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Badminton is great.

Although there was an All-time Announcer’s Jinx in the women’s singles badminton semis. The Spanish player was up a set and up 10-5 in the second when the announcer said (paraphrasing) “The 2016 Olympic champion is showing no signs of the two knee injuries that prevented her from defending her gold medal in Tokyo. So far in Paris she’s been playing great.” On the very next point she tore an ACL, which not only prevented her from finishing that match and clinching at least a silver medal, but caused her to get no medal at all. She was in physical and emotional agony laying on the court.

Literally the very next point, seconds after those comments were made. It was eerily sad.

It was absolutely brutal to watch. Up there with Derek Redmond from 1992 for pure emotional trauma.

However.......If you want to take just a bit of that heartache away, this video highlighting what a poor sportswoman she is might help with that.

Also, in 2016 when her Olympic opponent Li Xue Rui injured her knee late in a match, Marin later accused Li of feigning the injury as a tactic against her. She apologized once she found out her opponent really was badly injured, but that sort of accusation is pretty damning about the kind of player Marin is.

The video of her injury yesterday is still pretty moving, but maybe not quite as moving as before.
 
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"I want to play in my hijab, she wants to play in a bikini," Expressen reported Egypt's Doaa Elghobashy as saying. "Everything is OK, if you want to be naked or wear a hijab. Just respect all different cultures and religions."

FWIW, Spain defeated Egypt in straight sets.

Just sayin': I am anxiously awaiting a female sand volleyball match between countries that choose to play naked........:boogie:

Spain got dem asses though!

Whew. France is pretty fantastic too
 
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Just sayin': Two stories on "Olympic surfing":

1. https://www.foxnews.com/sports/who-...-native-olympian-who-just-won-gold-us-surfing

Who is Caroline Marks? Florida native Olympian who just won gold for the US in surfing

Caroline Marks grew up in Florida surfing during hurricanes​

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A Florida woman was seen dominating in the Paris Olympics.

Surfer Caroline Marks joined women’s swimming sensations Torri Huske and Kate Douglass as the only Americans 22 or younger to win a gold medal in Paris. Marks took gold in the women’s competition early Tuesday morning in Tahiti, which is 12 hours behind Paris and more than 10,000 miles away.

Her neighbors in Florida woke up on Tuesday to find Marks, the reigning world champion, had capped off a dominant run in the South Pacific. She scored a 10.50 to defeat Brazil's Tatiana Weston-Webb, who scored a close 10.33, in the final. Marks had just scored a 12.17 in the semifinals held earlier in the day to defeat France's Johanne Defay.

The 22-year-old's medal also breaks the Olympic record for gold medal won furthest away from a main host city.



2. https://www.npr.org/2024/08/06/nx-s1-5065479/olympics-surfing-kauli-vaast-caroline-marks-whale

A whale got its turn in the spotlight on the last day of Olympic surfing

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Figure Skating at the Summer Olympics? No, Just a Long Overdue Medal Ceremony​

It took more than two years for American skaters to receive their gold medals from Beijing after a Russian doping scandal. With the Eiffel Tower behind them, it was worth the wait.

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The ceremony was not about doping. For clean athletes, the Olympics never are. Doping frustrates, it disheartens and it distorts, but ultimately, what the athletes who talk about doping really want is to not talk about it at all. Eight American figure skaters received their gold medals here Wednesday, Winter Olympians getting 2022 medals at the 2024 Summer Games. Russian doping was the reason for the delay, but it was not the reason for the ceremony. The Americans got gold medals because they won the team event in Beijing.

“It symbolizes a lifetime of hard work,” skater Madison Chock said. “It means a lot to us, and we're very grateful that we got to do it.”

If you don’t remember the roundabout way we got here, then here is a recap. Before the Olympics, Russian star Kamila Valieva tested positive for trimetazidine, a banned supplement. The Court of Arbitration for Sport inexplicably ruled Valieva was eligible for the Olympics. Then the IOC decided if Valieva won anything, no medals would be awarded. If Valieva’s performances counted, the Russians would have finished first in the team event, ahead of Team USA. After various challenges and legal processes, Valieva was retroactively ruled ineligible, the Russians fell to third place without her scores, and the Americans won gold.

To outsiders, flying winter Olympians across an ocean just to give them their medals might seem excessive—or a way for the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee to put the Russians in their place. To the athletes, it was just a way to give them their medals. Think of how many athletes step onto the medal podium and leave in a puddle. It happened to Scottie Scheffler last week.

The podium means so much to athletes that in Beijing, the Americans weren’t sure which medals they would get. Their families weren’t there because of COVID-19 restrictions and skater Karen Chen still said, “I was really looking forward to being on the podium with my amazing teammates. … I would love, even if we don't get our medals, just to stand on the podium.”

They had to wait two-and-a-half years for their gold medals, but Paris can make any wait worthwhile. It was a sunny day—too hot, surely, to be wearing their winter Olympic team warmups, but they did anyway. The stands at the Trocadero were packed. The video board flashed the names of the Americans who won gold and the Japanese skaters who won silver. Across the river, the Eiffel Tower … was … um … the Eiffel Tower. That was enough.

Chock, Evan Bates, Karen Chen, Nathan Chen, Zachary Donohue, Brandon Frazier, Madison Hubbell, Alexa Knierim and Vincent Zhou all sounded like they would give the experience the greatest possible review.

“I feel almost privileged in a way because there's many people who, you know, deserve the same thing and won't get it,” Zhou said.
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2024 Paris Olympics: Ranking the college athletics powerhouses that have produced the most medals

These schools will have serious bragging rights the next four years.​

If the 2024 Paris Olympics was the holiday season, fans of the games are in the afterglow of Christmas and eagerly awaiting New Year's Eve. A majority of the big-name events are over, but gold-medal games for soccer and basketball, along with a handful of marquee track and field events, await before the closing ceremonies Aug. 11. It's the perfect time to look back on the medal count for the USA's top collegiate programs.

Since the games started, 59 gold medals have been handed out to current and former college athletes. The new-look ACC has been the most successful conference by far, with three of the top four teams in total medal count and another team in the top 20. The SEC places six teams in the top 20, while the Big Ten ranks just behind with five.

This top 20 medal count is sorted by total number of medals. The programs with more gold medals won tiebreakers. The list includes current and former athletes. Medals for athletes who transferred schools in college were attributed to the last team they played for.

Here are the top 20 college athletics programs that have produced the most medals at the 2024 Paris Olympics, ranked:

16. Ohio State Buckeyes (4)
Gold:
1 | Silver: 1 | Bronze: 2
Hunter Armstrong (2020-22) won gold in the 4 x 100m Medley Relay at the 2020 games and silver in the same event in Paris. He also won his second gold medal in the 4 x 100m Freestyle Relay. Eleanor Harvey (2013-17) and Maximilien Chastanet (2015-18) finished bronze in individual and team fencing, respectively.
 
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