The Sports Report Olympics edition: Simone Biles proves sheâs the G.O.A.T.
Welcome to your daily Olympic newsletter. Iâm John Cherwa, your tour guide, as Simone Biles showed us why she is the G.O.A.T. of womenâs gymnastics.
So, is it better to win a bronze medal in somewhat of a surprise or win the gold medal in an event you were expected to dominate? Oh, who cares. On Tuesday, the United Sates convincingly won the team gold in womenâs gymnasts despite some bobbles, bad steps and a fall.
The U.S. is the only country to win a medal in the womenâs and menâs competition, which, we guess, makes the U.S. the best gymnastics country in the world. Weâll see how things stand after individual competition.
Simone Biles remained the driving force in U.S. gymnastics with her solid, at times excellent, performance. The U.S. women have won three of the last four golds in team competition. Italy got the silver and Brazil took the bronze.
Go beyond the scoreboard
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We have lots of coverage from our Thuc Nhi Nguyen. Look here.
(Note to NBC: The in-rotation scores when not everyone has the same number of competition scores is misleading, and, well, worthless. We can wait until after the rotation is over to see the standings.)
Here are some other high and low points from Tuesdayâs competition.
âThe U.S. picked up four medals in swimming Tuesday, but none of them gold. In fact, the U.S. has 15 swimming medals but only two gold. Regan Smith and Katherine Berkoff earned silver and bronze in the womenâs 100-meter backstroke; Bobby Finke took silver in the 800 freestyle and the U.S. was second to Britain in the menâs 800 freestyle relay.
âThe U.S. menâs soccer team qualified for the quarterfinals for the first time in 24 years when it beat Guinea 3-0 in group play. It will play Morocco on Friday.
âThe defending Olympic womenâs champion U.S. lost to Germany 17-13 in its first pool play game in the 3-on-3 basketball tournament. Serbia beat the U.S. men, 22-14.
âThe U.S. picked up its first ever rugby sevens medal when the womenâs team upset 2016 champion Australia 14-12 in the bronze-medal game. New Zealand beat Canada for the gold 19-12. Our Kevin Baxter can tell you about it here.
âThe water quality in the Seine River was such that the menâs triathlon has been moved to Wednesday, the same day as the womenâs triathlon. Officials spent about $1.5 billion to clean up the Seine to make it usable for competition. Hope there isnât a no-refund policy.
âCoco Gauff canât seem to get a call at Roland Garros tennis stadium. She was eliminated by Donna Vekic of Croatia 7-6, 6-2. Gauff disputed, to no avail, a chair umpireâs decision much the way she did in the French Open about a month ago. She lost that decision too.
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Five moments of the Games
Iâve done more Olympics than Methuselah had high school reunions. (That 200th was a humdinger.) And one thing I know about the Games is there are usually five major events that define each one.
Trying to predict the five at this point is like trying to predict the presidential election a year ago, or even a month ago. But, with so many days to go, hereâs what we know.
Guaranteed for one of the spots is Simone Biles, regardless of what she does in the individual events. The rest of the spots are in flux. In contention would be the dominance of the French, how poorly the U.S. is doing in gold medals and the opening ceremony. Sorry, but the U.S. menâs gymnastics team winning the bronze probably is a one- or two-day story soon to be in the rear-view mirror.
Weâll check back in later.
Extortion or blackmail?
You donât get to write this very often, but the U.S. Congress is in agreement on something that the IOC was out of bounds asking the Salt Lake City Organizing Committee to oppose its own government and lobby against its investigation of the World Anti-Doping agency.
On Tuesday, Congress gave the IOC one of its digits by proposing legislation that would keep funding from WADA if it doesnât do its job better. That comes to about $3 million-plus a year that could be withheld from WADA.
âThat sort of blackmail and bullying is exactly the problem that weâre trying to get at,â Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md) said.
We hate to quibble with the gentleman from Maryland but last week we referred to this IOC plot as extortion. Not really knowing the difference, we contacted uncredited co-author Mr. Google, who explained that it is, indeed, more like extortion than blackmail. Check it out here.
Whatâs wrong with Hoda?
We had planned to chronicle the number of times that NBCâs Hoda Kotb threw away any semblance of journalistic ethics and hugged members of the U.S. Olympic team. No doubt her enthusiasm is infectious but as a âjournalistâ there are some lines you donât cross. She broke out of the gate strong with six hugs â five full frontal and one side â in two days before breaking for the weekend.
But since then she has only one hug in 11 athletes interviewed and even that hug might have been initiated by skateboarder Nyjah Huston. Weâll still count it though.
Is it possible she figured out that Lester Holt doesnât hug Kamala Harris and Donald Trump or was she told to tone it down? The real test will be when the U.S. womenâs gymnastics team is on âTodayâ today.
If I could turn back time
In our item about the order of the individual medley, we said it was the slowest to fastest after the backstroke. In fact, the breaststroke is slower than the butterfly. But the order in team IM is butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke and freestyle.
What to watch today
There are 26 sports competing today with 18 gold medals to be awarded.
âThere are five medal races at swimming Wednesday. The U.S.âs best chance for a gold is the womenâs 1,500 freestyle with Katie Ledecky. Other finals are the womenâs 100 freestyle, menâs 200 butterfly, menâs 200 breaststroke and menâs 100 freestyle. It starts about 11:30 a.m. PDT.
âThe menâs all-around in gymnastics will also be held at 8:30 a.m. PDT. Donât expect the U.S. to medal.
Must-read links
Letâs catch up on some stories you might have missed, but shouldnât have:
- Paris Olympics TV schedule: Wednesdayâs listings
- 2024 Paris Olympics: How to watch every event and the opening ceremony
- Right place, right time: The story behind the viral surfing photo from the Paris Olympics
- âWe just made history.â U.S. womenâs rugby sevens revel in bronze-medal showing
- Olympics once again buzzing with fans and crowds in first post-COVID Games
- Colin Jost, non-Olympian, hurts his foot in Tahiti while covering 2024 Olympics surfing
- Simone Biles leads dominant U.S. to gold in Olympic gymnastics team competition
- Jordan Chiles adds secret ingredients of fire and fun to gold-medal U.S. gymnastics team
Your TV guide
How can you watch the Games today? Check out Wednesdayâs Olympic TV listings.
Until next time...
That concludes todayâs newsletter. If you have any feedback, ideas for improvement or things youâd like to see, email me at [email protected]. To get this newsletter in your inbox, click here.
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.