Simone Biles added yet another medal to her collection on the final day of gymnastics at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Biles earned a silver in the floor exercise final, and American teammate Jordan Chiles took bronze to join her on the podium. USA TODAY Sports broke down all the happenings of the event.
Team USA earned another gold medal at the track when Valarie Allmann made it back-to-back golds in womenâs discus. The Tokyo gold medalist became just the fourth woman ever to win two Olympic gold medals in discus.
And after thrilling races in the 100 meters, attention turned to the 200. Noah Lyles cruised in his first-round heat as seeks to win Olympic gold in both the 100 and 200. On the womenâs side, gold medal favorite Gabby Thomas led a trio of Americans into the 200-meter final.
USA TODAY Sports has highlights and results of all the action below.
2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.
USAâs Caroline Marks wins gold in womenâs surfing
American Caroline Marks edged Brazilâs Tatiana Weston-Webb for gold in the womenâs shortboard surfing competition Monday.
With the surf in Teahupoâo slumbering, Marks still caught a barrel ride for 7.50 points that proved to be the difference. But Webb found a serviceable wave in the final two minutes of the heat and the wait on the judges began.
It ended in celebration for Marks, who posted a two-wave score of 10.50 while Webb finished with a combined score of 10.33.
Itâs the second consecutive surfing gold for the American women, with U.S. surfer Carissa Moore having won at the Tokyo Games in 2021 during the sportâs Olympic debut.
Franceâs Johanne Defay took bronze. â Josh Peter
Kenyaâs Faith Kipyegon wins appeal, gets silver in 5,000 meters
SAINT-DENIS, France â Kipyegon will be the 5,000 silver medalist after all.
Kipyegon originally placed second in the womenâs 5,000 behind fellow countrywoman Beatrice Chebet. But officials disqualified the two-time gold medalist for obstruction for making contact with Ethiopiaâs Gudaf Tsegay with a little more than 800 meters left in the race.
After an appeal by the Kenyan Federation, Kipyegon was re-instated with her silver medal.
Netherlandsâ Sifan Hassan won the bronze medal.
Kipyegon is also expected to run the 1,500. Sheâs a two-time Olympic gold medalist and world-record holder in the event. â Tyler Dragon
Olympic surfing: USAâs Caroline Marks advances to womenâs final
American Caroline Marks will be surfing for a gold medal in the womenâs final against Brazilâs Tatiana Weston-Webb in Teahupoâo, Tahiti.
In the semifinals, Marks beat Franceâs Johanne Defay by tiebreaker. Each posted a two-wave score of 12.17, but Marks had the best single-wave score, a 7.0.
Marks will face Brazilâs Tatiana Weston-Webb, who won the second semifinal over Costa Ricaâs Brisa Hennessy, for Olympic gold. The final is currently scheduled for 8:57 p.m. ET tonight. â Josh Peter
France, Spain to meet in menâs soccer final for Olympic gold
Host nation France and Spain will meet in the menâs soccer final at the Paris Olympics.
Franceâs Jean-Philippe Mateta scored two goals, including one in extra time, while Michael Olise added another extra-time goal in the 108th minute to beat Egypt 3-1 on Monday night.
Spain advanced after FermiÌn LoÌpez (66â) and Juanlu Sanchez (85) started a second-half comeback in a 2-1 win against Morocco.
France and Spain will play Friday in an all-Euro final, with each seeking their second Olympic gold medal.
Spain will make its second straight appearance in the gold medal game after losing to Brazil and earning silver at the Tokyo Olympics. Spain previously won gold at home in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.
France has reached the menâs soccer final for the third time, seeking its second gold after winning at Los Angeles in 1984, and finishing with silver whe Paris first hosted the Olypics in 1900.
Morocco and Egypt will meet Thursday for the bronze medal in a match between African teams, each vying for their first Olympic medal in the sport. â Safid Deen
France gets second goal of extra time in menâs soccer semifinal
France has stormed to a 3-1 lead against Egypt in their Olympic menâs soccer quarterfinal.
Michael Olise scored in the 108th minute of extra time to put the French on the brink of what would be an electric gold medal match.
France responds with 2-1 lead vs. Egypt in menâs soccer semifinal
France has new life in its menâs soccer semifinal, as Jean-Philippe Mateta scored his second goal of the match in the 99th minute to take a 2-1 lead during extra time.
Egypt is playing with 10 players after center back Omar Fayed was ejected following his second yellow card as extra time got underway.
If the score holds, France will advance to the gold medal match against Spain on Friday. â Safid Deen
Netherlands wins menâs 3Ă3 basketball gold on game-winning shot
Worthy de Jong called game.
The menâs 3Ă3 basketball gold medal match between the Netherlands and France went to overtime, meaning the first to score two points wins. Even playing in front of a hostile French crowd, de Long was not fazed.
Franceâs Timothe Vergiat tightly guarded de Long, but the Dutch basketball player took a step back two-point shot with a hand in his face that was nothing but net to secure the gold medal for his country. â Jordan Mendoza
US menâs volleyball team beats Brazil to advance to semifinals
PARIS â The United States menâs volleyball team has yet to lose in the Paris Olympics, and the reward is a date with the No. 1-ranked team in the world.
Monday nightâs 26-24, 28-30, 25-19, 25-19 quarterfinal victory over Brazil moved the U.S. â now 4-0 in these Games â into a Wednesday semifinal against Poland, which is atop the sportâs current rankings. Italy (No. 2) and France (No. 5) meet in Wednesdayâs other semifinal after each getting five-set wins Monday.
The match took more than two hours. The Brazilians blew a five-point lead to lose the first set. Then the U.S. team blew a six-point lead to cough up the second after leading it 21-16 and having two set points.
As has been the case throughout this Olympics, though, an experienced U.S. team was able to settle down and stabilize when it mattered most, jumping ahead in the third set (and making that lead hold up) before gradually pulling away in the latter stages of the fourth to quiet a noisy crowd that was largely in Brazilâs corner.
The result continued what has been a nice rebound Games for a U.S. team that bowed out in the preliminary round in Tokyo. â Gentry Estes
France scores late goal to tie Egypt in menâs soccer semifinal
France has finally broken through as Jean-Philippe Mateta scored to tie Egypt 1-1 in the 83rd minute. It was Franceâs 18th shot of the match, which could see extra time and a penalty shootout if the score holds after regulation.
Team USA clinches a gold in womenâs wrestling
Team USAâs Amit Elor to wrestle for gold medal Tuesday
Womenâs wrestler Amit Elor is set to wrestle for Team USAâs first opportunity at a wrestling medal on Tuesday night.
Elor downed North Koreaâs Pak Sol Gum on Monday night at the Champ de Mars arena 10-0. Elor proved technical dominance over Pak during the match.
Elor will face Kyrgzstanâs Meerim Zhumanazarova in the final. Zhumanazarova is the defending Olympic bronze medalist and downed reigning silver medalist Blessing Oborududu on Monday night en route to the final.
Olympic wrestling: What to know about the wrestlers, the mat and more
Freestyle and Greco Roman wrestling matches are underway at the 2024 Olympic Games.
Hereâs everything you need to know about Team USAâs stars, the scoring system and more.
How Mason Parrisâ trip to Normandy gave him a new perspective.
Follow the mat action live.
Olympic soccer: France trails 1-0 vs. Egypt late in menâs soccer semifinal
Mahmoud Saber has scored in the 62nd minute to help Egypt take a 1-0 lead against host France in their Olympic menâs soccer semifinal.
Itâs the first goal France has allowed in the entire tournament. Les Bleus have less than 30 minutes to respond.
Spain awaits the winner in the gold medal game on Friday, while the loser will face Morocco in the bronze medal match Thursday. â Safid Deen
Armand Duplantis wins gold, then sets pole vault world record
Gold just wasnât enough for âMondo.â
Swedenâs Armand Duplantis secured the top step of the podium in menâs pole vault, but he wasnât satisfied with the jewelry. Using his remaining tries, he also set the pole vault world record, clearing 6.25 meters.
The previous record was set by ⊠Armand Duplantis, who posted 6.24 during the Diamond League events earlier in 2024.
Track and field: Sam Kendricks earns silver in pole vault
SAINT-DENIS, France â American pole vaulter Sam Kendricks tied a season best at 5.95 meters (19 feet, 6 1/4 inches) and is taking home the silver in menâs pole vault.
Late in the competition Kendricks, who won bronze at the 2016 Rio Games, appeared to be vaulting with his arm covered in blood. Itâs unclear what happened.
Armand Duplantis of Sweden won gold by clearing 6.0 meters, then set a new Olympic record at 6.10. He also won gold in Tokyo.
Emmanouil Karalis of Greece was third after clearing 5.90.
Itâs the second consecutive Olympics with Team USA earning silver in the menâs pole vault; Chris Nilsen took second in Tokyo three years ago but did not qualify for the final here. â Lindsay Schnell
Team USA misses out on womenâs 800 meter medal
Team USAâs Juliette Whittaker finished seventh at the Paris Olympics on Monday in the womenâs 800 meter event with a time of 1:58.50. The gold medal went to Great Britainâs Keely Hodgkinson (1:56.72), while Ethiopiaâs Tsige Dumuga took silver (1:57.15) and Kenyaâs Mary Moraa won bronze (1:57.42).
Whittaker was a first-time Olympian and the youngest competitor in the finals at age 20. She finished third in preliminary heats with a 2:00.45 to automatically qualify for the semifinals, and followed that with a 1:57.76 in the semis on Sunday, a personal best, to earn a place in Mondayâs finals. â Chase Goodbread
American Valarie Allman wins discus gold medal
SAINT-DENIS, France â The Olympic field in womenâs discus had three years to close the gap on Valarie Allman, and on Monday, they found out theyâll need four more.
The defending gold medal winner from the 2021 Tokyo Games did it again for Team USA Monday, making it back-to-back golds with a throw of 69.50 at the Paris Olympics. The silver medal went to Chinaâs Bin Feng (67.51) and the bronze to Croatiaâs Sandra Elkasevic (67.51). Allman fouled on her first attempt, landing the discus wide of the right-side boundary, but took the lead on her second try with a throw of 68.74, and put the competition totally out of reach with the 69.50 on her fourth attempt. â Chase Goodbread
Kenya takes gold in controversial womenâs 5,000 meter finish
SAINT-DENIS, France â Though Kenyaâs Faith Kipyegon, considered one of the greatest distance runners of all time, crossed the finish line second in the womenâs 5,000 meters, the Kenyan was disqualified for obstruction at the conclusion of the race, according to multiple reports.
At the final straightaway, Beatrice Chebet and her killer kick pulled in front of Kipyegon to give Chebet the gold over her Kenyan teammate.
Chebet finished in 14.28.56. Kipyegon ran a 14:29.60. Sifan Hassan of the Netherlands was third at 14:30.61, a season best, and moves up to silver amidst the DQ.
With Kipyegonâs DQ, Italyâs Nadia Battocletti, who clocked a 14:31.64, wins bronze.
Americans Karissa Schweizer (14:45.57), Elise Cranny (14.48.06) and Whittni Morgan (14:53.57) were bunched together most of the race, and finished tenth, 11th and 14th, respectively. It was a personal best for Morgan.
Kenya is likely to appeal the obstruction ruling.Â
Kipyegon is also entered in the 1,500, where she is the world record holder. â Lindsay Schnell
Team USA womenâs 3Ă3 basketball squad captures bronze
PARIS â The second 3Ă3 basketball tournament at the Olympics was a disappointment for the Americans, but they salvaged something when the womenâs team beat Canada for the bronze medal on Monday.
The U.S. managed to hold Canada without a basket for the final 86 seconds of the game, pulling away behind Dearica Hambyâs six rebounds and Hailey Van Lithâs six points.
The Americans were 11 for 17 on 1-point shots.
The U.S. took the gold three years ago in Tokyo. â Dan Wolken
Trio of Americans qualify for womenâs 200-meter final
SAINT-DENIS, France â Americans Gabby Thomas, McKenzie Long and Brittany Brown advanced to the womenâs 200-meter final at the Paris Olympics.
Thomas, the defending bronze medalist and favorite to win gold this time, blazed through her semifinal heat to win in 21.86. She has the fastest 200 time in the world, 21.78, which she ran June 28 at the U.S. track and field trials in Eugene, Oregon.Â
Thomas was behind at the curve, but easily overtook Dina Asher-Smith of Great Britain on the straightaway. Asher-Smith, who finished in 22.31, also advanced to the finals. â Lindsay Schnell
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Noah Lyles, Kenny Bednarek qualify for menâs 200m semifinal with ease
SAINT-DENIS, France â The 100 champion is off and running in the 200.
Noah Lyles coasted to an easy win in the menâs 200 on Monday. Lyles took the lead around the turn, led comfortably down the home stretch and crossed the finish line in 20.19 seconds to win the sixth and final heat of the 200.
Lyles is trying to become the first American sprinter to win Olympic gold medals in both the 100 and 200 since Carl Lewis did it at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
All three American men advanced to the semifinals with Kenny Bednarek (19.97) and Erriyon Knighton (19.99) joining Lyles. â Lindsay Schnell
Olympic soccer: Spain heads to gold medal game with win over Morocco
Juanlu Sanchez scored in the 85th minute, the late goal Spain needed to reach the menâs soccer final at the Paris Olympics in a 2-1 win against Morocco.
Spain will make its second straight appearance in the gold medal game, hoping to improve from a silver finish at the Tokyo Olympics.Â
FermiÌn LoÌpez scored in the 66th minute to tie it for Spain, while Moroccoâs Soufiane Rahimi converted a penalty in the 36th minute to lead early.Â
An electric run by Morocco, which beat the United States 4-0 and outscored opponents 11-2 before Mondayâs semifinal, comes to an end. â Safid Deen
Team USA menâs water polo advances to quarterfinal
The Team USA menâs water polo squad is moving on to the quarterfinal after holding off Croatia on Monday.
In a hard-fought battle, Team USA secured the 14-11 win on the strength of goals from Ryder Dodd and Alex Bowen, who had two goals apiece. They finish tied in third place in their group and wait for the end of group play to determine who they will face in the quarterfinals, beginning Wednesday.
Kenyan steeplechase runner allowed to race in final
A shove almost cost Amos Serem a shot at steeplechase glory.
Making his way over a hurdle, Serem was pushed aside and missed the water jump. He would double back and nearly secure his spot in the final lap, but would finish sixth in the heat, just out of qualifying range â the top five runners in the heats qualify for the final.
After appealing, the 21-year-old will be allowed to race in the 3,000 meter steeplechase final, making for 16 runners in the fold come Wednesday.
American Kenneth Rooks advances to menâs steeplechase final
SAINT-DENIS, France â Kenneth Rooks was the lone American to qualify for the menâs 3,000 steeplechase final, finishing second in the third and final heat of the event and clocking a time of 8:24.95. He was less than a second behind the winner of that heat, Lamecha Girma of Ethiopia, who ran 8:23.89.
The top five finishers in each of the steeplechaseâs three heats advanced to Tuesdayâs final.
Team USAâs other competitors, Matthew Wilkinson (8:16.82) and James Corrigan (8:36.67) finished sixth and tenth, in their respective heats and will not advance. â Lindsay Schnell
NBCâs Leigh Diffey owns up to botched 100m dash called
Diffey was behind the microphone for Lylesâ razor-thin victor in the menâs 100-meter dash on Sunday, and he incorrectly called the race for Jamaicaâs Kishane Thompson. Diffey caught heat for the botched call, and on Monday, he owned up to it.
âThe menâs 100 was epic & closest of all time! My eyes & instinct told me Kishane Thompson won. Obviously, that wasnât the case. I shouldnât have been so bold to call it, but I genuinely thought he won. I got it wrong. I am thrilled for @LylesNoah as his story only gets bigger!,â Diffey posted on X.
Team USA womenâs beach volleyball squad eliminated
PARIS â Being perfect in pool play only took Taryn Kloth and Kristen Nuss, one of the USAâs two womenâs beach volleyball teams with legitimate medal aspirations, so far.Â
Nuss and Kloth fell to Canadaâs Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes in two hard-fought sets 19-21 and 18-21 in the Round of 16, ending their Olympic dreams.Â
The tandem won all three of its pool play matches but that didnât matter once the knockout round began.Â
Against Canada, the first set featured runs from both teams, each side finding momentum only to lose it. Canada jumped out to the lead first. Then the USA made its play. A big block from Kloth gave the U.S. a 11-9 advantage as part of an 8-1 run. The Canadians battled back to tie the set at 14 and Wilkersonâs block put the Canadians back in front. Â
Trailing 19-17, the USA found a way to tie it at 19. But Klothâs swing into the net gave Canada the first set victory.Â
The Americans found themselves trailing again early in the second. Kloth, who finished with all eight of the teamâs attack errors, struggled on serve receive for the second straight match and the U.S. was in a 7-3 hole. The U.S. hung in there but an ace from Canada to make it 15-11 felt like a death knell â until it wasnât. Nuss and Kloth scraped themselves back into the set. Klothâs block tied it at 18. Canada scored the final three points of the match to walk away victors. â Chris Bumbaca
Olympic soccer: Semifinal matches underway
While the U.S. menâs soccer team is out, a gold medal for the Olympic soccer tournament must still be awarded. There are two semifinal matchups on the docket Monday: Spain vs. Morocco and France vs. Egypt. USA TODAY Sports will provide live updates, highlights and more from the fixtures.
Team USA 3Ă3 womenâs hoops loses in OT to Spain
PARIS â Foul trouble came back to bite Team USA in the womenâs 3Ă3 basketball semifinals Monday in a 18-16 sudden death loss to Spain that relegates them to the bronze medal game, where they will play Canada for the medal.
The Americans led most of the way, but piled up 10 fouls in regulation, putting them in the perilous position in a format where the opponent gets two shots and the ball from that point on.
After Spain scored the first point of sudden death on a driving layup by Sandra Ygueravide, Rhyne Howard shot a 2-pointer that would have given the Americans the win but missed everything.
On the next possession, Dearica Hamby was called for holding Ygueravide while trying to escape to the basket.
She swished the foul shot to send Spain to the gold medal game.
Hailey Van Lith had eight points to lead Team USA, which couldnât win despite making 14 of 27 shots. Spainâs six free throws were the difference.
Spain got the game to overtime with a backdoor layup right before regulation expired. â Dan Wolken
Olympic beach volleyball: Americans Benesh, Partain onto quarterfinals
PARIS â Onto the quarterfinals for menâs beach volleyball tandem Andy Benesh and Miles Partain.
Benesh and Partain defeated Italyâs Samuele Cottafava and Paolo Nicolai in two sets (21-17 and 21-18).Â
Partainâs ace in the second set to put the U.S. up 16-11 helped the duo secure the match, and Benesh followed with an ace to make it 18-13. Italy scored five of the next seven points to make the Americans sweat. But a final Italian service â of eight total â ended the match.Â
In the first, they jumped out to a 13-8 lead and relied on the early margin to carry them to a Set 1 victory.Â
Itâs been an interesting Games for the duo. They parted ways with their coach for unclear reasons over the weekend and have yet to be transparent on the matter. They won their final two matches of group play after starting these Games with a loss to Cuba. Their three-set victory over Brazil last week sent them into the Round of 16 and a date with Italy.Â
The youngest U.S. menâs beach team in Olympic history will play the winner of Chile vs. Qatar in the quarterfinals. â Chris Bumbaca
Delaney Schnell misses medal opportunity in Olympic diving
SAINT-DENIS, France â Two-time Olympic diver Delany Schnell advanced to the womenâs 10-meter platform semifinals Monday but failed to move on to Tuesdayâs top-12 final. She finished 15th with a score of 271.95.
Schnell pulled off an impressive recovery in prelims after a couple low-scoring dives to make the top 18, and she opened semifinals with strong first- and second-round performances.
But a rough third-round dive â a back 3 1/2 somersaults in the tuck position with a 3.3 degree of difficulty that earned her just 31.35 points â dropped the 25-year-old from Michigan to 14th. And she was unable to return to the top 12 with her two remaining dives.
At the Paris Olympics, Schnell previously finished sixth in the womenâs synchronized 10-meter platform â an event she won a silver medal in at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Three years ago, she finished fifth in the womenâs 10-meter platform.
Chinaâs defending Olympic gold and silver medalists, Quan Hongchan and Chen Yuxi, led the way both in prelims and semifinals. Quan and Chen enter Tuesdayâs final ranked first and second with scores of 421.05 and 403.05, respectively.
Fellow American diver Daryn Wright didnât advance out of prelims, finishing 19th with a score of 272.25. â Michelle R. Martinelli
Vincent Hancock adds another medal days after making Olympic history
Vincent Hancock has another medal to add to his collection.
Hancock and Austen Jewell Smith teamed up to earn a silver medal in team skeet shooting Monday at the Chateauroux Shooting Centre. This is the first year team skeet shooting has been contested at the Olympics.
Hancock is a four-time Olympic gold medalist having won menâs skeet in 2008, 2012, 2020 and this year. Smith, in her second Olympics, won bronze in womenâs skeet Sunday.
Hancock and Smith lost in the finals of Mondayâs team event to the Italian team of Diana Bocosi and Gabriele Rossetti, 45-44. China took bronze.
Italy tied the qualification world record with a score 149 in the qualification round.
The U.S. swept skeet shooting gold in Tokyo, with Hancock winning the menâs competition and Amber English winning the womenâs.
Team skeet marked the final shooting event at this yearâs Olympics. â Dave Birkett
American Evy Leibfarth out in womenâs canoe slalom
Team USAâs Evy Leibfarth was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the womenâs kayak cross event in canoe slalom. She finished third in her heat behind world No. 1 Kimberley Woods of Great Britain and Switzerlandâs Alena Marx.
Woods was the raceâs runaway winner, but Leibfarth caught up with Marx and made contact â which is allowed in this chaotic event â to try and disrupt Marxâs turn on the final barrier. Marx was able to stabilize quicker and beat Leibfarth to the final line in a race where only the top two would advance.
Leibfarth, a 20-year-old from Bryson City, N.C., won a bronze medal earlier in the Paris Games in the canoe single competition. â Gentry Estes
Simone Biles earns silver, Jordan Chiles bronze in floor
PARIS â Simone Biles won silver in the womenâs floor exercise final, giving her four medals, including three golds, at these Games. It is the first time she has not won gold in a floor exercise final â ever.Â
Brazilâs Rebeca Andrade won gold. After an inquiry, Team USAâs Jordan Chilesâ score was updated to a 13.766 to move her into third place and giving her bronze.
The medal is the 11th of Bilesâ Olympic career, seven of which are gold. Biles led the U.S. to gold in the team final, won gold in the all-around and vault finals and finished fifth in the balance beam final earlier Monday. â Nancy Armour, Tom Schad
Golf Channel analyst burns Jon Rahmâs Olympic collapse
Scottie Schefflerâs thrilling comeback victory at the Paris Olympics, rallying from four shots back during the final round at the Paris Olympics, was one for the ages.
Of course, it came at the expense of Jon Rahm, the 54-hole leader, who let that lead slip away by shooting a 39 on the back nine. That led to the chatter on social media â and on the Golf Channel, where analysts did not hold back on Rahmâs performance.
âIâm gonna put that down as one of the biggest collapses â chokes of the year,â Brandel Chamblee said. âProbably right up there with Rory McIlroy coming down the stretch at the U.S. Open.â â Scooby Axson
Simone Biles floor routine
Simone Biles scored a 14.133 to take second place behind Rebeca Andrade with two competitors left. Biles stepped out of bounds twice but stuck the landing on the Biles I. During warmups, she overcooked the Biles II and took a hard, awkward fall. She could be seen mouthing, âIâm fineâ after. Biles tweaked her calf during qualifying on July 28 and has had it wrapped in competition since. â Nancy Armour, Tom Schad
Political rivals. Badminton adversaries. What to know about Taiwan-China
PARIS â Badminton is a hugely popular sport in both Taiwan and China. At the Paris Olympics, two incidents in as many days involving the sportâs spectators reflects those placeâs uneasy rivalry on the world stage.
The incidents prompted Taiwanâs government on Monday to call on French authorities to launch an investigation. It followed a separate report on Friday that saw a spectator who was holding up a green banner that read, âTaiwan go for it,â removed from a Paris badminton venue during Taiwan player Chou Tien Chenâs match against Indiaâs Lakshya Sen.
Budinger-Evans eliminated in menâs beach volleyball
PARIS â Chase Budingerâs Olympic dream has ended.Â
Budinger and his partner Miles Evans fell in the Round of 16 of the menâs beach volleyball tournament Monday to Norwayâs Anders Mol and Christian Sorum, the defending Olympic gold medalists. Norway took out the USA in straight sets, 21-16, 21-14.Â
In Tokyo three years ago, Mol and Sorum became the youngest duo to win the Olympic gold at 23 and 24 years old, respectively. The Americans gave them their best shot but the Norwegians were simply better.Â
Budinger and Evans played solid defense early to stay in the first set. The former NBA playerâs presence at the net was a factor, as he had two blocks and forced an attack error within the first 10 points. Norway went on a 3-0 run to force a USA timeout at 14-11 and it controlled the rest of the set, with Mol dialing up his own block (six block points), to keep the U.S. off balance.Â
The Americans enjoyed a 3-1 lead to start the second set, but they quickly saw that evaporate to a 8-4 deficit. An ace from Mol made it 12-7 and created a mountain too tall for the U.S. to climb. By the end of the match, sand stuck to the entire right side of Evansâ body. He recorded nine digs and had 12 attack points. Budinger finished with four block points and eight points on attack. Both Norwegians finished with 11 attack points apiece.
Evans and Budinger advanced to the knockout round by winning their âlucky losersâ match two days earlier, as they won one of their three group play matches (the first). â Chris Bumbaca
American Emma Hunt makes finals in climbing
Emma Hunt of the United States is on to the speed finals at the Paris Games. Hunt bested French climber Manon Lebon in a head-to-head elimination climb with a time of 6.38 seconds. U.S teammate Piper Kelly was eliminated.
Only seven climbers who won their elimination heats and one lucky loser with the fastest time move on to finals on Wednesday. â Sandy Hooper
Womenâs gymnastics floor finals set to begin
Simone Biles and Jordan Chiles will be competing in the finals for the floor momentarily. Follow for the latest updates.
Olympic records in climbing
The Olympic record fell over and over and over again in the seeding heats of womenâs speed climbing qualifications. But it was Polandâs Aleksandra Miroslaw who came out on top of the seeding round with a new world record time (that she set twice) first at 6.21 seconds and again at 6.06 seconds. American Emma Hunt finished seeding in second place with a time of 6.36 seconds. For the women, going sub-6 seconds is the equivalent of running a 100-meter sprint under 10 seconds.Head-to-head heats will begin shortly to wrap up womenâs speed qualification. â Sandy Hooper
Americans make it into mixed skeet gold medal match
Team USAâs Austen Smith and Vincent Hancock placed second during qualifying in the mixed team skeet competition and will get a chance to shoot for gold.Smith and Hancock hit 148 of 150 clays, one less than Italyâs Diana Bacosi and Gabriele Rossettiâs 149. The final round begins with the bronze medal match between China and India, followed immediately by the gold medal match.Dania Vizzi and Conner Prince of the United States placed sixth with their score of 144.
Simone Biles, Suni Lee fall on balance beam
In a balance beam final that has seen multiple gymnasts fall, Simone Biles came off on her aerial series and scored a 13.100. This will be the first time, other than on uneven bars, that she has made a final and not won a medal.
Italyâs Alice Domato won gold while Chinaâs Zhou Yaqin took silver and Italyâs Manila Esposito secured bronze in a final that saw multiple gymnasts fall during their routines.
Suni Leeâs right foot slipped off the balance beam at the end of her aerial series, causing her to split the beam and then take a hard fall onto the mat. The result was a score of 13.100. The 21-year-old appeared frustrated as she re-mounted the beam and finished her routine after the fall, and as she walked away afterwards. But then she started to gradually lighten after talking with her coach, Jess Graba, and Biles. Within moments, Lee was smiling and laughing again, perhaps remembering the breadth of what sheâs already achieved in Paris. After returning from a pair of kidney ailments, Lee won a second consecutive all-around Olympic medal â this time a bronze â to go with team gold and another bronze on uneven bars Sunday. â Nancy Armour, Tom Schad
Americans struggle for tops in boulder qualification of sport climbing
Sport climbing is officially underway at Le Bourget. Despite the heat, the stands are packed to watch the menâs boulder semifinal and womenâs speed qualifications. American Jesse Grupper completed the four boulder problems and finished in 18th place with a score of 18.9, and U.S. teammate Colin Duffy finished boulder in 10th place with 33.8 points. Neither American was able to find a top, but there were few to be had in the round.
âThe style of bouldering is very flashy. You want to have cool moves for the crowd, but sometimes that can lead to an extra hard round like we saw today,â said Duffy.
The men will compete in the lead portion of the event on Wednesday. Only the top eight finishers will move on to the finals. â Sandy Hooper
Aaliyah Butler, Alexis Holmes moving on to 400 semis
Aaliyah Butler and Alexis Holmes automatically qualified to the semifinals in the womenâs 400 meters.
Butler finished behind Dominican Republicâs Marileidy Paulino to place second in the fifth heat of the 400. Paulino produced a 49.42, which is the top time entering the semifinals. Butler got through in 50.52.
Holmes ran a 50.35 to place second in the sixth heat. Irelandâs Rhasidat Adeleke won the heat in 50.09.
Kendall Ellis, who won the U.S. Olympic track and field trials in the 400, didnât automatically qualify to the next round. However, Ellis does have an opportunity to advance in the repechage round.
The womenâs 400 is wide open in Paris. But we do know there will be a new Olympic champion. Defending Olympic champ Shaunae Miller-Uibo of the Bahamas pulled up in the fourth heat of the 400 and didnât finish. â Tyler Dragon
Womenâs pole vault sending 20 to finals
Itâll be a crowded field Wednesday night when womenâs pole vaulting finalists gather for the medal competition at the Paris Games. Thatâs because 20 of them qualified Monday morning, eight more than the format called for, due to a massive gridlock of a tie for the last available spot.
Katie Moon was the lone qualifier for Team USA with a vault of 4.55, but the tie came at 4.40. Nine athletes tied for the 12th and final qualifying spot. Although other non-qualifiers also vaulted 4.40, the nine tied for the fewest attempts advanced.
The standard for automatic qualification to the medal rounds was 4.70, which no vaulter achieved. â Chase Goodbread
USAâs Delany Schnell sneaks into 10m platform diving semis
It was close, but Team USA diver Delany Schnell snuck into the 10-meter platform diving semifinals after finishing 17th in Mondayâs prelims. The top-18 divers out of 29 total at Olympic Aquatics Centre in Saint-Denis, France moved on to keep their medal hopes alive.Â
Schnell â who finished sixth in the womenâs synchronized 10-meter platform at the Paris Olympics â almost didnât advance out of the five-round prelims after poor second and third dives, which left her ranked 25th.Â
But the 25-year-old two-time Olympian from Michigan recovered well on her final dive with an inward 3 1/2 somersaults in the tuck position and a 3.2 degree of difficulty to finish with a score of 278.15.
First-time Olympian Daryn Wright ended prelims ranked 19th with a score of 272.25, just missing out on advancing. Wright â a 20-year-old diver for the Purdue Boilermakers â had a strong first round off a forward 3 1/2 somersaults in the pike position with a 3.0 degree of difficulty and was tied for eighth place. But she dropped to 22nd after the fourth round before finishing outside of the top 18 in her only Olympic event.
Chinaâs defending Olympic gold and silver medalists, Quan Hongchan and Chen Yuxi, finished prelims ranked first and second, respectively. Quanâs top score was 421.25, while Chen in second posted a score of 382.15.
Semifinals for the womenâs 10-meter platform are set for 9 a.m. ET Monday, and finals are Tuesday also at 9 a.m. ET. â Michelle Martinelli
Algerian boxer Imane Khelif speaks out amid gender controversy
PARIS â Stop the bullying, says Algerian boxer Imane Khelif.
Khelif, who was dragged into controversy over gender eligibility criteria at the Paris Olympics, has spoken out for the first time since the Games began. She and Taiwanâs Lin Yu-Ting have been subjected to abuse on social media and inaccurate online speculation about their sexes even though the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has said they both have met all criteria and that thereâs no question they are women.
âI send a message to all the people of the world to uphold the Olympic principles and the Olympic Charter, to refrain from bullying all athletes, because this has effects, massive effects,â Khelif said in an interview with SNTV, according to The Associated Press. âIt can destroy people, it can kill peopleâs thoughts, spirit and mind. It can divide people. And because of that, I ask them to refrain from bullying.â
Khelif and Yu-Ting have advanced to the semifinals at the Olympics, ensuring theyâll win at least bronze medals. â Josh Peter
Rai Benjamin qualifies for semis in 400m hurdles
Team USA hurdler Rai Benjamin qualified for the menâs 400m hurdles semifinals at the Paris Olympics on Monday, clocking a time of 48.82 seconds for a first-place finish in the opening heat.
In Olympic preliminary heats, the top three finishers in each of five races automatically qualify for the semifinals, as well as the next three fastest times, for a total of 18 semifinal qualifiers.
Benjamin, 27, won silver in the event at the Tokyo Games in 2021, along with a gold in the menâs 4Ă400 relay. Heâs not competing in the 4Ă400 relay in Paris, however, so the 400 hurdles is his lone chance at a medal.
Also qualifying for the semifinals for Team USA was CJ Allen, who ran 48.64 to finish second in Heat 3.
The semifinals for the 400m hurdles will be held Wednesday night, and medal races are scheduled for Friday. â Chase Goodbread
US wins silver in mixed triathlon relay
PARIS â The United States team of Seth Rider, Taylor Spivey, Morgan Pearson and Taylor Knibb took silver in the mixed triathlon relay Monday at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
The U.S. finished in a time of 1:25.40, 1/100th of a second behind gold-winning Germany and just ahead of bronze medal-winning Great Britain in a photo finish.
Great Britain, which won gold in 2020, led most of the race with Germany in second, but Knibb closed the gap for the U.S. with strong legs in swimming and biking in the final rotation before Germanyâs Laura Lindemann pulled ahead in the final moments of the run for the win. â Dave Birkett
Olympics schedule today
Here are some Olympic schedule highlights. Peacock is streaming every sport and event live as it unfolds in Paris.
(All times Eastern)
Gymnastics has the last individual events finals for these Olympics, including menâs parallel bars (5:45 a.m.), womenâs balance beam (6:38 a.m.), menâs horizontal bar (7:33 a.m.) and womenâs floor exercise (8:20 a.m.). E! is airing live.
Track and field prelims and qualifying rounds start at 4:05 a.m. The evening session opens with the menâs pole vault final at 1 p.m.. The other finals are womenâs discus throw (2:30 p.m.), womenâs 5,000m (3:10 p.m.) and womenâs 800m (3:45 p.m.). NBC is airing the evening session. USA Network is airing the morning session.
Menâs soccer holds the semifinals today: Morocco faces Spain in the first semifinal at 12 p.m., followed by France against Egypt at 3 p.m.
The 3Ă3 basketball slate has four medal matches: womenâs bronze medal game (3 p.m.), menâs bronze medal game (3:30 p.m.), womenâs gold medal game (4 p.m.), menâs gold medal game (4:30 p.m.) The womenâs semifinals feature the U.S. against Spain at 11:30 a.m. and Germany vs. Canada at 12:30 p.m. The menâs semifinals include the Netherlands vs. Lithuania at noon and Latvia vs. France at 1 p.m.. NBC is airing the gold medal games.
Other sports in action: Badminton, beach volleyball, canoe slalom, diving, equestrian, field hockey, sailing, shooting, sport climbing, surfing, table tennis, track cycling, triathlon, volleyball, water polo and wrestling.
How to watch Olympics today
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.
Medal count today
Our 2024 Paris Olympics medal count tracker updates after every single medal event.
Tallying up gold, silver, bronze for each country in Paris
How many medals has Team USA won?
Which country has won the most golds?
How many gold medals does Team USA have so far?
Which U.S. teams are playing at the Olympics today?
(All times Eastern)
The U.S. menâs beach volleyball team of ChaseBudinger and Miles Evans plays against Norway in the Round of 16 at 8 a.m.
The U.S. menâs beach volleyball team of Miles Partain and Andrew Benesh plays against Italy in the Round of 16 at 11 a.m.
The U.S. womenâs 3Ă3 basketball team plays against Spain at 11:30 a.m.
The U.S. womenâs beach volleyball team of Taryn Kloth and Kristen Nuss plays against Canada in the Round of 16 at noon.
The U.S. menâs water polo team faces Croatia in group play at 12:30 p.m.
The U.S. menâs volleyball team plays Brazil in the quarterfinals at 3 p.m.
What Olympic medals can be won today?
(All times Eastern)
Gymnastics: menâs parallel bars (5:45 a.m.), womenâs balance beam (6:36 a.m.), menâs horizontal bar (7:31 a.m.), womenâs floor exercise (8:20 a.m., E!)
Track & field: menâs pole vault final (1 p.m.), womenâs discus final (2:30 p.m.) womenâs 5,000m (3:10 p.m.), womenâs 800m (3:45 p.m.). NBC is airing the finals.
3Ă3 hoops: womenâs bronze (3 p.m.), menâs bronze (3:30 p.m.), womenâs gold (4:05 p.m.), menâs gold (4:35 p.m.). NBC is airing the gold medal matches.
Triathlon: mixed relay (2 a.m., USA Network)
Cycling track: womenâs team sprint bronze (1:53 p.m.), womenâs team sprint gold (1:58 p.m.)
Shooting: 25m rapid fire pistol menâs final (3:30 a.m.), skeet mixed team gold (9 a.m.)
Canoe slalom: womenâs kayak cross (10:55 a.m.), menâs kayak cross (11 a.m., USA Network)
Badminton: womenâs singles bronze (3:45 a.m.), womenâs singles gold (4:55 a.m.), menâs singles bronze (8:30 a.m.), menâs gold (9:40 a.m.)
Olympic track and field schedule today
(All times Eastern)
Qualifications: menâs discus throw group a (4:10 a.m.), womenâs pole vault (4:40 a.m.), menâs discus throw group b (5:35 a.m.)
Repechage rounds: womenâs 400m hurdles (4:50 a.m.), menâs 400m (5:20 a.m.), womenâs 200m (6:50 a.m.)
Round 1s: menâs 400m hurdles (4:05 a.m.), womenâs 400m (5:55 a.m.), menâs 3,000m steeplechase (1:04 p.m.), menâs 200m (1:55 p.m.)
Semifinals: womenâs 200m (2:45 p.m.)
Finals: menâs pole vault (1 p.m.), womenâs discus throw (2:30 p.m.), womenâs 5,000m (3:10 p.m.), womenâs 800m (3:45 p.m.)
Olympics track and field today: What to watch
Valarie Allman is the defending Olympic champion in womenâs discus. Allman, an accomplished dancer, took up track her freshman year in high school as a jumper and sprinter. She broke the school record at Stanford, where she was a two-time Pac-12 discus champion.
Olympics gymnastics today: What to watch
Itâs the finals for womenâs balance beam and womenâs floor exercise, two events that have Simone Biles is a favorite. At last yearâs world championships, Biles won gold in both. For the men, itâs the finals for parallel bars and horizontal bar. American Brody Malone won gold at the 2022 world championships on the horizontal bar.
Olympics artistic swimming today: What to watch
The team event starts with the technical routine. Anita Alvarez is set to compete in her third Olympics.
Behind the scenes with Snoop Dogg at the Paris Olympics
Snoop Dogg has been everywhere and anywhere, with everyone and anyone, during his time at these Games as a correspondent extraordinaire. He hasnât been sleeping as much as he has been relaxing.Â
âThis ainât the town to sleep in. This ainât the time to sleep,â Snoop said once his work for the day was done. âItâs the time to be on it like you want it.âÂ
Bouncing around from different events and being in the thick of the action, watching athletes do their thing, is something Snoop loves, he said. â Chris Bumbaca
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