Israel's judo team wins two medals on one day: joy and yet unspeakable heartache

Israel's judo team wins two medals on one day: joy and yet unspeakable heartache

PARIS – Thirty-two years ago, at the 1992 Games in Barcelona, a young Israeli, Yael Arad, won her nation’s first-ever medal in judo, a silver in the women’s under 61-kilo class. The very next day, in the men’s under-71 category, another young Israeli, Oren Smadja won a bronze.

The story of Israel at the Olympic Games, its hopes and dreams, particularly in the aftermath of 1972, is and forever will be intertwined with Yael Arad, who is far better known, because history summoned her first, but also Oren Smadja.

On Thursday, amid so much in our world that makes being Israeli at the Olympics extraordinary, with all that word conveys, destiny called again, a mixture of elation and unspeakable heartache as a new generation of Israeli judo players for the first time in that nation’s history won two medals on the same day – Arad now both president of the Israeli Olympic Committee and a member of the International Olympic Committee, Smadja the men’s national team coach.

The hip-gyrating, staying alive beautiful world of racewalk: 'It's a talent,' says Kenyan, finishing 22nd

The hip-gyrating, staying alive beautiful world of racewalk: 'It's a talent,' says Kenyan, finishing 22nd

PARIS — When one thinks of Kenya, does one’s mind skip to – racewalk?

“I believe,” said 36-year-old Samuel Gathimba of Kenya, “I was born a walker.”

He also said, and he has a flair for any number of aptitudes, including expressing himself, “It’s a talent.”

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome anew to the amazing and, if you allow yourself to see it the way it can be, beautiful world of racewalk.

Six medals in some 30 years. Suddenly, two in two days -- hope anew for one of Europe's poorest nations, Moldova

Six medals in some 30 years. Suddenly, two in two days -- hope anew for one of Europe's poorest nations, Moldova

PARIS – By any measure, landlocked Moldova, on the northeastern corner of the Balkans, is one of the poorest countries in Europe. Bordered by Romania to the west and Ukraine to the north, east and south, Moldova has been buffeted by an array of crises made all the more challenging in the past two years by the war nearby.

Over the past 30 or so years, roughly half the people who once called Modolva home – they’re gone. This exodus, this demographic decline, is so profound the situation is potentially, as a nation, existential. When it gained independence amid the end of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, the population of Moldova was more than 4 million. Currently: 2.5 million, and dropping.

Before these Paris Games, Moldova had won a total – since its first appearance, in Atlanta in 1996, as an independent entity – of six medals.

Now, already, here two.

Both in judo. Both bronze.

What does it mean to 'win'? Racked by civil war, team from Yemen says, 'We believe in love and solidarity and humanity'

What does it mean to 'win'? Racked by civil war, team from Yemen says, 'We believe in love and solidarity and humanity'

The national Olympic committee of Yemen's annual budget is about $370,000, all of which comes from outside the country, mostly from the International Olympic Committee. That money supports 16 sports and feeds a staff of 21. Each lives on roughly $200 per month. There is no government funding. “They don’t have the budget anymore,” the secretary general of the Olympic committee, Mohammed Al-Ahjeri, 66, said here Tuesday.

This, though, is not a story about pity for Yemen. Far from it.

This is a story about the true meaning of the Olympics.

What it means, ultimately, to “win.”

Again the soul poet Rodney King: can't we get along? Algerian judo player doesn't show against Israeli

Again the soul poet Rodney King: can't we get along? Algerian judo player doesn't show against Israeli

PARIS – Messaoud Redouane Dris of Algeria is the No. 14-ranked fighter in judo’s men’s under-73 kilo class. He’s the current African champion. A junior African champion. Last year, he took silver at the International Judo Federation Grand Prix in Zagreb, Croatia.  He is the gold medalist at the 2022 Mediterranean Games.

This is a guy who, one would think, by any measure would relish the chance to get on the tatami at his first – very first – Olympic Games.

But no.

Script it, fight club: American baptized by George Foreman vs. Refugee foe born in Iran

Script it, fight club: American baptized by George Foreman vs. Refugee foe born in Iran

PARIS – In the blue corner, representing the United States, from Spring, Texas, ladies and gentlemen, Roscoe Hill, dancing with orange shoes, baptized – why should you believe it because everything in boxing is 100% true but this really is – by George Foreman himself.

In the red corner, in lime-green shoes, representing the Refugee Olympic Team, Omid Ahmadisafa, a product of the Islamic Republic of Iran, a world champion in 2017 in kickboxing – not boxing, kickboxing – who three years later, while competing in Italy, sought asylum was invited to train with the German national team in Cologne.

And here we were, the rain having finally cleared outside, the stands maybe half full, perhaps 25 reporters from around the world here inside Arena Paris Nord, to take in this first-round men’s under 51-kilogram fight.

You couldn’t make it up if you tried. Script this, fight club, if you dare.

Olympics are about hopes and dreams. Second to last in men's 100 breast. And grateful

Olympics are about hopes and dreams. Second to last in men's 100 breast. And grateful

PARIS – Swim competition at these Paris 2024 Games got underway at 11:02 Saturday morning. By 11:38, Micah Masei, representing America Samoa, was done, his Olympics over just that quickly, 34th of 35 in the men’s 100-meter breaststroke, second to last.

Masei knew coming in that this, or something very much like this, would be the drill.

Which, in the case of Micah Masei and literally thousands of others of those taking part in these Paris Games, is absolutely the fundamental truth.

Because for most here the Olympics are not about winning.

The Olympics are about hopes and dreams.

Most swimmers do not take part in the opening ceremony. He did. Through the pouring rain. To take part in what International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach declared to the assembled athletes would be the “pinnacle of [their] Olympic journey.”

Plus ça change: IOC love fest (not) for USA as SLC wins for 2034

PARIS – Here in France they have a saying for the thing that transpired as Salt Lake City won the right to the 2034 Winter Games, delivered amid an International Olympic Committee thrashing of the IOC’s favorite dog to beat, the United States of America.

Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.

The more things change, Uncle Sam, the more they stay the same.

The IOC gave Salt Lake 2034 because it had to. It needs American money. The U.S. television rights deal expires in 2032.

The attack on Trump, the lone wolf ... and the Paris Games

The attack on Trump, the lone wolf ... and the Paris Games

There are 44,000 windows along the six-kilometer route, roughly three and a half miles, of the River Seine proposed for the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympics.

Keep this in mind as you weigh Saturday’s events in Pennsylvania, where a gunman climbed to an open roof to take shots at Donald Trump.

It is 100% impossible to secure open space.

LA28 new CEO: former three-star general a 'people person' who 'gets [stuff] done'

LA28 new CEO: former three-star general a 'people person' who 'gets [stuff] done'

Reynold Hoover is four weeks into his new gig, chief executive officer at LA28.

Hoover, 63, comes to the job after an incredible career, mostly in the military, that saw him earn the rank of lieutenant general. That’s three stars.

Skeptics: do we really need a former three-star general militarizing the Olympic Games? In, of all places, Los Angeles?

 “I’m not going to try to militarize the organization or the Olympics,” Hoover said Wednesday in his first interview since taking over at LA28. “That’s the wrong way to go.