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    Transgender weightlifter Laurel Hubbard OUT of Tokyo Olympics after failing all three attempts in first Games appearance

    TRANSGENDER athlete Laurel Hubbard is OUT of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics after failing to record a successful snatch.The New Zealander made history this afternoon by becoming the first transgender athlete to compete in an individual event at the Games.
    Laurel Hubbard braces herself to lift 120kgCredit: GETTY
    But the Kiwi failed to nail her opening attemptCredit: GETTY
    Hubbard’s second attempt was scratched off as she slightly pressed the barCredit: EPA
    Hubbard reacts after failing her third liftCredit: Getty
    A dejected Hubbard waves to the crowd after failing her third liftCredit: EPA
    A staggering 120kg was placed on the Olympic bar for Hubbard to snatch above her head for her first lift.
    The 43-year-old, however, was unable to adequately stabilise the weight after a decent lift off.
    Hubbard, who was competing in the over 87kg division, then failed her following attempts at 125 and 130kg.
    The Kiwi’s third failure sent her crashing out of the tournament as athletes are not allowed to proceed to the clean and jerk portion of the competition without recording a successful snatch.
    Hubbard was visibly devastated but showed her class by bowing to the officials and those in attendance in the crowd.
    Before walking back to the warm-up room, she looked at the camera and said: “Thank you.”
    After her early exit, Hubbard said: “I’m not entirely unaware of the controversy which surrounds my participation at these Games.
    And as such, I would particularly like to thank the IOC, for I think really affirming its commitment to the principles of Olympism and establishing that sport is something for all people, that it is inclusive and is accessible.”
    Thank youLaurel Hubbard after her third snatch attempt
    Hubbard has been eligible to lift at the Olympics since 2015, when the IOC began permitting transgender athletes to compete as women if their testosterone levels were below 10 nanomoles per litre for at least a year before competition.
    Many scientists and athletes, however, criticised the guidelines, insisting the Hubbard had an unfair advantage due to her body having years of the physiological benefits of testosterone.
    Belgian weightlifter Anna Vanbellinghen was one of the few athletes to come out and lambast the decision, which he branded a ‘bad joke’.
    She said: “I understand that for sports authorities nothing is as simple as following your common sense and that there are a lot of impracticalities when studying such a rare phenomenon.
    “But for athletes, the whole thing feels like a bad joke,” Vanbellinghen added.
    “Life-changing opportunities are missed for some athletes — medals and Olympic qualifications — and we are powerless.”
    Hubbard was grateful for the opportunity to compete in the games and thanked the IOC the day before her exit.
    She said: “The Olympic Games are a global celebration of our hopes, our ideals and our values.
    “I commend the IOC for its commitment to making sport inclusive and accessible.”

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    Hubbard transition from male to female in 2012 and underwent hormone therapy that year.
    Five years after making the transition, she returned to competition at the Australian International & Australian Open in Melbourne.
    Hubbard, the daughter of former Auckland Mayor Dick, left the competition with a gold medal after snatching 125kg and clean and jerking 145kg at a bodyweight of 131.83kg.
    Laurel Hubbard becomes first transgender weightlifter to compete at Olympics after overcoming career-threatening injuru More

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    Floyd Mayweather tried to convince Team GB boxer and Olympics finalist Ben Whittaker to turn pro in 2017

    TEAM GB’s Olympic star Ben Whittaker rejected Floyd Mayweather’s advice in 2017 to turn professional.The 24-year-old will compete for the gold medal on Wednesday when he faces Cuba’s light-heavyweight Arlen Lopez.
    Light-heavyweight Ben Whittaker faces Cuba’s Arlen Lopez for the gold medal on WednesdayCredit: Sportsfile
    Ben Whittaker met Floyd Mayweather in 2017 and mentioned he was aiming for Olympic gold. Mayweather said: “When are you turn pro? After the Olympics? Oh Hell no. Trophies don’t collect nothing but dust.”Now Whittaker will earn a fortune if he wins gold on Wednesday. pic.twitter.com/mFTSwM9aZ7— Declan Taylor (@DeclanTaylor87) August 1, 2021

    Lopez, 28, is looking to win back-to-back gold medals in the Games after scooping the top prize in the middleweight division in Rio 2016.
    But he knows he will have to be at his best to beat Midlands supremo Whittaker, who won a bronze medal at the 2019 World Championships.
    And in a clip that has emerged from 2017, American boxing legend Mayweather urged then-middleweight Whittaker to enter the paid ranks after Anthony Joshua introduced the pair.
    In a video posed by FightHype, Joshua can be seen telling Mayweather: “This guy here, this is Ben Whittaker. The future.
    “Olympic fighter right now, but I swear to you, this guy here, he’s the creme de la creme.”
    Mayweather then asked Whittaker: “When are you turning pro?”
    To which Whittaker said: “After the Olympics.”
    A shocked Mayweather, who won the bronze medal at the 1996 Games, then remarked: “Oh hell no! Trophies don’t do nothing but collect dust.”
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    Mayweather urged Team GB star Whittaker to turn professional in 2017Credit: Alamy

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    And speaking to the Daily Star, Whittaker has stated that winning a gold medal would put him in good stead for the future.
    Commenting on his meeting with the 15-time world champion, he said: “He told me waiting for the Olympics is a waste, and that all medals do is catch dust.
    “But he was kind of lying cos he did it himself.
    “The medal might catch dust but it opened a lot of doors for him. It will do the same for me.”
    Before adding: “I went to the worlds and got a bronze but if it wasn’t gold then it doesn’t matter.
    “Being an Olympian is great but if I don’t do what I’m supposed to do out there then I’ll never talk about the Olympics again.”
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    Olympic boxing drama for Team GB as Frazer Clarke controversially goes through after rival disqualified for head clash More

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    Tokyo 2020: Watch Dutch runner Sifan Hassan FALL on final lap of 1,500m heat but somehow get back up to win race

    DUTCH long-distance star Sifan Hassan remarkably won her 1,500m heat – despite FALLING on the final lap.Hassan, 28, got involved in a tangle of legs just after hearing the bell for the fourth lap at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo.
    Sifan Hassan fell to the track on the final lap of her 1,500m heat in TokyoCredit: Getty
    She got back up, composed herself and then overtook the rest of the field to winCredit: Reuters

    She was preparing to make her final dash from near the back of the group in the final 400m.
    When Kenya’s Edinah Jebitok took a tumble right in front of her, Hassan could not react in time and went down with her, rolling on the track.
    That left the Ethiopia-born Dutch runner at least 30m behind the leaders with 375m to go – and plenty of work to do.
    But 1,500m world champion Hassan did not feel sorry for herself and instead dusted herself down immediately then launched a staggering comeback.
    She blitz past the rest of the field – including Australia’s Jessica Hull and American Elle Purrier St. Pierre – to cross the line in first place in 4:05.17.
    And with it, Hassan booked her spot in the semi-finals for the 1,500m and kept alive her dream of a historic 1,500m, 5,000m and 10,000m athletics treble at the Tokyo Games.
    Former British 100m champion Jeanette Kwakye told the BBC: “There was a bit of panic, she got up and she started absolutely bombing it!
    “She loves the 1500m so she absolutely had to qualify by right, she didn’t want to do that much work, but the fall forced her to do so. It’s all still on for her.”
    One fan wrote on Twitter: “Sifan Hassan is….ready. I’ve never seen anything as impressive as that in a 1500 heat. Falls with 380 to go, rolls, loses 25-30 metres, gets up, still wins.”
    Another said: “Falling on the last lap of a 1500 is only a problem if your name isn’t Sifan Hassan.”
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    And a third added: “This is excellent. What a powerful life lesson.”
    British pair Laura Muir and Katie Snowden both secured their spots in the semi-finals.
    But there was heartbreak for fellow Team GB hopeful Revee Walcott-Nolan who just missed out as one of the fastest losers.
    Hassan lost around 30m on her rivals after the bell but showed true fighting spiritCredit: Getty
    Her dream of winning the 1,500m, 5,000m and 10,000m gold medal remains aliveCredit: Reuters
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    Tokyo 2020: High jumpers in tears of joy after they agree to share gold medal at Tokyo 2020 in amazing scenes at Olympic stadium More

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    Why is Usain Bolt not competing at Tokyo 2020 Olympics?

    THE Tokyo Olympics is well underway – and we have a new 100m men’s champion.However, it won’t feel quite the same without Usain Bolt competing.
    Usain Bolt will be playing no part in this summer’s OlympicsCredit: Reuters
    Why isn’t Usain Bolt at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics?
    Usain Bolt will not be at the Tokyo Olympic Games because he has retired.
    The Jamaican, who would be competing in Tokyo at the age of 34 if he had continued, last raced at the 2017 World Athletics Championships in London.
    There, he picked up a bronze medal after being beaten by American duo Christian Coleman and Justin Gatlin.
    That marked the first time he had been beaten in a sprint final since the 4x100m relay at the 2007 World Championships.
    And in the 4x100m in London, Bolt pulled his hamstring and was carried over the line in agony by his Jamaican team-mates in his final ever race.
    Trayvon Bromell is favourite to win the men’s 100m in TokyoCredit: AFP
    A year later, Bolt attempted to live a lifelong dream of pursuing a career in football as he signed for Australia’s Central Coast Mariners.
    However, after eight weeks he was unable to agree a contract extension and said: “My sports life is over.”
    He added that it was “fun while it lasted,” saying he “really enjoyed just being in a team and it was [much] different from track and field.”
    Bolt concluded: “I’m just doing many different things … the sports life is over, so I’m now moving into different businesses.
    “I have a lot of things in the pipeline, so as I say, I’m just dabbling in everything and trying to be a businessman now.”
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    How many false starts are sprinters allowed in 100m? Rules explained for 200m, 400m, relay and hurdles at Olympics

    SPRINTERS are allowed ZERO false starts at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, and if found guilty will be instantly disqualified – if they starter decides they’ve violated it.From January 2010 onward, the official track and field false start regulation indicated that any athlete starting within 100 milliseconds of the gun being fired would be disqualified from the race.
    Usain Bolt’s false start in the men’s 100m final at the World Athletics Championships in South KoreaCredit: AP:Associated Press
    James Dasaolu holds head in hands after disqualification from 2016 World Indoor Championships, OregonCredit: Reuters
    Research has found that a reaction time faster than one-tenth of a second is impossible for a human, and the runner is therefore deemed to have anticipated the gun.
    On the ‘Track & Field 101: Rules’ on the Olympics website, it states: “If a sprinter commences his or her starting motion from the set position before the Starter’s gun is fired, it is deemed a false start. The first false start of a race results in an automatic disqualification to the offending runner.”
    How can they detect a false start?
    False start detection systems were introduced in 1979 and Omega’s false start detection system made its Olympics debut at the Los Angeles Olympics Games.
    In major athletics competitions, reaction times are currently detected using IAAF accredited false start detection systems.
    These systems determine athletes reaction time using encased accelerometers or force sensors fixed to the rear of the starting block rail to detect changes in force or acceleration exerted on the blocks through the feet.
    RT’s can now be instantly calculated accurately to 0.001 of a second, but for results, are recorded to the nearest 0.01 second.
    For athletics and specifically sprint athletes reaction times and overall sprint time detection methods have improved dramatically since the original 1896 Olympic Games.
    Were false starts previously allowed?
    Originally, before 2010, the “one-and-done” regulation was implemented meaning one false start per race in events up to 400 metres would be allowed rather than one false start per athlete as in the past.
    This means the athlete making the second false start of a race, breaking the accepted reaction time of 0.10 seconds, will be disqualified regardless of whether he or she was responsible for the first one.
    However, sprinters would often take advantage of the previous false start rules, purposely jumping the gun either to play mind games with their competition and set them on edge before the race or use the extra leniency to predict the gun and gain bonus milliseconds from their efforts.
    So, World Athletics just decided to just ban any false starts – it’s one and YOU’RE OUT.
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    Famous false starts at previous track and field events
    Usain Bolt
    At the 2011 IAAF World Championships in Athletics in Daegu, South Korea, Usain Bolt, 100-meter world record holder, jumped the gun in the 100-meter final over a year after the new regulations had been put into place.
    Bolt walked off the track, head in hands, only to watch his Jamaican teammate Yohan Blake take the gold.
    Usain Bolt after disqualification at 2011 World ChampionshipsCredit: AFP
    Jon Drummond
    Drummond’s infamous “I did not move!” plea after his disqualification at the 2003 World Athletics Championships in Paris.
    Drummond protested his disqualification by storming into the infield, repeatedly yelling in front of officials and laying on the track.
    His tantrum delayed the 100-meter final by ONE HOUR. 
    A race official shows Jon Drummond the red card after his false start at the 2003 World Athletics Championships in ParisCredit: AP:Associated Press
    Linford Christie
    The 1992 Olympic 100-meter champion was disqualified under an even older false-start rule.

    Before 2003, any sprinter could false start once and get away with just a warning however Christie reacted early twice, delayed the competition and refused to leave the track.
    This was the first time a previous champion was unable to defend his title live on TV.
    Linford Christie walking back to his starting blocks after disqualification at the 1992 Barcelona gamesCredit: Reuters More

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    Tokyo Olympics football fixtures and results: Full semi-final schedule as Brazil and Spain bid for gold

    IF Euro 2020 wasn’t exciting enough, there’s plenty more football at the Tokyo Olympics.But Team GB are out of the women’s competition after losing their quarter-final with Australia.
    Brazil took gold last time out at Rio 2016, after beating Germany in a penalty shoot-out in the finalCredit: Splash News
    Team GB’s women starred at the London 2012 Games but were knocked out in the semi finalsCredit: Getty Images – Getty
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    What are the Olympic football groups?
    The men’s competition consists of sixteen teams split up four by four per group and the women’s competition will consist of 12 teams split up in three groups.
    Men’s groups

    Group A: Japan, South Africa, Mexico, France
    Group B: New Zealand, South Korea, Honduras, Romania
    Group C: Egypt, Spain, Argentina, Australia
    Group D: Brazil, Germany, Ivory Coast, Saudi Arabia

    Women’s groups

    Group E: Japan, Great Britain, Chile, Canada
    Group F: Brazil, Netherlands, China, Zambia
    Group G: USA, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand

    The GB Women’s team qualified for the Olympics by virtue of England’s performance at the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup, when they finished fourth in France.
    Defending champions Germany will not field a women’s side at the Olympics after they lost their World Cup quarter-final to Sweden.
    And unlike the men’s event – which is an under-23 tournament – the Olympics is one of women’s football’s biggest events, with no age restrictions.
    Olympic football fixtures in full
    Games in the same group are being played two at a time in various stadia, so second kick-off times are approximate.
    Wednesday July 21 – Women

    E: Great Britain 2-0 Chile
    E: Japan 1-1 Canada
    F: China 0-5 Brazil
    F: Zambia 3-10 Netherlands
    G: Sweden 3-0 USA
    G: Australia 2-1 New Zealand

    Thursday July 22 – Men

    C: Egypt 0-0 Spain
    C: Argentina 0-2 Australia
    A: Mexico 4-1 France
    A: Japan 1-0 South Africa
    B: New Zealand 1-0 South Korea
    B: Honduras 0-1 Romania
    D: Ivory Coast 2-1 Saudi Arabia
    D: Brazil 4-2 Germany

    Saturday July 24 – Women

    E: Chile 1-2 Canada
    E: Japan 0-1 Great Britain
    F: China 4-4 Zambia
    F: Netherlands 3-3 Brazil
    G: Sweden 4-2 Australia
    G: New Zealand 1-6 USA

    Sunday July 25 – Men

    C: Egypt 0-1 Argentina
    C: Australia 0-1 Spain
    B: New Zealand 2-3 Honduras
    B: Romania 0-4 South Korea
    A: France 4-3 South Africa
    A: Japan 2-1 Mexico
    D: Brazil 0-0 Ivory Coast
    D: Saudi Arabia 2-3 Germany

    Tuesday July 27 – Women

    G: New Zealand 0-2 Sweden
    G: USA 0-0 Australia
    E: Chile 0-1 Japan
    E: Canada 1-1 Great Britain
    F: Brazil 1-0 Zambia
    F: Netherlands 8-2 China

    Wednesday July 28 – Men

    D: Germany 1-1 Ivory Coast
    D: Saudi Arabia 1-3 Brazil
    C: Australia 0-2 Egypt
    C: Spain 1-1 Argentina
    B: Romania 0-0 New Zealand
    B: South Korea 6-0 Honduras
    A: South Africa 0-3 Mexico
    A: France 0-4 Japan

    Friday July 30 – Women’s quarter-finals

    Canada 0-0 (4-3p) Brazil
    Great Britain 3-4 (AET) Australia
    Sweden 3-1 Japan
    Netherlands 2-2 (2-4p) United States – 12 noon UK (8pm Japan)

    Saturday July 31 – Men’s quarter-finals

    Spain 5-2 (AET) Ivory Coast
    Japan 0-0 (4-2p) New Zealand
    Brazil 1-0 Egypt
    South Korea 3-6 Mexico

    Monday August 2 – Women’s semi-finals

    United States vs Canada – 9am UK (5pm Japan)
    Australia vs Sweden – 12 noon UK (8pm Japan)

    Tuesday August 3 – Men’s semi-finals

    Mexico vs Brazil
    Japan vs Spain

    Thursday August 5 – Women

    Women’s bronze medal match – 9am UK (5pm Japan)

    Friday August 6 – Women and Men

    Women’s gold medal final – 3am UK (11am Japan)
    Men’s bronze medal match – 12 Noon UK (8pm Japan)

    Saturday August 7 – Men

    Men’s gold medal final – 12.30pm UK (8.30pm Japan) More

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    Zharnel Hughes slammed for 100m false start by Michael Johnson and Denise Lewis who say ‘no excuse’ as he blames cramp

    ZHARNEL HUGHES has been slammed by Michael Johnson and Denise Lewis for his Olympic 100m false start.The Team GB sprinter, 26, was booted out of the men’s final following a dramatic false start in Tokyo.
    Zharnel Hughes was slammed by Olympic legends Johnson and Lewis for his false start in the men’s 100m finalCredit: AFP
    Zharnell Hughes was kicked out of the men’s 100m final for his early twitchCredit: AFP
    Following the race, Hughes blamed cramp for twitching out of the blocks early as Italian Marcell Jacobs stormed to gold in 9.80 seconds.
    But Olympic icons Johnson and Lewis lashed out at the Brit for his error,
    After the Team GB star’s blunder, 200m legend Johnson roared: “This was a blatant false start.
    “To be honest there’s just no excuse for false starts at a championship. He will be incredibly disappointed.
    “What are you trying to do? Are you trying to time it? Are you not focused on reaction to the gun?
    “I don’t know what was going on there but I will maintain for the rest of my life there’s no excuse for a false start.”
    ‘MISSED OPPORTUNITY’
    Lewis – a gold medallist for Team GB in the heptathlon at Sydney 2000 – added: “I agree with that.
    “I know it sounds a bit harsh but it’s the Olympic final.
    “You will not get a better opportunity to raise your game when the field was essentially wide open.
    “The medals were there for the taking and he just missed that.
    “Obviously the emotions are raw, he’s disappointed, I totally get that.
    “But there is an opportunity for an athlete, even in the set position, if you are uncomfortable for any reason you can put your hand up, you can alert the officials that something isn’t quite right.
    “Potentially [the official] may give the whole field a warning or you might get a personal warning.
    “But as I said, an opportunity missed.”
    Following his false start, Hughes had claimed: “It wasn’t pressure. I wasn’t nervous.
    “It’s just that my calf cramped up when I went up on ‘set’ and with the cramp I moved which is heart-breaking.
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    “I’m really gutted right now. I worked too hard to be here to come and false start. It hurts a lot.
    “I just have to gather my thoughts together now and try to re-focus for the 4x100m.
    “I’m sorry this had to happen like this, it’s just unfortunate like I said that the calf cramped and I moved. I’m sorry.”
    Italy’s Jacobs stormed to victory with a stunning time of just 9.80 secondsCredit: Alamy
    Jacobs edged out the competition in a quick race inside the Tokyo StadiumCredit: Alamy
    Gymnast Max Whitlock wins pommel horse gold at Tokyo 2020 More

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    Why is Usain Bolt not competing at Tokyo 2020 Olympics and who’s favourite for men’s 100m?

    THE Tokyo Olympics is here with no event more eagerly anticipated than the men’s 100m sprint.However, it won’t feel quite the same without Usain Bolt competing.
    Usain Bolt will be playing no part in this summer’s OlympicsCredit: Reuters
    Why isn’t Usain Bolt at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics?
    Usain Bolt will not be at the Tokyo Olympic Games because he has retired.
    The Jamaican, who would be competing in Tokyo at the age of 34 if he had continued, last raced at the 2017 World Athletics Championships in London.
    There, he picked up a bronze medal after being beaten by American duo Christian Coleman and Justin Gatlin.
    That marked the first time he had been beaten in a sprint final since the 4x100m relay at the 2007 World Championships.
    And in the 4x100m in London, Bolt pulled his hamstring and was carried over the line in agony by his Jamaican team-mates in his final ever race.
    Trayvon Bromell is favourite to win the men’s 100m in TokyoCredit: AFP
    A year later, Bolt attempted to live a lifelong dream of pursuing a career in football as he signed for Australia’s Central Coast Mariners.
    However, after eight weeks he was unable to agree a contract extension and said: “My sports life is over.”
    He added that it was “fun while it lasted,” saying he “really enjoyed just being in a team and it was [much] different from track and field.”
    Bolt concluded: “I’m just doing many different things … the sports life is over, so I’m now moving into different businesses.
    “I have a lot of things in the pipeline, so as I say, I’m just dabbling in everything and trying to be a businessman now.”
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    Who will win the 100m in Tokyo?
    American Trayvon Bromell is the favourite to take up Usain Bolt’s mantle as the fastest man on the planet.
    On Monday, July 19 the latest odds from Paddy Power were as follows:

    Trayvon Bromell (USA) Evens
    Ronnie Baker (USA) 7/2
    Akani Simbine (RSA) 9/2
    Andre De Graase (CAN) 5/1
    Fred Kerley (USA) 12/1
    Yohan Blake (JAM) 17/1
    Marcell Jacobs (ITA) 17/1
    Zharnel Hughes (GBR) 22/1 More