USA and Australia swimming rivalry alive and well
The rivalry between USA and Australia swimming goes back many years, but recent comments from the latter have fanned the flame.
The 2024 Paris Olympics keep rolling today with another packed day. Simone Biles and the U.S. women’s gymnastics team competed for the first time of these Games, their qualification starting at 5:40 a.m. ET.
Sunday’s Olympic swimming schedule features three finals with two-time U.S. Olympian Torri Huske and first-time U.S. Olympian Gretchen Walsh set to compete in the 100m butterfly.
Elsewhere, the U.S. men’s basketball team opened group play with a win against Serbia. The USWNT faces Germany in group play.
At least six U.S. squads are competing in team sports, with 25 sports in total are in action. USA TODAY Sports will bring you live results, medal count, highlights, and more throughout the day. Follow along:
NANTERRE, France —In a battle of the fastest women’s butterfly swimmers in history, Americans Torri Huske won the gold medal in 55.59 seconds and American Gretchen Walsh won the silver in 55.63.
Huske and Walsh both won silver medals Saturday night as part of the U.S. women’s 4×100-meter freestyle relay team.
For Huske, a 21-year-old former U.S. record holder taking a gap year from Stanford, this was a chance to perfect her performance in a race she nearly won three years ago. She ended up finishing fourth in the 100 butterfly in Tokyo after appearing to take the lead 10 meters from the finish. Huske did win a silver medal in the women’s 4×100 medley relay in 2021.
PARIS — Coco Gauff, perhaps the Americans’ best chance to win a medal in tennis, started her singles run with a dominant 6-3, 6-0 victory over Australia’s Ajla Tomljanovic.
American fans may remember Tomljanovic as the player who ended Serena Williams’ career at the 2023 US Open in a three-set thriller. Since then, however, Tomljanovic has struggled with injury and used a protected ranking to secure her spot on Australia’s Olympic team.
As for the 21-year old Gauff, who is seeded No. 2 and was Team USA’s female flagbearer at Friday’s opening ceremony, it was more or less an ideal start to the Olympics. On Sunday, she teamed with Jessica Pegula for a first-round victory in doubles. Gauff is also playing mixed doubles with Taylor Fritz.
She continues in singles Monday against Maria Lourdes Carles of Argentina, who is ranked 89th in the world. That match should start at around 7:30 or 8 a.m. ET, depending on how quickly the day’s first match finishes on Suzanne Lenglen Court.
– Dan Wolken
VILLENEUVE-D’ASCQ, France – Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum is coming off an NBA title in June and another All-NBA selection in 2023-24.
Yet Tatum didn’t play in the USA’s 110-84 victory against Serbia Sunday in the men’s 5×5 basketball Group C opener for both teams at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
U.S. coach Steve Kerr explained his decision and talked to Tatum about it.
“It’s really hard in a 40-minute game to play more than 10 guys, and with Kevin (Durant) coming back, I just went to the combinations that I felt would make the most sense,” Kerr said. “It seems crazy. I thought I was crazy when I looked at everything and determined these are the lineups I want to get to. Jayson’s first-team All-NBA three years in a row, he’s one of the best players in the world.
“He’s incredibly professional, and that’s tonight. That doesn’t mean it’s going to stay that way the rest of the tournament, so he’ll make his mark. But the key, and our guys know this, is to put all the NBA stuff in the rearview mirror and just win six games, and Jayson’s the ultimate pro and champion and he handled it well and he’s going to be ready for the next one.”
– Jeff Zillgitt
Team USA continues their Olympic slate vs. Germany at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday. Here’s how they’ll line up:
- Goalkeeper: Alyssa Naeher
- Defender: Emily Fox
- Defender: Naomi Girma
- Defender: Tierna Davidson
- Midfielder: Lindsey Horan (captain)
- Midfielder: Rose Lavelle
- Midfielder: Sam Coffey
- Forward: Sophia Smith
- Forward: Trinity Rodman
- Forward: Crystal Dunn
- Forward: Mallory Swanson
Available substitutes: Korbin Albert, Casey Krueger, Lynn Williams, Jenna Nighswonger, Emily Sonnett, Casey Murphy, Croix Bethune.
While appearing on NBC on Sunday as part of the network’s basketball coverage at the Games, South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley — a member of the selection committee that constructed the 12-player Team USA roster — said Clark would have been under “really high consideration” to make the team “if we had to do it all over again.”
“As a committee member, you’re charged with putting together the best team of players, the best talent,” Staley said in an interview with NBC’s Mike Tirico. “Caitlin is just a rookie in the WNBA and wasn’t playing bad, but wasn’t playing like she’s playing now.”
It’ll be an all-American gold medal bout in fencing Sunday night, with U.S. teammates Lee Kiefer and Lauren Scruggs facing off in the final of the women’s individual foil.
Kiefer, the reigning Olympic champion in the event, defeated Italy’s Alice Volpi in the semifinals 15-10.
Scruggs, 21 and a first-time Olympian, defeated Eleanor Harvey of Canada in the semifinals 15-9.
Both Americans won four matches apiece Sunday en route to the gold medal match. And regardless of how the bout unfolds, it’ll be another gold and silver medal for the United States. – Josh Peter
PARIS — Brazilian swimmer Ana Carolina Vieira has been sent home from the Paris Olympics and her teammate Gabriel Santos was given a warning after they left the athletes’ village without clearing it with the team, the Brazilian Olympic Committee said on Sunday.
The two swimmers had left the village, where most athletes for the Paris Games are staying, without their team’s knowledge and their infraction was discovered following their posts on social media.
The BOC said in a statement it had received a communique on Saturday from the head of the country’s swimming team informing them the swimmers had “committed acts of indiscipline.” – Reuters
American fencer Lauren Scruggs advanced gold medal match of the women’s individual foil Sunday night at the Paris Games.
Scruggs, 21, defeated Eleanor Harvey of Canada in the semifinals 15-9, ensuring she’ll win no less a silver medal in her first appearance at the Olympics.
Scruggs will face the winner of the semifinal bout between American Lee Kiefer, the defending Olympic champion in the women’s individual foil, and Italy’s Alice Volpi. – Josh Peter
Kevin Durant, USA Basketball’s all-time leading Olympic scorer, made his first eight shots, including five 3-pointers, and sparked a U.S. turnaround after a sloppy, turnover-ridden start that led to a 110-84 victory Serbia in their 2024 Paris Olympics Group C opener Sunday at Pierre Mauroy Stadium.
Durant missed his ninth shot early in the fourth quarter – with the U.S. ahead 86-65.
Durant finished with 23 points, and LeBron James had 21 points, nine assists and eight rebounds. – Jeff Zillgitt
Facing defending world champion Odette Giuffrida in the Round of 16, Angelica Delgado again took the match to golden score before Giuffrida recorded a waza-ari 2:28 in.
“I gave it my all and that’s really all I can say. I’m not gonna say that I’m going to sleep easy tonight because this one’s gonna hurt for a while,” Delgado said following the loss. “Because I don’t know if I’ll be back here. You never know, but I can just say that I really gave it my all in everything that I did.”
Team USA is off to a solid start in their opening matchup vs. Serbia, thanks to a sensational start from Kevin Durant.
Durant, playing in his first game action since suffering a calf strain in June, is 8-for-8 shooting with 21 points at the break. LeBron James adds 12 points as Team USA leads Serbia 58-49.
During the women’s 100-meter breaststroke on Sunday morning, American swimmer Emma Webber lost her swimming cap at the bottom of the pool. While common sense would dictate that a swimmer would just jump in after it, that’s, apparently, not the case.
Instead, a hero came to the rescue, in all his glory: Dubbed “Bob the Cap Catcher” by the NBC broadcast booth, a man of unknown origins in a small, flowery Speedo walked across the stage for all to see and dove to the rescue.
The U.S. men’s water polo team opened up group play with a 12-8 loss to Italy on Sunday. The team next faces Romania in another Group A match on Tuesday. – Ellen Horrow
After suffering a calf tweak during Team USA training camp, Kevin Durant is cleared to play and will play in Sunday’s matchup vs. Serbia. Durant missed practices and exhibition matchups ahead of Team USA’s 2024 Olympic debut.
LeBron James, Kevin Durant and the rest of Team USA Basketball tip off against Nikola Jokic and Serbia in their first match of group play in the 2024 Paris Olympics. USA TODAY Sports will provide live updates, highlights and more for the tilt.
VAIRES-SUR-MARNE, France – Team USA canoe racer Evy Leibfarth failed to qualify for the finals in her first of three events at the Paris Olympics on Sunday.
Leibfarth finished 15th in the 22-racer semifinal finishing at Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium with a time of 1:09.54, 10.23 seconds behind semifinal winner Ricarda Funk of Germany.
Her time included had a 2-second penalty for striking a gate.
Leibfarth has two more chances to medal in her busy schedule at the Olympics. She will compete in both canoe slalom and the new Olympic event kayak-cross beginning next week. The canoe finals are July 31, while Kayak-Cross finals are Aug. 5.
Jessica Fox, the Australian flag bearer and the heavy favorite entering the Olympics having won a silver and two bronze medals in the event at the past three Olympics, finished eighth in the semifinal to advance. – Dave Birkett
VILLENEUVE-D’ASCQ, France – Just before the start of the South Sudan-Puerto Rico men’s 5×5 basketball game, the wrong national anthem was played for South Sudan.
“It gave us fuel for the fire,” said South Sudan’s Nuni Omot who had 12 points and six rebounds in the 90-79 victory. “Obviously, we felt disrespected when that happened. We got to still earn our respect. We just got to continue to show the world what we’re capable of. That is just a testament to people not respecting us still, so we took that as fuel.”
It was Sudan’s anthem that was played, according to the Daily Telegraph.
Said South Sudan’s Majok Deng: “They have to be better because this is the biggest stage, and you know that South Sudan is playing. There’s no way you can get that wrong by playing a different anthem. It’s disrespectful. I don’t know. I don’t want to say anything, but to us it didn’t feel right, and that kind of delayed the game. For you to play a different anthem, I don’t think it’s the right thing. Obviously, nobody’s perfect. They made a mistake. They played it at the end, and we moved on.”
South Sudan won its first Olympics game in its first Olympics appearance in men’s basketball.
American fencer Lee Kiefer took another step toward defending her Olympic title, advancing to the semifinals of the women’s individual foil competition Sunday.
Kiefer, who won gold at the Tokyo Games in 2021, throttled Flora Pasztor of Hungary in quarterfinals 15-4. Earlier in the day Kiefer, 30, won bouts in the Round of 32 and Round of 16.
Fellow American Lauren Scruggs also advanced to the semifinals with a dramatic 15-14 victory over Arriana Errigo of Italy. – Josh Peter
U.S. gymnast Jade Carey said she has been fighting an undisclosed illness in recent days, citing the bug as the reason for her uncharacteristically poor performance on floor exercise in Sunday’s gymnastics qualifying round at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Carey, 24, told Olympics.com that she hasn’t “been able to eat or anything” over the past few days due to the illness and wanted to disclose the issue so fans didn’t assume she was being affected by nerves. USA Gymnastics had previously announced that her coach and father, Brian Carey, missed the team’s podium training Thursday because he was not feeling well.
“I had, like, no energy today and didn’t really have a sense of what was going on in my head,” Carey told Olympics.com. “So, I just kind of wanted people to know that so, they know that there’s actually something wrong.”
VILLENEUVE-D’ASCQ, France – In a completely unscientific survey, fans wearing Steph Curry shirts and jerseys outnumber any other player by about 5-1 inside and outside of the 2024 Paris Olympics 5×5 basketball venue ahead of the USA-Serbia men’s game Sunday. LeBron James jerseys are a close second followed by Kevin Durant and Nikola Jokic. – Jeff Zillgitt
ELANCOURT, France − Team USA women’s mountain bike rider Haley Batten earned a silver medal Sunday at the Paris Games, finishing with a time of 1:28.59. France’s Pauline Ferrand-Prevot pulled away from the field early and commanded gold in a time of 1:26:02, while Jenny Rissveds of Sweden took the bronze (1:29.04).
Batten incurred a flat on the fourth of seven laps while riding in fifth place, but still managed to improve her position from that point to take a place on the podium. Batten and Rissveds battled over the sixth lap, trading second and third place back and forth, before Batten pulled away in the final lap. Meanwhile, Ferrand-Prevot’s gold was well-secured and drew raucous cheers from home-country fans.
Batten’s first medal comes in her second Olympics appearance, having finished ninth in Tokyo in 2021. − Chase Goodbread
U.S. fencer Lee Kiefer, the defending Olympic champion in the women’s individual foil, advanced to the round of 8 Sunday with a victory over Qianqian Huang of China.
Kiefer, 30, coasted to a 15-9 win over Huang in the round of 16 bout while taking another step toward the medal rounds set for later Sunday. She bolted to a 10-2 lead before Huang mounted a brief scoring spree that wasn’t nearly enough to derail Kiefer.
Fellow American Lauren Scruggs also advanced to the round of 8 with a 15-11 victory over Jessica Zia Jia Guo of Canada.
A solid performance by the men’s four highlighted the action for Team USA in Sunday morning’s rowing competition and the Nautical Stadium for Flatwater in Paris.
Women’s pair – Azja Czajkowski and Jess Thoennes placed third to advance to the semifinals with a time of 7:25.52. The Netherlands took first in the heat with a time of 7:17.81, while Lithuania was second, reaching the line in 7:22.53.
Men’s pair – Oliver Bub and Billy Bender finished fifth in their qualifying heat, covering the course in 7:02.62. Spain won the heat with the fastest time of the morning at 6:32.28. Bub and Bender move into the repechage round, which will be held Monday.
Women’s lightweight double sculls – Molly Reckford and Michelle Sechser finished second in their heat with a time of 7:12.65, which advanced them to the semifinal round. Romania won the heat in 7:03.65. The semifinal round begins Wednesday.
Women’s four – The quartet of Emily Kallfelz, Kelsey Reelick, Daisy Mazzio-Manson, and Kate Knifton finished fourth in their qualifying heat and will move to the repechage round. Their 6:49.66 was 7.09 seconds behind the leading boat from Great Britain, which had the fastest time of the day with their 6:42.57. The repechage round will be held Tuesday.
Men’s four – The boat crewed by Nick Mead, Justin Best, Michael Grady, and Liam Corrigan won the second heat and had the second-fastest time of the field. Their time of 6:04.95 advanced them directly to the final round and put them into the discussion of potential podium finishers. New Zealand won the first heat with a time of 6:03.08. The finals are scheduled for Thursday.
Men’s 200m freestyle – Luke Hobson advanced to the semifinal round, tying for seventh among the qualifiers with a time of 1:46.23. That was 0.58 seconds behind the fastest time, a 1:45.65 posted by David Popvici of Romania. Chris Giuliano also swam for Team USA, ranking 19th in the field with a time of 1:47.60, which missed the cutoff for the semifinals by 0.21 seconds.
Men’s 400m IM – Carson Foster advanced to the final after placing fourth in qualifying. His time of 4:11.07 was 2.77 seconds behind Leon Marchand of France, whose 4:08.30 was 1.21 faster than the rest of the field. Chase Kalisz placed 11th for Team USA, clocking in at 4:13.36.
Women’s 100m breaststroke – Lilly King, a two-time Olympic medalist and world record-holder in the event, advanced to Sunday’s semifinal round after posting a time of 1:06.10, fifth fastest among the qualifiers. Tatjana Smith of South Africa had the fastest time at 1:05.00. Emma Weber swam a 1:07.65, ranking her 23rd.
Men’s 100m backstroke – Ryan Murphy and Hunter Armstrong advanced to the semifinals. Murphy had the fourth-fastest time in the qualifying heats with a 53.06 result, 0.28 behind the 52.78 of Hubert Kos of Hungary. Armstrong’s 53.34 ranked ninth in the field.
Women’s 200m freestyle – Claire Weinstein and Erin Gemmell moved through the to semifinals. Weinstein’s 1:56.48 was sixth in the field, 0.69 off the pace of 1:55.79 set by Australia’s Mollie O’Callaghan. Gemmell’s 1:57.23 ranked 11th among the qualifiers.
Cecile Landi, one of Simone Biles’ coaches, said after Sunday’s qualifying session that she doesn’t have concerns about Biles continuing to compete in Paris. Landi said it was Biles’ left calf that was bothering her and said “she felt better at the end, yeah.”
Landi went on to say there was no discussion about Biles not continuing to compete on Sunday. “Never in her mind,” Landi said.
Landi also said there was no discussion about Biles doing just one vault or watering down her planned skills. Landi was then asked what Biles did with her leg: “Just a little pain in her calf. She felt it a little bit on floor. And we taped it to kind of (tighten) it up.” Biles finished competing in the qualifying session with her left ankle taped.
Chellsie Memmel, the technical lead for the U.S. women, said: “What she was able to do … was remarkable.”
VILLENEUVE-D’ASCQ, France – Playing in its first Olympics in men’s 5×5 basketball, South Sudan produced a historic result, beating Puerto Rico 90-79 Sunday.
Carlik Jones, who played college basketball for Radford and Louisville and spent time in the NBA, led South Sudan with 19 points. Marial Shayok, who played college ball at Virginia and Iowa State and was an NBA second-round draft pick, scored 15 points.
In its infancy as a country, South Sudan did not qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics or 2020 Tokyo Olympics, but as the African nation with the best finish at the 2023 FIBA World Cup, it qualified for the 2024 Paris Olympics.
South Sudan plays the United States Wednesday (9 p.m. ET) in a Group C game, and it nearly beat the U.S. in an exhibition game July 20. The U.S. won 101-100 but South Sudan had a chance to win on the final shot of the game.
The team is coached by former NBA player Royal Ivey, and former NBA All-Star Luol Deng is the president of the South Sudan Basketball Federation and an assistant coach. — Jeff Zillgitt
Kanak Jha battled his way into the men’s singles round of 32 with a hard-fought victory over No. 15 seed Cho Daesong of Korea, 4-2 (8-11, 11-8, 11-2, 11-2, 8-11, 12-10) Sunday morning at the South Paris Arena.
Jha is the second Team USA entry to advance to the round of 32 in table tennis singles. He joins teammate Amy Wang, who defeated Priscilla Tommy of Vanuatu 4-0 (11-7, 11-8, 11-9, 11-5) Saturday evening.
The No. 23 seed in the women’s field, Wang next will face No. 6 seed Adriana Diaz of Puerto Rico. Wang’s teammate, Lily Zhang, will play Mariana Sahakian of Lebanon on Sunday. Sahakian defeated Chile’s Zhiying Zeng in the preliminary round for the opportunity to face Zhang, the tournament’s No. 19 seed.
Jha becomes the first U.S. men’s singles player to advance to the round of 32 in Olympic table tennis since Jimmy Butler did it at the Olympic Games Barcelona 1992. He will face the winner of Sunday’s match between Panagoitis Gionis of Greece and Edward Ly of Canada.
On the northern side of Bercy Arena, John Legend and Chrissy Teigen took their seats near a luxury box with their children, who held up a white flag adorned with the American flag and Olympic rings. A few rows away, Tom Cruise shook hands with a fellow spectator and smiled. Snoop Dogg, who is in Paris as a contributor with NBC, leaned back in a seat in the front row.
Oscar-winning actress Jessica Chastain and USA snowboarder Shaun White and his girlfriend, Nina Dobrev, were among the other notable figures in attendance Sunday. Businessman David Lauren, the son of eponymous clothing designer Ralph Lauren was also seated nearby.
Sunday’s women’s gymnastics team qualifying drew such high interest because it’s the first time Simone Biles competes at the 2024 Paris Olympics, where she is expected to add to her gold medal haul. — Tom Schad
Simone Biles left the floor briefly with Dr. Marcia Faustin, the U.S. gymnastics team doctor, after tweaking her left ankle during warmups on floor exercise Saturday. Another member of the medical team came and wrapped the ankle tightly. Biles got up and walked around, as if testing it.
Biles opened the floor with the triple-twisting, double somersault, better known as the Biles II. It’s both incredibly difficult and demands a lot of every part of her leg.
Biles spotted her parents when the Americans moved to vault, their next event, and she could be seen smiling and laughing again. After landing one practice vault, she motioned to teammates and then jokingly crawled partway toward the runway. Then she got up and hopped on her right leg. “I’m going to need a wheelchair,” she said, according to the Peacock broadcast, though she appeared to be making light of the apparent ankle injury.
Follow for more updates on the women’s gymnastics qualifications. — Tom Schad and Nancy Armour
American fencer Lee Kiefer, the defending Olympic champion in the women’s individual foil, won her opening bout at the Paris Games Sunday and advanced to final 16.
Kiefer, who won gold at the Tokyo Games in 2021, beat Martyna Jelinska of Poland 15-13 at the Grand Palais. Leading 8-1, Kiefer lost eight of the next nine points but never trailed before she triumphed.
Kiefer’s quest for another Olympic gold medal will play out later Sunday with the final rounds of competition in the women’s individual foil set to follow. She entered the Paris Games ranked No. 1 in the world. — Josh Peter
NANTERRE, France — American swimmer Chase Kalisz will not get the chance to defend his 2021 Tokyo Olympics gold medal after the three-time Olympian missed the top-8 cut for the 400 individual medley final Sunday.
In one of the most grueling events, the 30-year-old’s prelims time of 4:13.36 landed him in 11th place overall and more than five seconds behind France’s favorite, Léon Marchand, the top qualifier. Kalisz also won silver in the event at the 2016 Rio Games.
Fellow American Carson Foster’s 4:11.07 prelims swim was the fourth-fastest overall and advanced him to the final Sunday night (about 2:30 p.m. ET). − Michelle Martinelli
An American boxer who has trained at George Foreman’s gym in the Houston area won his opening bout at the Paris Olympics Sunday.
Roscoe Hill won by unanimous decision on points over Omid Ahmadisafa, who was born in Iran and was competing on the Refugee Olympic Team, in a round of 32 bout.
Hill, 29, not only trained in Foreman’s gym but was baptized by the former heavyweight world champion, according to Hill’s bio on USA Boxing. − Josh Peter
Angelica Delgado battled to a golden score 1-0 victory over Gultaj Mammadeliyeva of Azerbaijan in the women’s judo -52kg elimination round of 32 Sunday morning at the Champ de Mars Arena.
A three-time Olympian, Delgado fought Mammadaliyeva to a scoreless draw after the four minutes of regulation, taking the match into golden score overtime. Delgado finally was awarded a waza-ari 3:04 into the golden score time to claim the victory.
She advances to the round of 16, where she will face Italy’s Odette Giuffrida early Sunday afternoon Paris time.
Former Philadelphia Eagles six-time All-Pro center Jason Kelce − sporting a French beret − and his wife Kylie were in attendance as the United States women’s field hockey team lost 4-1 to Argentina in a Pool B match.
“We’re in France, in Paris, and I love assimilating to different cultures and whatnot,” Jason Kelce said according to Olympic News Service. “I know this is about as stereotypical as you can get … I’ve already had a bunch of croissants and baguettes too, I just didn’t carry them with me to the game.”
Kelce announced his retirement in an emotional speech in March after 13 NFL seasons.
Carissa Moore, the defending Olympic women’s surfing champion, and her four American teammates each won their first-round heats as the competition in Tahiti got underway at the Paris Games.
All five U.S. surfers advanced directly to third round as a result of winning the first-round heats, each of which included three surfers, this weekend. — Josh Peter
The U.S. women’s archery team of Catalina Gnoriega, Casey Kaufhold and Jennifer Mucino was eliminated from the team competition on Sunday, falling to Chinese Taipei 5-1 in the Round of 8 at the Olympic archery range at Invalides.
Here are some Olympic schedule highlights. Peacock is streaming every sport and event live as it unfolds in Paris (all times Eastern).
- Swimming heats start at 5 a.m. The finals for the men’s 400m individual medley and the women’s 100m fly are back to back, starting at 2:30 p.m. The final for the men’s 100m breaststroke is at 3:53 p.m. NBC is airing the finals.
- Qualification in women’s gymnastics is in five subdivisions, the first at 3:30 a.m. and the last at 3:10 p.m. The U.S. is in subdivision 2, which starts at 5:40 a.m. NBC is airing subdivision 2, E! is airing all five subdivisions.
- Women’s soccer has six group play matches throughout the day.
- Men’s basketball has two group stage games: South Sudan vs. Puerto Rico (5 a.m.), Serbia vs. U.S. (11:15 a.m.).
- Women’s basketball has two group stage games: Spain vs. China (7:30 a.m.), Serbia vs. Puerto Rico (3 p.m.)
- The women’s street final in skateboarding is at 11 a.m. CNBC is airing it.
- Other sports in action: Tennis, fencing, boxing, beach volleyball, badminton, canoe slalom, cycling mountain bike, equestrian, handball, field hockey, judo, rowing, rugby sevens, sailing, shooting, surfing, table tennis, volleyball, water polo, archery.
NBC is airing and streaming the Paris Olympics from all angles: Peacock is streaming every sport and event live as it unfolds; NBC, USA Network, CNBC and E! are carrying various live events and replays throughout the day. Here are 6 tips and tricks for getting the most out of Peacock during the Olympics.
Our 2024 Paris Olympics medal count tracker updates after every single medal event.
(All times Eastern)
- The U.S. women’s gymnastics team competes in qualification starting at 5:40 a.m. NBC airs it.
- The U.S. men’s water polo team faces Italy in group play at 9 a.m. NBC and USA Network are airing it.
- The U.S. women’s rugby sevens team plays Japan in pool play at 10:30 a.m. The Americans then play Brazil in pool play at 2 p.m. CNBC is airing it.
- The U.S. men’s basketball team faces Serbia in group play at 11:15 a.m. NBC is airing it.
- The USWNT plays Germany in group play at 3 p.m. USA Network is airing it.
- The U.S. competes in women’s beach volleyball against Czech Republic at 4 p.m. NBC is airing it.
(All times Eastern)
- Shooting: 10m air pistol men’s final (3:30 a.m), 10m air pistol women’s final (6 a.m.)
- Cycling mountain bike: women’s cross country (8:10 a.m., NBC)
- Archery: women’s team bronze medal match (10:48 a.m.), women’s team gold medal match (11:11 a.m., USA Network)
- Skateboarding: Women’s street final (11 a.m., USA Network)
- Canoe slalom: women’s kayak single final (11:45 a.m., USA Network)
- Judo: three medal events for men -66kg (11:18 a.m. start), three medal events for women -52 kg (11:49 a.m. start)
- Swimming: men’s 400m individual medley final (2:30 p.m., NBC), women’s 100m butterfly final (2:45 p.m.), men’s 100m breaststroke final (3:54 p.m., NBC)
- Fencing: women’s foil individual finals (2:50 p.m., CNBC), men’s épée individual finals (3:20 p.m., CNBC)
(All times Eastern)
- Heats for the following events start at 5 a.m.: men’s 200m free, 400m IM, 100m backstroke; women’s 100m breaststroke, 200m free. USA Network is airing heats.
- Semifinals for the following events start in the afternoon: men’s 200m free (2:51 p.m.), women’s 100m breaststroke (3:15 p.m.), men’s 100m backstroke (3:37 p.m.), women’s 200m free (4 p.m.)
- Today’s finals: men’s 400m IM (2:30 p.m.), women’s 100m fly (2:25 p.m.), men’s 100m breaststroke final (3:54 p.m.).
In women’s team qualifying, fans will get their first glimpse of Simone Biles, a seven-time Olympic medalist who is now 27 competing in her third Summer Games. The U.S. women are in Subdivision 2 with Italy, China and a mixed group of athletes from other countries that did not qualify a team. Qualifying on Sunday determines which countries make it to the team finals, which individual gymnasts reach the all-around finals and who will qualify for the event finals.
In women’s foil, American Lee Kiefer is one to watch. In Tokyo, Kiefer won team and individual gold. At last year’s world championships, she took bronze in the individual event. At 29, Kiefer is the most decorated women’s foil fencer in U.S. history. She won four consecutive NCAA championships at Notre Dame before pursuing a medical degree at the University of Kentucky.
The U.S. women’s national team faces Germany in their second group game. The Americans are fourth in the FIFA rankings, followed by Germany at No. 5. The Olympic tournament has 12 teams and the top two in each group advances to the quarterfinals along with the two best third-place teams.
In women’s mountain bike, American Haley Batten had a strong start to the World Cup season, placing third in a cross-country race in Mairipora, Brazil, followed by a win the next weekend in Araxa. Growing up in Park City, Utah, Batten got her start in cycling at age 9 and won her first national title at 14. Now 25, Batten is expected to be among the medal contenders in the cross-country final.
Torri Huske was 18 when she made her Olympic debut at the Tokyo Games, winning silver in the women’s 100-meter butterfly. She’s back for the Paris Olympics, with more international experience under her belt. Gretchen Walsh, a senior at the University of Virginia, won the 100 fly at the U.S. Olympic trials and will make her Olympic debut.
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