Open in App
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Newsletter
  • The Guardian

    Paris 2024 Olympics: what you missed overnight in Australia on day seven of the Games

    By Mike Hytner in Paris,

    3 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0ZtbYd_0ulyza2H00
    Gold medallist Kaylee McKeown of Australia celebrates on the podium after setting a new Olympic record in the 200m backstroke. Photograph: Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters

    The three gold medals, along with a bronze won by Jessica Morrison and Annabelle McIntyre in rowing, propelled Australia to a total of 21 medals at the close of play – 10 gold, six silver and five bronze.

    Swimming

    On a breathless evening at La Défense Arena, Kaylee McKeown entered the record books with a stunning victory in the 200m backstroke, completing a unique double-double and becoming the first Australian to win four individual Olympic gold medals. Remarkably, it came just eight minutes after Cam McEvoy put in an electric swim of his own to claim gold in the 50m freestyle, completing a a late-career resurgence after quitting the sport in 2021. Read Kieran Pender’s report

    BMX racing

    Saya Sakakibara made up for her Tokyo 2020 heartbreak with a dominant win in the final in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, storming around the track to finish a whopping seven tenths ahead of second ahead of her nearest rival, second placed Manon Veenstra from the Netherlands, with Switzerland’s Zoé Claessens third. Read Jack Snape’s report

    Rowing

    Australia’s first medal of the day came in the water at the Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium, where Jessica Morrison and Annabelle McIntyre were close to winning silver in the coxless pair final, but were pipped at line and instead left with bronze. Read Jack Snape’s report

    Athletics

    Having competed in the heats at the Stade de France, Australia-based Afghan 100m sprinter Kimia Yousofi had a message for girls back in the country of her birth. Yousofi, one of a six-person Afghan team, held up a piece of A4 paper with the words “education”, “sport” and “our rights” written on it. “Don’t give up, don’t let others decide for you,” she said. “Just search for opportunity, and then use that opportunity.” Read Jack Snape’s report

    Swimming

    Chinese state and social media have rallied behind swimming star Pan Zhanle, following comments made by the Australian coach, Brett Hawke, who said Pan’s world record 100m freestyle swim earlier this week was not “humanly possible”. Pan broke his own world record to deliver China’s its first gold medal of the Games, drawing scepticism from Hawke. But that has prompted a response and accusations that Hawke is a sore loser. Read Helen Davidson’s report

    Judo

    France rejoiced once more on Friday as one of the host nation’s favourite sports stars, Teddy Riner, met huge expectations and made history by winning his third individual Olympic medal in +100kg category. “Teddy Bam Bam!” roared the crowd in his home city as the popular colossus beat his final opponent Kim Min-jong. Read Angelique Chrisafis’s report

    Other bits

    A remarkable story of grit and determination has emerged out of the ashes of the Matildas’ all-too-brief Olympic football campaign – a travel odyssey of epic proportions undertaken by a group of fans who were forced to make a mad dash across France after their train from Paris to Marseille was cancelled. Spoiler: sadly, it doesn’t end well. Read Kieran Pender’s story

    The gender eligibility row that is engulfing boxing at Paris 2024 has further escalated after the Hungarian Boxing Association protested over the decision to allow the Algerian fighter Imane Khelif to compete at Paris 2024, before her quarter-final bout with one of its boxers. Read Alexandra Topping’s report

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular
    The Guardian6 hours ago

    Comments / 0