Rio 2016 – Water Polo Preview

Water polo began as an Olympic sport in 1900, but didn’t feature women’s water polo until 2000.  The men’s tournament grew as large as 21 in 1952 and was as small as four in 1964 before settling on 12 since 1976. The women’s tournament has been between eight teams other than the first one in 2000 which was six. Water polo will be played at the Maria Lenk Aquatic Center which is in part of the Barra zone and outdoors, as well as the Olympic Aquatics Stadium which is an indoor stadium which is a temporary venue. The US men qualified at the Pan American Games in July of 2015 while the women qualified in a world qualification tournament in March. Continue reading Rio 2016 – Water Polo Preview

Aaron Gwin Qualifies in First, Extends UCI Mountain Bike World Cup Lead

Aaron Gwin won qualifying by 3.603 seconds over Great Britain’s Danny Hart at the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup event in Mont-Sanite-Anne, Quebec on Friday. The top finish gave Gwin 50 more points in the overall standings and despite Hart finishing second Gwin’s lead grew to 218 points in the season standings. If Gwin wins the final tomorrow he will move 258 points in front of Gwin and won’t even need to score points in the final event of the season to win the season title. It’s hard to see a scenario at this point where he doesn’t end up on top for the second straight year and fourth time in his career.

14 of the US riders reached the final with Luca Shaw in seventh and Charlie Harrison in 19th the most noteworthy finishers. None of the three US riders who missed the final had participated in a race earlier this year. Also all that talk of there finally being a US woman in the field and Amanda Batty did not start qualifying so there won’t be any US women competing on Saturday. The downhill final is on Saturday with a cross-country event on Sunday.

Previous Mountain Bike World Cup Downhill Coverage:
Mont-Sainte-Anne Preview

Rio 2016 – Rowing Preview

Rowing has been a part of every Olympics, though it was not held in 1896 due to bad weather. Women’s rowing didn’t begin until 1976, and has six events compared to the eight the men have though the Olympics are working to at the very least increase the size of field for women while decreasing it for men. The competition will be held in the Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon. The US qualified all but one of their boats at the World Championships in 2015 with the men’s eight qualifying at the final qualifying regatta in May.

The Team:

This year’s team is made up of 21 men and 20 women despite the fact that there are six women’s boats and only five for the men. There are more men because the US has two four-man and one eight-man boat but just one four-woman and one eight-woman boat. 12 of the 41 have Olympic experience with most of that in London but one woman who was not part of the team in London but was in Beijing as well as two others who took part in both London and Beijing. Steve Kasprzyk is the oldest on the team at 34 while Andrew Weiss won’t turn 24 until this November.

Links are to twitter accounts for the athletes.

USA Rowing
Men:
Nareg Guregian – Coxless pair
Anders Weiss – Coxless pair
Andrew Campbell – Lightweight double sculls
Joshua Konieczny – Lightweight double sculls
Anthony Fahden* – Lightweight Four
Edward King – Lightweight Four
Tyler Nase – Lightweight Four
Robin Prendes* – Lightweight Four
Charlie Cole* – Four
Henrik Rummel* – Four
Matt Miller – Four
Seth Weil – Four
Mike DiSanto – Eight
Sam Dommer – Eight
Austin Hack – Eight
Alex Karwoski – Eight
Steve Kasprzyk* – Eight
Rob Munn – Eight
Glenn Ochal* – Eight
Hans Struzyna – Eight
Sam Ojserkis – Eight

Women:
Gevvie Stone* – Single Sculls
Grace Luczak – Pair
Felice Mueller – Pair
Kate Bertko – Lightweight Double Sculls
Devery Karz – Lightweight Double Sculls
Meghan O’Leary – Double Sculls
Ellen Tomek^ – Double Sculls
Tracy Eisser – Quadruple Sculls
Megan Kalmoe** – Quadruple Sculls
Grace Latz – Quadruple Sculls
Adrienne Martelli* – Quadruple Sculls
Amanda Elmore – Eight
Tessa Gobbo – Eight
Eleanor Logan** – Eight
Meghan Musnicki* – Eight
Amanda Polk – Eight
Emily Regan – Eight
Lauren Schmetterling – Eight
Kerry Simmonds – Eight
Katelin Snyder – Eight
* – Was part of the team in 2012 – London
** – Was part of the team in 2012 and 2008 (Beijing)
& – Was part of the team in 2008 – Beijing

Format:

All the events follow the same basic format of many Olympic racing events… heats, semifinals, finals. In rowing there is a repechage after the heats so those who don’t reach the semifinals on the first try get one more chance to advance. These events also feature additional finals past the main one to determine positions all the way down the line.

Schedule:

All Times ET
Saturday, August 6th
8:30 AM – Women’s Single Sculls – Heats
9:30 AM – Men’s Pair – Heats
10 AM – Women’s Double Sculls – Heats
11 AM – Men’s Lightweight Four – Heats
11:50 AM – Women’s Quadruple Sculls – Heats

Sunday, August 7th
8 AM – Women’s Single Sculls – Repechage
8:30 AM – Men’s Pair – Repechage
8:40 AM – Women’s Double Sculls – Repechage
9 AM – Men’s Lightweight Four – Repechage
9:10 AM – Women’s Pair – Heats
9:40 AM – Women’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Heats
10:20 AM – Men’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Heats
11 AM – Men’s Four – Heats

Monday, August 8th
7:50 AM – Women’s Single Sculls – Semifinals
8:10 AM – Women’s Pair – Repechage
8:20 AM – Women’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Repechage
8:40 AM – Men’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Repechage
9:10 AM – Women’s Quadruple Sculls – Repechage
9:20 AM – Men’s Four – Repechage
9:30 AM – Women’s Eight – Heats
9:50 AM – Men’s Eight – Heats

Tuesday, August 9th
8:10 AM – Women’s Single Sculls – Quarterfinals
8:50 AM – Men’s Pair – Semifinals
9:10 AM – Women’s Double Sculls – Semifinals
9:50 AM – Men’s Lightweight Four – Semifinals
10:10 AM – Women’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Semifinals
10:30 AM – Men’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Semifinals

Wednesday, August 10th
7:30 AM – Women’s Pair – Semifinals
7:50 AM – Women’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Semifinals
8:10 AM – Men’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Semifinals
8:30 AM – Men’s Four – Semifinals
8:50 AM – Women’s Eight – Repechage
9 AM – Men’s Eight – Repechage
9:34 AM – Women’s Quadruple Sculls – Finals
10:30 AM – Women’s Single Sculls – Semifinals
10:50 AM – Women’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Finals
11 AM – Men’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Finals
11:30 AM – Women’s Pair – Finals

Thursday, August 11th
7:30 AM – Men’s Pair – Finals
7:40 AM – Women’s Double Sculls – Finals
8 AM – Men’s Lightweight Four – Finals
8:30 AM – Women’s Single Sculls – Semifinals

Friday, August 12th
7:40 AM – Women’s Single Sculls – Finals
8:10 AM – Women’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Finals
8:20 AM – Men’s Lightweight Double Sculls – Finals
8:30 AM – Women’s Pair – Finals
8:40 AM – Men’s Four – Finals

Saturday, August 13th
8:40 AM – Women’s Single Sculls – Finals
10:04 AM – Women’s Eight – Finals
10:24 AM – Men’s Eight – Finals

Past Results:

The US has more medals than any other country, 87 including 32 golds, with Great Britain in second with 63 medals. The US won three medals in London, a gold in women’s eight and bronzes in women’s quadruple sculls and men’s four. Meghan Musnicki and Eleanor Logan are back from the gold medal eight team and Logan won another gold in 2008 as well. Megan Kalmoe and Adrienne Martelli were part of the women’s quadruple sculls team that won bronze while Glenn OchalCharlie Cole, and Henrik Rummel were part of the men’s four team that won bronze.

 

Rio 2016 – Cycling Preview

Cycling has been a part of every modern Olympics and has included women’s cycling since 1984. The program has been constantly changing, but all 18 events held in London are being held again this time. Of the current events only men’s team pursuit, men’s/women’s individual sprint, and men’s/women’s individual road race have histories at the Olympics stretching earlier than Atlanta. With the variety of events in the cycling category there are four venues for the Olympic events. Fort Copacabana, a military base, will be the focal point of the road cycling roads race but the time trial will not be held there instead the Pontal, an area along the coast in the western part of Rio near the Barra region will host those events. The Rio Olympic Velodrome, built pre-Olympics in 2005, in the Barra area will host the track events. In the Deodoro zone the newly constructed Olympic BMX Center will host, you guessed it, the BMX events while the Mountain Bike Centre will host the mountain bike events. The US qualified for the men’s road events via the UCI America Tour while the women were in the top five of the UCI World Rankings in 2015 to qualify four spots. All of the track spots the US qualified were via rankings based on performances over the last three years with similar criteria qualifying the mountain bike and BMX spots.

The Team:

This year’s team is made up of eight men and 13 women. Ten of the 21 have Olympic experience with four going to their third straight Olympics. Kristin Armstrong is the veteran of the group at 42 while Chloe Tygert is just 19.

Links are to twitter accounts for the athletes.

USA Cycling
Men:
Connor Fields* – BMX
Nicholas Long* – BMX
Corben Sharrah – BMX
Howard Grotts – Mountain Biking – Cross-country
Brent Bookwalter – Road – Road race and time trial
Taylor Phinney** – Road – Road race and time trial
Matt Baranoski – Track – Keirin
Bobby Lea** – Track – Omnium

Women:
Brooke Crain* – BMX
Alise Post* – BMX
Lea Davison* – Mountain Biking – Cross-Country
Chloe Woodruff – Mountain Biking – Cross-Country
Mara Abbott – Road – Road race
Kristin Armstrong*** – Road – Road race and time trial
Megan Guarnier – Road – Road race
Evelyn Stevens* – Road – Road race and time trial
Kelly Catlin – Track – Team pursuit
Chloe Dygert – Track – Team pursuit
Sarah Hammer** – Track – Team pursuit and omnium
Jennifer Valente – Track – Team pursuit
Ruth Winder – Track – Team pursuit
* – Was part of the team in 2012 – London
** – Was part of the team in 2012 and 2008 (Beijing)
*** – Was part of the team in 2012, 2008, and 2004 (Athens)

Format:

Some of the events are simple… like the road race and time trial as well as the cross-country race, all are just fastest wins. In some time is mostly irrelevant, like the BMX events where other than the seeding run the rest of the event is top riders advance and losers are out. In women’s team pursuit there will be a qualification round to narrow it down to eight for the first round. The top two in the first round will face off for gold with third and fourth meeting for bronze. In the men’s keirin the first round and the subsequent repechages will narrow the field for the first round. Only the top six in the first round (three from each heat) will move into the final. The men’s and women’s omniums are the cycling equivalent of the heptathlon with six individual events contributing to an overall score.

Schedule:

All Times ET
Saturday, August 6th
8:30 AM – Road – Men’s Road Race

Sunday, August 7th
11:15 AM – Road – Women’s Road Race

Wednesday, August 10th
7:30 AM – Road – Women’s Time Trial
9 AM – Road – Women’s Time Trial

Thursday, August 11th
3:10 PM – Track – Women’s Team Pursuit – Qualification

Saturday, August 13th
10:17 AM – Track – Women’s Team Pursuit – Round 1
3:53 PM – Track – Women’s Team Pursuit – Finals

Sunday, August 14th
3:40 PM – Track – Men’s Omnium – Flying Lap 250m Time Trial
4:50 PM – Track – Men’s Omnium – Individual Pursuit
6:15 PM – Track – Men’s Omnium – Elimination Race

Monday, August 15th
9:21 AM – Track – Men’s Omnium – 1km Time Trial
9:59 AM – Track – Women’s Omnium – Flying Lap 250m Time Trial
3 PM – Track – Men’s Omnium – Flying Lap
3:30 PM – Track – Women’s Omnium – Individual Pursuit
4:23 PM – Track – Men’s Omnium – Points Race
5:17 PM – Track – Women’s Omnium – Elimination Race

Tuesday, August 16th
9:18 AM – Track – Men’s Keirin – Round 1
9:57 AM – Track – Women’s Omnium – 500m Time Trial
10:25 AM – Track – Men’s Keirin – Round 1 Repechages
3:10 PM – Track – Women’s Omnium – Flying Lap
3:46 PM – Track – Men’s Keirin – Round 2
4:05 PM – Track – Women’s Omnium – Points Race
5:14 PM – Track – Men’s Keirin – Finals

Wednesday, August 17th
12:30 PM – Women’s BMX – Seeding Run
1:34 PM – Men’s BMX – Seeding Run

Thursday, August 18th
12:30 PM – Men’s BMX – Quarterfinals

Friday, August 19th
12:30 PM – Women’s BMX – Semifinals
12:38 PM – Men’s BMX – Semifinals
2 PM – Women’s BMX – Final
2:10 PM – Men’s BMX – Final

Saturday, August 20th
11:30 AM – Women’s Mountain Bike – Cross-Country Race

Sunday, August 21st
11:30 AM – Men’s Mountain Bike – Cross-Country Race

Past Results:

France is the all-time leader in cycling medals with 89, but the US is 4th with 52, including 14 golds. The US won gold in the women’s time trial, silver in the women’s team pursuit and the women’s omnium, and bronze in the women’s cross-country in London. Armstrong now has two golds from the last two Olympics while Sarah Hammer won two silvers in London.

Rio 2016 – Fencing Preview

Fencing has been an Olympic sport since the first modern Olympics with the women’s events starting in 1924.  The events have expanded from three in the first Olympic games to ten, as there has been since 1996.  Five of the events are in men’s fencing, with five in women’s. Now with three disciplines and individual and team events in each there should be 12 events, but the Olympics are limited to ten and so all six individual events are held with two team events being skipped each cycle. This time it’s the women’s team foil and the men’s team sabre that are not being held. Fencing will be held in the Carioca Arena, a new facility in the Barra zone. Qualifying for the Olympics was based on the FIE rankings on April 4th with a zonal qualifier two weeks later the last chance for US athletes and teams to qualify. There were no fencing trials for the US Olympic spots.

The Team:

This year’s team is made up of 14 athletes, six men and eight women. The US did not qualify a men’s epee team, only one individual. Only four of the athletes are first time Olympians as the bulk of the team was in London and three were in Beijing as well. Mariel Zagunis is the veteran of the group at 31 while Eli Dershwitz won’t turn 21 until next month.

Links are to twitter accounts for the athletes.

USA Fencing
Men:
Jason Pryor – Individual Épée
Miles Chamley-Watson
* – Individual and Team Foil
Alexander Massialas* – Individual and Team Foil
Gerek Meinhardt** – Individual and Team Foil
Eli Dershwitz – Individual Sabre
Daryl Homer
* – Individual Sabre

Women:
Katharine Holmes – Individual and Team Épée
Courtney Hurley* – Individual and Team Épée
Kelley Hurley** – Individual and Team Épée
Lee Kiefer* – Individual Foil
Nzingha Prescod* – Individual Foil
Ibtihaj Muhammad – Individual and Team Sabre
Dagmara Wozniak* – Individual and Team Sabre
Mariel Zagunis*** – Individual and Team Sabre
* – Was on team in 2012 – London
** – Was on team in 2012 and 2008 (Beijing)
*** – Was on team in 2012, 2008, and 2004 (Athens)

Format:

All the fencing events are knockout style. In team events there are three fencers per team who will face the three fencers on the other team. Scores are summed up and the team with the most points at the end wins. Each fight is limited to three minutes. The first fight ends at three minutes or when a team reaches five points. The second fight ends at three minutes or when a team reaches ten points… and so on until the end. In the individual events it’s first to 15 unless the three rounds of three minutes each expire first.

Schedule:

All Times ET
Saturday, August 6th
9:45 AM – Women’s Individual Epee – Round of 32 – Katharine Holmes vs. Erika Kirpu
9:45 AM – Women’s Individual Epee – Round of 32 – Courtney Hurley vs. Yana Shemyakina
10:15 AM – Women’s Individual Epee – Round of 32 – Kelley Hurley vs. Nathalie Moellhausen
11:30 AM – Women’s Individual Epee – Round of 16
12:45 PM – Women’s Individual Epee – Quaterfinals
3 PM – Women’s Individual Epee – Semifinals
4:15 PM – Women’s Individual Epee – Finals

Sunday, August 7th
9 AM – Men’s Individual Foil – Round of 32 – Gerek Meinhardt vs. TBD
10 AM – Men’s Individual Foil – Round of 32 – Miles Chamley-Watson vs. Artur Akhmatkhuzin
10:30 AM – Men’s Individual Foil – Round of 32 – Alexander Massialas vs. TBD
11:30 AM – Men’s Individual Foil – Round of 16
12:45 PM – Men’s Individual Foil – Quarterfinals
3 PM – Men’s Individual Foil – Semifinals
4:15 PM – Men’s Individual Foil – Finals

Monday, August 8th
9 AM – Women’s Individual Sabre – Round of 32 – Mariel Zagunis vs. TBD
9:40 AM – Women’s Individual Sabre – Round of 32 – Dagmara Wozniak vs. Vassiliki Vougiouka
10 AM – Women’s Individual Sabre – Round of 32 – Ibtihaj Muhammad vs. Olena Kravatska
10:35 AM – Women’s Individual Sabre – Round of 16
11:40 AM – Women’s Individual Sabre – Quarterfinals
3 PM – Women’s Individual Sabre – Semifinals
4:15 PM – Women’s Individual Sabre – Finals

Tuesday, August 9th
9:45 AM – Men’s Individual Épée – Round of 32 – Jason Pryor vs. Benjamin Steffen
11:30 AM – Men’s Individual Épée – Round of 16
12:45 PM – Men’s Individual Épée – Quarterfinals
3 PM – Men’s Individual Épée – Semifinals
4:15 PM – Men’s Individual Épée – Finals

Wednesday, August 10th
8:10 AM – Women’s Individual Foil – Round of 32 – Nzingha Prescod vs. Nataly Michel
9:25 AM – Women’s Individual Foil – Round of 32 – Lee Kiefer vs. Mona Shaito
10 AM – Women’s Individual Foil – Round of 16
11 AM – Women’s Individual Foil – Quarterfinals
12:05 PM – Men’s Individual Sabre – Round of 32 – Eli Dershwitz vs. Seppe Van Holsbeke
12:05 PM – Men’s Individual Sabre – Round of 32 – Daryl Homer vs. Ilya Mokretcov
1:35 PM – Men’s Individual Sabre – Round of 16
2:40 PM – Men’s Individual Sabre – Quarterfinals
4:30 PM – Women’s Individual Foil – Semifinals
5:30 PM – Men’s Individual Sabre – Semifinals
6:20 PM – Women’s Individual Foil – Final
6:50 PM – Men’s Individual Sabre – Final

Thursday, August 11th
9:30 AM – Women’s Team Epee – Quarterfinals – USA vs. Romania
11 AM – Women’s Team Epee – Semifinals
1:30 PM – Women’s Team Epee – Placement 5-8
4 PM – Women’s Team Epee – Finals

Friday, August 12th
8 AM – Men’s Team Foil – Quarterfinals – USA vs. Egypt
9:30 AM – Men’s Team Foil – Semifinals
12:15 PM – Men’s Team Foil – Placement 5-8
4 PM – Men’s Team Foil – Finals

Saturday, August 13th
8 AM – Women’s Team Sabre – Quarterfinals – USA vs. Poland
9:15 AM – Women’s Team Sabre – Semifinals
11:45 AM – Women’s Team Sabre – Placement 5-8
4 PM – Women’s Team Sabre – Finals

Past Results:

The US has only won 21 medals in fencing at the Olympics, a far smaller number than the 121 of Italy and 115 of France. The US only has two gold medals, both in women’s individual sabre in 2008 and 2004 by current team member Zagunis. She won a team medal with the US as well in 2012.

Rio 2016 – Shooting Preview

Shooting was held at the 1st Olympics and all Olympics since then with the exception of 1904 and 1928. Women’s shooting began in 1984 with three events and is now up to six. The competition will be held in the National Shooting Center which has been around since 2007 and is part of the Deodoro zone of venues. Qualifying national spots for the Olympics has been part of the stakes at the various world cup, world championship, and regional championship events over the last two years. The various NOCs then got to choose who would take those spots.

The Team:

This year’s team is made up of 13 men and seven women. Only eight of the 20 are first timers while two of the 20 competed for other countries before immigrating to America. 11 were part of the team in London while six were part of the team in Beijing. Emil Milev is the oldest on the team at 38 while Virginia Thrasher is the youngest at 19.

Links are to twitter accounts for the athletes.

USA Shooting
Men:
Will Brown – 10m pistol and 50m pistol
Jay Shi – 10m pistol and 50m pistol
Lucas Kozeniesky – 10m air rifle
Dan Lowe – 10m air rifle and 50m rifle three positions
Emil Milev* – 25m rapid fire pistol (part of Bulgaria’s team from 1992-2004)
Keith Sanderson** – 25m rapid fire pistol
David Higgins – 50m rifle prone
Michael McPhail* – 50m rifle prone
Matt Emmons*** – 50m rifle three positions
Glenn Eller**** – double trap
Josh Richmond* – double trap
Vincent Hancock** – skeet
Frank Thompson* – skeet

Women:
Lydia Patteson – 10m air pistol
Enkelejda Shehu – 10m air pistol and 25m pistol (part of Albania’s team from 1992-1996)
Sarah Scherer* – 10m air rifle and 50m rifle three positions
Virginia Thrasher – 10m air rifle and 50m rifle three positions
Kim Rhode***** – skeet
Corey Cogdell-Unrein** – trap

* – Was part of the team in 2012 – London
** – Was part of the team in 2012 & 2008 (Beijing)
*** – Was part of the team in 2012, 2008, and 2004 (Athens)
**** – Was part of the team in 2012, 2008, 2004, and 2000 (Sydney)
***** – Was part of the team in 2012, 2008, 2004, 2000, and 1996 (Atlanta)

Format:

In general each event will feature a qualification stage with only the top six of eight shooters advancing to the final. New from 2012, each event’s final will feature elimination rounds so a poor start to the final may doom your medal chances while a late collapse on the final few shots may take you from gold to bronze but still give you a medal. This format should be more exciting for viewers.

Schedule:

All Times ET
Saturday, August 6th
7:30 AM – Women’s 10m Air Rifle – Qualification
9:30 AM – Women’s 10m Air Rifle – Final
12 PM – Men’s 10m Air Pistol – Qualification
2:30 PM – Men’s 10m Air Pistol – Final

Sunday, August 7th
8 AM – Women’s 10m Air Pistol – Qualification
8 AM – Women’s Trap – Qualification
10 AM – Women’s 10m Air Pistol – Final
2 PM – Women’s Trap – Semifinals
2:30 PM – Women’s Trap – Semifinals

Monday, August 8th
8 AM – Men’s 10m Air Rifle – Qualification
11 AM – Men’s 10m Air Rifle – Final

Tuesday, August 9th
8 AM – Women’s 25m Pistol – Qualification – Precision
11 AM – Women’s 25m Pistol – Qualification – Rapid
2:30 PM – Women’s 25m Pistol – Semifinals
3 PM – Women’s 25m Pistol – Final

Wednesday, August 10th
8 AM – Men’s 50m Pistol – Qualification
8 AM – Men’s Double Trap – Qualification
11 AM – Men’s 50m Pistol – Final
2 PM – Men’s Double Trap – Semifinals
2:30 PM – Men’s Double Trap – Final

Thursday, August 11th
8 AM – Women’s 50m Rifle 3 Position – Qualification
11 AM – Women’s 50m Rifle 3 Position – Qualification

Friday, August 12th
8 AM – Men’s 50m Rifle Prone – Qualification
8 AM – Women’s Skeet – Qualification
8:30 AM – Men’s Skeet – Qualification Day 1
10 AM – Men’s 50m Rifle Prone – Final
11:15 AM – Men’s 25m Rapid Fire Pistol – Qualification Stage 1
2 PM – Women’s Skeet – Semifinals
2:30 PM – Women’s Skeet – Final

Saturday, August 13th
8 AM – Men’s 25m Rapid Fire Pistol – Qualification Stage 2
8:30 AM – Men’s Skeet – Qualification Day 2
11:30 AM – Men’s 25m Rapid Fire Pistol – Final
2 PM – Men’s Skeet – Semifinals
2:30PM – Men’s Skeet – Final

Sunday, August 14th
8 AM – Men’s 50m Rifle 3 Position – Qualification
12 PM – Men’s 50m Rifle 3 Position – Final

Past Results:

This group of athletes for the US is fairly decorated with seven golds and 13 medals between them. Kim Rhode is clearly the most decorated with three golds and a silver and bronze in her five Olympics including gold in London. Vincent Hancock has won gold in the last two Olympics. Matt Emmons won bronze in London but took silver in Beijing and gold in Sydney. Glenn Eller won gold in Beijing, Corey Cogdell-Unrein won bronze in 2008, and Milev won silver 20 years ago in Atlanta competing for Bulgaria.

Overall the US is the all-time leader with 107 medals including 53 golds (more than the next two countries combined). The medal haul from London was three goals and a bronze.

14 Nationals Titles in Sprint Canoe Awarded in Oklahoma City on Wednesday and Thursday

The 2016 USA Canoe/Kayak Sprint National Championships are being held in Oklahoma City this week and 14 of the 28 senior national titles have been determined over the last couple of days. To start things off on Wednesday brothers Ian Ross and Gavin Ross dueled for the men’s C1 1000m title with Ian coming out on top by ten seconds. They would team up to win the men’s C2 1000m title by four seconds later in the day. Azusa Murphy took the national title in the women’s C1 1000m by over a minute and a half. The men’s K2 1000m went to Alex Lee and Zsolt Szadovski by 14 seconds while the men’s K4 1000m went to those two along with Jonathan Chee and Jacob McFarlane by eight seconds. In Wednesday’s final events Nicole Mallory won the women’s K1 5000m by 43 seconds while Delaney Valentine was the only one to finish the women’s C1 5000m.

On Thursday Ian Ross made it four national titles for the week by winning the men’s C1 500m by four and half seconds over his brother and the men’s C1 5000m by nine seconds over his brother. Just 25 seconds over 6500m in the three head-to-head matchups between these two so far this week. Kaley Martin won the national title in women’s C1 500m by just under a minute. Matching Ian Ross’ four national titles on the week Lee won the men’s K1 1000m by seven seconds and the men’s K1 5000m by a minute and five seconds. Samantha Barlow also won two national titles on Thursday grabbing the women’s K1 1000m by just 1.43 seconds over Mallory and then teaming up with Kaimi Yoza to win the women’s K2 500m by 12 seconds.

The national championships continue Friday and Saturday with 14 more national titles on the line. Full results are available here.

Men’s C1 500m – Ian Ross
Men’s C1 1000m – Ian Ross
Men’s C1 5000m – Ian Ross
Men’s C2 1000m – Ian Ross and Gavin Ross
Men’s K1 1000m – Alex Lee 
Men’s K1 5000m – Alex Lee 
Men’s K2 1000m – Alex Lee and Zsolt Szadovski
Men’s K4 1000m – Jonathan CheeAlex LeeJacob McFarlane, and Zsolt Szadovski
Women’s C1 500m – Kaley Martin
Women’s C1 1000m – Azusa Murphy
Women’s C1 5000m – Delaney Valentine 
Women’s K1 1000m – Samantha Barlow
Women’s K1 5000m – Nicole Mallory
Women’s K1 1000m – Samantha Barlow and Kaimi Yoza

Aaron Gwin Could Lock Up Mountain Bike World Cup Downhill Title This Weekend

Aaron Gwin holds a 208 point lead over Great Britain’s Danny Hart as the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup heads to Mont-Sanite-Anne, Quebec for the second to last event of the year. With 250 points available each event Gwin could win the overall title this weekend with the right results. There is a large crowd of 17 American men in the field this weekend, ten more than other other stop this year and no surprise for the only North American event. Luca Shaw is again in the field with two top seven finishes in the last there events as is Eliot Jackson, who finished 30th in Lenzerheide. Back for the first time since Cairns is Neko Mulally who was 23rd in that event.

For the first time this year there is a US woman competing in the downhill as Amanda Batty is in the starting list for the women’s event. The qualifying rounds for the men and women will be on Friday with the final on Saturday. Sunday will be a cross-country event.

Previous Mountain Bike World Cup Downhill Coverage:
Lenzerheide Recap

Rio 2016 – Archery Preview

Archery debuted at the second Olympics in 1900 and after being held in the next two would only appear once (1920) between 1908 and 1972. The early Olympic archery was nothing like the modern versions with very different events. Women were able to compete in both 1904 and 1908 and have been part of the modern version since the first appearance in 1972. The current program is only in recurve archery (compound being the other style) with individual and team competitions (first instituted in 1988). Archery will be held at the Sambadrome Marquês de Sapucaí in Rio which is actually a large parade ground that holds 90,000 people. Bet you don’t have anything like that in your hometown.

Qualifying was done on a country-by-country basis with quotas won over the last year. You can either qualify a whole team of three or only an individual spot. The US men qualified their team at the World Championships in Copenhagen last year while the US women could not qualify a team at the World Championships or the last chance World Cup event in Antalya, Turkey in June. The only US spot was qualified at the World Championships as one of the individual qualifiers.

The Team:

The US team is thus three men and one woman for Rio. Two of the men have Olympic experience with one here for the third time. Both Jake Kaminski and Brady Ellison are the veterans of the team at 27 while Zach Garrett and Mackenzie Brown are just 21.

Links are to twitter accounts for the athletes.

USA Archery
Men:
Brady Ellison**
Jake Kaminski*
Zach Garrett

Women:
Mackenzie Brown
* – Was on team in 2012 – London
** – Was on team in 2012 & 2008 (Beijing)

Format:

The individual competitions will begin with a Ranking Round to set the seeds for the knockout portion of the tournament. After the knockout bracket is set (1v64, 2v63 and so on) the competitors will face off in five-set matches. Each set consists of three arrows. Win three sets and you are through.

The team competitions will be seeded using the combined scores of the team members from the Ranking Round, the top 4 teams on each side getting a bye with teams 5-12 matching up. In the team competition the format has changed for this year with each member shooting twice in an “end”. Four ends is a match but if it’s tied it’ll go to extras where each archer will only get one shot an in end.

Schedule:

All times ET
Friday, August 5th
8 AM – Men’s Ranking Round
12 PM – Women’s Ranking Round

Saturday, August 6th
8 AM – Men’s Team – Round of 16
1 PM – Men’s Team – Quarterfinals
2:43 PM – Men’s Team – Semifinals
3:39 PM – Men’s Team – Finals

Monday, August 8th
8 AM – Men’s Individual – Round of 64
8:26 AM – Women’s Individual – Round of 64
8:52 AM – Men’s Individual – Round of 32
9:05 AM – Women’s Individual – Round of 32

Tuesday, August 9th
8 AM – Men’s Individual – Round of 64
8:26 AM – Women’s Individual – Round of 64
8:52 AM – Men’s Individual – Round of 32
9:05 AM – Women’s Individual – Round of 32

Wednesday, August 10th
8 AM – Men’s Individual – Round of 64
8:26 AM – Women’s Individual – Round of 64
8:52 AM – Men’s Individual – Round of 32
9:05 AM – Women’s Individual – Round of 32

Thursday, August 11th
8 AM – Women’s Individual – Round of 16
2 PM – Women’s Individual – Quarterfinals
2:55 PM – Women’s Individual – Semifinals
3:27 PM – Women’s Individual – Finals

Friday, August 12th
8 AM – Men’s Individual – Round of 16
2 PM – Men’s Individual – Quarterfinals
2:55 PM – Men’s Individual – Semifinals
3:27 PM – Men’s Individual – Finals

Past Results:

The US has the second most medal of all time with 32 to Korea’s 34, but 17 of those were in 1904 when there were exactly ZERO other countries competing. They’d have had 18 if they could find one more team for the women’s event. The US has not medaled in the women’s individual event since 1976 (a gold by Luann Ryon) or the men’s individual event since 2000 (a silver by Vic Wunderle) but the men’s team won silver in London including both Brady Ellison and Jake Kaminksi.

Rio 2016 Olympic Review – August 3rd

Women’s Soccer:

The Rio Olympics kicked off for the US on Wednesday with the women’s soccer team taking to the field to take on New Zealand. Riding an 11-match Olympic win streak the US scored early in the game, their earliest Olympic opening goal, through Carli Lloyd in the ninth minute. It was the third straight US Olympic goal scored by Lloyd after she had the brace to win the gold against Japan in 2012. The US had other chances throughout the first half but wouldn’t secure their second until the first minute of the second half when Alex Morgan secured the win. Hope Solo had the shutout in goal for the US. Tobin Heath and Morgan Brian picked up the assists on the two US goals.

The other game in the US group saw France dominate Colombia 4-0. With both teams sitting on three points and likely to win their final games the matchup between the USA and France is almost surely for the top spot in the group. Those two last met in the Olympics in the group opener in 2012. The US was down 2-0 within 14 minutes but rallied for an incredible 4-2 win.

US Soccer Recap
NBC Highlights

Next US game:
Saturday, August 3rd – 4 PM ET – France – NBCSN