The Sports Report Olympics Edition: Vending machines on every corner
TOKYO â Itâs a rare sight, trash sullying the pristine Tokyo cityscape â all the litter is apparently piled inside the hotel rooms of visiting journalists â but one thing is ubiquitous here.
The vending machine.
Good morning, my name is Ben Bolch, curator of todayâs Olympics newsletter, and Iâve got the lowdown on Japanâs favorite automated pastime. But first, letâs get to the major Olympic news:
Latest Olympics news and results
Saturday and Sunday TV schedules
A morning stroll around the Nishitetsu Inn, situated in the Shinjuku area of Tokyo, reveals a smorgasbord of drink options readily available without ducking into a restaurant or one of the 7-Elevens stationed on almost every block.
There was soda, tea, iced coffee, juice, water, milk, energy drinks and other indecipherable liquid refreshment all for the taking, provided one plunked a hundred or so yen into the vending machines that swarmed the place like cicadas.
I counted 19 vending machines within half a city block â or maybe it was a block, given that alleyways here can be crowded thoroughfaresâaround my hotel. A coworker later suggested that I make one purchase from every machine, but I wanted to be able to button my ever-tightening pants before heading out on my next assignment.
Iâll admit, though, that some of the options were enticing. All were cheap. Nothing exceeded 210 yen, or roughly $2 given the current exchange rate. I didnât look closely at the cigarette-dispensing machine because I had no interest.
So many machines in such a small area raises so many questions. Namely, why? Why is there a need for such an oversaturation of machines? How much product is moved? How much money is generated? Also, what happens when it rains? While some of the machines reside under an overhang, others are completely unprotected. Electric shock, anyone?
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Most of these questions were answered by Sports Illustratedâs Greg Bishop as part of his exhaustive review of this countryâs fascination with automated dispensing. Bishop revealed the country contains 5.5 million vending machines â more than the entire European Unionâwhile generating more than $60 billion annually. Convenience is a major factor, yes, in addition to value and variety.
These things donât just peddle drinks, as Bishop noted. Japanese delicacies, souvenirs, electronics, knickknacks and knickers â allegedly used â among other mentionables and unmentionables can all be had by the push of a button.
A handful of vending machines inside the Olympics media center hawk official Summer Games souvenirs including sunglasses, coffee mugs, tote bags and dolls bearing the images of super cute Miraitowa and Someity, the Olympic and Paralympic mascots, respectively. The machines keep cranky journalists from waiting in long lines to buy those same items inside the adjacent souvenir shop, though lines can also form in front of the machines themselves.
Any doubts about the popularity of these things were quashed as I approached my second set of machines on my morning stroll. As I contemplated the kaleidoscope of colors and foreign symbols, a smiling apple on one bottle alleviating the need for translation, a truck pulled up behind me and a man got out.
He worked for Asahi, and he was there to restock the machines.
Californiaâs gold rush
Given that itâs easily the most populous state, California leading the medal count in the Summer Olympics going back their 1896 debut in Athens is no surprise.
According to BeenVerified, athletes born in California had snagged 954 medals before the Tokyo Olympics, including 467 gold, 269 silver and 218 bronze. New York ranked second with 436 medals and Pennsylvania was third with 267. North Dakota is the only state never to produce a gold medal winner among its natives.
When it comes to maximizing its population at the Summer Games, one of the smaller states has earned a spot atop the podium. Hawaii has produced 10.7 Olympians per 100,000 residents in the 125 years since the first Summer Games, edging California (7.5), Massachusetts (6.2) and New Jersey (5.6).
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Swimming
Nathan Fenno on swimming: Each gold medal at the Summer Games weighs a little over a pound, but the burden the discs made from recycled electronics carry can be much greater.
When two of the worldâs most dominant swimmers, Caeleb Dressel and Katie Ledecky, grabbed hold of the starting blocks for their signature events Saturday, the expectation that rippled through the few hundred whistling, flag-waving athletes scattered around the Tokyo Aquatics Centre wasnât just for them to win gold, but to deliver something special.
They provided that during a 25-minute stretch that made history.
Dressel broke his world record to win the 100-meter butterfly during a busy morning, then Ledecky followed minutes later with a victory in the 800 freestyle for the third consecutive Olympics.
Gymnastics
Helene Elliott on gymnastics: Simone Biles, who was scratched from the womenâs team competition and withdrew from the all-around event final after losing her ability to sense where she is in the air, has withdrawn from the event finals in the vault and uneven bars, which will be contested Sunday.
USA Gymnastics, the sportâs governing body in the United States, said in a statement released Saturday that Biles made the decision to withdraw from the vault and uneven bars finals âafter further consultation with medical staff.â
MyKayla Skinner will replace Biles and will join Jade Carey in the vault final. Skinner had the fourth-best vault score in qualifying but didnât reach the finally automatically because of a rule that limits each country to a maximum of two representatives in any event final. The U.S. will not be granted a replacement for Biles on the uneven bars because no other U.S. woman scored high enough to earn a replacement spot.
Soccer
Kevin Baxter on Mexico soccer: It took Mexico six tries to reach the semifinals of an Olympic soccer tournament. Now it canât seem to stay away.
With Saturdayâs 6-3 rout of South Korea in Yokohama, El Tri is back in the final four for the second time in nine years, riding two goals from Henry Martin and two from SebastiĂĄn CĂłrdova to a date with Brazil on Tuesday in Kashima, about 70 miles east of Tokyo, where an Olympic medal will be on the line.
Brazil beat Egypt 1-0 in its quarterfinal.
Mexicoâs only other trip to the Olympic semifinals, in 2012, ended on the top step of the medal stand. But the team has been far more dominant in this tournament, scoring three or more goals in three of its five games. And each game has produced a different star.
Track and field
From the Associated Press: Elaine Thompson-Herah of Jamaica broke Florence Griffith Joynerâs 33-year-old Olympic record in the womenâs 100 meters.
She crossed the line in 10.61 seconds to defend her title and lead a Jamaican sweep of the medals, besting Joynerâs mark of 10.62 at the 1988 Seoul Olympics.
Thompson-Herah beat rival Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce by .13 seconds. Shericka Jackson won bronze. This had been shaping up as a fast race for some time. Fraser-Pryce ran the fourth-fastest time in history at 10.63 seconds in June.
âââ
Poland was a surprise winner in the Olympic debut of the 1,600-meter mixed relay event, holding off a late charge from an American team that didnât have Allyson Felix in the lineup.
The Dominican Republic finished with the silver medal and the Americans took bronze. There was some thought Felix might be on the track for the relay with a chance to win her record 10th Olympic medal. It will have to wait.
The American squad was made up of Trevor Stewart, Kendall Ellis, Kaylin Whitney and Vernon Norwood. They were .01 seconds behind the Dominicans.
Speedwalking
Kevin Baxter on speedwalking: Legend says the Aztecs wandered for more than a century before establishing TenochtitlĂĄn, the largest city in the pre-Columbian Americas, on the site of what is now Mexico City. It was the journey that gave birth to the Aztec empire and built the foundation for modern Mexico.
Seven centuries later the descendants of those nomadic warriors still use walking as a way to project power. Only now it happens in the Olympic sport of racewalking, an odd mix of Monty Pythonâs âMinistry of Silly Walksâ and ultramarathoning that Mexico has dominated for nearly half a century.
Mexico has won 10 gold medals since the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, and three have come in racewalking. Mexican racewalkers also have captured five silver and two bronze medals; no country has won more in the sport over that time.
Menâs basketball
Dan Woike on U.S. menâs basketball: The teams of two, dressed identically down to the Asics sneakers, pushed yellow dust mops up and down the court, mirroring one another. After finishing their trips around the floor, they pause under the basket and, in totally synchronicity, bow.
Every timeout, every halftime of the tournament looks exactly the same.
Now this is the kind of consistency the American menâs basketball team would love to have.
Instead, theyâll have to settle for the highs, the stretches where the best players in the world play like the best team in the world. Led by Kevin Durant, they had enough of those moments Saturday beating the Czech Republic 119-84 and assuring themselves a spot in the quarterfinals.
TV schedule for Saturday and Sunday
SATURDAY
Multiple sports â 11 p.m. (Friday)-1:30 a.m., USA
- Diving â Womenâs springboard semifinal (live)
- Womenâs handball â Russian Olympic Committee vs. France
Multiple sports â 11 p.m. (Friday)-1 a.m., CNBC
- Gymnastics â Menâs trampoline final (live)
- Shooting â Mixed trap final
- Archery â Menâs individual final (live)
Tennis
11 p.m. (Friday)-Saturday 4 a.m., Olympic Channel
- Womenâs singles gold medal match
- Womenâs singles bronze medal match
- Menâs singles bronze medal match
- Womenâs doubles bronze medal match
- Mixed doubles bronze medal match
8-11 p.m., Olympic Channel
- Menâs singles final
- Womenâs doubles final
- Mixed doubles final
Menâs volleyball
- U.S. vs. Brazil, 11 p.m. (Friday), NBCSN
Rugby
- Womenâs final and bronze medal matches, 1:30 a.m., USA (live)
Soccer
- Menâs Quarterfinals (TBD), 1 a.m., NBCSN (live)
- Menâs quarterfinals (TBD), 1:30 a.m., USA (live)
- Menâs quarterfinals (TBD), 4 a.m., USA (live)
Track and field
Multiple events â 3-8 a.m., Peacock (live)
- Menâs long jump qualifying round
- Womenâs 100 semifinals
- Menâs 100 round 1
- Menâs discus throw final
- Womenâs 800 semifinals
- Mixed 400 relay final
- Womenâs 100 final
Baseball
- U.S. vs. South Korea, 3 a.m. (live)
Golf
- Menâs final round â 3:30 a.m., Golf Channel (live)
Multiple sports â 5 a.m.-3 p.m., NBC
- Archery â Menâs final
- Menâs water polo â U.S. vs. Hungary
- Rugby â Womenâs final
- Cycling â BMX freestyle qualifying
- Gymnastics â Menâs trampoline final
- Tennis â Womenâs singles final
- Beach volleyball â Womenâs qualifying round
- Golf â Menâs third round report
- Diving â Womenâs springboard semifinal
- Womenâs Volleyball â U.S. vs. Russian Olympic Committee (11 a.m.)
- Menâs Basketball â U.S. vs. Czech Republic (1 p.m.)
Womenâs volleyball
- China vs. Italy, 6 a.m., USA (live)
Multiple sports â 6 a.m.-12 p.m., NBCSN
- Badminton â Menâs doubles final (live)
- Womenâs handball â Norway vs. Netherlands
- Fencing â Womenâs team sabre final
- Beach volleyball â Lucky loser
- Equestrian â Eventing, dressage
Multiple sports â 7:30 a.m.-11 p.m., USA
- Menâs basketball â Australia vs. Germany
- Womenâs volleyball â Serbia vs. Brazil
- Womenâs rugby â Final and bronze medal matches
- Judo â Team final
- Boxing â Semifinals
- Weightlifting â Finals
- Menâs water polo â U.S. vs. Hungary
- Menâs soccer â Quarterfinal (TBD)
- Menâs water polo â Croatia vs. Serbia
- Fencing â Menâs team foil quarterfinals
- Womenâs basketball â Canada vs. Spain
- Fencing â Menâs team foil semifinals (live)
- Track and field â Finals and qualifying rounds, 5:10 p.m. (live): Womenâs shotput final; Menâs 400 qualifying round; Womenâs steeplechase qualifying round
Menâs basketball
- U.S. vs. Czech Republic, 10:45 a.m., NBCSN
Multiple sports â 5-9:05 p.m., NBC
- Beach Volleyball â Womenâs Elimination Round (live)
- Track and Field â Qualifying rounds
- Swimming â Finals (live): Menâs and Womenâs 50 freestyle; Menâs 1,500 freestyle; Menâs and womenâs 100 medley relays
- Track & Field â Finals (live): Mixed 400 relay final; Womenâs 100 final
- Fencing â Menâs team foil quarterfinals
- Multiple sports â 9:05-11 p.m., NBC
- Beach Volleyball â Menâs elimination round (live)
- Cycling â BMX freestyle finals
- Menâs swimming â 1,500 freestyle final
Multiple sports â 12-6:45 p.m., NBCSN
- Badminton â Womenâs semifinal
- Archery â Menâs individual final
- Beach volleyball â Qualifying round and lucky loser
- Tennis â Womenâs final
- Menâs soccer â quarterfinals (TBD)
Multiple sports â 6:45-8:45 p.m., NBCSN
- Womenâs volleyball â U.S. vs. Russian Olympic Committee
Menâs water polo
- U.S. vs. Hungary, 8:45 p.m., NBCSN
Womenâs rugby
Bronze medal and final matches, 9:45 p.m., NBCSN
SUNDAY
NBC coverage
Menâs volleyball
- U.S. vs. Argentina, 5:45 a.m., NBC
Multiple sports â 7:45 a.m.-3 p.m.
- Fencing â Menâs Team Foil Final
- Equestrian â Eventing, Cross Country
- Tennis â Menâs Singles Final
- Beach volleyball â Menâs Elimination Round
- Golf â Menâs Final Round
- Beach Volleyball â Womenâs Elimination Round
- Cycling â BMX Freestyle Finals
- Gymnastics â Menâs Floor & Pommel Horse Finals
Multiple sports â 4-6:30 p.m.
- Diving â Womenâs Springboard Final
- Track & Field â Semifinals: Menâs 100m; Womenâs 100m Hurdles
- Beach Volleyball â Womenâs Elimination Round (LIVE)
- Gymnastics â Womenâs Vault Final
Track & Field
Semifinals and Finals, 6:30 p.m.
- Menâs 100m Final
- Womenâs 100m Hurdle Final
- Menâs Long Jump Final
- Menâs 800m Semifinal
- Menâs 400m Semifinal
- Womenâs 200m Round One
Multiple sports â 8 p.m.-9:05 p.m.
- Womenâs Uneven Bars Final, 8 p.m.
- Canoe â Qualifying (LIVE)
Womenâs volleyball
- U.S. vs. Italy, 9:05 p.m., NBC
USA Network Coverage
Multiple sports â 11 p.m. (Saturday)â11 a.m.
- Diving â Womenâs Springboard Final (LIVE)
- Menâs Volleyball â Brazil vs. France
- Beach Volleyball â Elimination Round
- Menâs Handball â Denmark vs. Sweden (LIVE)
- Womenâs Water Polo â Hungary vs. China
- Womenâs Water Polo â Netherlands vs. Canada
Menâs Basketball
- Spain vs. Slovenia (LIVE), 1:20 a.m.
Multiple sports â 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
- Menâs Handball â Germany vs. Brazil
- Wrestling â Semifinals
- Boxing âSemifinals
- Weightlifting â Womenâs Final
- Tennis â Menâs Singles Final
- Canoeing â Qualifying (live)
Track & Field â Finals and Qualifying Rounds, 5 p.m. (LIVE)
- Womenâs 100 Hurdles Final
- Menâs Long Jump Final
- Womenâs 1500 Round One
- Womenâs 200 Round One
Womenâs basketball
- U.S. vs. France, 9:40 p.m. (live)
CNBC coverage
Multiple sports â 11 p.m. (Saturday)-2 a.m.
Badminton â Menâs Singles Semifinal
Menâs Handball â Norway vs. France (LIVE)
Multiple sports â 5 p.m.-7:30 p.m.
Fencing â Menâs Team Foil Final
Beach Volleyball â Menâs Elimination Round (LIVE)
Menâs Water Polo â Hungary vs. Italy
Field Hockey â Womenâs Quarterfinal (LIVE)
Badminton â Womenâs Doubles Bronze Medal & Final (LIVE)
Menâs water polo
U.S. vs. Greece (LIVE), 7:30 p.m.
NBCSN Coverage
Menâs basketball
- U.S. vs. Czech Republic, 11 p.m. (Saturday)
Multiple sports â 12:30-11 a.m.
- Menâs Soccer â Quarterfinal
- Field Hockey â Menâs Quarterfinal
- Weightlifting â Womenâs Final (LIVE)
- Fencing â Menâs Team Foil Final (LIVE)
- Badminton â Womenâs Singles Final (LIVE)
- Table Tennis â Elimination Round
- Badminton â Menâs Singles Semifinal
Multiple sports â 11 a.m.-11 p.m.
- Equestrian â Eventing, Cross Country
- Golf â Menâs Final Round
- Menâs Handball â Denmark vs. Sweden
- Badminton â Womenâs Singles Final
Menâs Volleyball
- U.S. vs. Argentina, 3 p.m.
Olympic Channel coverage
Tennis â 11 p.m. (Saturday)
- Menâs Singles Final
- Womenâs Doubles Final
- Mixed Doubles Final
Tennis â 4 a.m.
- Menâs Singles Final
- Womenâs Doubles Final
- Mixed Doubles Final
Wrestling â 4 p.m.
- Qualifying Rounds & Semifinals
- Greco Roman 60kg and 130 kg
- Womenâs Freestyle 76 kg
Wrestling â 7 p.m.
- Qualifying Rounds & Semifinals (LIVE)
- Greco Roman 60kg, 77 kg, 97 kg, and 130 kg
- Womenâs Freestyle 68kg and 76 kg
Golf Channel
Golf
- Menâs Final Round, 8:30 a.m.
Peacock
- Gymnastics event finals 1 a.m. (live)
- Menâs Floor Exercise
- Womenâs Vault
- Menâs Pommel Horse
- Womenâs Uneven Bars
Track & Field (LIVE)
- Menâs High Jump Final
- Menâs 100m Semifinals
- Womenâs 100m Hurdles Semifinals
- Womenâs Triple Jump Final
- Menâs 800m Semifinals
- Menâs 400m Hurdles Semifinals
- Menâs 100m Final
Until next time...
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Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.