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11.12am on Aug 11, 2024
What’s coming on the final day of Paris 2024Latest posts11.26am on Aug 11, 2024
GoodbyeThat’s all we have time for today.
The Sydney bureau is officially signing off for Paris 2024. Los Angeles, we’ll see you in four years.
Don’t worry, the Games aren’t quite over yet, we still have Aussies in action for the marathon, cycling and basketball before the closing ceremony – our colleagues in Melbourne and Paris will bring you all the action from those.
The Stingers with their silver medals.Credit: Eddie Jim
11.12am on Aug 11, 2024
What’s coming on the final day of Paris 202411.10am on Aug 11, 2024
Georgian weightlifter completes three-peatLasha Talakhadze of Georgia has won his third consecutive Olympic title in the heaviest weightlifting division, taking gold in the men’s +102kg.
Talakhadze won gold in the men’s +102 kg after winning at +109kg in Tokyo three years ago and +105 kg in 2016 at Rio de Janeiro. He won with a total of 470. Varazdat Lalayan of Armenia got silver with 467 and Gor Minasyan of Bahrain took bronze with 461.
Lasha Talakhadze won gold.Credit: Getty Images
10.47am on Aug 11, 2024
Meares defends viral sensation Raygun10.29am on Aug 11, 2024
Opinion: I am Raygun. You are Raygun. We are all Raygun!By Peter FitzSimonsYeah, yeah, yeah, we know. The Olympics is meant to be all about excellence. So what is Raygun doing there, with her breakdancing routine, you ask?
Being EXCELLENT, dammit, at too many things to count. But let’s try and count them, after a quick recap.
Dr Rachael Gunn, aka Raygun, is a 36-year-old Sydneysider with a PhD in cultural studies, “interested in the cultural politics of breaking”. She is also the talk of much of the globe for a – technically – less than prepossessing performance in the brand spanking new Olympic sport of breaking (aka breakdancing).
Sure, she didn’t make the podium, but she has sure made the world talk, and laugh, and exult!
Read the full piece here.
10.13am on Aug 11, 2024
Official almost gets skewered during javelin final9.57am on Aug 11, 2024
Paris 2024 is almost over. What comes next?When is the next Olympics?
The 2028 Olympics will begin on July 14, 2028 and conclude on July 30, 2028. It is then followed by the Paralympic Games, which will be held between August 15 and 27.
Where will the next Olympics take place?
The next Olympics in four years will take place in Los Angeles, California.
After the withdrawal of other bidding cities, the International Olympic Committee decided to award LA with the 2028 Games.
Los Angeles previously hosted the Olympics in 1932 and 1984 and will become the third city – after London and Paris in 2024 – to host the Summer Games three times.
What comes next after Paris 2024?Credit: PA Images via Getty Images
What about the 2032 and 2036 Olympics?
The 2032 Games will be held in Brisbane.
The bidding process is underway for the 2036 Games with Turkey, India, Indonesia and Chile among the nations who are considering hosting.
Of a potential Olympics 2036 bid, HRH Prince Abdulaziz Bin Turki Al Faisal, the Saudi sports minister, said: “I think we now have all that it takes to host any tournament that comes our way… I am not in a position to comment on specific bids, but I can tell you that we always keep an eye out on different events and sports properties that we could partner with.
“We were recently awarded the right to host the Asian Winter Games in 2029 and have also secured the 2034 Asian Games two years ago. Our focus now lies on building on our existing world-class infrastructure and preparing new ones for them.”
The London Telegraph
9.40am on Aug 11, 2024
Your 90-second wrap of day 159.24am on Aug 11, 2024
‘There’s no excuses’: Little’s performance a ‘hard pill to swallow’As you might have seen, Australian Mackenzie Little – who was a medal chance in the women’s javelin – struggled to get her best throw in the final.
Here’s what she had to say in the mixed zone afterwards:
Read the full story here.
9.03am on Aug 11, 2024
Aussies in action on day 151 of 15
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