‘His words are gold’ – Olympic hopeful on Henry’s influence as France U21 coach

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Refugee athletes to be backed by a new home crowd at Paris Olympics this summer

Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) is calling on Olympic fans across Europe to come together to pledge their support for the Refugee Olympic Team by creating a new ‘Home Crowd’ as the athletes prepare to compete in Paris this summer.

The Refugee Olympic Team was first created for Rio 2016 by International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach in celebration of Olympic Solidarity. Paris 2024 will be the first Summer Olympic Games in eight years where fans will be able to cheer on the athletes within Olympic venues and never before has there been a greater need for a fervent following for refugee athletes competing on the world’s biggest stage.

According to UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, more than 114 million people globally – and counting -are estimated to be forcibly displaced due to persecution, conflict and human rights violations. This represents an increase of more than 40% since Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 or roughly double the number since the first refugee athletes competed at Rio 2016.

Following the announcement of the IOC Refugee Olympic Team on 2 May, with athletes predominantly selected from 73 Refugee Athlete Scholarship holders, WBD is calling on the world to back the team on the road to Paris and beyond while offering support to vulnerable communities.

Scott Young, Group SVP Content, Production and Business Operations at WBD Sports Europe, said: “Through its diversity, its rivalries and above all its trailblazing athletes, sport has a unique ability to unite communities in celebration of human achievements. And, as passionate storytellers, we are uniquely privileged to be able to harness our international reach to support our purpose-driven mission to demonstrate the power of sport in helping displaced people and vulnerable communities to reshape their futures by bringing these stories to the widest possible audience.

“We are delighted to welcome Yusra Mardini to our ranks, an inspirational athlete and storyteller who will be joining our team of presenters embedded in the heart of Paris this summer to help us authentically connect audiences all around the world with the athletes and stories from the Refugee Olympic Team. Today is just the beginning and we will be announcing even more initiatives designed to generate mass support for refugee athletes as we head towards Paris 2024.”

YUSRA MARDINI TO BRING REFUGEE STORIES TO NEW AUDIENCES

To illuminate the stories of refugee athletes and their journey to the Games, WBD will be relentless in its pursuit of new voices, knowledge and innovation. To accelerate this mission and to connect new fans with refugee stories, Yusra Mardini is today announced as Eurosport Reporter dedicated to covering the Refugee Olympic Team.

The Syrian Refugee Olympic Team athlete, who competed at Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020, and UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador whose remarkable life story was told in the film The Swimmers, has landed her first reporting role and will be presenting live coverage on-site at Paris 2024, getting to the heart of every story involving refugee athletes.

Yusra Mardini, Eurosport Reporter for the Refugee Olympic Team, said: “It is an incredible opportunity for me. My role will be reporting on-site, specifically about the Refugee Olympic Team and the most exciting stories about the Olympics. It’s going to be a really exciting time to bring awareness about refugees and why we’re doing what we do as athletes.”

“My message is that this is a time where you can open your heart and your mind for this team and watch the way they compete and listen to their stories. They went through a lot of hardship to get to this point. I’m just excited to see them compete and show the world that just because you’re a refugee, it doesn’t mean that you cannot do what you dream of.”

NEW CAMPAIGN SHOWS THE POWER OF A HOME CROWD

To kickstart the first phase of the campaign, WBD has produced a powerful new short film launching on 3 May starring refugee athletes competing in an empty stadium. With the team being the only one from 206 nations not to benefit from the support of a home crowd cheering them on, the film inspires viewers to create a new community to get behind the athletes as they prepare to compete at some of the world’s most iconic venues in Paris.

In addition, WBD will also leverage the full scale of its international channels, platforms and digital sites to tell these stories while providing a space where refugees’ voices can be heard. This includes new first-person Refugees’ Voice features on Eurosport.com as well as showing on-demand documentaries via Max, discovery+ and the Eurosport App such as We Dare to Dream directed by Oscar nominated Waad Al-Kateab, which stories the dramatic challenges faced by refugee athletes competing for a place at Olympic Games Tokyo 2020.

WBD first set out to create a Home Crowd for the Refugee Olympic Team ahead of Tokyo 2020 by launching content including Trailblazers, telling the stories of sporting pioneers who have inspired change, and In Conversation which brought together UNHCR Goodwill Ambassadors including Bayern Munich’s Alphonso Davies and seven-time Olympic champion for Team USA Katie Ledecky for conversations with refugee athletes. The ambition is to now bring these stories to an even wider audience in build up to the Games while ensuring athletes have the support of a home crowd when they compete in Paris this summer.

WBD is guided by its core social impact pillar of supporting vulnerable communities and is committed to harnessing sport and storytelling as a vehicle for raising greater awareness of refugee causes. In 2023 it signed up to The Multistakeholder Pledge on Sport for Inclusion and Protection of Refugees (Sport Pledge) at the UNHCR Global Refugee Forum which promotes access to, and opportunities through sport for, and with, displaced people and host communities, contributing to more inclusive and cohesive societies.

discovery+ is the streaming home of the Olympic Games, and the only place you can watch every moment of Paris 2024 this summer

‘We welcome you with open arms’ – Refugee Olympic Team named for Paris 2024

International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach says the whole world will cheer on the Refugee Olympic Team, which has been named for Paris 2024.

Thirty-six athletes from 11 countries will compete across 12 different sports, having been picked initially on their sporting performance alongside their refugee status being verified by United Nations bodies.

Fifteen National Olympic Committees, including Great Britain and Northern Ireland, France and the USA, have hosted the athletes and provided training provisions.

They include boxer Cindy Ngamba, who left Cameroon aged 11 in search of a better life in the UK and swimmer Alaa Maso, who fled conflict in Syria before settling in Germany.

But arguably the highest profile is Olympic sprint canoe champion Fernando Jorge, who defected from Cuba after winning C2 1000m gold in Tokyo.

It is the third time a Refugee Olympic Team will compete at a summer Games, following the debut appearance at Rio 2016. In a sign of progression, the team now has its own emblem which features a way marker arrow with a heart in at the centre.

“We welcome all of you with open arms,” said Bach.

“You are an enrichment to our Olympic Community, and to our societies. With your participation in the Olympic Games, you will demonstrate the human potential of resilience and excellence.

“This will send a message of hope to the more than 100 million displaced people around the world. At the same time, you will make billions of people around the world aware of the magnitude of the refugee crisis.

“Therefore, I encourage everyone, around the world, to join us in cheering for you – the IOC Refugee Olympic Team”.

The Refugee Olympic Team for Paris 2024

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, said the team should remind the world of the “resilience, courage and hopes of all those uprooted by war and persecution”, while the team’s chef de mission has also encouraged athletes to enjoy the experience.

“All of you had a dream, and today your dream to compete at the Olympic Games is closer than ever,” said Masomah Ali Zada.

“With all the challenges that you have faced, you now have a chance to inspire a new generation, represent something bigger than yourselves and show the world what refugees are capable of.”

discovery+ is the streaming home of the Olympic Games, and the only place you can watch every moment of Paris 2024 this summer

Kenya’s Kipchoge confirmed for shot at Olympic marathon history

Eliud Kipchoge will attempt to become the first athlete to win three Olympic marathon titles after the former world record holder was confirmed in Kenya’s team for Paris 2024.

The 39-year-old had an underwhelming start to his year by , his worst performance over 26.2 miles.

But Kipchoge has shown form in the past year, winning September’s Berlin Marathon in 2:02:42 – the third quickest time of 2023. He will attempt to add to his triumphs at Rio 2016 and the Covid-delayed Tokyo 2020 when he competes at a fifth Games, having made his debut as a 5000m bronze medallist at Athens 2004.

Kipchoge is joined in the men’s team by 2024 Tokyo Marathon champion Benson Kipruto, a former winner of both Boston and New York events, as well as Alexander Mutiso Munyao, who claimed his first major victory in London last month.

Obiri has made an impressive step up to marathon level, winning and taking victory in New York in November, with the double track world champion using her finishing speed to take apart the rest of the field.

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Obiri secures back-to-back wins at Boston Marathon

It means an intriguing rivalry with the Netherlands’ Sifan Hassan is likely to be resumed, which could be one of the highlights of the athletics programme in Paris.

Hassan beat Obiri to 5000m gold at the Tokyo Olympics three years ago and has also made a big impression on the marathon circuit, winning in London and Chicago last year before a more humbling fourth place in Tokyo in March.

A stellar line-up is completed by former world record holder Brigid Kosgei, who is beginning to return to form after injury forced her out of the London Marathon last year having barely run 200m.

Kosgei won the Abu Dhabi Marathon at the end of last year and followed that up with a fifth place finish in London.

2022 New York champion Sharon Lokedi will be the first reserve for the women, with Timothy Kiplagat, who finished second in Tokyo, taking that position for the men. Ruth Chepngetich, Rosemary Wanjiru and Vincent Kipkemoi Ngetich, who were all on the original shortlist, miss out completely, as does Evans Chebet.

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‘Look what it means!’ – Jepchirchir breaks women’s only world record to win London Marathon

Kipchoge’s biggest threat could come from within his own team, though Ethiopia’s Boston Marathon champion Sisay Lemma will also go off as one of the favourites.

Women’s world record holder Tigst Assefa and world champion Amane Beriso will also be involved for Ethiopia, in a stacked field.

discovery+ is the streaming home of the Olympic Games, and the only place you can watch every moment of Paris 2024 this summer

Nadal ‘hugely’ excited at prospect of playing doubles with Alcaraz at Paris Olympics

While doubts still swirl about his participation at the French Open, Rafael Nadal is at least excited about the prospect of partnering fellow Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz at the Paris Olympics this year.

Singles world No. 3 Alcaraz has previously expressed his desire to play alongside the tennis icon, who is winding down his career after being plagued by injuries over the past year.

A hip issue kept Nadal sidelined for most of last season, and the Madrid Open is just his third tournament this year.

He says he shares Alcaraz’s wish, and hopes that the pair can get some time together on the court before the tennis competition at the Games, which will take place on clay at Roland-Garros where Nadal has won 14 major titles.

Both players are competing at the Madrid Open this week and Nadal spoke on the IGUALES podcast, putting an admittedly nervous Alcaraz at ease about partnering up.

“Carlos doesn’t have to ask me anything, all things being well, we’ll play,” Nadal said. “It’s also hugely exciting for me. If I’m not mistaken, I’ve heard it is for him too.

“So it would be great to play the odd tournament before the Olympics to prepare ourselves and to get some rapport on court.”

Nadal recently returned to competition in Brisbane in January before a thigh issue arose, returning in Barcelona earlier this month where he lost to Alex de Minaur in the second round.

He played his first match in Madrid on Thursday, cruising past 16-year-old Darwin Blanch, but was clear that his body didn’t feel tested and his participation at Roland-Garros is still up in the air.

Despite that, the 37-year-old is eyeing up a third gold medal in Paris this summer after triumphing in singles in the 2008 Beijing Games and doubles eight years later in Rio, while Alcaraz will be making his Olympic debut.

“I think if we’re both fit enough, why not? We could have the chance to form a great team and aspire to great things,” Nadal said of the partnership.

“It would be good for both of us. It would also be good for the Spanish team, so we’ll see how things progress.”

Nadal, a five-times champion in Madrid, faces Australian 10th seed De Minaur again on Saturday, in a second-round match.

Stream top tennis action, including the 2024 French Open, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

‘Almost impossible to do properly’ – Kopecky to skip TDF, will focus on Olympics

World champion Lotte Kopecky will not be racing at the 2024 Tour de France Femmes, her team SD Worx has confirmed.

Instead, the Belgian superstar will put all her focus towards the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.

Ever since the schedule for 2024 was announced, it always seemed that the top cyclists were going to have to make a choice, with the Olympics finishing just a day before the Grand Depart of the Tour.

And speaking to Belgian outlet Sporza, SD Worx team manager Danny Stam said that the Tour just isn’t going to be possible for Kopecky.

“The omnium ends on Sunday afternoon, the Tour starts on Monday morning. It is almost impossible to do that properly,” explained Stam.

“Combining those two events would also be a very difficult task mentally.”

It has been a stellar season for Kopecky so far, having won Paris-Roubaix, Strade Bianche and Nokere Koerse, as well as the GC at the UAE Tour.

Last year she finished second at the Tour de France Femmes in dramatic fashion, leading the race until the penultimate stage when team-mate Demi Vollering passed her in the GC on the Col du Tourmalet.

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Stage 1 highlights: SD Worx one-two as Kopecky soars into yellow

Between now and the Olympics, Kopecky is scheduled to race at the Tour of Britain and the Giro d’Italia.

Discovery+ is the streaming home of the Olympic Games, and the only place you can watch every moment of Paris 2024 this summer