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The 12-team field for the men’s basketball event at the 2024 Paris Olympics is set.

Team USA – loaded with stars such as LeBron James, Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant, Joel Embiid and others – figures to be a powerhouse, though there are plenty of global icons also vying for a chance at Olympic glory.

Established veterans like Greece’s Giannis Antetokounmpo, a two-time NBA MVP, and Serbia’s Nikola Jokić, a three-time winner of the award, will join a younger crop of stars: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jamal Murray from Canada and French phenom Victor Wembanyama are among the other standouts.

Here’s everything you need to know about the schedule for the men’s basketball competition at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

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

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

How to watch men’s basketball at the 2024 Paris Olympics

Olympic action will be broadcast across the channels on the NBC network: NBC, CNBC, E!. Spanish language broadcasts will be available on Telemundo. Streaming will be available on Peacock, NBCSports.com.

Streaming will also be available on Fubo.

Saturday, July 27

Australia vs. Spain, 5 a.m. | CNBC
Germany vs. Japan, 7:30 a.m. | streaming only
France vs. Brazil, 11:15 a.m. | CNBC
Greece vs. Canada, 3 p.m. | CNBC

Sunday, July 28

South Sudan vs. Puerto Rico, 5 a.m. | CNBC
Serbia vs. United States, 11:15 a.m. | NBC

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

Tuesday, July 30

Spain vs. Greece, 5 a.m. | E!
Canada vs. Australia, 7:30 a.m. | USA
Japan vs. France, 11:15 a.m. | streaming only
Brazil vs. Germany, 3 p.m. | streaming only

Wednesday, July 31

Puerto Rico vs. Serbia, 11:15 a.m. | streaming only
United States vs. South Sudan, 3 p.m. | USA

Friday, Aug. 2

Japan vs. Brazil, 5 a.m. | streaming only
Australia vs. Greece, 7:30 a.m. | USA
Canada vs. Spain, 11:15 a.m. | streaming only
France vs. Germany, 3 p.m. | E!

Saturday, Aug. 3

Puerto Rico vs. United States, 11:15 a.m. | NBC
Serbia vs. South Sudan, 3 p.m. | CNBC

Tuesday, Aug. 6

Quarterfinals

TBD vs. TBD, 5 a.m. | streaming only
TBD vs. TBD, 8:30 a.m. | USA
TBD vs. TBD, 12:00 p.m. | streaming only
TBD vs. TBD, 3:30 p.m. | USA

Thursday, Aug. 8

Semifinals

TBD vs. TBD, 11:30 a.m. | USA
TBD vs. TBD, 3:00 p.m. | USA

Saturday, Aug. 10

Third-place game

TBD vs. TBD, 5:00 a.m. | USA

Final

TBD vs. TBD, 3:30 p.m. | NBC

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Members of President Biden’s Cabinet are doubling down on their support for the president amid calls for them to invoke the 25th Amendment and remove him from office.

The shoring up of their support comes as Biden continues to face pressure over his health as well as his decision to drop out of the 2024 presidential race, which prompted mounting concern from lawmakers questioning his ability to serve the remainder of his term if he is unable to seek re-election.

‘Secretary Yellen disagrees with those calls,’ a spokesperson for Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Fox News Digital on Tuesday, while also pointing to recent comments she made during a House hearing in which she refused to comment in detail on her private meetings with Biden.

‘The president is extremely effective in the meetings that I’ve been in with him. That includes many international meetings that are multihour,’ Yellen said at the time.

Representatives for Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra and Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm also said their bosses did not agree with the calls for Biden to step down or be removed from office.

Granholm’s spokesperson pointed Fox to comments the secretary made last month pushing back on a report that Biden was mentally ‘slipping.’

‘The president is utterly on his game,’ Granholm told Fox at the time. ‘He is the wisest, most knowledgeable person in the room. He asks the toughest questions and has the keenest insights on the complex questions brought to him. He is sharp, thoughtful and wise.’

A spokesperson for Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack pointed Fox to comments the secretary made this month defending Biden’s ability to perform the job of president.

‘You’re d–n right he’s capable,’ Vilsack told Agri-Pulse, an agriculture-focused news site.

Fox News Digital reached out to multiple other members of Biden’s Cabinet but did not receive responses.

Biden announced on Sunday that he would suspend his re-election campaign and would instead endorse Vice President Harris for the Democrat nomination after facing weeks of pressure from within his own party to drop out of the race.

The pressure mounted after his poor performance at the first presidential debate in June, where he was seen speaking with a raspy voice and jumbling up his words.

Harris’ office said Tuesday morning that she believes Biden is currently capable of serving as president.

‘As the vice president has said many times before, the nation is lucky to have President Biden leading our nation,’ Ernesto Apreza, press secretary to the vice president, told Fox.

Fox News’ Aubrie Spady and Matt Richter contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A veteran and high-ranking Democratic lawmaker claims she was in the dark about President Biden’s intention to resign from the 2024 presidential campaign.

Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters from California spoke to Politico on Monday, saying Biden dropping off the party’s ticket caught her completely off-guard after she ‘woke up to it on the television.’

‘I was angry at first, because we’d worked so hard to give him the kind of support that would cause him to stay,’ Waters told Politico. ‘We had been told up to the last minute that he was going to stay.’

She continued, ‘After I calmed down, I was alright, because in doing that, he endorsed Kamala [Harris]. And I thought, well, that’s great.’

Waters was a die-hard defender of Biden following his disastrous performance in the first presidential debate that led the U.S. public to question his mental capacities. 

She consistently pushed back on any intention to replace the president with a stronger Democratic candidate and told Politico she has ‘seen him at his best.’

However, Waters has also been a high-profile ally of Harris. The California representative told Politico that she sees Harris as a friend and didn’t hesitate to endorse her.

‘I tell you that Trump, the MAGA crowd, racists — I think that they’re going to hit and they’re going to hit hard,’ she said of challenges facing Harris. ‘They’re going to do everything that they can do to try and convince their crowd and others that she should not be the president and he will be dog whistling about a woman and a Black in ways that he knows how to do.’

Biden will address the nation on Wednesday about why he decided to exit the race and what he plans to focus on for the remaining six months of his first term. His address will be delivered from the Oval Office, the White House said. 

The president was seen in public for the first time in six days on Tuesday at Dover Air Force as he returned to the nation’s capital from his home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The media are gushing – there’s no other word – over newly minted Democratic nominee Kamala Harris.

She was being portrayed as having the money and the mojo as she headed to Milwaukee. ‘Harris Hits the Trail, Powered by Endorsements, Money and Delegates,’ said The Washington Post.

The excitement is understandable. The mainstream press wanted Joe Biden to step aside, the vice president steps in and attacks Trump from an ex-prosecutor’s perspective (and he calls her ‘Dumb as a Rock’). And given that Harris would be such a groundbreaker – first female president, first black female president, first president of Asian-American background – it’s a hell of a story.

But with Biden finally planning to address the country tonight – putting to rest absurd rumors that he was dying or dead – the spotlight remains firmly fixed on Harris.

Her Milwaukee rally yesterday was a truncated version of her Wilmington speech the day before – slamming Trump, promising to work for the middle class – a practically verbatim reprise. If she keeps repeating that, it won’t make much news. 

There was nothing personal in the speech, even though Harris has to sell herself and her persona. An hour later, she was on a plane back to Washington, rather than shaking hands in a coffee shop or otherwise getting out from behind the podium.

So with the reality that Twitter is not the real world – shocking I know – here is a more skeptical view of her obviously hasty campaign launch.

Liberal New York Times columnist Ezra Klein says the question, after a grueling month, is ‘How do candidates respond to pressure? Do they seem honest and authentic to voters, or does something about them read as false or opportunistic? Do they have that charisma that convinces people to knock on doors for them, share memes of them, proselytize to family members about them?

‘Harris’s reputation was as a candidate with the tangibles but not the intangibles. She was great on paper but, in 2020, couldn’t put the pieces together…

‘But Harris has never won an election atop the ticket in Pennsylvania or Wisconsin or Michigan. She’s never won an election atop the ticket anywhere but California. The Biden administration’s record is unpopular, and she cannot make a clean break from it. Immediately uniting around Harris feels safe to some Democrats. To other Democrats, it’s risky. They risk making the mistake they made with Biden, which is being so afraid of disunity that they’re failing to gather the information they need to know how their candidate will really perform.

And here’s the truth: It’s all risky. It could all go bad, no matter what path is chosen.’

Now that’s a candid assessment.

The Atlantic’s David Frum, a Never Trumper and former Bush White House speechwriter, says ‘now the Trump campaign will be defining Harris’s identity too —and no prizes for guessing how they will do that: by casting Harris as a threat to sexual decency and racial order. 

‘Also, respects to our potentially new Democrat Challenger, Laffin’ Kamala Harris. She did poorly in the Democrat nominating process, starting out at Number Two, and ending up defeated and dropping out, even before getting to Iowa, but that doesn’t mean she’s not a ‘highly talented’ politician! Just ask her Mentor, the Great Willie Brown of San Francisco.

‘In case you missed Trump’s hint, he’s referencing an old internet smear that Harris slept her way to political success.’

(Note: Kamala Harris had a relationship with Willie Brown, who would become San Francisco’s mayor, in the 1990s, and it was not a secret. She was single, and while Brown was still technically married, he had separated from his wife more than a decade earlier.)

 

‘Her midlife marriage, her mixed-race origins, her manner and appearance, her vocal intonations, her career in the Bay Area with all of its association in the right-wing mind with dirt and depravity — those will be resources to construct a frightening psychosexual profile of the Black, Asian, and female Democratic candidate.

‘Democrats are taking a risk with Harris — and it’s not only their risk. If she does secure the Democratic presidential nomination, then she becomes the only hope to keep Trump out of the White House for a second term. She becomes the only hope for Ukraine, for NATO, for open international trade, for American democracy, for a society founded on the equal worth and dignity of all its people.’

Pollster Kristin Soltis Anderson writes in the New York Times that Harris has her upsides, but on the downside, Biden’s ‘poor approval rating wasn’t all about his age; on an array of issues, voters say they don’t think his policies made them better off — and his policies are also, in effect, her policies.’

Harris was ‘designated ‘to lead the White House effort on the border. Republicans will also, no doubt, point to Ms. Harris’s support for things like a controversial Minnesota bail fund to undercut any tough-on-crime-prosecutor messaging.’ 

On the right, National Review’s Noah Rothman says ‘contrary to the story Democrats are about to try to sell to the public, Harris’s party has never regained confidence in her abilities…

‘The revolt of the staffers coincided with a one-on-one interview with NBC News [anchor] Lester Holt, in which Harris defended her failure to visit the rapidly deteriorating Southern border by laughing awkwardly while insisting she hadn’t ‘been to Europe’ either. ‘I don’t understand the point you’re making,’ Harris insisted. No one else appeared similarly perplexed.’

‘The revolt of the staffers coincided with a one-on-one interview with NBC News [anchor] Lester Holt, in which Harris defended her failure to visit the rapidly deteriorating Southern border by laughing awkwardly while insisting she hadn’t ‘been to Europe’ either. ‘I don’t understand the point you’re making,’ Harris insisted. No one else appeared similarly perplexed.’

She was largely sidelined after that, preferring friendly settings like ‘The View’ and a show on Comedy Central hosted by Charlamagne tha God.

‘For all the party’s public displays of bravado, Democrats appear to understand that the vice president needs to operate in a rigidly structured environment . . . or else… As a presidential candidate, the vice president will be at least as rigorously stage-managed as Joe Biden was in the closing days of his campaign.’ So Democrats ‘have to preserve the abstraction of Kamala Harris for as long as possible.’

In Fox prime time, Jesse Watters said: ‘Kamala is even more radical and incompetent than old Joe Biden,’ calling her a ‘California socialist’ and ‘even more unpopular than the most unpopular president in American history.’

‘No one who truly loves this country, no one who truly wants the best for the American people, would ever subject us to someone like Kamala Harris,’ said Laura Ingraham. ‘They know that Harris is incompetent, just as they knew that Biden is incompetent.’

But the beat goes on. Speaking of ‘The View,’ the liberal ladies conducted an absolute love fest yesterday with the White House press secretary, the woman who constantly assured reporters that the president was definitely running (as she was told to do). 

‘Please welcome back the fabulous Karine Jean-Pierre,’ Whoopi Goldberg said.

Other than a skeptical question or two, the spokeswoman said her boss ‘still has the job. And we have a lot more to get done on behalf of the American people.’

Can a Kamala appearance be far behind?

Look, maybe Harris will catch fire and make this a cliffhanger. Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries endorsed her yesterday, by which time she didn’t need them anymore. A Quinnipiac poll has her trailing Trump by just 49 to 47 percent, or several points better than Biden. Trump is suddenly the old-guy candidate in the race.

But for now the media cheerleading for Harris isn’t providing the full picture.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Federal Trade Commission is launching an investigation into so-called “surveillance pricing,” seeking more information about how artificial intelligence is used to change pricing rapidly based on data about customer behavior and characteristics.

The FTC says the practice allows companies to charge different customers, different prices.

The agency is serving eight companies with a mandatory request for information — all companies it says that advertise their AI and other tech tools along with a trove of customer information to target prices to individual customers.

The list includes Mastercard, JPMorgan Chase, Accenture and consulting giant McKinsey. It also includes software firm Task, which counts McDonald’s and Starbucks as clients; Revionics, which works with Home Depot, Tractor Supply and grocery chain Hannaford; Bloomreach, which services FreshDirect, Total Wine and Puma; and Pros, which was named Microsoft’s internet service vendor of the year this year.

“Firms that harvest Americans’ personal data can put people’s privacy at risk,” FTC Chair Lina Khan said in a news release. “Now firms could be exploiting this vast trove of personal information to charge people higher prices.”

Kahn describes surveillance pricing as a “shadowy ecosystem of pricing middlemen.”

The FTC is demanding information about the types of products and services offered; how the companies collect consumer data; who their customers are; how the clients are using this product or service; and what impact it has on consumer pricing.

The agency’s undertaking the action under its 6(b) authority, which authorizes it to collect information for study without a specific law enforcement action.

CNBC has reached out to the companies included in the FTC’s requests.

Mastercard said in a statement, “We will cooperate with the FTC in this process.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Sales of previously owned homes dropped 5.4% in June compared with May, to 3.89 million units on a seasonally adjusted, annualized basis, according to the National Association of Realtors. Sales were also 5.4% lower than June of last year. This is the slowest sales pace since December.

These are closed sales, so based on contracts signed mostly in April and May, when the average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage jumped above 7%. Rates have pulled back slightly since then, to the high 6% range.

“We’re seeing a slow shift from a seller’s market to a buyer’s market,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors. “Homes are sitting on the market a bit longer, and sellers are receiving fewer offers. More buyers are insisting on home inspections and appraisals, and inventory is definitively rising on a national basis.”

Inventory jumped 23.4% from a year ago to 1.32 million units at the end of June, coming off record lows but still just a 4.1-month supply. A 6-month supply is considered balanced between buyer and seller.

These inventory levels are the highest supply since May 2020, boosted by homes sitting on the market longer. The average time that a home sat on the market was 22 days, up from 18 days a year ago.

Even that new supply, however, is not helping ease prices. The median price of an existing home sold in June was $426,900, an increase of 4.1% year over year and an all-time high for the second straight month. Part of that is skewed because the higher end of the market is much stronger.

Sales of homes priced over $1 million was the only price category seeing gains over last year, while the biggest drop in sales was in the $250,000 and lower range.

Supply of homes for sale is weakest on the lower end, but is seeing a new surge now. While the sales price nationally is high, new listing prices are lower.

“The median listing price is being held down by an influx in smaller and lower-priced listings. In fact, the number of for-sale homes in the $200k to $350k price bucket surged by 50% compared to a year ago,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist for Realtor.com.

Higher-end buyers tend to use more cash, and 28% of sales were all-cash, up from 26% a year ago. Investors pulled back a bit, though, making up 16% of sales, down from 18% one year ago.

“Assuming more inventory continues to increase, two things would happen. Either home sales rise, or, if the prices do not rise, the prices would buckle down,” Yun added.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Moriah Jefferson headed to Saint Lucia to lie on the beach. Nneka Ogwumike flew to Houston to spend time with family. And Sabrina Ionescu spent so much time off her feet trying to get healthy, she said, “I don’t think I touched a basketball for a month.”

For some of the top picks in past WNBA drafts, the league’s Olympic break — which started July 21 and runs until Aug. 14 this season, with almost 30 of the league’s 143 players scheduled to compete in Paris — was more than nice.

It was necessary.

The American women begin the journey to defend their Olympic gold medal for a record eighth time July 29 when they meet Japan in the first game of pool play at the 2024 Paris Games. Missing from the roster: Record-setting rookie Caitlin Clark, who some believed was a lock for Team USA. 

Clark, who has no senior national team experience, was left off in favor of older, more experienced guards (the youngest player is 26-year-old Ionescu). Clark has put on a show her first 26 games as a pro, leading the league in assists per game (8.2), rookies in scoring per game (17.1) and recording the first triple-double by a rookie. Given her stats, some were outraged at her exclusion, convinced it was a snub. Others said the break would be welcome for the 22-year-old phenom. 

The numbers back up the latter assertion. A USA TODAY Sports study of past top picks and their WNBA stats proves rookies who got nearly a month off in the middle of their first professional season benefited from the break. 

Consider Jefferson, the No. 2 overall pick in 2016. While No. 1 pick and UConn teammate Breanna Stewart made her Olympic debut in Rio — the third major tournament she’d played with the senior national team — Jefferson took a few weeks to breathe.

Like Clark, Jefferson had just played in consecutive Final Fours and barely had time to sleep before being drafted by the San Antonio Stars and starting training camp. When the league paused play for the Olympics in early August, Jefferson hopped on a plane bound for the Caribbean.

“It’s huge, that break,” Jefferson, now with the Chicago Sky, told USA TODAY Sports. “You’re in college and two weeks later, you’re trying to score against the best (players in the world). Especially for point guards, you’re trying to be a leader for your team while you’re figuring all that out. The break is gonna give (rookies) a chance to decompress — they need that — and then to break down the game and see, ‘This is where I’ve been good, this is where I’ve been bad.’ ”

After WNBA Olympic break, a big boost in production

When she returned to San Antonio after a week of sunshine, Jefferson studied film of her first 23 games, when she averaged 12.2 points and 4.0 rebounds. At just 5-foot-6, 130 pounds, Jefferson learned quickly that her body could not handle non-stop drives to the rim, where she was likely to be body checked by bigger, stronger, older pros. 

Jefferson needed to be able to get in the lane and get a shot off without getting clobbered. So she started working on her floater package and midrange game, studying where and when she could exploit matchups with her speed. 

The boost in production was noticeable: In 11 games after the Olympics, she averaged 17.5 points and 4.6 assists, an uptick she credits to time off. 

“Jumping right into the pros, it’s a lot,” said Jefferson, who scored in double figures every game after the break. “You’re learning new plays, new teammates, transitioning to a whole different game. When I got back and was working out two, three times a day, we had a strategic and very specific routine. I really started learning my spots: When do I come off this screen, how do I get to the elbow, when am I hesitating and getting downhill, how can I use my speed to my advantage and learn change of pace in the WNBA.”

Another positive: Because of those few weeks of extra rest, Jefferson never felt like she hit the dreaded rookie wall. 

Clark, who’s been playing since last August without a break, has already proven to have nearly unlimited stamina. But because the Fever opened with a brutally tough, and packed, schedule, she’s also looking forward to a few weeks off.

“It’ll be huge,” said Clark, who set the WNBA single-game assist record in her final game before the Olympic pause. “Obviously we’ll get a little bit of a break at the beginning, but then we’ll have quite a bit of time to just practice and really get better. Once we come back, those (last 14) games are going to be super important for the playoff push that we hope to make.” 

Indiana coach Christie Sides is looking forward to it, too, not only because the Fever will finally have some quality practice time. 

“During that break, you also get a lot of team time,” Sides said. “You get to spend time with each other where there’s not games, so you can do team (bonding) events. We’ve got some stuff planned for them that we’re really excited about.” 

In first pro season, three weeks off is ‘golden’ for WNBA rookies

The best player comparison for Clark is probably Ionescu, the No. 1 pick in 2020 who, like Clark, loves to stuff the stat sheet, has deep shooting range and is of similar size and build (Ionescu is 5-foot-11, 165 pounds; Clark is 6-foot, 152 pounds). 

For all intents and purposes, Ionescu’s true rookie season was 2021. She suffered a severe ankle sprain in her third game of 2020, and missed the rest of the COVID-shortened season. 

After offseason surgery, she returned to the floor in 2021 and did a little bit of everything for the New York Liberty. She averaged 9.9 points, 6.0 assists and 5.7 rebounds in her first 19 games despite the fact that “I literally could not walk without excruciating pain,” Ionescu said.  

During her almost month off during the Tokyo Olympics, Ionescu flew home to the Bay Area and rehabbed like crazy, desperate to get healthy. She stayed off the basketball court, watching film as she iced, stretched and strengthened her ankle.

It worked. Ionescu’s stats improved to 14.8 points and 6.3 assists per game, while her field goal percentage rose from 35.2% to 41.2%. What’s more, she came back happier and healthier. 

“Without that break, I probably wouldn’t have been able to finish the season,” Ionescu said. “… That time off gives you an opportunity to reset, get your mind off basketball and then you come back to practice feeling fresh. There are no more ‘firsts’ — you’ve already played your first game, and now you know what to expect. That break gets you excited to play again.” 

Highly drafted guards aren’t the only ones who benefit from a break. Forwards like the vacation, too — which means Chicago rookie Angel Reese, Clark’s biggest competition for 2024 Rookie of the Year after setting a WNBA record for consecutive double-doubles (15), should also profit.

Ogwumike would know. Like Jefferson, Ogwumike began her pro career after playing in four consecutive Final Fours, a rare, and exhausting, feat. The Stanford grad was an instant contributor for the Los Angeles Sparks after going No. 1 overall in 2012, averaging 14.1 points and 7.6 rebounds in her first 20 games. While her points and rebounds mostly stayed the same after the London OIympics (13.9 points, 7.4 rebounds), her shooting percentage vaulted from 50.7% to 58.1%; she finished fourth in the league in that category.

“It’s rare to get this sort of chance to breathe in the middle of the season,” said Ogwumike, now in her first season with the Seattle Storm. “Especially your first year in the league, you can reset, reorient and figure out, ‘What do I want to get better at, how do I want to do things differently?’ ”

Ogwumike gushes about the Olympic pause to anyone and everyone, especially newcomers. 

Her specific phrasing of choice: “I tell them, this Olympic break is golden.” 

Maybe it’s not of the medal variety, Ogwumike acknowledged. But if used correctly, it could be even more valuable. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

What happens when one of the most polarizing figures in the world of golf partners with one of the most polarizing figures in the world, period?

Science tells us certain poles can be attracted to each other and connect, which seems to be the case with U.S. Open champ Bryson DeChambeau and former President Donald Trump, who put together a solid round of golf but fell one shot short of DeChambeau’s ultimate goal in his latest episode of “Break 50” — a recurring feature on his YouTube Channel.

“This is going to be one of the greatest rounds of golf ever played,” Trump said in a blast of pre-round trumpeting.

Surprised? Didn’t think so. 

Not sure if the game’s historians will ever list it alongside Nicklaus-Watson at Turnberry, or even Xander Schauffle’s Sunday 65 this past weekend at Troon, but frankly, quirkiness aside, DeChambeau and Trump, at Trump’s New Jersey course in Bedminster, was watchable in its own way, and dare we say dramatic?

The quirky: In these particular episodes on DeChambeau’s YouTube efforts, the goal is to break 50, over 18 holes, with the host and another golfer partnering in a two-man scramble … from the course’s most forward tees.

Even with DeChambeau able to drive all the par-4s from the red tees, and leave flip-wedges for second shots to the par-5s, 23 under par for 18 holes is asking a lot. In the end, it was asking too much, but barely — 12 birdies, five eagles and a par resulted in a 50, one shy of the show’s ultimate goal.

On a side note, DeChambeau said beforehand the show would be donating $10,000 per birdie and $20,000 per eagle to the Wounded Warrior Project.

Five takeaways from Donald Trump and Bryson DeChambeau’s two-man scramble …

1. When did Donald Trump and Bryson DeChambeau play this round?

Trump’s ear isn’t bandaged so the round of golf was obviously played before the July 13 assassination attempt in Pennsylvania.

So it was also obviously played before this past weekend’s announcement that President Joe Biden is dropping out of the presidential rematch — “Do you think Biden could do that?” Trump asks after one good shot.

And, also obvious, it was played before DeChambeau went belly-up at last week’s British Open and was still riding the high of his U.S. Open victory last month at Pinehurst.

2. Guess which golf courses are Trump’s favorites

Not so shockingly, Trump is a big fan of Trump golf courses. When DeChambeau asks for his favorite courses, he quickly talks of his courses in the UK — one in Ireland and two in Scotland, including the famed Turnberry.

Trump uses the episode to talk glowingly about what they see before them at Bedminster, where the rolling terrain and greenery belies its proximity (40 miles) to Manhattan. 

3. The Donald Trump golf swing works better than it looks

Trump claims a 2 handicap, or at least claims to have been a 2 at some point, and has also won a bunch of club championships at his courses. Given his propensity for promotion, some raise an eyebrow at all of that. 

But there’s no denying his acumen with two particular clubs — the driver and putter. 

On all but one or two driving holes with DeChambeau, the shot tracer showed Trump hitting center-cut tee shots with a bit of left-to-right fade. Not sure if there’s a copy/paste function on the shot tracer, but there seemed to be. 

It’s a bit surprising at first, given how Trump’s full swing begins with a flat takeaway that looks borderline painful. But he reloads before the downswing and passes through the ball on a decent plane with good speed and numbing consistency — looks like something you see from those in the late 1800s playing in overcoats. Substance over style, which indicates quality hand-eye coordination.

He generally employs a little Gary Player-style “walk-through” on his follow-through, which an amateur swing analyst might attribute to potential issues with the left knee — or some other left-side part that makes it difficult to maintain balance on the follow-through.

Whatever, it works.

And the putter is surprisingly good for a 78-year-old man putting conventionally — compared to DeChambeau, who uses an extended putter he rocks through the hitting zone like a pendulum. Brandel Chamblee would tell you Trump has too much ‘hit’ in his putting stroke, but his speed and accuracy are consistent, or at least they were on this day.

In between, on the few occasions Trump takes a full swing with a short iron, there were a couple of fat shots. Yeah, yeah, blamed on “wet” conditions on a course which must have seen some recent rain. Most of us just blame our wedge.

4. It’s Trump, so there’s something for everyone

Fans and detractors alike will find plenty here to chew on with both Trump and the show host.

DeChambeau, who’s been trying hard (too hard?) to change the perception of him as geeky golf scientist, is either generally excited at the challenge of shooting a two-man 49 or needs to dial back the gung-ho meter. 

And Trump, like any president or former president, has enough people blowing smoke. He doesn’t need DeChambeau begging a fat iron shot to “get up” when it’s obviously been mis-hit and will fall well short of the target. 

Trump, in control of the cart (of course) drives over tee boxes and right up to the closely mowed fringes of greens. Yes, he owns the place, but still …

5. Who is Donald Trump’s favorite LIV golfer?

At the beginning of the day, while watching DeChambeau launch drives on the range, Trump and other onlookers marvel at his unmatched length.

“The longest hitter by far. By far,” Trump tells the camera. “And I know ’em all.” 

Surprised? Nah.

In another surprising move for a 78-year-old man, Trump takes control of the tablet in the duo’s cart and hits go on his musical play list.

And near the end, approaching the final tee, Trump asks DeChambeau’s opinion of his fellow tour players, not specifying if he means PGA Tour golfers or DeChambeau’s current mates on the Trump-endorsed LIV Tour. DeChambeau sings their general praises before Trump jumps in with a particular opinion.

“You know whose game I like?” he asks before answering in his next breath. “Patrick Reed.”

Whether a Trump supporter or detractor, you had to see that coming, right?

Reach Ken Willis at ken.willis@news-jrnl.com

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King Louis XV once said “Après moi, le déluge.”

After me, the flood. 

If only “The Sun’s King” knew what would eventually take place at the royal palace he commissioned more than four centuries after his death: the 2024 Paris Olympics. The Palace of Versailles will be the site of Olympic equestrian and Paralympic equestrian, as well as modern pentathlon, during the 2024 Summer Games – giving one of the most-visited tourist destinations in France (8.2 million visitors in 2023, 18% from the United States) another temporary distinction. After the Paralympics, there will be no sign of the transformation the 741 acres have undergone over the past two years. 

Three grandstands constructed around the Etoile Royale can fit about 16,000 spectators. The cross-country discipline of equestrian will feature a 3.29-mile course with 27 obstacles. Another 40,000 seats will line the course.

Even with all of the changes, the setting of Versailles provides a heightened sense of history, said David O’Connor, who chairs the eventing committee within equestrian’s international governing body (Federation Equestre Internationale) and was heavily involved in the planning of the Paris Olympics. 

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

“It’s a pretty stunning backdrop,” O’Connor told USA TODAY Sports.  

How did Versailles turn into Olympic equestrian venue for Paris 2024?

Versailles has been a public establishment under the supervision of the French Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Budget since 1995. To make the palace grounds suitable for Olympic competition, large-scale construction took place – which could have been a cumbersome and ineffectual process, considering Versailles has been recognized as a world heritage site by UNESCO since 1979.  

At the 2012 London Games, which held equestrian events at iconic Greenwich Park, O’Connor said they couldn’t dig into the ground. Everything had to be built up. 

“(At Versailles), they’re like, ‘No, we can do things and we’ll just put it back when we’re done,’” O’Connor said. “That’s a pretty remarkable thing for a historical preservation place.” 

Working with the Palace teams – from architects, site supervisors, gardeners and fountain artisans to project managers, legal and administrative staff – has been easy enough. Organizers paid a lot of attention to improving the quality of the grass and mostly moving earth. 

Builders wanted to clear underbrush, and park personnel told O’Connor that had been on the to-do list anyway. 

“It’s dirt, and dirt that has been here a long time, and it’ll all go back,” O’Connor said.

The three-sided stadium looks out to the Grand Canal and the palace. During the cross-country portion of eventing and the jumping event, both the Grand Canal and the Royal Menagerie will be featured. Horses and their riders will traverse the canal twice via makeshift pontoons. They’ll jump into a large fountain near the Menagerie, which has a natural amphitheater that dates back to the 1600s. 

“We’re jumping into the fountain, going across, jumping up a bank coming out of that area and having another fence,” O’Connor said. “So it’s a really cool exercise.” 

The fences on the cross-country course are designed and painted in ways to honor the history of Versailles and the French style. 

“It is beautiful, what the craftsmen have put together for the courses, within the shapes that we want for the horses and things like that,” said O’Connor, who is also U.S. Equestrian’s chief of sport. 

Once the Paralympic competition wraps on Sept. 7, deconstruction and restoration of the grounds will begin. As with all temporary venues at Paris 2024, the goal is to return the setting to its pre-Olympic look. 

“A year from now, you won’t even notice that we were all there,” O’Connor said.

Putting horses first for hundreds of years

Louis IV became interested in the grounds – 12 miles west of Paris – because he hunted on horseback in what eventually became Versailles and the surrounding area. 

As many as 2,200 horses filled the royal stables at Versailles at its peak in 1787. The art of modern dressage was founded at the École de Versailles. A bronze statue of Louis XIV on horseback stands at the edge of the Place d’Armes. It was Louis IV who ordered the construction of the stables that were built between 1679 and 1682 opposite the palace’s main entrance. 

Beyond the sense of history, O’Connor said, what amazes him is how they built an advanced stabling system in a short period of time during that era. 

“Because of that number of horses, they’re on two levels,” he said, “and just the quality of that stabling, all built out of stone.”

The French army took over the stables following the French Revolution and housed cavalry regiments there through World War II, according to the Associated Press. They were essentially a storage facility for the Versailles district’s archives and horse carriages in the latter half of the 20th Century. In 2003, the National Equestrian Academy returned to the building. 

The Olympic horses will be housed in a separate, air-conditioned facility beyond the Grand Canal – away from vehicle traffic, which is always a priority, O’Connor said.

“There’s a lot of places for the horses to be able to go out and graze and get out of their stalls and be able to walk around in a section of the park that the public won’t have really access to, and will kind of have their own quiet zone to be able to get out and roll,” O’Connor said.

Versailles will remain open to the public during the Games. From July 2 to Nov. 3, the palace will hold an exhibition dedicated to horses and equestrian civilization in Europe to honor the Olympic event taking place on its grounds. 

“It’s all right there in front of you when you go look around,” O’Connor said, “and it’s pretty amazing.”

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PARIS — As the 2024 Summer Olympics approach and swimming takes center stage during the first week of the Games, there will be many stories written and told about the exploits of the extraordinary swimmers who have gathered to compete here. 

But before the current-day swimmers take the headlines, a story of two Olympic gold-medal-winning swimmers from the past is worth telling, two Americans from different eras who never knew each other until one decided to donate a kidney to the father of the other. 

Crissy Perham, competing as Crissy Ahmann-Leighton, won two gold medals and a silver at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics nearly three years before Missy Franklin was born. Franklin went on to become one of the superstars of U.S. swimming in the 21st century, winning four gold medals and a bronze at the 2012 London Games, then one more gold in 2016 in Rio. 

In January 2022, through friends on Facebook, Perham read a heart-breaking post from D.A. Franklin, Missy’s mother: “Our family is looking for a Hail Mary and need your help as we are in a race for time. My husband, Dick, is in End Stage Kidney Failure. He is on the Kidney Transplant list waiting for a cadaver kidney. The current wait is 4 years. 100,000 Americans are presently on the list. 17 die each day while waiting on the list. The other option to cadaver kidney is finding a living donor.” 

Said Perham, “I see this post and think, I’m so healthy, I’m not creeped out by surgery, I’m not going to have any more kids, I can do this. Lots of parts of my brain were like, check, check, check.”

She emailed D.A. Franklin to say she was interested in seeing if she might be a match, but decided to keep her conversation private and her identity anonymous as she went through the process over the next several months.

At the end of July, the match was confirmed, and Perham soon was revealing her name, and her Olympic resume, to the entire Franklin family.

Missy Franklin, known for being one of the kindest and most quotable swimmers of her generation, said she couldn’t believe a fellow Olympic swimmer was going to be her father’s donor. 

“I don’t think I talked for two minutes which for me is pretty much a lifetime,” Franklin said in a recent interview. “I did not know who Crissy was because she was a little bit before my time. She was anonymous at first. We just found out that my dad had a match. That in and of itself was a miracle. 

“Then we found out just before the surgery that it was Crissy and we learned who Crissy was and what her story was and there’s not really a way to put words to it. It truly is otherworldly that this happened, that she saw our story and she was willing to do this.”

Franklin, now 29, still marvels at the history she and Perham share through representing their country in their sport.

“It’s so much bigger than ourselves,” Franklin said. “When you meet another swimmer, another person that does what you do, you kind of automatically have this sense of respect and understanding. You know on a deeper level what it is they’ve been through and what they experienced. Knowing what Crissy accomplished, I couldn’t have been more excited and more at peace. She knows how to work hard, she’s going to recover like a champ, I couldn’t have imagined a better donor. I was like, ‘This kidney is going to be freaking awesome.’”

Turned out, it was. The transplant occurred August 24, 2022. Perham recovered quickly, as did Dick Franklin. 

Although she grew up in Colorado, Missy and her husband and young daughter were now living in Nashville. Soon D.A. and Dick were living in Nashville too. 

How far away? “Oh, 10 minutes,” Missy Franklin said. 

“Every day I wake up knowing that I am given the gift of more time with my dad, and my daughter is given the gift of more time with her grandfather and my mom is given more time with her husband,” Franklin said. “Throughout this whole process there is no greatest gift than that of time. And that’s what organ donation does. It gives people time. It gives people their lives back.”

Every few weeks, Franklin sends Perham texts with photos or videos of Dick playing with his granddaughter. “There is not a moment with my dad when I don’t think of Crissy, not only that he is here but also the quality of his life.”

Perham and her family have visited the Franklins once. It won’t be the last time, Missy Franklin said. “They’re family now. Any time they come to Nashville, it’s immediate, you’re staying with us, we’re planning dinner, the whole thing. They’re family and they always will be.”

Both Franklin and Perham have become very involved in promoting the cause of living organ donation, with Franklin’s current work focusing on the understanding and awareness of family history and inherited diseases. Perham even has had two friends become living kidney donors because of her experience. This is very serious business, most of the time.

“They say that when you take a donor’s kidney, they literally are taking cells from that person and putting them into the other person,” Perham said. “Dick jokes that he loves Mexican food way more now. He definitely got that from me, or at least from my kidney.”

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