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The 2024 German Grand Prix has not been kind to Fabio Quartararo, but the French rider sees encouraging signs in his Yamaha’s performance. With only 5 points collected, Quartararo had to settle for a thirteenth place in the sprint and an eleventh place in the long race. While these results weren’t spectacular, they gave the Monster Energy Yamaha team crucial data to improve the M1.
« Final results are not my main concern at the moment, ” told Fabio Quarterly à

Motosan.es. ” I’m not interested in position and I think the race at Sachsenring went better than expected. We had a lot of trouble at the start with the new tires. I finished about the same as in the Sprint, so I think it was very positive. »
Le
world champion 2021 MotoGP is determined to help its engineers reach the long-awaited milestone. “ There are things we don’t quite understand, but we must examine them to try to improve, especially with new tires,” he explains. “ During the first laps we don’t need to save ourselves, we just need to be in the best possible position. But we lack performance at the start, we have to progress.”

Fabio Quartararo: “ I think we are getting closer to the Europeans, not Ducati, but Aprilia and KTM »
Despite the challenges, Quarterly notes the progress and is optimistic for the second half of the season. “ My job is to try to provide information. In the past, I thought too much about the operation of the motorcycle, but
I am not an engineer. We work hard and I think that we have already made some improvements. I think we have improved at Sachsenring compared to last year, but we still need to improve. And I think we’ll get there in the second half of the season.”
The French pilot also highlights the positive aspects of the first months of 2024: “ this is the mentality and the way of working that we have. I think we started the season very far from the European manufacturers and the results are the same, but I think we’re getting closer. No Ducati, but Aprilia and KTM. It will still take us months to really get closer.”
While waiting for the championship to resume at
Silverstone early August, Fabio Quartararo remain confident. “ With concessions we can improve every month, we are not focused on the 2025 bike. We want to see a competitive M1 before the end of the World Championship,” he concludes.

General classification after nine Grands Prix: 

Ranking credits motogp.com

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For at least a year, there have been persistent rumors that Raúl Ruidíaz could return to Peru to play for Universitario — the team where he got his professional start and is considered a bit of a club legend — as they celebrate their centennial next month. This has always been considered a long shot, but recently was given some credence by journalists in Peru who claim Ruidíaz is “doing his part” to make a move happen.”El tema con Ruidíaz sigue avanzando. El jugador está poniendo de su parte y pronto tendremos más novedades”Información de @Gustavo_p4#L1Radio🎙⚽👉 https://t.co/A3agmo3Ub2 pic.twitter.com/XIwxuk7s6f— L1 MAX (@L1MAX_) July 11, 2024
What does “doing his part” mean? Good question, but it strikes me as more public relations than anything actionable.From everything I’ve been told, the Sounders are not interested in buying out Ruidíaz, who has about $1.2 million remaining on his contract, nor are they willing to effectively pay him to play somewhere else. The reality is that even if Ruidíaz has lost his starting spot, he’s still been reasonably productive — he’s tied for the team lead with eight goals — and recently has looked pretty good off the bench. Unless the Sounders are planning to make use of the Designated Player spot that Ruidíaz currently occupies, losing him is a net negative.Still, I do think they’d be willing to let him out of his contract early if that’s what he wanted, but I suspect he’s only willing to do that if Universitario is planning to effectively make him whole on their end. I’ve seen nothing that indicates they’re prepared to do that.As recently as last month Universitario’s president said signing Ruidíaz was prohibitively expensive and that “today I would say that it is impossible.” My understanding is that the highest paid Universitario players make about 20% of what Ruidíaz is owed. Unless they’re thinking about busting their budget to sign Ruidíaz, he’d need to walk away from about $1 million. I’d be totally shocked if that happened.



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Going for a dip in the Seine on a hot summer’s day has been the pipedream of many a Parisian since swimming in the river was formally banned a century ago.But floating on your back under the Eiffel Tower could very soon become reality thanks to investments linked to this month’s Paris Olympics. Weather permitting, the river will be the star of the opening ceremony of the Games on July 26 and will then host the triathlon and the swimming marathon.

Then, if all goes well, next summer Parisians and tourists will be able to dive in too.

Like Zurich and Munich before it, Paris has been reclaiming its river with one of three new urban “beaches” to open under the windows of its historic town hall next year, with another almost at the foot of the Eiffel Tower.

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Nearly 30 more — complete with pontoons, showers and parasols — are planned for the suburbs and along the Marne, which flows into the Seine just east of the French capital.

Once regarded as an open-air dump, former French president Jacques Chirac first floated the idea of swimming in the Seine in 1990.

But it was the current mayor Anne Hidalgo who really ran with the idea, making it a pillar of her Olympic bid in 2016.

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Some 1.4 billion euros ($1.51 billion) has been spent on colossal public works to counter pollution, with Hidalgo vowing to swim in the Seine next week to prove its cleanliness.

But with the capital suffering an exceptionally wet start to the year, causing regular discharges from the city’s sewerage system into the river, the mayor has had to repeatedly delay taking to the water.

The Seine’s water quality fluctuates sharply after major rainstorms, which lead to untreated sewage being released, meaning there is still suspense about whether the Olympic swimming can take place.

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Disastrous Olympic test events last August first raised doubts over whether the triathletes and marathon swimmers will be allowed to race for gold in the Seine.

Most of the events had to be cancelled because the water failed to meet European standards on two bacterias found in faeces.

Unusually violent downpours and a faulty valve in the sewage system were blamed.

But it prompted the reigning Olympic marathon swimming champion Ana Marcela Cunha to call for a “plan B”.

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“The health of athletes should come before everything,” the Brazilian great told AFP.

In recent weeks, the river has continued to fail pollution tests, although dry weather forecast for the next few weeks should help raise standards.

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Only a handful of people swim in the river regularly and their testimony is not always reassuring.

Lifeguard Gaelle Deletang, 56, a member of the French capital’s aquatic civil defence team, got “diarrhoea and a rash” after swimming in the Seine in central Paris last winter.

Several other volunteers “had a bug for three weeks… and everyone had stomach upsets”, she added.

Young adventurer Arthur Germain — who happens to be the mayor of Paris’s son — also came across “zones where I had trouble breathing” from both industrial and agricultural pollution when he swam the whole 777-kilometre (482-mile) length of the Seine in 2021.

In deepest rural Burgundy — days before he got anywhere near Paris — he measured levels of faecal matter well above EU limits for swimming. Further north he swam past farmers spraying pesticides by the riverbank.

His “worst day”, however, was a few kilometres downstream from the capital as he passed a sewage works at Gennevilliers.

Yet the quality of the water has been on a steady upward curve.

Five major anti-pollution plants have come on stream ahead of the Games, while wildlife is returning and the quantity of garbage floating in the waterway has fallen.

Remi Delorme, captain of a boat that has been fishing rubbish from the river since 1980, has seen progress.

His 20-metre (65-foot) catamaran Belenos sucks up rubbish, from dead leaves and plastic bags to bicycles.

Delorme, 36, has seen it all. “Scooters, sofas, dead animals, and once or twice a year, human corpses. You get used to it,” he told AFP.

But year after year, the rubbish the boat hoovers up has been falling, from a high of 325 tonnes to 190 tonnes in 2020.

The push to make the Seine swimmable for the Olympics has accelerated a French government plan to limit waste water and sewage getting into both it and the river Marne.

A 2018 law obliges the boats and barges that line the Seine to be hooked up to the city’s sewers to stop them flushing directly into the river. Officials says almost all are now following the rules.

“Uncontrolled flushing has a major impact on faecal bacteria in the river,” said Jean-Marie Mouchel, professor of hydrology at the Sorbonne University.

Another problem was leakage from sewage pipes from some 23,000 homes in the suburbs, with shower and toilet water being discharged directly into the environment.

Officials have been going door-to-door offering subsidies to get them fixed and threatening penalties if they are not.

“We have gone from 20 million cubic metres to two million cubic metres of discharges into the Seine per year in recent years,” said Samuel Colin-Canivez, head of major works for the Paris sewer network.

Hydrologist Jean-Marie Mouchel has seen big signs of improvement in the river’s health, with better “oxygenation, ammonium and phosphate levels”.

While the Seine “has not become a wild river again”, it now has “more than 30 species of fish, compared with three in 1970”, said the professor.

Bill Francois, who fishes up to five times a week near Pont Marie in the historic heart of Paris, caught a surprisingly large catfish the day he talked to AFP — the likes of which he never expected to find in the Seine.

The 31-year-old physicist also hooked a small perch, which are becoming more and more numerous. Half a century ago “there were none left”, he said.

Other fish that need far higher water quality are also returning, he said, as well as “insects, crustaceans, little shrimps, sponges and even jellyfish”.

For microbiologist Francoise Lucas, who has been following efforts to clean the Seine for years, the weather will ultimately decide the fate of the Olympic events on the river

“Everything that could be done (technically) has been done,” Lucas told AFP.

Upstream from the capital, one of the newly modernised sewage plants is using an innovative treatment method based on performic acid — an “organic disinfectant” — according to Siaap, the body that deals with the Paris region’s waste water and sewage.

It insists the acid is safe and “rapidly disintegrates even before coming into contact with the natural environment.”

Not far away, a new stormwater control station has come online. Dug deep underground at Champigny-sur-Marne to the southeast of Paris, it is designed to stop the river being polluted by heavy downpours.

As well as catching the stormwater, it filters and cleans it to remove floating debris and counters bacteria with ultraviolet lamps before the water is released into the Marne.

And as a final safety net to avoid a recurrence of the failed Olympic test events last summer, a huge new stormwater cistern has opened at near Austerlitz station on the eastern edge of central Paris.

Fifty metres (164 feet) wide and 30m deep, it can hold the equivalent of 20 Olympic swimming pools worth of water.

A veritable underground cathedral, it is there to stop stormwater flooding the sewers and overflowing into the Seine.

Even so, “statistically there are a few rainstorms a year for which it won’t be totally sufficient”, admitted prefect Marc Guillaume, Paris’s top state official.

“We had forgotten about the Seine,” said Stephane Raffalli, mayor of the riverside Paris suburb of Ris-Orangis, where one of the nearly 30 new urban beaches will open next year. “There are people who have lived here for years who have never walked along the banks of the river.”

Yet suburbanites were still swimming in the Seine until the 1960s and right up to the 1970s in the Marne, where riverside lidos called “Little Trouville” or “Deauville in Paris” did their best to summon up the holiday atmosphere of English Channel beach resorts.

In Champigny-sur-Marne, the old “beach” had “a kind of small pool where children were able to touch the bottom,” recalled 74-year-old Michel Riousset. “Everyone had their own cabin.”

Ris-Orangis hopes to have its old river pool complete with cabins, first built around 1930, back in service next year.

“We have conducted pollution studies over a long period, and it is safe” to swim in the river, the mayor insisted.

With climate change, and the prospect of summer temperatures hitting 50 degrees Centigrade (122 Fahrenheit) in Paris, the need for somewhere to cool off in summer has never been greater.

But some have already taken the plunge. On a warm evening last July about 20 swimmers were enjoying the Seine off the Ile Saint Denis, where the Olympic Village has been built.

Josue Remoue swims in the river three times a month from May to October.

“I’ve never been sick,” said the 52-year-old civil servant. “The water is dodgier at the edge, generally I don’t linger there.” And he never “goes underwater”.

Remoue takes to the water on Sundays or in the evening to avoid barge traffic.

On the night AFP joined his group, the water was a bit earthy but not murky. With the temperature at 25C, the scene along the riverbank was almost bucolic despite the nearby tower blocks.

“It’s completely different from swimming in a pool,” said Celine Debunne, 47, as she emerged from “a super two-kilometre swim…. I love swimming like this.”

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The 2024 German Grand Prix has not been kind to Fabio Quartararo, but the French rider sees encouraging signs in his Yamaha’s performance. With only 5 points collected, Quartararo had to settle for a thirteenth place in the sprint and an eleventh place in the long race. While these results weren’t spectacular, they gave the Monster Energy Yamaha team crucial data to improve the M1.
« Final results are not my main concern at the moment, ” told Fabio Quarterly à

Motosan.es. ” I’m not interested in position and I think the race at Sachsenring went better than expected. We had a lot of trouble at the start with the new tires. I finished about the same as in the Sprint, so I think it was very positive. »
Le
world champion 2021 MotoGP is determined to help its engineers reach the long-awaited milestone. “ There are things we don’t quite understand, but we must examine them to try to improve, especially with new tires,” he explains. “ During the first laps we don’t need to save ourselves, we just need to be in the best possible position. But we lack performance at the start, we have to progress.”

Fabio Quartararo: “ I think we are getting closer to the Europeans, not Ducati, but Aprilia and KTM »
Despite the challenges, Quarterly notes the progress and is optimistic for the second half of the season. “ My job is to try to provide information. In the past, I thought too much about the operation of the motorcycle, but
I am not an engineer. We work hard and I think that we have already made some improvements. I think we have improved at Sachsenring compared to last year, but we still need to improve. And I think we’ll get there in the second half of the season.”
The French pilot also highlights the positive aspects of the first months of 2024: “ this is the mentality and the way of working that we have. I think we started the season very far from the European manufacturers and the results are the same, but I think we’re getting closer. No Ducati, but Aprilia and KTM. It will still take us months to really get closer.”
While waiting for the championship to resume at
Silverstone early August, Fabio Quartararo remain confident. “ With concessions we can improve every month, we are not focused on the 2025 bike. We want to see a competitive M1 before the end of the World Championship,” he concludes.

General classification after nine Grands Prix: 

Ranking credits motogp.com

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Scott Taetsch. Getty Images.For those dropping in raw this is part three of a five part blog series shining light on NFL players who never quite made it at their position, yet played a ridiculous amount of special teams plays otherwise. These phatoms of the kick off deserve their day even if it’s in this blog series that’s being dominated in page views by topics such as the Hawk Tuah girl getting paid to appear at bars and Zach Wilson’s engage-off with his ex. I’m not complaining this series is flying under the radar. It’s actually perfectly poetic. Just one more way these guys can stay completely unknown. Today we focus on a few phantoms we’ll just loosely all call #3 on the list. A running back, a wide receiver, and a center walk into a bar.Xavier Jones- Running Back Ronald Martinez. Getty Images.Here’s an action shot of Xavier Jones running with the ball. You can tell this is a preseason game since he literally has never officially recorded a rush in his entire career. As far as he knows, his job in the regular season is running back… to tackle people on kickoffs and punts. An undrafted free agent in 2020 for the Sean McVay Rams, you have to feel for Jones not getting a chance when it seems like every other backup running back found their way on the field for McVay. But he did play in 13 games and recorded a whopping four tackles. I know you’re supposed to earn your way out of special teams but is that really fair to expect from a 5’11 running back? Look at him up there. It’s like making Mugsy Bogues win a tip-off before he can play at guard back in the 90s. Let’s move on to wide receiver. I feel really bad for my guy, Jake Lampman – even if he catches passes like he’s in pee-wee football. Jake Lampman – Wide Receinever Icon Sportswire. Getty Images.AdvertisementMy first assumption was that this dude was a kickoff/punt return specialist I somehow never heard of, but he has zero return stats on record during is solo 2016 season. Yet there he is with almost double to second most snaps for any wide receiver who never actually played wide receiver. Hang the banner, baby. Just a reminder to anyone who thinks making the NFL means you have an easy life, not only did Lampman deal with this bullshit, but he also dealt with inevitable roster spin cycle life fringe roster players deal with. That’s a lot of tryouts for someone who wasn’t given a try. Still nothing compared to my guy’s 113 transactions here or this other guy’s 113 transactions. And to add insult to injury, Pro Football Reference had to twist the knife by putting Lampman’s career fantasy football stats on his profile page… and this supposedly “frequently asked question” one might ask regarding Jake Lampman:AdvertisementMad respect for Jake. Say what you want but he literally leads NFL history for a wide receiver in least dropped balls, penalties, and fumbles. You can’t tell the story of the best to ever do it in all three categories without Jake Lampman.Mike Gibson – Center Christian Petersen. Getty Images.OK – our last phantom for today is Mike Gibson who is actually listed as a tackle but I think played some center too. In any case, he broke the 100-play special teams barrier and thus deserves some recognition to all 18 barstool sports blog readers of which 16 have left by this point. Drafted in the 6th round by the Eagles in 2008, he didn’t play until 2009 with the Seahawks. As either of you might recall from an earlier blog in this series, snap count data wasn’t tracked until 2012 meaning this 101 figure is actually probably higher if we are to believe he didn’t play on offense up until then too. Or maybe he did and he’s a phantom fraud. I don’t know. AdvertisementThat’s enough for today. Two more phantom editions to go. Catch up on any you might have missed here. What else are you gonna do? It’s hot as hell and there’s no football action for another few weeks. @Stathole

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50 kids participating this week in a summer camp offered by the town in partnership with the NOTL Tennis Club
A partnership between the town and the Niagara-on-the-Lake Tennis Club has kept 50 kids busy all this week while learning some crucial tennis skills. 

Recreation program coordinator Emily Kujbida explained that the joint effort is one of many this summer that teams up local organizations with the town to offer experiences for the youth of NOTL this summer. 

“It benefits both the town and the tennis club,” she explained. “They wanted to expand their reach and we wanted to offer more theme-oriented activities with our camps this year. We’ve been at the arena for three days this week and one day at Memorial Park, where they got to experience the tennis courts and even went for a swim. We’ve received great feedback.”

When The Local dropped in Wednesday, the youngest age group (6 to 8) were utilizing the three makeshift tennis courts set up inside. Tennis club representatives Adam Wodz, Charlotte Hawkswell and Ed Roy, with the help of some summer staff members from the town, were leading the campers through a series of fun drills and skills. 

“They are learning the fundamentals,” explained Kijbida. “A lot of kids are at camp for child care specifically. Some of them have an interest in tennis so their parents register them because of that. Lots of beginner-type skills are going on this week.”

Meanwhile, the middle group (ages 8 and 9) were in the arena foyer enjoying a snack and doing some tennis-related activities, while the oldest group (ages 9 to 12) was in the Mary Snider Room working on crafts. The three groups rotated through each station every 45 minutes. 

Having the arena to use this summer is a big boost to the summer day camp program, she added.

“Being at the arena for day camp with the kids this year means we have a lot more space to utilize,” Kujdiba told The Local as the rain was pelting down outside the Memorial Arena. “It gives the children a good home base to come to. And when it rains like today, they can still enjoy the same programming they would get outside.” 

Other themed camps coming up this summer include an Olympics camp, a Mission Impossible Camp, and a partnership Paddle Niagara, Wacky Science camp and one based on NOTL’s Got Talent. Kujdiba says there are a number of children registered for every week this summer. 

“Each week is a different theme, and it keeps the kids on their toes, keeps the staff engaged, and the kids have something new each week too,” she said. 

For information about upcoming camps and registration,, visit the town’s website. 

 

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Amateur success doesn’t necessarily equal pro success.
Not every Olympian becomes a world titleholder in the pros. Not even the medalists. Of the 178 medalists since 2008, only 20 have gone on to become titleholders.
What that also means – reaching the greatest of heights in the pros doesn’t require being one of the best amateurs in the world. An overwhelming majority of professional world titleholders never competed in the Olympics. Only 11 of the 50 male fighters, or 22 per cent, holding major world titles today are Olympians. And 7 of the 35 women, or 20 per cent, who hold major world titles are Olympians. 

None of that stops us from watching Olympic boxing for a chance to see who some of the future stars could be. And so we’ll tune in to this year’s Olympics, with the first boxing matches scheduled for July 27. 
In the meantime, let’s continue to examine some of the talent that were featured in the past four Olympic Games in 2008, 2012, 2016 and 2021. 
In part one of this two-part series, we looked at the 17 Olympic boxers since 2008 who are world titleholders — including eight lineal champions — as well as 22 Olympians who have never won title belts but are ranked in the Top 10 by the Ring Magazine or the Transnational Boxing Ratings Board.
For the second part, let’s examine the other 37 Olympians who went on to win world titles as professionals.
Fighters in each section are listed in alphabetical order.

Active former world titleholders
Murodjon Akhmadaliev (Uzbekistan): Akhmadaliev earned a bronze medal at bantamweight in the 2016 Olympics and was fast out of the gate in the paid ranks; in his eighth fight as a professional, in 2020, Akhmadaliev defeated Daniel Roman for two world titles at junior featherweight. He lost those belts to Marlon Tapales via split decision in 2023 but remains ranked at 122, where he’s hoping for a fight with the undisputed champion Naoya Inoue.
Demetrius Andrade (United States): Andrade was a quarter-finalist at welterweight in 2008 and has built a career in which his accomplishments don’t quite match his talent. He hasn’t helped himself with his decisions out of the ring – including turning down fights – and in the ring by easing off after stellar starts to fights and coasting to forgettable wins, or simply coasting to forgettable wins. Doing so left Andrade pursuing bigger opportunities, despite his holding world titles at 154 and 160, until he was stopped by David Benavidez at 168 in November 2023.
Joe Cordina (Great Britain): Cordina lost in the second round of the 2016 Olympics at lightweight. In 2022 he unseated Kenichi Ogawa for the IBF belt at junior lightweight, and he made two successful title defenses before suffering an upset loss in May, when he was stopped in eight rounds by Anthony Cacace.
Joseph Diaz Jr. (United States): Diaz lost in his second fight at bantamweight at the 2012 Olympics. He beat Tevin Farmer for the IBF junior-lightweight title in 2020, but conceded it on the scales before his first defense. Today he is competing between lightweight and junior welterweight, and he is clearly at the tail end of his career, having lost five of his past six.

Isaac Dogboe (Ghana): Ousted in his opening fight at the 2012 bantamweight tournament, Dogboe went on to win the WBO junior-featherweight title in 2018, only to lose it to Emanuel Navarrete by the end of the year. Dogboe was stopped in the rematch with Navarrete and competes at 126lbs, where he’s dropped consecutive decisions to Robeisy Ramirez and Nick Ball.
Marlen Esparza (United States): Esparza picked up a bronze at flyweight in the 2012 Olympics, and won the WBC belt at 112lbs in 2021. She had unified three belts by 2023, only to lose them on the scales in April, when then suffering a split-decision loss in a rematch with Gabriela Celeste Alaniz.
Hector Garcia (Dominican Republic): Garcia lost in the opening round at bantamweight in the 2016 Games but succeeded higher up on the scales in the professionals, defeating junior lightweight Chris Colbert in 2022 and then outpointing Roger Gutierrez for the WBA belt later that year. Garcia has since lost two straight – stopped by Gervonta Davis at lightweight in 2023 and then losing to Lamont Roach Jr. by split decision in a junior-lightweight title fight in November.
Oleksandr Gvozdyk (Ukraine): Gvozdyk earned bronze at light heavyweight in the 2012 Olympics and reached even greater heights as a professional by stopping Adonis Stevenson in 2018 to become the lineal 175lbs champion. Ten months later Gvozdyk suffered a TKO at the hands of Artur Beterbiev – then spent more than three years away before returning to the ring in 2023. Gvozdyk’s comeback eventually got him in front of David Benavidez in June; he lost a unanimous decision.
Jamel Herring (United States): Herring was dispatched in his first junior-welterweight fight in the 2012 Olympics. He found more success as he moved down in weight, taking two defeats as a professional lightweight and then dropping to junior lightweight, where he won the WBO title in 2019. Herring’s defenses included wins over Lamont Roach Jr. and Carl Frampton, but he lost that belt to Shakur Stevenson in 2021. He’s since added one victory and two more defeats.

Julius Indongo (Namibia): Indongo lost clearly in 2008 to the eventual lightweight gold medalist. In 2016, he won the IBF junior-welterweight title with a 40-second knockout of Eduard Troyanovsky. Indongo added the WBA belt via a clear decision over Ricky Burns, and be then lost in a fight for the undisputed championship when he was knocked out in three rounds by Terence Crawford in 2017. He’s been in decline ever since. He’s gone from losing quickly to fighters you’ve heard of – like Regis Prograis – to getting knocked out this in January by the little-known Richard Mtangi, who had a record of 4-1-1. Indongo is 41 years old and hasn’t yet retired.
Badou Jack (Gambia): Jack lost in the first round of the 2008 middleweight tournament. He’s since become a three-division world titlist as a professional, by defeating Anthony Dirrell at 168, Nathan Cleverly at 175 and Ilunga Makabu in February 2023 to at cruiserweight title.
Anthony Joshua (Great Britain): Joshua won super-heavyweight gold in 2012 in his home country. He picked up his first professional world title in 2016, and had unified three belts by 2018 – only to lose them, shockingly, to Andy Ruiz in 2019. Joshua won the rematch with Ruiz and regained the belts before dropping them, when losing two fights with Oleksandr Usyk in 2021 and 2022. He fights the champion Daniel Dubois for the IBF belt on September 2021.
Mikaela Mayer (United States): Mayer, who was dispatched in the lightweight quarter-finals of the 2016 Olympics, won a world title at junior lightweight in 2020, unified titles in 2021, and then lost to Alycia Baumgardner in 2022 in a fight to determine the undisputed champion. Mayer has since gone up in weight classes, dropping a split decision to Natasha Jonas in a welterweight title fight this past January.
Jose Pedraza (Puerto Rico): Pedraza fought at lightweight in the 2008 Olympics and made it to the second round. He won a vacant junior-lightweight belt in 2015 and made two successful defenses before getting stopped by Gervonta “Tank” Davis in 2017. Pedraza soon won a lightweight title against Ray Beltran in 2018 but lost in a unification bout with Vasiliy Lomachenko. He’s become a recurring “B-side”, losing to, among others, Jose Ramirez, Arnold Barboza and Keyshawn Davis, and drawing with Richard Commey.

Jose Ramirez (United States): Ousted in his second lightweight fight at the 2012 Olympics, Ramirez won two junior-welterweight world titles before losing to Josh Taylor in 2021, which made Taylor the undisputed champion. He has won three straight since.
Robeisy Ramirez (Cuba): Ramirez is a two-time gold medalist. He became champion at flyweight in 2012, and bantamweight in 2016. He suffered a surprising decision loss on his professional debut in 2019, but je steadied himself and improved, and outpointed Isaac Dogboe to win the vacant WBO featherweight title in 2023. His reign didn’t last long; he unexpectedly lost to Rafael Espinoza in December.
Jonathan Romero (Colombia): Romero was a first-round departure in the 2008 bantamweight competition. He won a vacant belt at junior featherweight in early 2013, and lost it to Kiko Martinez six months later. He remains active, at 37 years old.
Amnat Ruenroeng (Thailand): Ruenroeng lost in the quarter-finals at junior flyweight in 2008, but went on to hold a flyweight world title as a professional from 2014 to 2016. He later competed as a lightweight at the 2016 Olympics. He’s 44 years old, and has fought twice this year.
Errol Spence (United States): Spence made it to the welterweight quarter-finals in 2012, but the consensus was that he was better suited to being a professional. He knocked out Kell Brook for his first world title in 2017 and added two more while defeating the likes of Shawn Porter, Danny Garcia and Yordenis Ugas along the way. Spence fought Terence Crawford inm2023 for the undisputed championship, and Crawford won handily, via TKO. Spence is expected to fight later in 2024 at junior middleweight, likely against Sebastian Fundora.

Josh Taylor (Great Britain): Taylor made it to the second round at lightweight at the 2012 Olympics. He did much better in a professional tournament – he won the World Boxing Super Series and two world titles in the process of doing so, and he then added the remaining two when defeating Jose Ramirez. Taylor only made one successful defense as undisputed champion, when awarded controversial decision over Jack Catterall in 2022. He was dethroned as WBO champion by Teofimo Lopez in 2023, having by then vacated the other three titles, and lost a rematch to Catterall earlier in 2024.
Yordenis Ugas (Cuba): Ugas earned a bronze medal at lightweight in 2008, struggled as a professional while competing at junior welterweight, and then had his best days when he moved up to 147lbs. A series of wins earned him a title shot against Shawn Porter. He lost a split decision but was able to pick up the WBA belt in August 2021, when he stepped in for the injured Errol Spence and sent Manny Pacquiao into retirement. Ugas then challenged Spence in April 2022 in a unification bout with three titles on the line. He was stopped in 10 round, and lost a wide decision to Mario Barrios in September 2023.
Oscar Valdez (Mexico): Valdez lost his first fight at the 2008 Olympics and in the quarter-finals in 2012 – both at bantamweight. He went on to win a featherweight world title in 2016, and did the same at junior lightweight with a big knockout of Miguel Berchelt in 2021. Valdez lost a unification bout against Shakur Stevenson in 2022, and came up short against titlist Emanuel Navarrete in 2023.
Rau’shee Warren (United States): Warren fought at junior flyweight at the 2004 Olympics, and at flyweight in 2008 and 2012. He lost in his first appearance each time. As a professional he briefly held the WBA bantamweight title after edging Juan Carlos Payano via majority decision. He then lost it to Zhanat Zhakiyanov in his first defense. He has not fought since 2022, but, aged 37, he has also not yet officially retired.
Deontay Wilder (United States): Wilder’s medal at the 2008 Olympics led to his nickname, “The Bronze Bomber”. Winning that medal was quite an accomplishment given his limited amateur experience, which also meant that he learned on the job as a professional. With great hand speed and some of the heaviest hands in history, Wilder won the WBC title in 2015 and retained it for five years. He lost it in a rematch with Tyson Fury in 2020 – suffering a seventh-round TKO – and was knocked out in the 11th round of their third and final fight in 2021. Wilder got a quick win over Robert Helenius in 2022, but was then outboxed by Joseph Parker in December 2023 and stopped in five by Zhilei Zhang in June.

Note: Maiva Hamadouche already held the women’s IBF junior lightweight title prior to competing at the 2020 Olympics.
Retired former titleholders
Nicola Adams (Great Britain): Adams won gold in the women’s flyweight division at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics, and briefly held the WBO title at flyweight before retiring in 2019 due to concerns that she could lose her vision if she continued to compete.
Sadam Ali (United States): Ali lost a wide decision in his only Olympics bout, at lightweight in 2008. He was stopped by Jessie Vargas in a welterweight title fight in 2016 but stunned Miguel Cotto to win the WBO belt at junior middleweight the following year. He then lost in his first defense, when he was put away in four rounds by Jaime Munguia in 2018. He last fought in 2019.
Eleider Alvarez (Colombia): Alvarez didn’t advance past his first light-heavyweight fight at the 2008 Olympics but had a decent professional career at 175lbs. He outpointed Jean Pascal and then knocked out Sergey Kovalev in 2018 for the WBO title, only to lose a decision to Kovalev in their rematch in 2019. Alvarez’s last bout came in August 2020, when he was stopped in nine rounds by Joe Smith Jr.

McJoe Arroyo (Puerto Rico): Arroyo lost his first fight at the 2008 Olympics, at bantamweight. He picked up a vacant junior-bantamweight title in 2015 and lost it in his first defense to Jerwin Ancajas. He last fought in 2021.
James DeGale (Great Britain): DeGale won middleweight gold in 2008 and, after an early setback in a close fight with George Groves, went on to become a super-middleweight titleholder as a professional. He outpointed Andre Dirrell for the vacant IBF title in 2015 and went 2-0-1 in his next three defenses, before suffering an upset loss to Caleb Truax in late 2017. DeGale won their rematch, and regained his title, four months later. He’d soon vacate his belt and retired following a loss in February 2019 to Chris Eubank Jr.
Jeff Horn (Australia): Horn exited at the quarter-final stage at junior welterweight at London 2012 when losing to the eventual silver medalist Denys Berinchyk. He was given a controversial decision over Manny Pacquiao in 2017 in their fight for the WBO welterweight title, and was dominated by Terence Crawford two fights later. Horn last fought in 2020 and later announced his retirement, citing issues with his memory.
Ryota Murata (Japan): The gold medalist at middleweight in 2012, Murata was miss-and-hit as a professional, losing to Hassan N’Dam but then winning the rematch by TKO, and then following the same pattern with Rob Brant. Murata eventually landed a fight in April 2022 fight with Gennadiy Golovkin. “GGG” stopped him in nine rounds, in what turned out to be Murata’s final fight.
Nordine Oubaali (France): Oubaali competed in the 2008 Olympics, losing in the second round at junior flyweight, and in 2012, losing in the quarter-finals at flyweight. He won the vacant WBC bantamweight belt in 2019 against Rau’shee Warren, whom Oubaali had also defeated at the Games in 2012. Oubaali held that belt until 2021, when he was beaten by Nonito Donaire. He officially retired in 2022 but then returned in April 2023, losing a split decision to a 9-9 opponent. He hasn’t fought or made any proclamations since about his career.

Juan Carlos Payano (Dominican Republic): Payano made it as far as the second round of the 2004 and 2008 Olympics, competing as a flyweight in both. In 2014 he defeated Anselmo Moreno to win the WBA bantamweight title, and he took a split decision over Rau’shee Warren and then conceded that same belt to Warren in a rematch. Following a good win over Mike Plania in 2018, Payano made it no more than 70 seconds against Naoya Inoue. He last fought in 2021.
Billy Joe Saunders (Great Britain): Saunders lost in his second welterweight fight at the 2008 Olympics. He outpointed Andy Lee in 2015 for the WBO middleweight title, made a few successful defenses and then picked up the vacant WBO title at super middleweight in 2019. Owning that title made Saunders a target for Saul “Canelo” Alvarez in Canelo’s campaign for undisputed at 168lbs. Canelo stopped Saunders in 2021. That was Saunders’ last fight. He’s teased returning, but until that happens, he remains in this section.
Francisco Vargas (Mexico): Vargas advanced as far as the second round of the lightweight tournament in 2008. His peak as a professional was brief but fun, and included a title win at junior lightweight over Takashi Miura in 2015, a draw with Orlando Salido in 2016, and a TKO loss to Miguel Berchelt in 2017. He last fought in 2022.
Khalid Yafai (Great Britain): Yafai, who was ousted in his first flyweight fight in the 2008 Olympics, held the WBA junior-bantamweight title from 2016 until a fight in 2020 with Roman Gonzalez. Yafai retired following a first-round TKO loss to Jonathan Rodriguez in November 2023.
Zou Shiming (China): Zou won gold at junior flyweight in 2008 and 2012 – and bronze in the same weight class in 2004. His time as a professional was relatively brief, lasting from 2013 to 2017. He won a WBO title at flyweight in late 2016, lost it in his first defense, and never fought again.

How did boxers from each Olympics do as professionals?
2008: The Beijing Olympics featured 283 boxers. Of those, 23 later won professional world titles – Sadam Ali, Eleider Alvarez, Demetrius Andrade, McJoe Arroyo, Artur Beterbiev, Robson Conceicao, James DeGale, Julius Indongo, Badou Jack, Vasiliy Lomachenko, Nordine Oubaali, Juan Carlos Payano, Jose Pedraza, Amnat Ruenroeng, Billy Joe Saunders, Yordenis Ugas, Oleksandr Usyk, Oscar Valdez, Francisco Vargas, Rau’shee Warren, Deontay Wilder, Khalid Yafai and Zou Shiming.
Five of those were among the 44 total medalists – DeGale, Lomachenko, Ugas, Wilder and Shiming.
2012: The London Olympics featured 286 boxers. Of those, 25 won professional world titles: Nicola Adams, Denys Berinchyk, Beterbiev, Conceicao, Joseph Diaz Jr., Isaac Dogboe, Marlen Esparza, Oleksandr Gvozdyk, Jamel Herring, Jeff Horn, Natasha Jonas, Anthony Joshua, Lomachenko, Savannah Marshall, Ryota Murata, Jai Opetaia, Jose Ramirez, Robeisy Ramirez, Claressa Shields, Errol Spence, Josh Taylor, Katie Taylor, Usyk, Valdez, Warren and Shiming.
Twelve of those were among the 52 total medalists: Adams, Berinchyk, Esparza, Gvozdyk, Joshua, Lomachenko, Murata, Robeisy Ramirez, Shields, Katie Taylor, Usyk and Shiming.

2016: The Rio Olympics featured 286 boxers. Of those, 15 later won world titles as professionals: Adams, Murodjon Akhmadaliev, Janibek Alimkhanuly, Conceicao, Joe Cordina, Hector Garcia, Teofimo Lopez, Fernando Martinez, Marshall, Mikaela Mayer, Lawrence Okolie, Robeisy Ramirez, Shields, Shakur Stevenson. and Katie Taylor.
Six of the 52 medalists from the 2016 Olympics became titleholders: Adams, Akhmadaliev, Conceicao, Robeisy Ramirez, Shields and Shakur Stevenson.
2020/2021: The Tokyo Olympics featured 289 boxers. To date three of those fighters have gone on to win world titles: Beatriz Ferreira, Skye Nicolson and Lauren Price.
Ferreira and Price are the two of the 52 medalists from the Tokyo Olympics to win a world title.

Follow David Greisman on Twitter @FightingWords2. His book, “Fighting Words: The Heart and Heartbreak of Boxing,” is available on Amazon.

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CNN
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The Olympic Games will be chock full of iconic images of Parisian landmarks – the Eiffel Tower, Versailles, the Pont Alexandre III bridge and Hôtel des Invalides are all set to play a starring role.

But one of the most stunning backdrops for the quadrennial competition won’t be in Paris – or France for that matter. It won’t even be in the same hemisphere.

The world-famous waves off Teahupo’o in Tahiti are set to be one of the most scenic and unique locations of the upcoming games, beginning when the island hosts the surfing competition that kicks off on July 27.

The selection of Tahiti fulfills one of the pledges from Paris organizers, who promised to spread the Olympics throughout French territory. Tahiti became a French colony in 1880 and is now classified as an autonomous overseas country of the French Republic.

While other cities across France are hosting soccer, basketball and other high-profile competitions, the choice to put the surfing competition in the largest island in French Polynesia has made for one of the most unique and controversial venues in this edition of the Olympics.

But it’s one that’s well-known in the surfing community, as the swells off of the southwestern coast of Tahiti have long been a part of the stops on the competition circuit.

Located roughly 9,700 miles and a 21-hour flight away from Paris, Teahupo’o will make for one of the far-flung host cities for an Olympic event in history.

“This is a magical place, and the waves in Teahupo’o are breathtaking,” said Paris 2024 President Tony Estanguet after a visit to the event site in 2022. “Our vision has always been to provide the most spectacular conditions for the surfers and the sport. I have no doubt that Tahiti will deliver on that vision.”

Teahupo’o was selected third on CNN’s list of top 50 places to surf in the world in 2013, described as a short and intense ride that creates amazing waves for surfing. The name means “Wall of Heads” and can be dangerous.

Because the location of the Games’ competition has long been on the worldwide surfing circuit, it’s long had a wooden tower that is built for competitions in the lagoon off the coast.

It’s this judging tower – and the determination that it wasn’t going to be compliant with the safety expectations of Olympic competition, notably refereeing and broadcast coverage – that has set off a controversy in Tahiti and surfing circles.

Olympic organizers have instead built an aluminum tower in the lagoon that has become a source of scrutiny throughout the build-up to the Olympics.

After initially announcing plans to build a 14-ton, 150-square-meter tower with room for 40 people, drinking water and wastewater connections, the Paris 2024 team announced last year that it would be scaling back the project following backlash.

“As the current judges’ tower does not meet current safety standards, it will no longer be used and must be replaced if Teahupo’o is to continue to organise surfing events, whether for the Olympic Games or any other competition,” organizers said in a November news release.

“The second issue is that the tower must be able to guarantee good conditions for the refereeing of the competition, in particular by offering the judges the necessary visibility over the entire wave.”

The plans for the new aluminum tower were criticized for potentially causing damage to the delicate coral reef off Teahupo’o at a time when global warming is already harming coral reefs around the world.

Video posted last year by Save Teahupo’o Reef showed a barge – being used to build the tower – stuck on the reef, as well as evidence of broken coral

The tower had been ripped by some critics as a symbol of colonialism and accused the organizers of the event of not living up to their claims that the competition would be sustainable and environmentally friendly.

Alexandra Dempsey, coral reef ecologist and CEO of Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation, said that the coral formation that makes Tahiti such an ideal place for professional surfing could be damaged by the tower.

“The local communities there are incredibly passionate and culturally tied to the ocean, and particularly the reef systems and the reef systems there that caused the wave action in that area. And the perfect wave … is … a natural effect of how the reef is and has been naturally formed for millions of years,” she told CNN.

“You’re really not only damaging the ecology of the reef, but also the structure that’s been there, that’s been able to create the wonderful waves that that site was chosen for. And we’re not really sure what the outcomes or the fallout would be of damaging the reef system there,” she added.

View this interactive content on CNN.com

There are over 1,000 species of fish and 150 species of coral in French Polynesia, according to Tahiti’s tourism board. Threatened by the effects of climate change and mass tourism, the corals are a highly protected species.

The Paris 2024 committee said in a November news release that other options had been considered – such as reinforcing the foundations of the current tower, certifying the existing tower and existing foundation as safe, building a new wooden tower and having the judges judge the competition either from the shore or from boat.

All of those options were ruled out and the decision was made to construct a slimmed-down version of the new aluminum tower.

“The protection of the natural environment at Teahupo’o has always been a priority in the conception of all envisaged solutions for the site,” the news release stated.

“All development plans at Teahupo’o have been studied to minimise impact on the environment. This has been the aim of all the studies carried out with a view of organising the Games, and in particular the environmental support mission during the design and construction phase of the new tower.”

“The new tower, less imposing and reduced in size and weight, installed on new permanent foundations, is the solution that will ensure the longevity of the tower and guarantee that future sporting events can be held at Teahupo’o,” organizers added.

“This tower and the new foundations will be able to receive 10-year certification, which is essential for insurance purposes.”

The decision met with outrage from activists and condemnation from the International Surfing Association, the sport’s world governing body.

The new nine-ton, 50-square-meter, three-story tower is now sitting in the waters off Teahupo’o and – as Surfer Magazine reported in April – is in an area that does not directly affect much of the coral, though the long-term effects have yet to be seen.

“The area where the tower is built has very little coral. It’s a flat shelf with small spread out corals heads and a few bigger rocks covered with coral,” wrote Tim McKenna, a Tahiti-based photographer, in an Instagram post that showed photos of how the new tower looks after its construction.

“Over the years corals (have) even covered the previous concrete tower base structure.”

He added: “The new tower was never only for the Olympic Games. It’s a collapsable tower that will be assembled every year for the duration of the event.

“The aluminum structure designed and built exclusively in Tahiti can finally be certified for insurance and safety reasons. It’s an investment the Tahitian government has made for the … next 20 years of surfing events at Teahupo’o.”

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Let’s go on a little ghost hunt this week.Ever wonder about the guys in the NFL that play special teams and never really get a chance to play their actual position? The players on the fringe of the roster who have to earn their chances by balling out on special teams. But what about the ones that never really got that chance? Have you ever wondered who battled on the front lines of kickoffs and punt returns the most while remaining a complete unknown? A mirage somehow hiding for years in plain sight, yet whose name is as ephemeral as a single frame in the memory of his own team’s fans. He is a phantom. A phantom of the kick off. Step into this stathole, because we’re going to find the phantomest of them all. May as well while we’re all stuck in the thick of the summer sports slog. Perfect time to kill some time while we wait another 59 days before kickoff. Plus I think these phantoms deserve some recognition. Think about it. They’ve only known positional relegation and have remained imprisoned in plain sight for you to watch and ignore. At best, they are their own fans’ Deja vu. Here are the rules. Each day this week I’ll blog on one of what I’ll argue are the five biggest phantoms on record. Regular season/Playoffs only, so no preseason heroes. You might actually remember one of them after all. I’m using snap count data as the engine here which only goes back to 2012, so shoutout to anyone who played before then who’s phantomness will remain unrecognized likely forever. Whoever you never were. But let’s first set the stage. Below is a table of the NFL players sorted by most career special teams plays. The top-two names (Matthew Slater and Brandon Bolden) you’ve definitely heard of. Both Bill Belichick New England Patriots’ who really had to earn their way into playing their actual position. Take note of the number of offensive/defensive snaps by all players on this list. Only place kicker Justin Tucker failed to ever get a snap on offense or defense because – well, duh – he’s a kicker and the best kicker of all time. As for the rest of this crew, safe to say these are all perennial preseason roster bubble boys that just squeeked by without being popped. Living every play like their last as they desperately try to make an impact on special teams to earn a snap here and there in their native role. I show you this list to provide a baseline expectation for how many plays on offense/defense a fringe roster bubble boy type is likely to have in their career. And as hard knock of a life it is for a guy like Matthew Slater to play just 268 plays as a wide receiver as reward for 3,974 brutal special teams plays, he is nothing close to being considered a phantom. Say his name in a New England pub and someone will frown for a second and respond: “oh yeah, I rahmembah that guy”. In fact, none of the names on this list are phantoms. Not even close. Even though they are the players who’ve been stuck playing special teams the most. So who is? Put your ghostbusters gear on people. It’s time to go hunting.Let’s consumate this quest. Here’s our phantom player of the day. NFL Phantom #5: Dee Virgin Nuccio DiNuzzo. Getty Images.AdvertisementOK. Time out. I feel like everyone knows who Dee “most memeable name ever” Virgin is which certainly hurts his phantom cred, but this was too perfect to resist. Dee – an undrafted corner from the 2017 class – popped up on my list of players who had the lowest percent of snaps taken on offense/defense vs special teams. He played 478 special teams plays in attempt to prove himself worthy of cornerback snaps on defense. Luckily for him he would not live up to his name as he popped his defensive cherry for one single defensive snap of his entire career on November 16, 2020. One out of 479 plays or .2% of his career. Just to be clear – the decimal point is not a typo. Pro-football Reference Stats:I think us guys can all relate when we learn he only lasted 40 seconds in finally doing something he dreamt about doing his entire life while being completely unmemorable in this performance. I mean, he didn’t even show up on the stat sheet. No tackle. No mention of a sack. And since he played corner, it’s unlikely he really ever even went inside the box. In his defense though, since he only had one crack at it, that left him zero chance to ever explore changing positions. This is some bullshit if you ask me. How bad could Virgin have been on this one play? Was he legally required to change his name to “No longer Virgin” before going a round two? Because if players have to live up to the name on their back, then I have some questions for other players such as 6’4″ 332 lb. Richie Incognito.  Adam Bettcher. Getty Images.Anyway – I feel for Dee. I don’t know what the hell happened on that one play but if he gave up a pass, committed a penalty or did something obbviosly stupid, it would have showed. Even still, he was cut the week afterwards by the Lions. The 2020 Lions. New England picked him up for Week 17 so they could have him hold down one of their ‘inactive’ designations which started and ended the Dee Virgin era in New England. The 49ers picked him up for the 2021 season and played him in two games for 32 special teams snaps to presumably end his career in the NFL. All in all, he played for six teams (or was at least signed by six teams) and made $1.35 Million across five years. That’s about 270K before taxes. Pitiful in NFL terms, but elite for normies. Then again, us normies didn’t put our bodies on the front line of the most dangerous part of the most dangerous team sport. AdvertisementDee had 15 total tackles and one forced fumble in his career. That’s 16 instances in which you might have heard his name on TV during his five-year career. Hopefully there will be a 17th this season. And many more. I’d love to see a team take a flyer on the kid and give him an actual damn chance at cornerback. I mean – the kid literally has experience. One experience. But experience. Come on now GMs!Dee Promiscuous >>> Dee Virgin. I’ll be back early tomorrow morning for another round (unlike Dee) as we look at a player who didn’t even get the non-chance Dee Virgin got. A linebacker who stayed true to his position name by remaining back behind the line on every single defensive play of his career. It is he who leads the record book with most special teams plays without a single play at his actual position.See you tomorrow. @StatholePS: Need some more random NFL research to get you through offseason? Got you covered:- What NFL player has the most transactions?- Who’s the other player that also has 113 transactions?- What coach is the best/worst at coin flips?

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