Biles retakes spotlight as world records fall, IOC probes Belarus
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[August 03, 2021]
By Karolos Grohmann and Mitch
Phillips
TOKYO (Reuters) -Simone Biles retook the gymnastics stage on Tuesday
after a week's absence, electrifying the Tokyo Olympics on a day
that saw world records smashed and organisers probe Belarus's
treatment of an athlete now in diplomatic protection.
The return of the American, considered by many the greatest gymnast
ever, ensured a blockbuster finale Olympics-Gymnastics-Biles return
set to bring gymnastics to dramatic end for the sport as Biles
scored 14.000 on the balance beam to finish third.
She had abruptly dropped out of the team event earlier in the Games
citing mental health issues and increasing the global spotlight on
the pressures elite athletes face.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said it expected a report
https://www.reuters.com/article/
olympics-2020-ioc/update-1-olympics-ioc-awaiting-report-from-belarusian-olympic-committee-idUSL8N2PA0F4
later in the day from the Belarusian team on the case of sprinter
Krystsina Tsimanouskaya, who sought protection
https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/
sports/belarus-athlete-in-hands-authorities-ioc-2021-08-02 in the Polish
embassy in Tokyo on Monday after refusing her team's orders to fly home.
She was expected to fly on Wednesday to Poland, which has offered her a
humanitarian visa. The IOC spoke twice on Monday to Tsimanouskaya, who
was in a safe and secure place, spokesman Mark Adams said.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken accused https://www.reuters.com/world/blinken-says-belarus-treatment-athlete-intolerable-transnational-repression-2021-08-03
Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko's regime of intolerable
"transnational repression" in the matter.
On the track, Norway's Karsten Warholm shattered his own world record in
the men's 400 metres hurdles final with a blistering 45.94-second run,
besting American Rai Benjamin, who also beat last month's record of
46.70 seconds.
"Man, it's so crazy. It's by far the biggest moment of my life," Warholm
said after carving his name among the greats of athletics history and
crouching in apparent disbelief on the track. "You know the cliche that
it hasn't sunk in yet? I don't think it has, but I feel ecstatic."
In women's cycling, Germany won the gold medal in team pursuit at the
Izu Velodrome, beating Britain in a thrilling final after both teams
traded world records in the heats. The United States took the bronze.
Outdoor athletes were once again battling the Tokyo summer weather as
well as their competitors, with highs around 33 degrees Celsius (91
Fahrenheit) and rain-forest humidity.
Athletes also lacked the cheers of fans, as organisers have banned
spectators from almost all events due to COVID-19, which had already
delayed the Games by a year.
The lack of fans, however, is not depressing viewership https://www.reuters.com/article/olympcis-2020-audience/olympics-surfing-skating-boosts-viewership-lack-of-fans-has-zero-impact-ioc-idUSL1N2PA059,
the IOC said, as debut events such as surfing and skateboarding attract
a global buzz.
[to top of second column] |
Simone Biles of the United States and
coach Cecile Landi during training. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner
Host city Tokyo is enduring its fourth
coronavirus state of emergency with infections spiking https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/japan-limits-hospitalisation-covid-19-patients-most-serious-cases-surge-2021-08-03
to record highs and hospitals under increasing strain.
Tokyo Olympics organisers have reported 294 Games-related COVID-19
cases since July 1 even as strict testing and monitoring measures
continue inside the Olympic "bubble".
Positive COVID-19 tests have forced Greece to pull out of the
artistic swimming competitions.
MAKING HISTORY
Biles, her hopes of six gold medals shattered, has been battling the
"twisties", a condition in which gymnasts lose their orientation
while doing twists and gravity-defying mid-air tumbles, that forced
her to pull out of events.
Japan's Naomi Osaka, who had cited depression in taking a break from
tennis in recent months, lost to the world No. 42 in the third round
last week, one of many shocking results in this year's Games.
Also making history, the first openly transgender Olympian, New
Zealand weightlifter Laurel Hubbard, said she does not consider
herself a trailblazer and just wanted to be seen as any other
athlete on sport's biggest stage.
Hubbard made an unexpected early exit on Monday, eliminated just 10
minutes into her +87 kg contest, ending an appearance that provoked
controversy.
Transgender rights advocates applauded her being allowed to compete,
while some former athletes and activists believe her background
gives her an unfair physiological advantage and undermines efforts
for women's equality in sport.
Away from the competition, some Australian athletes caused damage to
their rooms in the athletes' village before departing while the
team's mascots - an emu and a kangaroo - went missing but have since
returned, team chief Ian Chesterman said.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, Mitch Phillips; Additional reporting
by Mari Saito, Steve Keating, Elaine Lies, Martin Petty; Writing by
William Mallard; Editng by Lincoln Feast and Himani Sarkar)
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