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Nina Kennedy rounds off Australia’s golden day at Paris Olympics with pole vault victory | Paris Olympic Games 2024
As pole vault world champion Nina Kennedy took Australia to its 18th gold medal at the Paris Olympics, the nation’s best medal haul... moreNina Kennedy rounds off Australia’s golden day at Paris Olympics with pole vault victory | Paris Olympic Games 2024
As pole vault world champion Nina Kennedy took Australia to its 18th gold medal at the Paris Olympics, the nation’s best medal haul at the Games, she soared to new heights. After Kennedy had charged towards the uprights, forcefully planting her pole in the box, the 27-year-old flew upwards, gracefully lifting over the bar, before dropping cleanly to clear 4.90m. Kennedy did not know it at the time, but it would be the jump that won her gold.
It felt like an apt metaphor for an extraordinary Wednesday from the Australian Olympic team, the best single day in the team’s history, with a total of four golds and two bronze medals. What more appropriate way for the Australians to fly past history and make Paris 2024 the nation’s best Olympics yet?
Kennedy became the first Australian to win pole vault gold since Steven Hooker at the Beijing Olympics in 2008, and the first Australian woman to win gold, bettering Tatiana Grigorieva’s silver medal at the Sydney 2000 Games.
The bar started low, with Kennedy easily clearing 4.40m on her first attempt. She was again comfortable at 4.60m, before suffering a minor mishap at 4.70m. But any fears of an early exit — Kennedy bowed out at 4.40m three years ago in Tokyo, as she battled an injury — were quickly allayed as the Australian soared over on the second attempt.
From there, while the field slimmed, Kennedy looked flawless. She took a deep breath at 4.80m, waited in contemplation, before clearing on her first attempt. When the bar was raised five centimetres, Kennedy was again untroubled — waiting for the jump clock to hit 20 seconds before charging forward and sailing over the bar. She was the only vaulter to clear 4.85m on the first attempt, and the only remaining competitor to clear 4.90m (again, on the first attempt).
Kennedy clears again. Photograph: Andrej Isaković/AFP/Getty Images
With just three athletes left, defending champion Katie Moon from the United States and Canada’s Alysha Newman, Kennedy found herself in the gold medal position. Newman failed to clear 4.90m, while after an unsuccessful attempt, Moon elected to pass on to 4.95m. The American and Kennedy both missed their first attempts at the new height, but Moon had one less chance to give. When Moon failed to clear again, Kennedy did not need to try again.
“I knew first-attempt clearances at those high bars were going to take the gold,” Kennedy said afterwards. “I put all my focus into that exact second, and that’s how I won.”
Kennedy had shared the gold medal with Moon at last year’s world championships, after the pair were level at 4.90m and both failed to clear 4.95m. The Australian has been asked repeatedly in recent months whether she would consider splitting Paris gold.
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“Deep down I knew I wasn’t going to,” she said. “I wanted that outright gold medal. I became really confident in talking to the media, it was really scary, really vulnerable, to lay it all out there and say: ‘I want the fucking outright gold medal, this is what I want.’ That’s really scary — I’m just really happy I got the job done.”
Matthew Denny continued Australia’s medal rush in the discus, winning the bronze medal with a throw of 69.31m. Three years ago in Tokyo, the Queenslander was an agonising five centimetres short of third place. But there would be no such heartbreak in Paris, with Denny almost a metre clear of the fourth place throw. Jamaica’s Rojé Stona won gold with an Olympic record throw of 70.00m. Denny’s medal is the first Olympic medal for an Australian in an Olympic throwing event — discus, shot put, hammer throw and javelin.
The medals at the track capped off a remarkable day which began with bronze in the morning for Jemima Montag and Rhydian Cowley in the mixed relay race walk marathon. Then, across a handful of hours in the afternoon, it rained gold: gold for Matthew Wearn in the sailing; gold for Keegan Palmer in the skateboarding; and gold in the men’s team pursuit on the track. The four golds and two bronze medals eclipses Australia’s prior best day of Olympic action, four gold medals in quick succession in Tokyo.
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Why Olympic wrestler Vinesh Phogat was disqualified
India’s star Olympic wrestler Vinesh Phogat is out of the competition ahead of a gold medal match, after being disqualified for being over her class’s weight limit. It’s a devastating end to the... moreWhy Olympic wrestler Vinesh Phogat was disqualified
India’s star Olympic wrestler Vinesh Phogat is out of the competition ahead of a gold medal match, after being disqualified for being over her class’s weight limit. It’s a devastating end to the Paris games for the wrestler who has led the charge against sexual harassment at the highest levels of her sport.
Had she been able to compete and won Wednesday’s match, she would have been the first Indian woman to win a gold medal in any Olympic event.
Phogat, who often wrestles at a 53-kilogram weight — or about 116 pounds — made the 50-kilogram (about 110 pounds) berth after another wrestler won the 53-kilogram spot on India’s wrestling team. She knew that getting down to competition weight would be difficult, she said in an April interview: “I gain weight easily. It doesn’t matter how fit I am, I still gain weight because I have a lot of muscle mass.”
She had been able to maintain the lower weight until Wednesday, when she weighed in at just 100 grams over the weight limit — despite the drastic measures she had taken over the past week to maintain her 50-kilogram weight. Phogat barely ate, spent hours in a sauna and exercised, and even tried cutting her hair to make weight, according to Team India’s chief medical officer.
But that 100 grams — around 3.5 ounces — meant she couldn’t compete in Wednesday’s match, and wouldn’t receive a medal at all despite her dominance. She put up a phenomenal performance in Paris, beating out Japanese Olympic gold medalist Yui Susaki in the first round, and dominating thereafter, seemingly guaranteeing India either a gold or silver medal.
Her wins — and sudden disqualification — have put her recent crusade against sexual harassment in India’s national wrestling organization back in the spotlight. And though her Olympics are over, there’s now global attention on her activism as much as her athletic prowess.
Sexual harassment is a problem in India — and in sports
Phogat spent months last year as the face of a campaign to remove Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh as head of the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI), the body governing the sport in India.
Phogat and other women wrestlers accused Singh of sexual exploitation, and Phogat in particular alleged that he emotionally and psychologically tormented her following the Tokyo Summer Games, where she just missed out on a medal. After filing a complaint with the Indian Olympic Association, and receiving little response, they mounted a May 2023 protest in New Delhi — where they were reportedly assaulted by police.
Sexual harassment is a problem everywhere, and India is no different. A 2024 Centre for Economic Data & Analysis study found workplace sexual harassment to be on the rise in India (though reporting mechanisms have increased, too), and a 2022 World Bank report found harassment on public transportation to be a nearly universal experience in big cities, with 88 percent of those surveyed in New Delhi saying they’d experienced it.
Scholars Anil Kumar and Ashutosh Pandey, both professors in the department of sociology at Bayalasi P.G. College, in Jalalpur, India, wrote in a recent study that the “prevalent perception of sexual harassment often portrays it as a joke, where women are deemed both responsible for and deserving of such behavior.”
Despite the efforts of Indian feminists, particularly from the 1970s onward, there are still high-profile cases of harassment and violence against women, as well as protests against the police and governments’ handling of the problem.
In the case of Phogat and her colleagues, New Delhi police did finally arrest Singh in June of this year on charges of “sexual harassment, intimidation and outraging the modesty of women,” according to The Hindu. He has maintained his innocence.
That Singh was removed from his post as the head of the WFI and held to account for his alleged crimes is a testament to the women’s protests; in addition to his high profile in the athletic world, Singh was also a powerful member of Parliament with the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Phogat’s Olympics are at an end, but more and more Indian women are taking up sports — and excelling. And her activism is part of a wider effort in India to help women athletes speak up about sexual harassment and assault. There’s a lot more to be done in that arena: As sports fans have seen in Spain, the US, and elsewhere, the serious consequences of sexual harassment aren’t unique to India.
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Olympic basketball: D'Tigress overcome adversity to shine at Paris 2024
Nigeria’s historic run in the women’s basketball tournament at Paris 2024 has been underlined by defensive steel, as well as a sprinkling of inspiration from their young... moreOlympic basketball: D'Tigress overcome adversity to shine at Paris 2024
Nigeria’s historic run in the women’s basketball tournament at Paris 2024 has been underlined by defensive steel, as well as a sprinkling of inspiration from their young coach.
The team known as D’Tigress became the first African side - male or female - to reach the quarter-finals of an Olympic Games after beating Canada in their final group game on Sunday.
The West Africans registered a win on their Olympic debut in Athens in 2004 but had to wait 20 years for their second victory.
The challenge now is to build on their progress.
“I'm really proud of them putting Nigeria on the map again after 20 years,” Mfon Udoka, a member of the 2004 squad, told BBC Sport Africa.
“I'm just hoping in the near future that it doesn't take another 20 years to see the same success.”
However, the squad has had to show plenty of resilience off the court to get to this stage.
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Paraguay’s Luana Alonso has denied reports that she was removed from the Paris Olympics Village for inappropriate behaviour.
Paraguay’s Luana Alonso has denied reports that she was removed from the Paris Olympics Village for inappropriate behaviour.... moreParaguay’s Luana Alonso has denied reports that she was removed from the Paris Olympics Village for inappropriate behaviour.
Paraguay’s Luana Alonso has denied reports that she was removed from the Paris Olympics Village for inappropriate behaviour. This denial comes after several news outlets ran stories on her expulsion from the athletes’ village. The story was first published by British tabloid The Sun, quoting Larissa Schaerer, head of the Paraguayan Olympic Committee.
Paraguay’s Luana Alonso denies reports of her expulsion from the Olympics Village.(Instagram/@luanalonsom)
“Her presence is creating an inappropriate atmosphere within Team Paraguay,” Larissa Schaerer said in a statement published by the outlet. “We thank her for proceeding as instructed, as it was of her own free will that she did not spend the night in the Athletes’ Village.”
The Sun report suggested that Luana Alonso, 20, sneaked out of the Olympic Village to visit Disneyland Paris instead of cheering for her teammates. A separate report in Daily Mail also said that she was a distraction to her teammates “with her skimpy clothing and socialising with other athletes.” It added that she was seen walking around the Village in her own clothes rather than the official Paraguayan kit provided to all athletes.
In an Instagram Story shared yesterday, the 20-year-old swimmer dismissed reports of her expulsion from the Olympic Village.
“I just want to clarify that I was never removed or expelled from anywhere,” Luana Alonso wrote in Spanish on Instagram Stories. “Stop spreading false information. I don’t want to give any statement but I am not going to let lies affect me either,” she added.
Take a look at her Instagram Story:
Luana Alonso addresses reports of her expulsion from Olympic Village
Alonso failed to advance into the women’s 100m butterfly semifinals on July 27, missing out of qualifying by a mere 0.24 seconds. She announced her retirement from the sport shortly after the event, but continued to stay on in the Olympics Village.
“I have been swimming for so long, 18 years, and I have so many feelings,” she wrote on Instagram while announcing her retirement. “Unfortunately, I made the decision to stop and I am happy that my last race will be at the Olympic Games.” Alonso was just 17 when she participated in the Tokyo Olympics.
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News / Trending / Swimmer Luana Alonso breaks silence on her expulsion from Olympic Village: ‘Stop spreading false info’
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Simone Biles toasts Olympic glory with racy snaps alongside Team USA gymnast Jordan Chiles
Simone Biles celebrated her three gold medals at the 2024 Olympics in Paris by posing for a set of eye-popping snaps with fellow Team USA gymnast Jordan Chiles.... moreSimone Biles toasts Olympic glory with racy snaps alongside Team USA gymnast Jordan Chiles
Simone Biles celebrated her three gold medals at the 2024 Olympics in Paris by posing for a set of eye-popping snaps with fellow Team USA gymnast Jordan Chiles.
Barely 24 hours after the 27-year-old openly complained about reporters constantly asking her about ‘what’s next’ following her new achievements at the Olympics this summer, Biles took to social media to put her close bond with Chiles, 23, on display.
‘red, white, biles&chiles,’ she captioned her post on Instagram.
The pair can be seen hanging out on a balcony in what presumably is the Olympic Village, which is located in the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis.
Both gymnasts wore booty shorts with ‘TEAM USA’ printed on them as they also showed off their back muscles with crop tops
Chiles also posted a series of pics with Biles on Instagram.
She wrote ‘team usa girlies…’ with a red heart emoji as a caption to her post.
After claiming gold in the teams finals, all-around events and women’s vault earlier this week, Biles expressed her frustration with the line of questioning taking place after her performances in Paris.
Addressing reporters on X, she posted: ‘you guys really gotta stop asking athletes what’s next after they win a medal at the Olympics.’
Biles then added in another post: ‘let us soak up the moment we’ve worked our whole lives for’.
When asked by a fan what does come next for her after winning another gold, she replied: ‘babysitting the medal’.
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Today at the Olympics: Monday’s schedule and highlights including Keely Hodgkinson and Noah Lyles
Our mission is to deliver unbiased, fact-based reporting that holds power to account and exposes the truth.
Whether $5 or $50, every contribution... moreToday at the Olympics: Monday’s schedule and highlights including Keely Hodgkinson and Noah Lyles
Our mission is to deliver unbiased, fact-based reporting that holds power to account and exposes the truth.
Whether $5 or $50, every contribution counts.
Support us to deliver journalism without an agenda.
Monday’s highlights
Simone Biles has already won three gold medals in Paris but she has further finals to come on the balance beam and floor exercise on the final day of artistic gymnastics. Biles has the chance to make history in the events – if she wins both she will join American swimmer Katie Ledecky and former Soviet Union gymnast Larisa Latynina on nine Olympic golds, which is the most of all time.
The headline star athlete of Monday and perhaps the entire Olympics is Noah Lyles. The Team USA sprinter is back from the thrilling 100m final in a bid to double up and take gold in the men’s 200m first round. Zharnel Hughes, Letsile Tebogo, Andre De Grasse and Erriyon Knighton are among the biggest threats to Lyles.
Keely Hodgkinson goes again in the women’s 800m final, with the Team GB star likely to face a challenge from Kenya’s Mary Moraa.
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Donna Kelce HITS OUT at critics of Paris Olympics ‘last supper’ controversy by sharing a Facebook post blaming ‘veiled homophobia’
Donna Kelce has appeared to hit out at criticism over the Olympics ‘last supper’ scene in the opening ceremony... moreDonna Kelce HITS OUT at critics of Paris Olympics ‘last supper’ controversy by sharing a Facebook post blaming ‘veiled homophobia’
Donna Kelce has appeared to hit out at criticism over the Olympics ‘last supper’ scene in the opening ceremony via her Facebook page, sharing a post from a user saying ‘veiled homophobia’ is behind the outrage.
Kelce, the mother of NFL heroes Travis and Jason Kelce, shared the posts to her thousands of followers on her Facebook page this week. The post reads: ‘ This is what happens when you ban books and limit education.
‘The Opening Ceremony of the Olympics wasn’t a mock of the Last Supper. If you have any knowledge of the Greek origin of the Olympics and the French’s rich history of theater you would have gotten this. However, because of your veiled homophobia, some of you can’t discern factual information.’
The post, which was uploaded with a picture of the Greek Dionysus Feast painting – a 17th-century Dutch painting of the Greek Gods, continued: ‘This is was what went down, so do your own research into the Olympics.
‘The scene was a portrayal of a Greek Dionysus Feast celebration, which is a Greek (the origin of the Olympics) celebration of Dionysus (who is also known as Bacchus) who is the god of festivities, ritual, wine, pleasure, and frenzy. The blue guy…..that’s Dionysus. Dionysus was one of the 12 Olympians.
Donna Kelce has hit out at criticism over the Olympics 'last supper' opening ceremony scene
Donna Kelce has hit out at criticism over the Olympics ‘last supper’ opening ceremony scene
Organizers apologized to Christian groups offended by the scenes in the opening ceremony
Organizers apologized to Christian groups offended by the scenes in the opening ceremony
Kelce shared a post saying the scene was referencing the Greek Dionysus Feast celebration
Kelce shared a post saying the scene was referencing the Greek Dionysus Feast celebration
‘The French are known for theatrics. Historical context and education surrounding the Olympics and its origin is important here in this. Many of you fell for the controversy in spun-up click bait.
‘Stop mindlessly sharing posts and do some research.’
Kelce’s followers were split in response to the NFL’s most famous mom sharing the post.
One comment underneath read: ‘I already loved you Mama Kelce but this just elevated it 1000%. This is why we need art and history in our schools!’.
Another said: ‘Ahhh Mama Kelce for the win!’
But there were plenty of comments disagreeing with her from users who were unhappy that she shared the post in question.
One of her followers commented: ‘Why should we have to educate ourselves about something that we should be able to sit down and enjoy with our children without a lot of confusion?’
Another follower simply wrote: ‘Totally and strongly disagree with you.’
Fans were split in reaction the post that Kelce shared on her Facebook account this week
Fans were split in reaction the post that Kelce shared on her Facebook account this week
Kelce is the mother of Travis Kelce - Taylor Swift's boyfriend - and fellow NFL star Jason
Kelce is the mother of Travis Kelce – Taylor Swift’s boyfriend – and fellow NFL star Jason
The organizing committee of the Paris 2024 games apologized on Sunday after Christian groups around the globe reacted in outrage at the scene in question from the opening ceremony.
‘Clearly there was never an intention to show disrespect to any religious group. [The opening ceremony] tried to celebrate community tolerance,’ the Paris 2024 spokesperson Anne Descamps told a press conference. ‘We believe this ambition was achieved. If people have taken any offence we are really sorry.’
Donna Kelce, 71, shot to fame in 2023 when her sons Travis and Jason were playing on opposing teams in that year’s Super Bowl. Travis and the Kansas City Chiefs went on to emerge victorious over Jason and the Philadelphia Eagles.
Last September, Travis and girlfriend Taylor Swift went public when the singer appeared at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City to watch him play in the NFL.
The singer took a seat alongside Donna in a VIP suite at the stadium.
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Donna Kelce HITS OUT at critics of Paris Olympics ‘last supper’ controversy by sharing a Facebook post blaming ‘veiled homophobia’
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Ex-NBA player Budinger wins Olympic beach volleyball debut
PARIS — Chase Budinger has never forgotten how badly he played in his first NBA game. He’ll have only good memories from his Olympic debut.
The former Arizona and professional basketball... moreEx-NBA player Budinger wins Olympic beach volleyball debut
PARIS — Chase Budinger has never forgotten how badly he played in his first NBA game. He’ll have only good memories from his Olympic debut.
The former Arizona and professional basketball player and his partner, Miles Evans, beat host France in straight sets on Monday to coast through their opening match of the Paris beach volleyball tournament.
I really tried to use my basketball experience of playing in front of big crowds to be composed the whole time,” Budinger said after a 21-14, 21-11 victory. “But it definitely was not like that inside.
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Countdown to Paris 2024: Torch Relay Kicks Off as Olympic Fever Grips France
As of late July 2024, the Paris Summer Olympics, set to commence on July 26, 2024, are generating significant buzz with several key updates and developments capturing global... moreCountdown to Paris 2024: Torch Relay Kicks Off as Olympic Fever Grips France
As of late July 2024, the Paris Summer Olympics, set to commence on July 26, 2024, are generating significant buzz with several key updates and developments capturing global attention.
First and foremost, the Olympic torch relay, which began its journey in Greece, is now making its way through various French cities, creating a festive atmosphere nationwide. The relay, which will conclude at the opening ceremony in Paris, has already been marked by vibrant celebrations and enthusiastic crowds, setting an exciting tone for the games.
In terms of infrastructure, Paris has made substantial progress in preparing for the Olympics. The city has invested heavily in upgrading existing venues and constructing new facilities, including the stunning Aquatics Centre and the new Olympic Village, designed to be both environmentally sustainable and technologically advanced. The Paris 2024 organizing committee has emphasized eco-friendliness, with many venues utilizing green energy sources and sustainable materials.
Athlete preparations are also in full swing, with numerous national teams conducting their final training camps and trials. A particular highlight is the anticipated debut of several new sports, including breakdancing, which will feature prominently for the first time in Olympic history. The inclusion of these sports has sparked considerable interest, especially among younger audiences.
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Olympics to Hold Its First Esports Games Starting in 2025, Amid Concerns
The games industry may be surging, having recently generated more money than movies and North American sports combined, but enthusiasm for esports has ebbed and flowed. Now,... moreOlympics to Hold Its First Esports Games Starting in 2025, Amid Concerns
The games industry may be surging, having recently generated more money than movies and North American sports combined, but enthusiasm for esports has ebbed and flowed. Now, though, competitive gaming will get a jolt of recognition: The International Olympic Committee has just formalized the Olympic Esports Games, with the first scheduled for 2025 in Saudi Arabia.
Complicating the picture for the IOC: the themes of violence that run through many video games, and a political environment in Saudi Arabia that’s hostile to LGBTQ+ individuals.
The IOC hasn’t decided on the exact location and dates or, most importantly, which video game titles the esports athletes will be competing in. In the past, professional esports competitions have mostly been title-specific tournaments, including huge international efforts like the League of Legends World Championship and the Dota International.
The last couple of decades have seen esports leagues rise and fall, from the US-specific Major League Gaming (acquired by Activision Blizzard and now owned by Microsoft) to publisher-sponsored organizations like Activision Blizzard’s Overwatch League.
Large-scale professional gaming competitions have been pushed mostly by game publishers and esports leagues, but the IOC has been exploring esports since 2017, culminating in the Olympic Esports Week in Singapore in 2023 and a subsequent request to study the creation of a formal Olympic Esports Games.
The IOC Esports Commission said in a release Tuesday that it has “devised a project which addresses the interest of the esports community while respecting the Olympic values. This is particularly true with regard to the game titles on the programme, the promotion of gender equality and engagement with the young audience, which is embracing esports.”
Esports reviving the Olympics
Appealing to younger fans has been a priority for the IOC, leading it to adopt new event categories in recent Olympics. In 2020, the traditional Games added surfing, skateboarding and sport climbing, while breaking (what had been known as breakdancing) is debuting at the 2024 Paris Olympics. The IOC has been looking into esports as traditional sports audiences age — a MarketWatch report in 2017 noted that the average NBA viewers were in their early 40s, while average NFL and MLB viewers were in their 50s.
But even as the IOC Esports Commission formed to explore how it might integrate competitive gaming into the Olympics, questions arose about whether that marriage would work. Many of the top esports titles are violent first-person shooters, which goes against Olympic values of peaceful competition — the IOC flatly stated a year ago that games from the Counter-Strike and Call of Duty series would never be included in Olympic Esports, according to The Jakarta Post. While the IOC formalizing the Olympic Esports Games seems to put the debate to bed about whether virtual competition is a sport, siloing esports into their own event, away from the traditional Olympics, does send a complicated message.
The most pertinent question is whether gamers will flock to esports if they’re hosted by the Olympics, or if they’ll just continue watching tournaments and leagues that have been built up by the games industry and esports enthusiasts.
“Years ago I said, ‘The Olympics needs esports more than esports needs the Olympics,’ and I still stand by that statement,” said Rod Breslau, an esports and gaming consultant.
“However, there is no denying that esports officially being at the Olympics, and even the creation of its own games, is another major stepping stone in establishing competitive gaming as a ‘real thing’ to the mainstream,” Breslau added. “Video games at the Olympics is validation for an entire generation of kids that grew up playing Street Fighter, Quake or StarCraft.”
Esports Olympics in Saudi Arabia
Tuesday’s announcement focused on Saudi Arabia’s role in hosting the first esports Olympics, which spokespeople for the country said is a natural extension of Saudi Arabia’s support for traditional sports and efforts to reach young athletes.
“Our commitment to esports is simply a reflection of the world our young people live in,” Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki Al Faisal, minister of sport and president of the Saudi Arabian Olympic and Paralympic Committee, said in the press release. “We now all have the chance to write new Olympic history together, the chance to inspire new dreams and new ambitions for literally millions of athletes around the world.”
Saudi Arabia has 23.5 million gamers and almost half are female, said Princess Reema Bandar Al-Saud, who’s on the board of directors of the Saudi Arabian Olympic and Paralympic Committee and is president of the Women’s Committee.
Saudi Arabia has been ramping up its investments in esports over the past several years, culminating in the 2024 Esports World Cup that kicked off July 3 and runs through Aug. 25. But that event has proved divisive as players, streamers and fans have protested and boycotted the championship, according to the BBC, because of hostility toward LGBTQ+ people on the part of the country, where same-sex acts are punishable by death.
Similarly, earlier this year advocacy groups protested the United Nations for appointing Saudi Arabia to lead the UN commission on women’s rights, citing the kingdom’s “abysmal” record in that realm, The Guardian reported. Though Saudi Arabian authorities have attempted reforms in recent years, like the 2022 Personal Status Law, Amnesty International criticized the legislation for entrenching “gender-based discrimination in every aspect of family life.”
The IOC defended its decision to partner with and hold the first Olympic Esports Games in Saudi Arabia, saying that the country’s National Olympic Committee is in line with the Olympic Charter and that the IOC will work with the committee to “ensure that the event will be held in a sustainable way and international standards are respected in the context of the event,” according to a statement attributed to an IOC spokesperson.
The IOC Esports Committee pointed to Saudi Arabia’s recent efforts to encourage sports participation among its population, including substantial growth among women, from girls playing in school football leagues to nearly 30 women’s national teams.
“With regards to LGBTQ+ players — within the context of the Olympic Esports Games and in line with the Olympic Charter, there will be no discrimination against any player on the basis of their gender or sexuality,” the IOC spokesperson said. “We will work with our Olympic Esports Games partners to ensure that all athletes/players feel welcome and compete safely in our events.”
There are other concerns about Saudi Arabia’s massive investments in esports — through acquisitions, the kingdom owns around 40% of the total esports market, according to a recent report by The New York Times, making it difficult for anyone in the industry not to work with or for the country. This has led to questions about whether the Olympic Esports Games would exist without Saudi Arabia’s investments.
“If the IOC truly believed in its principals they would have created the esports games without the Saudi partnership, and this news would be much more widely accepted,” said esports analyst Breslau. “As it stands, the Olympics is now complicit in esportswashing.”
Global politics and the Olympics
Some parts of the esports and gaming communities may again protest and even skip the inaugural Olympics Esports Games held in Saudi Arabia, but boycotting Olympics on moral and political grounds is a tradition that goes back to their modern resumption in the early 20th century, as this timeline from the Associated Press illustrates. Countries defeated in the world wars were excluded from the 1920 and 1948 Olympics, and Cold War tensions led to varying abstentions until the US led 60 countries in boycotting the 1980 Moscow Games over the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan, followed by a Soviet boycott of the 1984 Games in Los Angeles.
Athletes from countries involved in wars condemned by the international community have been allowed to compete in the Games as neutral athletes under no flag, which is how competitors from Russia and Belarus — nations that have invaded and waged war on Ukraine for more than two years — are participating in the 2024 Paris Olympics.
The most prominent and long-lasting absence was that of South Africa, which was banned from attending the 1964 Tokyo Olympics due to its apartheid system of racial discrimination, as the AP described, and the country didn’t return to the Games until 1992, when referendums preceded the end of that government-imposed societal system.
At this early stage, it’s unclear how substantial any protests would be against the Olympic Esports Games in Saudi Arabia. Amid the 2024 Esports World Cup held in the country, some competitors attended while waging their own, quieter protests. The esports organization Team Liquid sent its members to compete, and they wore their official rainbow-colored Pride jerseys to show their support for the LGBTQ+ community on stage. Team Liquid co-CEO Steve Arhancet posted a lengthy explanation on X (formerly Twitter) ahead of the tournament of the organization’s decision and his own as a gay man to attend and, hopefully, spark conversations to inspire incremental change.
“Progress lies in engagement, not isolation,” Arhancet wrote on X. “Progress won’t be swift, and setbacks are inevitable, but in the meantime we at Team Liquid believe that the best way to create change is to include others, and show them that progress is possible.”
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Olympics to Hold Its First Esports Games Starting in 2025, Amid Concerns
The games industry may be surging, having recently generated more money than movies and North American sports combined, but enthusiasm for esports has ebbed and flowed. Now,... moreOlympics to Hold Its First Esports Games Starting in 2025, Amid Concerns
The games industry may be surging, having recently generated more money than movies and North American sports combined, but enthusiasm for esports has ebbed and flowed. Now, though, competitive gaming will get a jolt of recognition: The International Olympic Committee has just formalized the Olympic Esports Games, with the first scheduled for 2025 in Saudi Arabia.
Complicating the picture for the IOC: the themes of violence that run through many video games, and a political environment in Saudi Arabia that’s hostile to LGBTQ+ individuals.
The IOC hasn’t decided on the exact location and dates or, most importantly, which video game titles the esports athletes will be competing in. In the past, professional esports competitions have mostly been title-specific tournaments, including huge international efforts like the League of Legends World Championship and the Dota International.
The last couple of decades have seen esports leagues rise and fall, from the US-specific Major League Gaming (acquired by Activision Blizzard and now owned by Microsoft) to publisher-sponsored organizations like Activision Blizzard’s Overwatch League.
Large-scale professional gaming competitions have been pushed mostly by game publishers and esports leagues, but the IOC has been exploring esports since 2017, culminating in the Olympic Esports Week in Singapore in 2023 and a subsequent request to study the creation of a formal Olympic Esports Games.
The IOC Esports Commission said in a release Tuesday that it has “devised a project which addresses the interest of the esports community while respecting the Olympic values. This is particularly true with regard to the game titles on the programme, the promotion of gender equality and engagement with the young audience, which is embracing esports.”
Esports reviving the Olympics
Appealing to younger fans has been a priority for the IOC, leading it to adopt new event categories in recent Olympics. In 2020, the traditional Games added surfing, skateboarding and sport climbing, while breaking (what had been known as breakdancing) is debuting at the 2024 Paris Olympics. The IOC has been looking into esports as traditional sports audiences age — a MarketWatch report in 2017 noted that the average NBA viewers were in their early 40s, while average NFL and MLB viewers were in their 50s.
But even as the IOC Esports Commission formed to explore how it might integrate competitive gaming into the Olympics, questions arose about whether that marriage would work. Many of the top esports titles are violent first-person shooters, which goes against Olympic values of peaceful competition — the IOC flatly stated a year ago that games from the Counter-Strike and Call of Duty series would never be included in Olympic Esports, according to The Jakarta Post. While the IOC formalizing the Olympic Esports Games seems to put the debate to bed about whether virtual competition is a sport, siloing esports into their own event, away from the traditional Olympics, does send a complicated message.
The most pertinent question is whether gamers will flock to esports if they’re hosted by the Olympics, or if they’ll just continue watching tournaments and leagues that have been built up by the games industry and esports enthusiasts.
“Years ago I said, ‘The Olympics needs esports more than esports needs the Olympics,’ and I still stand by that statement,” said Rod Breslau, an esports and gaming consultant.
“However, there is no denying that esports officially being at the Olympics, and even the creation of its own games, is another major stepping stone in establishing competitive gaming as a ‘real thing’ to the mainstream,” Breslau added. “Video games at the Olympics is validation for an entire generation of kids that grew up playing Street Fighter, Quake or StarCraft.”
Esports Olympics in Saudi Arabia
Tuesday’s announcement focused on Saudi Arabia’s role in hosting the first esports Olympics, which spokespeople for the country said is a natural extension of Saudi Arabia’s support for traditional sports and efforts to reach young athletes.
“Our commitment to esports is simply a reflection of the world our young people live in,” Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki Al Faisal, minister of sport and president of the Saudi Arabian Olympic and Paralympic Committee, said in the press release. “We now all have the chance to write new Olympic history together, the chance to inspire new dreams and new ambitions for literally millions of athletes around the world.”
Saudi Arabia has 23.5 million gamers and almost half are female, said Princess Reema Bandar Al-Saud, who’s on the board of directors of the Saudi Arabian Olympic and Paralympic Committee and is president of the Women’s Committee.
Saudi Arabia has been ramping up its investments in esports over the past several years, culminating in the 2024 Esports World Cup that kicked off July 3 and runs through Aug. 25. But that event has proved divisive as players, streamers and fans have protested and boycotted the championship, according to the BBC, because of hostility toward LGBTQ+ people on the part of the country, where same-sex acts are punishable by death.
Similarly, earlier this year advocacy groups protested the United Nations for appointing Saudi Arabia to lead the UN commission on women’s rights, citing the kingdom’s “abysmal” record in that realm, The Guardian reported. Though Saudi Arabian authorities have attempted reforms in recent years, like the 2022 Personal Status Law, Amnesty International criticized the legislation for entrenching “gender-based discrimination in every aspect of family life.”
The IOC defended its decision to partner with and hold the first Olympic Esports Games in Saudi Arabia, saying that the country’s National Olympic Committee is in line with the Olympic Charter and that the IOC will work with the committee to “ensure that the event will be held in a sustainable way and international standards are respected in the context of the event,” according to a statement attributed to an IOC spokesperson.
The IOC Esports Committee pointed to Saudi Arabia’s recent efforts to encourage sports participation among its population, including substantial growth among women, from girls playing in school football leagues to nearly 30 women’s national teams.
“With regards to LGBTQ+ players — within the context of the Olympic Esports Games and in line with the Olympic Charter, there will be no discrimination against any player on the basis of their gender or sexuality,” the IOC spokesperson said. “We will work with our Olympic Esports Games partners to ensure that all athletes/players feel welcome and compete safely in our events.”
There are other concerns about Saudi Arabia’s massive investments in esports — through acquisitions, the kingdom owns around 40% of the total esports market, according to a recent report by The New York Times, making it difficult for anyone in the industry not to work with or for the country. This has led to questions about whether the Olympic Esports Games would exist without Saudi Arabia’s investments.
“If the IOC truly believed in its principals they would have created the esports games without the Saudi partnership, and this news would be much more widely accepted,” said esports analyst Breslau. “As it stands, the Olympics is now complicit in esportswashing.”
Global politics and the Olympics
Some parts of the esports and gaming communities may again protest and even skip the inaugural Olympics Esports Games held in Saudi Arabia, but boycotting Olympics on moral and political grounds is a tradition that goes back to their modern resumption in the early 20th century, as this timeline from the Associated Press illustrates. Countries defeated in the world wars were excluded from the 1920 and 1948 Olympics, and Cold War tensions led to varying abstentions until the US led 60 countries in boycotting the 1980 Moscow Games over the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan, followed by a Soviet boycott of the 1984 Games in Los Angeles.
Athletes from countries involved in wars condemned by the international community have been allowed to compete in the Games as neutral athletes under no flag, which is how competitors from Russia and Belarus — nations that have invaded and waged war on Ukraine for more than two years — are participating in the 2024 Paris Olympics.
The most prominent and long-lasting absence was that of South Africa, which was banned from attending the 1964 Tokyo Olympics due to its apartheid system of racial discrimination, as the AP described, and the country didn’t return to the Games until 1992, when referendums preceded the end of that government-imposed societal system.
At this early stage, it’s unclear how substantial any protests would be against the Olympic Esports Games in Saudi Arabia. Amid the 2024 Esports World Cup held in the country, some competitors attended while waging their own, quieter protests. The esports organization Team Liquid sent its members to compete, and they wore their official rainbow-colored Pride jerseys to show their support for the LGBTQ+ community on stage. Team Liquid co-CEO Steve Arhancet posted a lengthy explanation on X (formerly Twitter) ahead of the tournament of the organization’s decision and his own as a gay man to attend and, hopefully, spark conversations to inspire incremental change.
#lesottolenghi #Olympics #OlympicGames #Olympics2024 #parisolympics2024 #olympicsparis2024 #2024summerolympics #parisolympicsschedule
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‘I’m good to go’: Steph Catley fit for Matildas’ Olympics opener against Germany | Paris Olympic Games 2024
Coach Tony Gustavsson expects to have captain Steph Catley and a full-strength squad available when the Matildas face Germany in the... more‘I’m good to go’: Steph Catley fit for Matildas’ Olympics opener against Germany | Paris Olympic Games 2024
Coach Tony Gustavsson expects to have captain Steph Catley and a full-strength squad available when the Matildas face Germany in the opening match of their Olympic campaign on Thursday.
The Matildas have been beset by injury woes in the lead-up to the Paris Games, with Catley nursing a calf niggle, Katrina Gorry returning from an ankle injury, and other worries for attacking threat Caitlin Foord and defender Kaitlyn Torpey. But Gustavsson insisted his team was fit and ready to go following an extended pre-Olympics training camp, as all 22 players – 18 squad members and four reserves – trained on Wednesday in Marseille.
“Everyone trained today, which is good,” Gustavsson said. “It’s been a challenging preparation period, to be honest. If you look at the game minutes that these players have had over the last six months, with everything from stress fractures to foot surgeries to soft tissue injuries and all that. And then a break, and then coming in [to camp]. So we’ve had to do a lot of hard work and individual planning.
“It’s been a little bit of a challenge to get everyone up to speed, but to then see 100% of the players available for training today was amazing,” Gustavsson added.
While the coach said that final decisions on availability would be made following a last medical meeting, he indicated that Arsenal star Catley was expected to start against Germany. “If Steph is available, our captain, that’s a no-brainer,” he said.
“I’m fit,” added Catley, set to compete in her third Olympics. “I’m good to go.”
The Matildas enter the Games with high expectations after finishing fourth at both the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and home World Cup in 2023. But on each occasion the Australians fell in the third-place encounter; the team has never won a medal at a major international tournament.
“It would be incredible,” Catley said about the prospect of finishing on the podium in Paris. “This team has gone through a lot, been together for many, many years, we’ve come close to having some pretty amazing results. It’s definitely something that we want to achieve.
“But so does every single team in this tournament,” continued the 30-year-old. “Every single team in this tournament is incredible – the Olympics is really, really tough. Not to be clichéd but it really is one game at a time for us. We dream big always – every tournament we go into, we go into to win, to achieve the absolute most we can. But it’s risky to start to think like that, we just need to focus on Germany and how we can beat them.”
After the encounter with Germany, the Matildas will face Zambia in Nice on Sunday, before concluding the group with a blockbuster clash against long-time rivals the United States in Marseille next week. The Australians need to finish in the top two of group B, or be among the best-ranked third placed teams, to qualify for the quarter-finals.
On the eve of their opening match, and with the Paris 2024 opening ceremony only 48 hours away, Catley spoke of her pride at wearing the green and gold on the Olympic stage.
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“We know what the Olympics mean to everyone,” said the defender. “We take a lot of pride from the stories we share – meeting Cathy Freeman )ahead of the last World Cup], the connections we have with her, and how many of us grew up watching the Olympics and being so proud to be Australian in those massive moments.
“We want to recreate those kinds of moments for young girls watching the TV, up in the middle of the night watching us,” Catley added. “We want to make them proud – we want to give them that Olympic memory we had growing up.”
Goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold, meanwhile, had a simple message for Australian fans ahead of the Germany clash: “Set your alarms.”
The Matildas’ Olympic opener will take place on Thursday evening local time (3am AEST). “It’s going to be an early one – set your alarms, get around it,” said Arnold. “It means a lot to us.”
#lesottolenghi #Olympics #OlympicGames #Olympics2024 #parisolympics2024 #olympicsparis2024 #2024summerolympics #parisolympicsschedule
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Nike eyes marketing moment at the Olympics, as industry execs sound off on the brand’s challenges
The Olympic Games is undeniably a major brand marketer moment. And lately, marketers have been eyeing everything from women’s sports to Formula One... moreNike eyes marketing moment at the Olympics, as industry execs sound off on the brand’s challenges
The Olympic Games is undeniably a major brand marketer moment. And lately, marketers have been eyeing everything from women’s sports to Formula One races as opportunities for growth, making sports marketing more competitive than ever.
Still, brands are throwing money at the games, including the likes of Powerade, Reese’s, Old El Paso and, of course, Nike. The athletic retailer in particular has already shelled out nearly $143 million in advertising dollars from January through May this year, even before the Olympic Games start, according to data from MediaRadar. That figure is up 10% year over year from the $130 million spent during the same period in 2023.
Nike, which didn’t respond to comment on this story, told Reuters that this year’s Olympics were its “biggest” spend yet. In 2021, Nike spent an estimated $39 million on advertising during the Summer Olympics in Tokyo, per MediaRadar’s data.
The Olympic moment comes at a time that is all too critical for a brand like Nike, which some industry experts say is pressured to improve its standing among consumers after seeing a dip in sales as of late.
The 60-year-old retailer faces challenges on more than one front. Full-year revenue (the fiscal year ended May 31 for the company) was up just 1% to $51.4 billion compared to $51.2 billion in 2023, per the company’s earnings report. Meanwhile, fourth-quarter revenues were $12.6 billion, down 2% on a reported basis and flat on a currency-neutral basis, per the report. Nike’s digital sales have also been lagging, dipping 3% year over year from the third quarter of fiscal 2023 to the third quarter of fiscal 2024, marking the retailer’s first digital decline in nine years. Nike is said to have invested too much, too quickly in its direct-to-consumer business, which has become a scapegoat for its poor performance, as ModernRetail reported. In the face of financial headwinds, the company has gone through a series of layoffs to cut costs.
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