U.S. hope for more beach volleyball
medals under Eiffel Tower
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[July 08, 2024]
By Rohith Nair
(Reuters) - Beach volleyball has had some iconic venues at the
Olympics but nothing will probably beat the foot of the Eiffel
Tower, where the United States will look to extend their streak of
winning a medal at every Games since the sport was introduced in
1996.
The Champ de Mars in Paris will host a temporary outdoor arena with
one of the world's most spectacular monuments serving as a backdrop
for the 48 pairs in men's and women's beach volleyball.
That is where the newly-crowned world champions Sara Hughes and
Kelly Cheng, who dethroned Brazil, will look to claim their first
Olympic medal and follow in the footsteps of American greats such as
Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh Jennings.
May-Treanor and Jennings won three consecutive gold medals from 2004
to 2012, with the latter adding a bronze medal to her glittering
resume in 2016.
Cheng and Hughes were the first pair to seal qualification for the
Olympics when they won the world title in Mexico after teaming up in
2022 following unsuccessful stints with other partners.
Both were born in California and played together in school and
college -- getting 103 consecutive match wins at the University of
Southern California -- but they went their separate ways in 2018.
Although Cheng qualified for the Tokyo Games, where she was knocked
out in the last 16, Hughes did not when her partner Summer Ross
injured her back in 2019.
It was Cheng who had a "gut feeling" and contacted Hughes with the
prospect of pairing up. Following a long chat at a coffee shop in
Long Beach, they eventually teamed up again with the goal of winning
gold in Paris.
"It was four years of being our own people and learning about
ourselves and figuring out what kind of volleyball we want to play,"
Cheng told Olympics.com.
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A general view of the olympic Eiffel Tower Stadium venue where beach
volleyball events will be held during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games,
at the foot of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, June 25, 2024.
REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo
"It was perfect timing when we sat down. Our styles
of play just naturally, individually, formed the chemistry.
"We're both at the same stages of life and on the same page with a
lot of things. And I think that's just helped us fight hard together
and fight for each other on and off the court, which I think is
really important."
In the men's draw, the Czech Republic's Ondrej Perusic and David
Schweiner surprised even themselves when they won their first world
title last year to qualify for the Olympics where they will have a
chance at redemption.
A positive COVID-19 test in Tokyo forced the Czech pair to forfeit
their first group match which eventually prevented them from
qualifying for the knockout stage.
But the pair, who got together in 2016, gave their country a first
world title with a nail-biting victory in the final against Norway
which they hope put the sport on the map back home.
"For sure this success has raised some awareness about us outside
the 'sports bubble'. There are not so many world champions in the
Czech Republic, so that for sure helped," Perusic said.
(Reporting by Rohith Nair in Bengaluru; editing by Clare Fallon)
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