Showing posts with label Kristen Faulkner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kristen Faulkner. Show all posts

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Olympics - Paris 2024 - Day 15

Day 15 - August 7, 2024



Well, the biggest problem today isn't an actual controversy, for once, but is a black eye for Australia's field hockey team.  Tom Craig, a FeeHocker (shoutout to Blackish), wa arrested for purchasing cocaine.  I don't know if he did or didn't, but I do know that he was arrested for it.  That being said, good to see the controversies had nothing to do with anything that occurred in our around the actual events.

Indian wrestler Vinesh Phogat has definitely had an up-and-down memorable Olympics.  Qualifying in a weight class lower than the one in which she participated in Tokyo 2020, Phogat went on to upset Japanese star Yiu Sasaki in teh quarterfinals.  Sasaki won the gold medal in Tokyo without even surrendering a single point to any point during the entire tournament.  She then won her quarterfinal and semifinal matches to advance to the finals.  However, before the finals began, Phogat failed to make weight by about two-tenths of a pound.  This despite a lot of time in the sauna, and even cutting her hair.  Phogat then fainted later in the day and went to the hospital, suffering from dehydration.  She then announced her retirement from wrestling on X (Twitter).

In that weight class, Sarah Hildebrandt of the USA, who was supposed to wrestle Phogat, instead defeated Yusneylis Guzman Lopez for the gold medal in wrestling.


Showing off his own strength, USA weightlifter Hampton Morris won third place in his weight class, earning not only the bronze, but the first medal in weightlifting of any kind for the United States since 1984, games it should be noted that the Eastern Bloc countries boycotted.  Congratulations Hampton!


Another American flourishing at these Olympics is Kristen Faulkner, a cyclist that only took up cylcing six years ago.  She followed-up her gold medal performance in the road race by leading her team to the gold medal - her second of these games - in the women's team pursuit.  Faulkner, Chloe Dygert - a bronze medalist in the cycling time trial - Jennifer Valente, and Lilly Williams, defeated a New Zealand team that had beaten them in a preliminary round for gold.  Faulkner's gold medal is the 11th medal at these games for Harvard alumni and/or students.  ELEVEN!


On a different track, US track athletes had a great day today as well.  In the 3000 meter steeplechase, American Kenneth Rooks took off in a sprint in front of a lead pack of about 7 (some were spread out a little bit - but they were all in touch with each other), later saying "what did I have to lose".  Although he was caught and passed by defending Olympic champion Soufiane El Bakkali of Morocco, Rooks won the silver.  Rooks, who is only in his second international race at this distance, seemed to be an unknown quantity to the rest of the finishers as they didn't even appraoch him to congratulate him like they did El Bakkali, but it didn't look like anger or jealousy, but more like, "Who is this guy?"  Abraham Kibiwot of Kenya finished with the bronze.


Steeplechase world record holder Lamecha Girma of Ethiopia fell over a hurdle on the penultimate lap and hit his head hard on the track.  He was transported on a stretcher, and later a gurney, to the hospital where he is recovering well.

And then there was the men's 400 meter dash.  Quincy Hall of the US dug down deep within himself, and passed 3 other runners in the last 30-40 meters in order to capture gold for the US!  Hall's finish was spectacular, as he was looking like he was putting so much into his final sprint that he might fall down.  You can tell from his facial expressions that he literally had nothing else to give as he was picking off runners.  Hall passed Zambia's Muzala Samukonga who held on for bronze, and at the line, nipped Matthew Hudson-Smith of Great Britain, earning the Brit the silver.  This was Zambia's third medal ever, and the first since the great Samuel Matete.


Nina Kennedy of Australia wins gold in the women's pole vault, followed by the USA's Katie Moon (silver) and Alysha Newman of Canada (bronze).  Newman will be the one remembered, though, for her twerking celebration.

In team sports, there was no better place to be than in the water polo pool.  In the first semifinal matchup, Greece scored against Serbia with 11 seconds left on the clock to tie the match.  In a rush Serbia speeds up their transition, where Greece fouled with 3 seconds left; stopping the clock.  The Serbia player picks up the ball, fires it toward the net, and in for a victory and a date in the finals.  But this was just the appetizer.  

The entree match pitted the United States versus Australia, where the United States scored a second goal early to tie it up 2-2.  But wait, there's more.  On the play, the American's Johnny Hopper was issued a red card on a brutality call - he threw a punch - pulling the goal off the board, ejected Hopper, gave Australia a penalty shot - which they hit, and a 4:00 power play.  The score was 5-1 Australia at the end of the first period, but then it was 5-5 at the end of the third period.  At the end of regulation, the score was 7-7 and went to a shootout, where US goalie Adrian Weinberg made two saves for the US to win the match 4-3 on penalty shots.Weinberg had 11 total saves in the match - as the US adance to play Serbia in the gold medal match.

In the other pool, China won the team artistic swimming event capturing gold, leaving the silver for the United States and the bronze medal for Spain.

In other team sports, the United States fell to Poland in the men's volleyball semi-finals, as they just didn't have an answer for the best player in the world, Wilfredo Leon.  The Americans will be battling for the bronze medal later this weekend.

In kid's sports, just kidding, Keegan Palmer of Australia won gold in skateboarding, American Tom Scharr secured silver, and the bronze medal was awarded to Brazil's Augusto Akio.

Athlete of the Day - Quincy Hall, USA, Athletics
Not only did he comeback down the final backstretch to pass 3 athletes to win gold, he did it in the fourth fastest time ever.

Team of the Day - Poland Men's Volleyball Team, Volleyball
That team is good, but it is mostly because Wilfredo Leon is a bad, bad boy.

U.S. Team of the Day - Women's Team Pursuit, USA, Cycling
Gold medalists in the team pursuit.  Second gold for Kristen Faulkner, second medal for Chloe Dygert.

Olympic Term of the Day:  Brutality Call - A water polo call in which the offending player is "demonstrate obvious intent to injure another player."

Olympic Events Watched:  Athletics, Basketball, Beach Volleyball, Kayak, Skateboarding, Volleyball, Water Polo

USA Potential Closing Ceremony Flag-Bearer (listed alphabetically): Simone Biles, Ryan Crouser, Caleb Dressel, Brady Ellison, Kristen Faulkner, Cole Hocker, Vincent Hancock, Torri Huske, Lee Kiefer, Katie Ledecky, Ilona Maher, Tom Murphy. Sophia Smith, Gabby Thomas

Monday, August 5, 2024

Olympics - Paris 2024 - Day 12

Day 12 - August 4, 2024



I have been trying my best to watch as many events as possible, which means that in order to maximize events, I have missed some of the general news, and such was with Saturday's big news surrounding the sprints.

Sha'Carri Richardson of the United States and Jamaican legend Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce were both denied entrance to the warm-up facility on Saturday due to the fact that they made their own travel arrangements and did not arrive on the Olympics-provided shuttle bus.  Apparently they had done the same thing for the previous days, but on Saturday, they were told that they had to walk to a different general entrance that required about an hour walk to-and-fro the other entrance.  Both runners were told that this was a rule change from the day prior.  So, given that neither runner was going to have their normal prep time/warm-up, and given that Fraser-Pryce, in her fifth Olympics, was nursing a bit of an injury, the Jamaican chose to DNS (did not start) rather than risk further injury.  Richardson did run the 100 meter semi-finals, but she did not look her top self.  She did win the semi-finals after a fabulous run by St. Lucia's Julien Alfred, but again Richardson did not run her top time.  Was she affected?  Probably for her semifinal run, but she most likely was able to do he rproper warmup for the final.

In bad news, the Belgian delegation announced that they would not be participating in the triathlon relay due to the fact that one of their triathletes became sick after the women's triathlon event, and they believe that swimming in the contaminated Seine River may have caused.  There is no way the Paris Olympic Committee could have seen this coming, since swimming has been prohibited in the Seine for over 100 years because of said contamination.

The men's 100 meter final has already been written about - A LOT - and deservedly so.  I am just going to say WOW, and congratulations to Noah Lyles of the USA (gold), Kishane Thompson of Jamaica (silver) and Fred Kerley of the USA (bronze).  Each runner finished the race under 10 seconds, and here is the finish line!



Lyles was truly one of the superstars entering these games, and his gold medal solidified his status as a track legend, even before the 200 meters and the 4x100 meters.  Two other superstars entering Paris are Novak Djokovic and Scottie Scheffler.  Novak Djokovic defeated Carlos Alcaraz in an instant classic 7-6, 7-6, easily taking both tiebreakers.  This completes the career Golden Slam for Novak Djokovic (Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, US Open, Olympic gold), joining Steffi Graf, Andre Agassi, Rafael Nadal, and Serena Williams.


Scottie Scheffler came to these games the number 1 ranked player in the world, but entering Sunday's final round, Scheffler found himself in sixth place, and 4 shots out of the lead.  Jon Rahm Made the turn 
in the lead, and after the 10th hole, found his lead had grown to 4 shots.  But Scheffler birdied four holes down the stretch to take the lead, which he did not relinquish, even as the remaining leaders finished after he did, with Tommy Fleetwood of Great Britain needing to chip in from about 80 feet to earn a playoff.  Fleetwood earned silver and Japan's Hideki Matsuyama won silver.  Scheffler definitely cherished this win, as he showed his emotions on the podium!


From one emotion to another ... let's go to the badminton court.  Rio 2016 gold medalist in singles, Carolina Marin from Spain did not have the opportunity to defend her title in Tokyo thanks to a left ACL tear in 2019 and a right ACL tear in 2021.  She goes up 10-6 in the second set of the semi-finals before falling straight to the floor as she attempted to return the shuttlecock.  She immediately rolled onto her stomach and screaming.  The entire room went quiet (and keep in mind they play several matches simultaneously).  After a long time down, Marin gets up and puts a knee brace on her right knee to try to continue, and now ahead 10-7, she makes one step toward the shuttlecock and let's out a scream.  She goes down crying as we all know it is another knee injury.  She is surrounding by her coaches (which incidentally, her personal coach was also named coach of the French team, but he took that job only on the condition that he would also be allowed to coach Marin), trainers, her opponent - who exhibited nothing by genuine class and concern - and the officials.  You could see that the officials were trying not to ask the coaches if Marin could not continue because they did not want to force the coaches to have to say yes, but alas, they did.  She gets up and is helped to the sideline with the entire arena standing and applauding.  Get well soon Carolina.

Two other superstars competed in the last day of swimming, and succeeded in winning gold.  First, Caleb Dressel was fresh off his 9th gold medal won the day prior as the US team won the 4x100 mixed medley relay.  (He was not mentioned as winning his 9th medal in yesterday's update as Ryan Murphy and Nic Fink swam in the finals; with Dressel winning a gold from his participating in the semi-finals round.  His 9th gold medal ties him for second of all time with Paavo Nurmi, Larissa Latynina, Mark Spitz, Carl Lewis and Katie Ledecky.)  Dressel swam the third leg - the butterfly leg - in the 4x100 medley relay, and was amazing, clocking a 45.9 second leg.  He single-handedly gave the team a chance for gold while simultanesouly pulling away from third, fourth and fifth places.  But, the 10th gold was not to be, as China, with two swimmers who have had prior positive steroid tests swept under the rug, defeating the USA.

Bobby Finke took the lead immediately in teh men's 1500 meters freestyle, with a 54 second first lap, and tired the field quickly to the point where no other swimmer could mount a charge as Finke finished in world record time! 

Another world record was set in the pool as the United States women set the record in winning gold in the 4x100 meter medley relay.  The team of Regan Smith (backstroke), Lilly King (breaststroke), Gretchen Walsh (butterfly), and Torri Huske (freestyle) secured the gold over the Australians (silver), and also secured the title of most golds in the pool for the US with 8, over Australia's 7.


Also in the pool, Sweden's Sarah Sjoestrom maintained her dominance in the sprints by winning gold in the 50 meter freestyle to go along with her gold in the 100 meter freestyle.

Sunisa Lee won bronze on the uneven parallel bars, finishing just behind Qui Qiyuan of China who won silver, and the gold medalist Algeria's Kaylia Nemour.

The United States women's basketball team secured the number 1 overall seed in the knockout rounds by crushing Germany, mostly behind the strength of the bench, which outscored their opponents 52-13 in this game.  Both basketball teams are huge favorites to win gold.

At the skeet shooting venue, American Austin Jewell Smith secured the bronze medal, shooting better than everyone except Chile's Francisco Corvetta (gold) and Britain's Amber Rutter (silver).  Tomorrow is the first ever mixed team skeet shooting event, and with Jewell Smith winning the bronze, and Victor Hancock securing gold in the men's event, the USA should be primed to medal.

In the men's archery gold medal match, Brady Ellison of the USA competing against South Korea's Kim Woo-jin, and after both secured the same amount of points after all 5 sets, they went to a 1 arrow arch-off.  And despite hitting the 10 point bullseye, Ellison's arrow was just a bit farther from the center from Kim's, giving the South Korean the gold and Ellison the silver.

And, in Harvard athlete news, Kristen Faulkner, an alternate for the cycling road race who is competing in the indoor cycling events, took to the road race when Taylor Knibb withdrew to concentrate on the triathlon.  Faulkner, with Belgian Lotte Kopecky, began to chase Marianne Vos and Blanka Vas, who had taken off much earlier to form the lead.  Faulkner and Kopecky caught them with about 6 kilometers remaining, and Faulkner kept pushing the attack.  Kopecky, Vos and Vas just started looking at each other, and none of them had the will, or the ability, to try to go with Faulkner.  Faulkner continued unabated to the finish line for gold.  Kopecky, Vas and Vos finished in a photo finish for silver and bronze, with Vos from the Netherlands winning silver and Kopecky earning bronze.  The tally so far in these games for Harvard athletes is now 3 golds and 1 silver.  



The table tennis men's final was amazing, as 19th seed Truls Moregard of Sweden gave Chinese world champion Fan Zhendong all he could handle, but Zhendong was too much, winning gold.

Back at the track, Ukranian and Australian athletes dominated the women's high jump, with Ukranian world champion Yaroslava Mahuchikh winning gold and her compatriot Iryna Geraschenko earning bronze.  The Australians Nicola Olyslagers (silver) and Eleanor Patterson (bronze) also captured medals.

But I don't think we will see any ending like that men's 100 meter final.  Here it is again!



Athlete of the Day - Noah Lyles, United States, St. Lucia, Athletics
Delivered on all the hype in winning gold in one of the marquis events of the Olympics, in an ending that will be discussed for years.  Bobby Finke and Kristen Faulkner with honorable mentions.

Team of the Day - 4x100 meters women's medley relay, USA, Swimming
Regan Smith, Lilly King, Gretchen Walks and Torri Huske for a world record, and the gold that decided the team "competition".

Olympic Term of the Day:  Shuttlecock - In badminton, the cork to which feathers are attached to form a cone shape, or similar item of plastic, to be struck with the badminton rackets.

Olympic Events Watched:  Archery, Athletics, Badminton, Basketball, Beach Volleyball, Cycling, Golf, Kayak, Shooting, Swimming, Volleyball

USA Potential Closing Ceremony Flag-Bearer (listed alphabetically:  Simone Biles, Ryan Crouser, Caleb Dressel, Brady Ellison, Kristen Faulkner, Vincent Hancock, Torri Huske, Lee Kiefer, Katie Ledecky, Ilona Maher, Tom Murphy