 60-year-old kingmaker: California Assembly Speaker Willie Brown — arguably then the state’s most powerful politician.

Brown, while estranged from his wife, remained married. However, socially, he and Harris were seen everywhere and never denied being close. Brown appointed Harris to several well-paid state commissions: the state Insurance Commission, the state Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board and later, the California Medical Assistance Commission.

Harris came from a learned household. She was born in Oakland, California, to an Indian-born mother and a Jamaican-born father. Both were professors — one at Berkeley, the other at Stanford. Harris’ parents divorced when she was 7. Following her parents’ split, she moved to Illinois, then to Quebec, Canada, alongside her sister and mother.

After high school, Harris attended Howard University, where she joined the debate team and claimed to demonstrate ‘almost every weekend.’ Later, she attended Hastings College of Law, where, like many of her classmates, she failed her first attempt at the California bar exam, but she passed the second time.

In 1998, Harris took a job at the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office, but was later demoted after opposing a measure to try juveniles as adults for felony crimes.

After quitting, Harris took a job in the city attorney’s office, and with Brown’s help, raised $600,000 to defeat her former boss to become San Francisco DA. The city’s campaign ethics board fined Harris $30,000 – the highest fine ever levied at the time – for violating campaign finance limits.

‘I made a very conscious and deliberate decision to become a prosecutor,’ she said during a 2003 debate. ‘I think San Francisco wants a progressive district attorney who is also effective.’

As San Francisco DA, she became a controversial figure for opposing the death penalty — even for cop killers — and pursued three-strikes convictions only when they involved violent felonies.

After a man murdered officer Isaac Espinoza and Harris refused to pursue the death penalty, Harris received a rare rebuke from Sen. Dianne Feinstein. 

‘I think this district attorney made a very big mistake. As a matter of fact, if I had known she had said that in her campaign, I never would have supported her,’ Feinsein said at the time. 

As district attorney, Harris prosecuted marijuana crimes but rarely sought prison time.

In 2010, she became the first woman to serve as California’s attorney general, where she opposed the state’s ban on affirmative action and asked the state Supreme Court to ‘reaffirm its decision that public colleges and universities may consider race as one factor in admissions decisions.’ The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled affirmative action unconstitutional. As AG, she prioritized environmental crimes, obtaining millions in fines from oil companies for failing to monitor underground storage leaks.

In 2016, she ran for U.S. senator and won by outmaneuvering Rep. Loretta Sanchez for the union and Latino vote. Harris also had the support of then-President Obama, who called her brilliant, dedicated and tough, adding, ‘She also happens to be, by far, the best-­looking attorney general in the country.’

Harris’ appeal is partly demographic, but her law enforcement background also made her an appealing running mate in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests and rising crime in some cities.

In 2019, Harris dismissed criticism of her record as a prosecutor for jailing marijuana offenders and even joked about her own previous cannabis use.

‘Have you ever smoked?’ she was asked on the ‘Breakfast Club’ radio show in 2019. ‘I have, and I inhaled. I did it, I did it, and it was a long time ago,’ she admitted. 

As district attorney, however, she pushed for higher bail for gun crimes and sought minimum 90-day sentences for possession of concealed or loaded weapons.

Later, as a presidential candidate, Harris said she would pursue universal background checks and a ban on assault-style rifles.

‘I will give the United States Congress 100 days to get their act together and have the courage to pass reasonable gun safety laws and if they fail to do it, then I will take executive action,’ she said during a CNN town hall in December 2019.  

CNN anchor Jake Tapper also suggested to Harris that her ‘Medicare-for-all’ proposal might eliminate private health insurance.

Harris’ defense was, ‘The idea is, everyone gets access to medical care, and you don’t have to go through the process of going through an insurance company, having them giving you approval, going through the paperwork … let’s eliminate that. Let’s move on.’

Her signature tax proposal cost an estimated $3 billion. It would have provided a $3,000 tax credit for individuals and $6,000 for married couples. She also proposed lowering pay disparities by requiring large companies to pay men and women in similar jobs equally. 

Another proposal aimed at raising teacher pay by $13,500. In a 2020 campaign video she explained her economic approach, saying, ‘It’s about giving people the resources and the support they need so that everyone can be on equal footing and then compete on equal footing. Equitable treatment means we all end up at the same place.’

As a candidate for president in 2020, Harris dropped out before the Iowa caucuses. As a candidate, some viewed her policies as too far left, where she seemed to favor big government to solve income and gender inequality.

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Boeing’s crew spacecraft Starliner will stay docked with the International Space Station into August, NASA confirmed on Thursday, as the mission remains on hold while the company and agency study problems that arose early in the flight.

Starliner capsule “Calypso,” which carried NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams to the ISS, has now been in space 50 days and counting. The Boeing crew flight test has been extended several times while NASA conducted testing back on the ground prior to clearing the spacecraft to carry the pair of astronauts back to Earth.

NASA’s Commercial Crew manager Steve Stich said during a press conference Thursday that the agency was not prepared to set a return date.

Boeing’s Starliner lifts off from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Fla., on June 5.John Raoux / AP file

“We’re making great progress, but we’re just not quite ready to do that,” Stich said.

NASA needs to conduct a review that won’t happen until the first week of August, Stich said, and only after that review will the agency schedule Starliner’s return.

The indefinite extension of Starliner’s flight test is difficult to put into context of other human spaceflights due to the unique circumstances and developmental nature of the mission. Any crewed spaceflight comes with heightened risk and scrutiny. Originally, Calypso was expected to spend a minimum of nine days in space before returning.

The Boeing Starliner spacecraft, circled in red, docked with the International Space Station’s forward port on June 7.Maxar

“I think we all knew that it was going to go longer than that. We didn’t spend a lot of time talking about how much longer, but I think it’s my regret that we we didn’t just say we’re going to stay up there until we get everything done that we want to go to do,” Stich said on Thursday.

Both NASA and Boeing leadership have repeatedly stressed that Wilmore and Williams “are not stranded in space.” Officials previously said that Starliner is safe to return in the event of an emergency and that the pair of astronauts are enjoying the extra time on the ISS and assisting the rest of the station’s crew with tasks in the meantime.

Boeing and NASA earlier this month began testing the spacecraft’s malfunctioning propulsion system back on the ground in White Sands, New Mexico.

Stich and Boeing’s Mark Nappi, vice president of the Starliner program, outlined the next steps that must be completed before making the call on when to bring back Starliner.

Boeing on Thursday is finishing dissection of the thruster that was tested in New Mexico. On Thursday afternoon, NASA and Boeing will hold a mission management meeting to plan the docked test firings that are expected to happen on Saturday or Sunday. Then, on Monday or Tuesday, the teams will do “an integrated assessment of all the data” from the docked tests, Stich said, before “some significant education of [NASA] leadership” ahead the final big review, also known as “Agency Flight Test Readiness Review.”

Stich also acknowledged again that NASA has contingency plans in case the agency determines that Starliner should return without Wilmore and Williams — alternatives that include using SpaceX’s Dragon capsule to bring back NASA’s astronauts.

“NASA always has contingency options. We know a little bit of what those are, and we haven’t worked on them a whole bunch, but we kind of know what those are,” Stich said. “Right now we’re really focused on bringing Butch and Suni home on Starliner.”

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Editor’s note:FollowOlympics opening ceremony live updates.

PARIS − It’s the moment that every U.S. athlete at this summer’s Paris Olympics has dreamed about, and perhaps visualized: They win a medal at the Summer Games. The crowd roars. Cameras flash. And as they start to celebrate, someone hands them an American flag.

Believe it or not, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee actually coaches every member of Team USA on what should happen next.

They’re taught how to properly (and respectfully) celebrate with the American flag.

‘We just want them to be ready,’ a USOPC spokesperson explained.

Meet Team USA: See which athletes made the U.S. Olympic team and where they are from

How many gallons are in an Olympic swimming pool? A look at the volume

In the leadup to the Paris Olympics, which formally begin Friday with the opening ceremony, each Team USA athlete has participated in an Olympic Games readiness course hosted by the USOPC. The course covers everything from rules and regulations they will face at the Games, to resources that will be available to them, to little things that many television viewers would never think about − like celebrating with the flag.

While the official guidelines for how the American flag can and should be displayed are outlined in the U.S. Flag Code, the USOPC offers its athletes a few key bullet points, according to a copy of the organization’s ‘flag etiquette’ guidelines provided to USA TODAY Sports.

Among the flag etiquette recommendations for athletes:

Make sure the flag is displayed with the stars behind you on the right
Raise the flag above your head
Return the flag to a coach before leaving the field of play

The biggest no-nos, meanwhile, are displaying the flag with the stars down, wearing the flag or letting the flag touch the ground.

‘After running a race, you can’t wrap your body around (the flag) even though you’re showing love for it,’ retired track and field star Jackie Joyner-Kersee told ESPN in 2012.

‘Someone will be watching who doesn’t even care about sports, but all they know about is how you treat that flag.’

The USOPC spokesperson said the national Olympic committee and its athletes do receive messages from TV viewers about even minor issues during flag celebrations, though the messages are often ‘more educational in nature than scolding.’

At the 2018 Winter Games, for example, snowboarder Shaun White received backlash for letting the American flag brush against the ground following his gold medal victory in the halfpipe competition. White later said in a news conference that the flag slipped while he was trying to put his gloves on and get a hold of his snowboard.

‘So honestly, if there was anything, I definitely didn’t mean any disrespect,’ White said. ‘The flag that’s flying on my house right now is way up there. So sorry for that.’

Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @Tom_Schad.

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