Olympics 2021 live updates: Men’s basketball in tight semifinal, USA’s Ryan Crouser wins shot put gold – USA TODAY - Sports Rack

Breaking

Thursday, August 5, 2021

Olympics 2021 live updates: Men’s basketball in tight semifinal, USA’s Ryan Crouser wins shot put gold – USA TODAY

play
Show Caption
Hide Caption

McLaughlin breaks own world record; Beach volleyball semi on Thursday

U.S. 400m hurdler Sydney McLaughlin earned gold in world record time. Thursday may be the last time we see several USWNT players in the Olympics.

Sandy Hooper, USA TODAY

Wednesday was filled with glory for Team USA at the track, and Thursday marked the first gold medal in track and field at the Tokyo Olympics for U.S. men. Ryan Crouser set an Olympic record in winning the men’s shot put, with teammate Joe Kovacs taking silver. 

However, there was disappointment as well when the men’s 4×100 relay team finished sixth in their semifinal heat and did not qualify for the final. In addition, the favorite in the men’s 110-meter hurdles — American Grant Holloway — was upset in the final. He hung on for the silver. 

The day got off to a positive start for the U.S. as the “A Team” beach volleyball duo of April Ross and Alix Klineman took care of Switzerland in straight sets for a spot in the gold medal match. 

One of many teams still hoping to win gold will be the U.S. men’s basketball team. However, poor shooting has led to them trailing at halftime to Australia, who beat them in an exhibition game last month, in semifinal play.

Despite a devastating loss to Canada in the semifinals, the USWNT still has a chance to leave Tokyo with a medal as they’ll face Australia in the bronze medal match at 4 a.m. ET.

WEDNESDAY RECAP: Sydney McLaughlin sets world record in women’s hurdles

LATEST FROM TOKYO: Sign up for our Olympic newsletter to get exclusive insight

OLYMPIC TEXT ALERTS: We’ll be your guide to the Games with the inside scoop sent directly to your phone

The U.S. men’s basketball team closed a 15-point deficit to just three points, 45-42, in the latter stages of the second quarter in its semifinal against Australia and will head into halftime with a good chance to advance to the gold medal round.

Given the way most of the first half played out, Team USA should feel fortunate to be in this position after struggling on both ends of the floor for the first 16 minute of the game. Not only did the Americans have a hard time guarding the Australians, who made seven threes in the first half, they turned it over eight times and didn’t make a three of their own until Devin Booker splashed a wide open look from the corner with 3:21 left in the second quarter.

Team USA is shooting 64% from inside the arc but just 2-of-13 from long range.

Kevin Durant has 15 points for the U.S., while Dante Exum leads Australia with 10.

— Dan Wolken

CHIBA, Japan – No backflips yet, but Gable Steveson might break one out on the Olympic stage soon.

The high-flying Minnesota Gophers wrestler and NCAA champion still has some work to do on the mat first.

Steveson dominated both of his preliminary matches at Makuhari Messe Hall on Thursday to advance to the men’s heavyweight semifinals (125kg) this evening. He scored a technical victory in the first match (10-0) before winning 8-0 over Taha Akgul, the defending Olympic champion, of Turkey.

“Like a champ, took him down,” Steveson said.

“He’s the best heavyweight wrestler to ever step foot (onto the mat,” the 21-year-old added. “But his time is up. I came here for business. I came here to win. Respect to him, he is a top dog, but young cat came to play today.”

He’ll face Mongolia’s Lkhagvagerel Munkhtur in his semifinal matchup. Steveson will wrestle again Friday for a medal, and he’s hoping the color is gold.

“I gotta keep going,” he said. “Ain’t nothing going to be given to me, I got to go get it.

“The bigger the stage, the better Gable gets.”

USA wrestling has had success at the Tokyo Games, with Tamyra Mensah-Stock taking gold and Adeline Gray winning silver in their respective weight classes. David Taylor (men’s 86kg) has his gold-medal match later Thursday and Helen Maroulis (women’s 53kg), the defending champion from Rio, wrestles for bronze afterward.

“They did their job. It’s just momentum for us to go out there and do our things too,” Steveson said. “We’re on a roll right now. We’re not going to stop.”

A hiccup came when Kyle Dake, finally out of the shadow cast by J’den Cox in his weight class (men’s 74kg), lost 11-0 to Belarusian Mahamedkhabib Kazdimahamedau in the quarterfinals. In his first match of the day, a 4-1 victory, he was poked in the eye 15 seconds into the match and again a minute later.

Earlier, Jacarra Winchester overcame a 4-1 deficit in her first match but also fell in the quarterfinals.

Thomas Gilman won his 57kg repechage match to have the shot at a bronze later Thursday.

— Chris Bumbaca

TOKYO – Qualifying in the spot to the Tokyo Olympics men’s park final put Cory Juneau in a tough spot. Skateboarding first meant all he could do was put down his best run and then wait.

He did that Thursday, scoring 84.13 on his second run with massive air and difficult tricks. Luis Francisco seemed like he might pass Juneau on the last run of the contest, but the Brazilian scored just less than a point back and Juneau held on for bronze.

Australia’s Keegan Palmer won gold handily and clearly, getting huge air out of the bowl and using it to do kickflip tricks with grabs. Brazilian Pedro Barros took silver.

— Rachel Axon

TOKYO – On his very first attempt, U.S. shot put world-record holder Ryan Crouser walked to the shot put circle as cool and casual as one can be in an Olympic final. The reigning Olympic champion stepped into the ring sporting a USA track and field hat and shades. He took a deep breath, did the popular shot put spin technique and boom – Olympic record.

Crouser tossed 74 feet, 11 inches to break his 2016 Olympic record of 73 feet, 10¾ inches.

In Crouser’s second attempt, he increased his own record. The 6-foot-7 shot putter tossed a monster throw of 75 feet, 2¾ inches.

The competition for first was all over after two attempts.

Crouser saved his best for last, though. The Oregon native threw 76 feet, 5½ inches on is very last attempt to break the Olympic record for a third and final time of the competition.

Joe Kovacs finished in second (74′ 3¾) and New Zealand’s Thomas Walsh (73′ 8¾) came in third.

With the win, Crouser is the U.S. male to win a track and field gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics. Additionally, Crouser is the first American to win back-to-back Olympic golds in the shot put since Parry O’Brien did it at the 1952 and 1956 Olympics.

— Tyler Dragon

TOKYO – American Sakura Kokumai advanced to one of two Olympic bronze medal matches in karate kata Thursday.

Karate is making its Olympic debut in Tokyo. Kata is an a form demonstration event comparable to gymnastics floor exercise.

Kokumai, 28, was third in her five-woman pool, advancing to a ranking round, where she again placed third at Nippon Budokan.

That puts her into a bronze medal match later Thursday against Italy’s Viviana Bottaro, who was second after the ranking round in the other pool.

Kokumai was born in Honolulu but has family and friends in Japan, where she lived and trained before returning to the U.S. to train for these Games.

— Jeff Metcalfe

Nevin Harrison secured a rare medal in canoe for the United States as she took gold in the women’s 200-meter single canoe race. The 19-year-old from Seattle finished ahead of Canada’s Laurence Vincent-Lapointe (46.786) and Ukraine’s Liudmyla Luzan (47.034) in the final with a time of 45.932 seconds. 

Harrison’s medal is just Team USA’s fifth overall in the sport. 

“This is so incredible, it’s crazy. Thank you to my family and friends. You are my rocks and my support,” Harrison said. “Kenny and Anna, my two best friends, have been with me every step of the way. I wouldn’t be here without any of them.” 

— Jace Evans

TOKYO — The U.S. men’s team isn’t having much luck obtaining gold medals on the track.

Heavy 110-meter hurdle favorite Grant Holloway narrowly lost to Jamaica’s Hansle Parchment in the event final.

Parchment ran a season-best 13.04 to win the Olympic gold medal. Holloway finished second at a 13.09.

Holloway had the No. 1 time in the world heading into the final. His season-best of 12.81 is just a hundredth of a second shy of the world record.

Jamaica’s Ronald Levy got the bronze, running a 13.10.

— Tyler Dragon

TOKYO — In a stunning development, Team USA failed to qualify for the final in the men’s 4×100 relay at the Tokyo Olympics on Thursday.

The Americans fielded four of their fastest sprinters — Trayvon Bromell, Fred Kerley, Ronnie Baker and Crayvon Gillespie — and got beat, finishing sixth in their preliminary heat. The top three finishers automatically qualified, with the next two fastest advancing on time.

The U.S. finished behind China, Canada, Italy, Germany and Ghana in its heat, with a time of 38.10.

Team USA has a history of relay mishaps, from lane violations to poor handoffs. This time, poor handoffs proved to be costly.

The U.S. last won gold in the event in 2000.

— Tom Schad

TOKYO – Park skateboarding comes with its fair share of wipeouts. In the Tokyo Olympics prelims, one came for the leader and a cameraman.

Australia’s Kieran Woolley was finishing a big run when he went to ride a rail atop the bowl. It’s not clear how he meant to come out of it, because atop the course he collided with a cameraman from the Olympic Broadcasting Services. 

One the replay, it showed Woolley’s helmet colliding with the camera lens before the cameraman’s feed came into frame.

Both appeared to be unharmed and, thankfully for Woolley, it didn’t seem to matter.

He scored an 82.69 to take the overall lead during the third preliminary heat.

— Rachel Axon

TOKYO – The U.S. beach volleyball duo of April Ross and Alix Klineman are headed to the gold medal match after defeating the Swiss team 2-0 of Anouk Verge-Depre and Joana Heidrich in the semifinal round.

The pair made quick work of the Swiss, defeating them 21-12, 21-11. They went on a 7-1 run at the end of the first set to win and a 5-1 run at the end of the second. Ross finished with 15 attack points while Klineman contributed nine attack points and four block points.

Ross and Klineman will play in the final on Friday, Aug. 6 against Australia’s Mariafe Artacho del Solar and Taliqua Clancy, who beat Latvia’s Tina Graudina/Anastasija Kravcenoka in the semifinal.”

The U.S. team has been paired together since 2018 and were ranked No. 2 in the world entering the Tokyo Olympics. Ross and Klineman won once and took third twice on the world tour in 2021. Together, they have six FIVB wins.

Ross has been to two previous Olympics – she won silver in 2012 with Jen Kessy and bronze in 2016 with Kerri Walsh Jennings. With her 2016 third-place finish, she became just the fourth beach volleyball player of any gender to win multiple Olympic medals in the sport (Walsh Jennings, Misty May-Treanor and Karch Kiraly are the others).

— Olivia Reiner

Ahead of their semifinal match against Switzerland, the U.S. beach volleyball duo of April Ross and Alix Klineman, known as the “A Team,” received support from a fellow A-Team member, Mr. T

Ross and Klineman will face the Swiss duo of Anouk Verge-Depre and Joana Heidrich at 8 p.m. ET for a spot in the gold medal match, as they look to be the first Americans since Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh Jennings in 2012 to win gold in beach volleyball. 

— Jordan Mendoza

STAMFORD, Conn. – In 2011, NBC while looking a place to set up shop for its sports department, stumbled upon a Clairol shampoo warehouse in this quaint Eastern Connecticut town about 40 miles northeast of New York City. No one envisioned it would play a crucial part of the network’s vast array of sports properties.

Ten years later, that warehouse space has been converted into one full floor of multiple control rooms and studio space, complete with an existing loading dock so television trucks would have a place to operate.

Although there are nearly 1,600 NBC Olympics employees on-site in Tokyo, most of the behind-the-scenes work is done in Stamford, including the aforementioned production trucks that help viewers watch volleyball, golf, basketball and the swimming events.

“The biggest part is how impressive and large the operation is and continues to grow in the United States and that’s just a product of the changes in technology and the importance of figuring out simple system to create television,” Sam Flood, Executive Producer & President, Production, NBC & NBC Sports Network, told USA TODAY Sports.

— Scooby Axson

TOKYO – Earning an Olympic medal is extremely hard. Winning an Olympic gold medal is extraordinarily difficult, especially in individual sports such as track and field. The gold-medal winner truly has to be the best in the world. To put things in perspective, the world population is approaching 7.9 billion, according to Worldometer.

What’s transpired on the track and field for the U.S. men’s team encapsulates just that.

“It’s really hard. All the training, all the lifting, all the running and all the miles we put on our bodies,” Kenny Bednarek said moments after earning a men’s 200-meter silver medal. “It’s just a lot of hard, hard work. It’s not easy. You got to make sure to drink water, rehydrate every day, make sure to stretch every day and use all the equipment that you have…It’s not easy, but you can do it if you put in the hard work.”

Unfortunately for the U.S. men’s team none of them have been able to achieve their ultimately golden dreams.

Following six days of competition, the U.S. men’s squad has five overall medals – four silvers and one bronze. Zero gold medals. The U.S. track and field men are still leading all participating countries in the overall medal count with five. However, at the closing of Olympic track and field day six, 10 countries have at least one track and field gold medal, including Germany and Italy leading the way with two apiece.

The positive news for the U.S. men’s team is its gold-medal drought shouldn’t linger too much longer. World-record holder and reigning Olympic champion Ryan Crouser is the clear-cut favorite in the men’s shot put final on Thursday. On the track on Thursday, Grant Holloway is going into the 110-meter hurdles final ranNo. 1 in the world and in better form than any of his competitors. There could be two gold medals forthcoming, and possibly more, in the matter of hours. But that doesn’t take away from the incredible challenge it is to be the best in the world at an individual event.

KASHIMA, Japan – Bronze-medal games aren’t really the U.S. women’s thing.

Oh, they’re fine for other teams. For the marquee team in the game, however, it’s always been gold or bust. They’ve won the last two World Cups, and were runners-up the tournament before that. In the first five Olympic tournaments, they won either gold or silver.

But when the choice is bronze or bust, well, a bronze doesn’t look so bad.

“We’re lucky to be out here to play,” USWNT goalkeeper Adrianna Franch said Wednesday. “And we’re competitors. We’re here to win. We’re here to take home a medal. Everyone is trying to take home a medal. We didn’t make it for gold or silver, but a bronze is just as important (because) it’s what we have to fight for.”

For all of the USWNT’s success, this is the second consecutive Olympics where the world’s No. 1 team has failed to make the gold-medal game. Playing Australia on Thursday for the bronze is actually an improvement over 2016, when the Americans went out in the quarterfinals.

After winning the World Cup in 2019, and getting an extra year to recover from the celebrations that followed, the Americans seemed to be the favorites for gold in Tokyo. But they never looked quite right, getting routed by Sweden in their opener and being held scoreless in two of their three group games.

They needed a shootout to beat the Netherlands in the quarterfinals, then lost to Canada – for the first time in 20 years, no less – after the Canadians converted a penalty kick in the 74th.

This also might be the last game for some of the team’s biggest stars, and they don’t want to leave with a loss. 

A bronze medal will never be good enough for the USWNT. But, in this case, it’s better than the alternative. 

— Nancy Armour



from WordPress https://ift.tt/3lyqcDe
via IFTTT

No comments:

Post a Comment