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Paris 2024 Olympics: why some sports like boxing or judo award 4 medals

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This is the privilege offered to martial arts and combat sports. Four disciplines, yesterday five but karate left the Olympic program after Tokyo 2021, will distribute two bronze medals in each of its events. A habit that goes back quite a long way.

Boxing was the driving force behind this major change. Before the Helsinki Olympics in 1952, the two boxers beaten in the semi-finals would compete for the bronze medal. At its congress in Copenhagen in 1950, the International Boxing Federation (AIBA, now IBA), decided to cancel this match for third place.

The reason given? World boxing officials did not think it was prudent for the losing boxers to meet again only a day or two after their defeat. A decision that was followed a year later by the IOC. Thus, in a 1952 text, the official rapporteur wrote: “As recommended by AIBA, only the gold and silver medals were awarded. The losers of the semi-finals did not compete for the bronze medal, as before. Instead, both received diplomas. Their national flags were also hoisted during the protocol ceremonies.”

Thus, no bronze medals were awarded in boxing in 1952. An injustice that would be corrected eighteen years later. The Finnish federation was the initiator of this idea and six of the twenty forgotten bronze medalists of 1952 were finally honoured in Helsinki in April 1970 without the presence of the IOC. However, the IOC would end up that same year recognising and awarding these bronze medals from 1952 in its official count.

Several format changes in judo

Judo followed suit as soon as it entered the Olympic program in 1964 in Tokyo. For its first edition, judo imitated boxing by awarding two bronze medals to the semi-finalists. Absent in 1968 in Mexico, judo returned in 1972 in Munich and invented a repechage table, which is different from the one we know today. The competition was organized in the form of two separate tables.

Each table winner qualified directly for the semi-finals. The other two semi-finalists were the two winners of the repechage (concerning only the defeats of the two table winners). The two defeats in the semi-finals were bronze medalists.

Frenchman Luka Mkheidze won the bronze medal at the last Olympics. AFP/Franck Fife

The system changed again in 1980. This time, the winner of each table went directly to the final. In the repechage, all the losers of the two finalists were found to win the two bronze medals.

In 1992, the repechage system was opened to all the defeated of the four semi-finalists. In 2012, the repechages were limited to the defeated from the quarter-finals of the four semi-finalists. A system that is still current.

The fight has groped

After boxing and judo, it was taekwondo that applied the double silver medal as soon as it entered as a demonstration sport in Seoul 1988 and Barcelona 1992. In South Korea and Spain, the two defeated semi-finalists climbed onto the 3rd step of the podium.

In 2000 in Sydney, taekwondo was officially included in the Olympic program. It was during this edition that a repechage table was set up and only awarded a bronze medal to its winner from a tournament opposing only all the defeated of the two finalists. A system that was maintained for Athens 2004. From 2008, two medals were awarded to the two winners of the repechage. A system that is still in force. READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

The fourth sport to introduce the double medal is wrestling. Present since the first Games in 1896 in Athens (its only absence was in Paris 1900), wrestling waited until Beijing 2008 to follow suit. From 1896 to 1904, wrestling offered a classic table with a match for 3rd place between the two defeated in the semi-finals. In Stockholm 1908, a competition in the form of groups and over several rounds was introduced. A fighter is eliminated as soon as he is beaten twice. A system that allowed the establishment of a ranking.

In Antwerp 1920, wrestling invented a repechage table for both the silver medal (the finalist was not guaranteed second place) and the bronze medal. In 1932 in Los Angeles, wrestling created a points and handicap system, without using a classic table. A system that would last until… 1992.

In Barcelona, ​​wrestling innovated again with a two-pool system, the two winners faced each other for the title and the two runners-up for the bronze medal. In 1996 in Atlanta, we returned to a classic direct elimination system, with a repechage table for the award of the single bronze medal including all the losers since the first round. In 2000 in Sydney, we returned to a pool system where each winner entered the direct elimination matches. The bronze medal was determined after the match of the losers in the semi-finals. A system unchanged for Athens 2004.

Then we arrive at Beijing 2008, which is the first edition with a double bronze medal for the wrestlers. All the defeated of the two finalists find themselves in the repechage table. A system still in force today.

Second Chance School

Finally, the fifth sport that introduced the double bronze medal system is karate. A discipline that will not be present at Paris 2024 and which was only present once at Tokyo 2020 as an additional sport. After a group stage, the competition then moved to the semi-finals where the two losers won bronze.

If for boxing, the introduction of a double bronze medal is justified for security reasons, in other disciplines, the school of second chances is put forward to erase any possible bad luck in the draw. Thus, if you come across a big guy, who blocks your path to a medal, you can catch up via the repechages.

PODCAST. Boxer Brahim Asloum: “I knew I had to do more than the others”

In other sports, several systems are in place. But they always award three medals, reserved for the first three. Thus, some sports (athletics, swimming, cycling, gymnastics, artistic swimming, canoe slalom, canoe sprint, diving, horse riding, rowing, shooting, skateboarding, sport climbing, triathlon, weightlifting) organize races until the final to determine a ranking.

Sailing and golf cultivate a difference

Other disciplines that take place on courts and fields (3×3 basketball, archery, badminton, softball/baseball, basketball, fencing, football, handball, hockey, rugby sevens, surfing, table tennis, tennis, volleyball, water polo) favour direct elimination competitions. The semi-finalists then compete for the sole bronze medal.

Finally, two sports have different systems, golf and sailing. For golf, all participants compete to determine a ranking. The elimination series are only used to decide between tied competitors. Finally, in sailing, all participants take part in about ten qualifying races. The top ten then compete in a final race which awards the three medals to the best.

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Champions League schedule and results, 2024-2025 season

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What is the 2024-2025 Champions League schedule? The new tournament format, which now includes 36 teams compared to 32 previously, promises more confrontations from the start of the competition. Find the complete schedule of matches and their results updated in real time in our table below.

During the league phase scheduled between September and December 2024, each club plays eight matches against different opponents, selected based on their UEFA ranking.

Then, the top eight teams in the rankings will advance directly to the round of 16, while teams ranked 9th to 24th will have to go through play-offs in January 2025. These knockout matches will begin in February, with the grand final scheduled for June 2025. READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

For French clubs, including PSG, AS Monaco, Lille and Stade Brestois, the challenge will be to stay in the race for direct qualifications and avoid early eliminations.

The final of the competition will take place in Munich on May 31, 2025. We will then know the successor to Real Madrid where Kylian Mbappé now plays.

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Halftime show: Fifa is planning an event like in football at the next World Cup final

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In American football, the halftime show has long been part of the event. Appearances during the break have not been an issue in football so far – but that will change at the next World Cup.

Anyone who goes to the toilet or refills chips during half-time at the next World Cup final will miss something: As the world football association Fifa announces, from the next World Cup in the USA, Canada and Mexico there will be a half-time show in the final. What exactly the association is planning is still very vaguely worded in the announcement. FIFA is probably planning a musical performance modeled on the Superbowl in American football: This so-called half time show is probably the biggest stage that musicians have had so far. In recent years, megastars such as Coldplay, Rihanna and Bruno Mars have appeared at halftime.

FIFA wants to organize a halftime show together with an aid organization

Global Citizen acts as co-organizer. The aid organization is committed to combating extreme poverty around the world. “FIFA has made it its mission to promote football in all countries of the world and thereby have a positive influence on society,” explains the controversial FIFA President Gianni Infantino.

Through this partnership, FIFA, together with Global Citizen, will unite the world of sports and entertainment to actively contribute to a better world. “We are committed to a series of joint actions that promote access to the game and encourage fans to advocate for positive change in their local communities,” Infantino continued. However, the association leaves it open exactly how a halftime show during the World Cup final should support Global Citizen or combat poverty in the world. READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

“Eventization” of football is met with rejection in Germany

If FIFA presents an act as big as the NFL at the Superbowl, the football halftime show would actually immediately be in the same league as its US counterparts. In the USA, the show is one of the absolute highlights of the football final. It remains to be seen whether such a show will be received so positively by football fans who are more used to a simpler presentation of their sport.

In Europe and especially in Germany, the organized fan scene is extremely critical of the additional commercialization and “eventization” of sport. A resonant example is Helene Fischer’s act before the 2017 DFB Cup final. The artist was booed so mercilessly and loudly during her short appearance that her singing on the television was difficult to understand at times.

Source: FIFA press release

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Ugo Humbert-Arthur Fils, duel for a title in Tokyo between a calm player and another who doesn’t give up

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Difficult to find two courses as dissimilar as those of Ugo Humbert and Arthur Fils at the ATP 500 in Tokyo, but the rectilinear trajectory of the first will still cross the fractured line of the second, in the final, this Tuesday. Despite losing his first set of the week, Humbert (19th in the world) qualified without too much difficulty by beating Tomas Machac (54th) 6-3, 3-6, 6-2. After having fought like a madman to eliminate Taylor Fritz and especially Ben Shelton, Son went through two tie-breaks with forceps to subdue Holger Rune. One wanders, the other suffers, but we will be treated to a happy ending. Even with a seven-hour time difference with France, this is a pleasure that we won’t shy away from.

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