Olympics: Paris 2024

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dimejinky99
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Better a bee than a judging panel. Honestly, Olympic boxing is a disgrace. There were 5 clear robberies in 3 hours yesterday. Never seen anything like it.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Ello Sailor wrote:Better a bee than a judging panel. Honestly, Olympic boxing is a disgrace. There were 5 clear robberies in 3 hours yesterday. Never seen anything like it.
who was robbed? havent seen any of the boxing..think we have someone in it today or tomorrow
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Not in medals, just round of 16 stuff. Mostly Asian women, not that I think it was political. Just complete and utter incompetence.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Ello Sailor wrote:Not in medals, just round of 16 stuff. Mostly Asian women, not that I think it was political. Just complete and utter incompetence.
right. i havent been paying attention but you might be onto something. loads of our lads were meant to be easy shoo ins for medals in the boxing and many of them on the way home already. some grumbling about unfair decisions from them too.
who knows

* we've got three women in the boxing today as it turns out. Kellie Harrington will be the one to watch. She lives round the corner from me :)
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Dude, like every second match is judged incorrectly. I'm not biased, I post on boxing forums. Everyone agrees this shit is a farce.

The worst was W. Bertal (Morocco) over J. Jitpong (Thailand) in 54kg W. The latter controlled the centre and landed harder, cleaner shots. Then she gets her foot stepped on and does a butt scoot, which was ruled a knockdown.

These judges are completely redacted. It's fucked.

But I digress...
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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dimejinky99 wrote:* we've got three women in the boxing today as it turns out. Kellie Harrington will be the one to watch. She lives round the corner from me :)
As a seasoned masochist, I will watch this shit. Hell yeah.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Ello Sailor wrote:Dude, like every second match is judged incorrectly. I'm not biased, I post on boxing forums. Everyone agrees this shit is a farce.

The worst was W. Bertal (Morocco) over J. Jitpong (Thailand) in 54kg W. The latter controlled the centre and landed harder, cleaner shots. Then she gets her foot stepped on and does a butt scoot, which was ruled a knockdown.

These judges are completely redacted. It's fucked.

But I digress...

shit..sounds like awful amateur hour, and this is the olympics..surely the judges and refs should be the best?
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Ello Sailor wrote:
dimejinky99 wrote:* we've got three women in the boxing today as it turns out. Kellie Harrington will be the one to watch. She lives round the corner from me :)
As a seasoned masochist, I will watch this shit. Hell yeah.

well she won gold last time but now you have me worried..
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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dimejinky99 wrote:shit..sounds like awful amateur hour, and this is the olympics..surely the judges and refs should be the best?
They are truly pathetic. Which is why no one takes Olympic boxing seriously. Remember Roy Jones Jr., perhaps the greatest pound-for-pound boxer of all time, being robbed of gold in Seoul '88? Completely fucking insane, and it seems like nothing has changed.

It might not even survive the next few cycles. It's that bad.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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So mad about inconsequential, amateur boxing matches right now. I might never emotionally recover from this.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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youre like the devastated rancor keeper in return of the jedi after Luke kills his baby...inconsolable..

it'll be alright pal..it'll be alright
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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That women’s rugby bronze medal ending was bonkers
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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E.H. Ruddock wrote:That women’s rugby bronze medal ending was bonkers

id argue rugby and soccer have no business at the olympics..countries only send their B teams anyways and as sailor pointed out, the referreees havent a clue what theyre doing.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Soccer teams are not b teams…they are sub 23 which is pretty cool because it gives a lot of players the experience of a well regarded tournament. You can have 3 majors too; and the kids can learn from them.

It’s very formative and important and you can see a lot of the great ones before the World Cup.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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BurtReynolds wrote:I won't stand for it.
I was out running this morning and happened upon a beach volleyball court where 6 young women (in their 20’s maybe), some wearing a lot less than in your screenshot, were with a single middle aged thinning hair dude who apparently was their coach. I’m wondering what league this must be (July, 6:30am), and mostly I’m thinking Nassar.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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Kellie nailing it :)
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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I have to agree with Dime about football at the Olympics. It's great if you're enjoying the games, but on this part of the globe, as long as I remember, nobody has ever cared about the Olympic football. But maybe it's different in South America. Anyways I think this article from The Guardian sums up my thoughts pretty well:
Men’s football is no longer a fit for it to remain in the Olympic Games

Nine years ago, I had a front-row seat at the Olympic Stadium in London for what would become known as Super Saturday. The ley lines of that evening are now firmly etched into the sporting lore of the UK: the triumphant last-lap surge of Jess Ennis, Mo Farah being physically roared over the line, that chirpy bloke who won the long jump. And yet my strongest and clearest memory of Super Saturday is none of these things.

It came about half an hour after Farah crossed the line, with the stadium still wreathed in a shimmering glow somewhere between heat and love. At which point, a member of the crowd shouted out to nobody in particular that 150 miles away in Cardiff, Team GB had just lost to South Korea on penalties in the quarter-finals of the men’s football. As the news filtered around, everybody – from the crowd to the press box to the journalist from L’Equipe sitting next to me – spontaneously burst into laughter.

Somehow it was just perfect: the perfect end to the perfect day of British sport. You didn’t need to be British or even English to grasp the incongruity of it all: the national team in the national game relegated to a comic afterthought, never (in all likelihood) to be seen again. At this moment of collective triumph, the Olympics was the Olympics and football was football, and the divide between the two had never been expressed more clearly.

Similarly, you don’t necessarily need to view events in Tokyo through a narrow Team GB filter to appreciate the basic dispensability of Olympic men’s football these days. There have been a few interesting moments: Richarlison’s hat-trick for Brazil against Germany, the utterly unhinged spectacle that was France 4-3 South Africa (0-0 after 52 minutes), the commitment and passion of the few countries (Honduras, South Korea, the host nation) for whom this genuinely seems to matter.

For all the undoubted apathy out there, let’s not pretend there isn’t an audience for this stuff. Four years after London, I sat in the top deck of the Maracanã to watch Neymar’s Brazil claim gold against Germany: arguably, the only one of the host nation’s 19 medals it truly cared about. But even this moment of cathartic grace came at the end of a painfully forgettable tournament defined by half-bothered teams and the sight of Serge Gnabry running at a terrified Fiji defence on the way to a 10-0 Germany win.

This, perhaps, is the biggest problem with Olympic football: a problem that feels specific to men’s football, but may in time come to subsume the women’s game too. Nobody really seems to know what it is: a development competition, a star vehicle, a sideshow knockabout.

And so it simply unfolds largely at random, starting long before the actual Olympics has started, ending long after other sports have taken centre stage, populated by an eclectic cast list (Dani Alves! Maya Yoshida! Khalid al-Ghannam!) and played at wildly varying levels of seriousness.

So Spain, with Pedri, Marco Asensio, Pau Torres and Dani Olmo, have sent pretty much an international-strength squad. France have a bunch of academy prospects captained by the 51-year-old Tigres striker André-Pierre Gignac. New Zealand have called up Chris Wood and Winston Reid. Manchester United seem quite happy to relinquish control of Eric Bailly to Ivory Coast for several weeks.

What is the meaning of all this? What does football add to the Olympics other than swelling an already packed programme in a variety of distant satellite venues? What does the Olympics add to football other than stuffing a few more fixtures into an already packed calendar?

All sport thrives on context and Olympic men’s football has existed for more than a century in a curious vacuum, largely devoid of narratives, storylines, defining moments or teams. Italy haven’t taken part since 2008. Belgium and the Netherlands have featured once between them in the past 70 years. Cameroon won gold in 2000 and nonsensically weren’t allowed to defend their title in 2004. The great Uruguayan team of the 1920s won consecutive gold medals in Paris and Amsterdam and then didn’t come back for 84 years.

I don’t quite subscribe to the maxim that the Olympics need to be the pinnacle of a sport for it to be worth its place: tennis and road cycling offer two arresting counterarguments. But it does have to feel like a meaningful part of the whole, an enterprise into which the sport itself is invested, where the value of a medal is broadly accepted by fans, governing bodies and above all the players. Through the postwar amateur era, the years of Soviet-bloc dominance and the current unsatisfactory compromise by which squads are staffed by whoever picks up the phone, this has probably never been the case.

Naturally, whenever anyone suggests scrapping any longstanding event or convention you get the usual howls of protest. And perhaps there are ways of reforming Olympic football: a dedicated slot in the calendar, a more intelligible qualification process, doing away with over-age players.

But the acid test of its worth is this: if, somehow, the rest of the Olympic men’s football tournament were quietly shelved, the medals put back in a drawer, the players discreetly spirited back on an overnight plane, would anyone really notice? Exactly.


https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/ ... 1627461072
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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TLDR but certainly World Cup and local/continental championships (such as Euro) are widely considered more important.

Same with tennis (ie Wimbledon) and golf (ie Masters) Major Championships.

Somehow the importance of Olympic Basketball (a winter sport by the way) has hung on. NBA players, of course, being responsible for that.
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Re: Olympics: Paris 2024

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most watched tournaments in the world?

world cup(soccer)
european championships(soccer)
olympics(all sorts)

soccer at olympics just isnt a priority for northern hemisphere teams. Hence none of them pay much heed to it. I get VGs point about it helping develop the game and younger players. That works for SA teams perhaps. But each EU/NH countries leagues are focused on their own internal structures and players resting for the summer for next season. Nothing whatsoever to be gained by sending a team worth a few hundred million euro off to play a contest nobody will even watch. Not when theres multiple risks involved including putting next years championship at risk
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