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2016 Olympics
6/28/2016 8:58:02 PM
US Olympic swimming trials 2016: Time, TV schedule and events for Tuesday

Katie Ledecky will work toward trying to cement her spot in the 2016 Rio Olympics at the USA Swimming Olympic trials on Tuesday. Ledecky has entered five events for the trials, held in Omaha, and of those events the 200-meter freestyle preliminaries will be on Tuesday.

Missy Franklin, herself an Olympic gold medalist just like Ledecky, will also be in trials action on Tuesday. Of the events on Tuesday, she will be participating in the 200-meter freestyle and 100-meter backstroke. That means she'll be competing with Ledecky in one of those events, but two swimmers will qualify from the trials. Both of those events will only feature prelims on the day.

Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte, the faces of men's swimming in the US, will be participating in one event each as well. Phelps dropped the 200-meter freestyle event from his calendar and will be participating in the 200-meter butterfly on Tuesday. Lochte will participate in the 200-meter freestyle semifinals.

Between Phelps, Lochte, Franklin and Ledecky, there are a ton of Olympic gold medalists, and if they all perform up to snuff then USA Swimming will be in great shape heading into Rio later this summer.

Tuesday's events get underway at 11 a.m. ET with the first block of prelims, which includes the women's 200-meter freestyle and individual medley and the men's 200-meter butterfly. That will run until 2 p.m., with the second block consisting of those same prelims from 7-8 p.m.

Finally, the last block will contain the women's 100-meter breaststroke final and 100-meter backstroke final; the men's 200-meter freestyle final and 100-meter backstroke final; and a few more semifinals in various events. Those begin at 8 p.m. and will run for a little over an hour, and will be broadcast on NBC and via livestream. The first block will just be available via live stream, and the second will have a stream as well as coverage on NBCSN.

Olympic trials swimming coverage for Tuesday (all times ET)

Men's Events: 200-meter butterfly (prelims and semifinal), 200-meter freestyle (final), 100-meter backstroke (final)
Women's Events: 200-meter freestyle (prelims and semifinal), 200-meter individual medley (prelims and semifinal), 100-meter breaststroke (final), 100-meter backstroke (final)
Time: 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. (prelims), 7 - 8 p.m. (prelims), 8 - 9:20 p.m. (semifinals, finals)
TV: NBCSN (second prelims), NBC (semifinals, finals)
Streaming: NBC Sports


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RE: 2016 Olympics
6/28/2016 9:01:33 PM
Kuwait to file USD 1 billion lawsuit against IOC for blocking athletes to play under its flag at 2016 Olympics

Kuwait City: Kuwait said on Thursday it will sue the International Olympic Committee in Switzerland for USD 1 billion, the latest twist in an ongoing struggle that's blocked athletes from competing under the Kuwaiti flag at this year's games in Rio de Janeiro.

The comments by Minister of State for Youth Affairs Sheikh Salman al-Homoud Al Sabah, carried by the state-run Kuwait News Agency, comes after the IOC suspended the Kuwaiti Olympic body in October on grounds of government interference in sports.

In response, Kuwait filed a lawsuit in January in local courts against 14 board members of its Olympic committee seeking USD 1.3 billion. That lawsuit accused the members of corrupting the Olympic movement in Kuwait and interfering in sports affairs.

This new lawsuit will further widen the rift between the Kuwait government and the IOC, making lifting the suspension before the Rio games even less likely.

In a meeting earlier this month, the IOC's executive board authorized Kuwaiti athletes to compete as individuals under the Olympic flag if they qualify.

In his comments carried Thursday, Sheikh Salman called the IOC decisions "totally unacceptable."

Kuwait "showed a sincere desire to cooperate, but all to no avail," he said. "We were put in an embarrassing situation in the eyes of international sports circles and looked at as if we were outlaws."

Kuwait was first suspended by the IOC in 2010, also in a dispute over government interference. The country was reinstated in 2012 ahead of the London Games after Kuwait's ruler, Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah, pledged autonomy for the Olympic committee and promised new legislation for institutions governing sports


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RE: 2016 Olympics
6/28/2016 9:04:11 PM
Rio Olympics 2016: Sachin Tendulkar accepts IOA’s invitation to become goodwill ambassador

Cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar has accepted Indian Olympic Association’s (IOA) invitation to become the country’s goodwill ambassador for the upcoming Rio Olympics. Sachin Tendulkar is the third goodwill ambassador roped in by IOA after Bollywood actor Salman Khan and ace shooter Abhinav Bindra.

The IOA today confirmed that Tendulkar has accpeted its offer after the national Olympic body had invited the batting legend to come on board on April 29. “Sachin Tendulkar has accepted our request to become goodwill ambassador of Indian contingent at the Olympics. We have received the official communication from him accpeting our request,” IOA Secretary General Rajiv Mehta told PTI.

“We are very happy to have an iconic sportsperson like Mr Tendulkar on board as goodwill ambassador. We are thankful to him. We hope his association and the association of other goodwill ambassadors will take Indian sport forward,” he added.

The IOA’s had approached Bindra, Tendulkar and celebrated music composer AR Rehman after its move to make Salman the goodwill ambassador had drawn flak from many quarters, including wrestler Yogeshwar Dutt and former athlete Milkha Singh, who had said the honour should be given to top sportspersons.

The IOA Secretary General, however, said they are yet to get a confirmation from Rehman. “Mr. Rehman is yet to communicate to us but we are hopeful that he will also accept our invitation,” Mehta said.

Asked about what specific role the goodwill ambassadors would play, Mehta said: “These iconic sportspersons and celebrities will spread the idea of Olympic movement in every nook and corner of the country, every village, block and city of India. “They will help in buolding up a sporting culture in this country. We need a sporting culture if we want to become a sporting country.”


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RE: 2016 Olympics
6/28/2016 9:09:33 PM
Olympic Committee Could Bar 31 Athletes From Rio Games
A major doping crackdown dating back to 2008 could result in 31 athletes being barred from competing in the 2016 Rio Olympics.
A major doping crackdown dating back to 2008 could result in 31 athletes being barred from competing in the 2016 Rio Olympics

After retests of samples from the 2008 Beijing Olympics, 31 athletes from 12 countries in six sports could be banned from this summer's Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, the International Olympic Committee said Tuesday.

In a statement, the IOC said it retested 454 samples from the 2008 Beijing Games, using "the very latest scientific analysis methods." The retesting yielded suspicious results from dozens of athletes.

"All those athletes infringing anti-doping rules will be banned from competing at the Olympic Games Rio 2016," the statement from the IOC said.

The IOC said it is expecting 250 more results from retested samples taken at the 2012 London Games.

"The aim is to stop any drugs cheats coming to the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro," the IOC said.

Retesting samples from Olympic Games is not a new practice. As drug testing technology improves, the IOC is able to better analyze samples. The Associated Press reports that a few months after the Beijing Olympics, the IOC "reanalyzed nearly 1,000 of the total of 4,000 samples with a new test for the blood-boosting drug CERA. Five athletes were caught, including 1,500-meter gold medalist Rashid Ramzi of Bahrain."

The news service also reports that "nearly 500 doping samples from the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin" have been retested, but the IOC has not revealed whether any of the tests came back positive. The AP adds: "five athletes were caught in retests of samples from the 2004 Athens Olympics, including men's shot put winner Yuriy Bilonog of Ukraine."

The IOC's Tuesday statement also announced an investigation into the drug testing during the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia. The scandal surrounding allegations of a massive state-sponsored doping operation in Russia has been gathering strength since the former head of the Russian anti-doping lab, Grigory Rodchenkov, disclosed the details of the illicit enterprise to the The New York Times last week. The newspaper wrote that it was "one of the most elaborate — and successful — doping ploys in sports history." It described the setup, as confessed by Rodchenkov:

"In a dark-of-night operation, Russian antidoping experts and members of the intelligence service surreptitiously replaced urine samples tainted by performance-enhancing drugs with clean urine collected months earlier, somehow breaking into the supposedly tamper-proof bottles that are the standard at international competitions, Dr. Rodchenkov said. For hours each night, they worked in a shadow laboratory lit by a single lamp, passing bottles of urine through a hand-size hole in the wall, to be ready for testing the next day, he said."

The IOC requested the the World Anti-Doping Agency fully investigate the allegations. The IOC also directed its lab in Switzerland — where the Sochi samples will be stored for 10 years — to cooperate with WADA's analysis.

"All these measures are a powerful strike against the cheats we do not allow to win. They show once again that dopers have no place to hide," said IOC President Thomas Bach in the statement. "The re-tests from Beijing and London and the measures we are taking following the worrying allegations against the Laboratory in Sochi are another major step to protect the clean athletes irrespective of any sport or any nation."

The revelation about corruption in Russia's anti-doping lab also prompted the U.S. Department of Justice to launch an investigation, according to the Times.

A spokesperson from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York would not confirm the probe to NPR, citing DOJ policy to not comment on investigations, but the Times, citing "two people familiar with the case," said "prosecutors are believed to be pursuing conspiracy and fraud charges."


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RE: 2016 Olympics
6/28/2016 9:13:04 PM
Golf back in the Olympics after 112 years, but for how long?

The Associated Press

FILE - In this June 3, 2016, file photo, Jason Day, of Australia, tees off on the 14th hole during the second round of the Memorial golf tournament in Dublin, Ohio. Day said he is pulling out of Rio Olympics because of concerns about Zika. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File) The Associated Press

By DOUG FERGUSON, AP Golf Writer

AKRON, Ohio (AP) — For the longest time, golf's biggest headache in preparing for a return to the Olympics was getting a new course built in Rio de Janeiro.

That seems like a nuisance compared with its next major hurdle.

Who's going to play?

Ten eligible players over the last two months have pulled out of the Olympics, six of the specifically citing concerns about the Zika virus. The last week alone was particularly devastating to a sport wanting to make a good impression after being gone from the games for 112 years.

Rory McIlroy, a four-time major champion with the broadest global appeal among young stars, was the most prominent player to withdraw. That was until Tuesday when Jason Day, the No. 1 player in the world, said he would not be going. Shane Lowry and Branden Grace are planning to start families and will stay home because of Zika.

That's four players from the top 25 who won't be in Rio, and dread that more might follow.

One of them might be Jordan Spieth, who described his Olympic position Tuesday as "uncertain."

"I've always been excited about the possible opportunity, but there's quite a few different factors that would turn somebody away from going. It's not just one, there's quite a few factors," Spieth said, mentioning Zika, security and reports of violence.

The International Golf Federation stopped responding to each withdrawal because it was repeating the same statement: It is disappointed, but understands that each player has to decide on his own.

"Unfortunately with what's going on with Brazil and Rio with the Zika virus, there's a small chance it could happen, and I just can't put my family through that, especially with the future children we're looking at having," Day said.

While the sport is assured a spot in 2020 in Tokyo, the International Olympic Committee will vote next year to decide if golf stays longer than that. And it doesn't help when there's an All-Star roster of players who won't be there for whatever reasons.

Because countries are limited to two players (a maximum of four if they are among the top 15), only 18 players from the top 50 will be in Rio — as of Tuesday.

IGF executive director Antony Scanlon, who has been involved in nine Olympics, believes golf still can put on a good show.

"We gave a commitment to have the best players there," Scanlon said. "The decision they're making are personal. We can't make those decisions for them. All you can do is understand the decision they're making. After the games, we'll have two worthy champions, gold medalists that history will look back on. When the IOC members come to the venue, they're going to have a great time. They'll experience a sport where you can get close to the players and see their passion and determination.

"All we can do is make sure we deliver a great event."

It wasn't supposed to turn out this way.

When golf made its pitch to get back into the Olympics for the first time since St. Louis in 1904, the IGF presented video support from Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson and other top players who offered enthusiasm and unconditional support for Olympic competition.

That was in 2009, before Brazil was devastated by political corruption and an economic meltdown, before concerns over polluted water and whether Rio could provide adequate security. And that was before Zika.

Brazil has been the hardest hit by the outbreak of Zika, a mosquito-borne virus linked to severe birth defects and possible neurological problems in adults. Schwartzel and Lowry said if the Olympics were anywhere else, they would be there.

"The Olympic committee has to look at this and go, 'Look, it was a weird situation, so don't penalize golf because of a weird situation,'" Bubba Watson said.

But is it as simple as blaming it on Rio?

No women eligible for the Olympics have dropped out, and they would seem to be at greater risk from Zika. Then again, the women do not have the chance to play on a big stage like the Olympics. All three of their U.S. majors are held the week before the men's majors and often get lost in coverage.

The perception is that Zika is an easy way out from going to South America for an Olympic competition that has little history behind it in golf. And the leading organizations did themselves no favors by cramming their biggest events into the summer ahead of the games. The final two majors, the British Open and PGA Championship, will be held in the month before the competition in Rio.

After the Olympics, PGA Tour players go right into the lucrative FedEx Cup, and then for Americans and Europeans, it's off to the Ryder Cup and its flag-waving fervor.

"Other athletes have been training four and eight years to go to the Olympics. I can see why they're going because it's the pinnacle of their sport," Lowry said. "It's not the pinnacle of golf yet. It could be in 20 years' time. But it's not like winning the U.S. Open or winning the Masters or playing in the Ryder Cup."


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