Olympics 2021 Live:The Latest News – The New York Times

Current time in Tokyo: July 28, 11:48 p.m.

Daiki Hashimoto of Japan after a stellar performance on the high bar helped him secure the gold medal.
Credit…Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

TOKYO — Daiki Hashimoto is just 19, but he is already Japan’s leading men’s gymnast, the heir apparent to his idol, Kohei Uchimura, the greatest gymnast of his generation. Appearing in his first Olympics, Hashimoto turned in a stellar performance in the team event this week that nearly secured Japan a gold medal.

On Wednesday night, Hashimoto secured his fast emerging reputation when he came from behind to win the gold medal in the individual men’s all-around event. After a stellar performance on the high bar, the last of the six segments of the program, Hashimoto pumped his fists as cheers went up in the Ariake Gymnastics Center.

Hashimoto stood with a Japanese flag draped over his shoulders while he waited to find out what color medal he had won. When his score was announced and he vaulted into first place, Hashimoto waved the flag and pumped his fists again. He was officially Japan’s next great gymnast, surpassing Uchimura, who won gold at the Rio de Janeiro Games in 2016.

“Five years ago, I didn’t imagine myself standing here,” Hashimoto said. “The Olympics wasn’t even a realistic goal for me at the time, it was only a dream. And now that dream has come true and I’ve become a champion.”

Expectations for Hashimoto were high, but he faced stiff competition from Sun Wei and Xiao Ruoteng of China, and Nikita Nagornyy of Russia, whose own performance in the team event knocked Japan out of the top spot.

Early on, Hashimoto appeared poised to meet those expectations when he turned in stellar performances in the floor and pommel horse portions of the program. But in the third segment, the rings, Hashimoto faltered, creating an opening that his rivals charged through. Sun and Xiao held the top two spots through the middle portion of the program.

But Hashimoto wasn’t done. In the second-to-last event, the parallel bars, Hashimoto turned in a superb score of 15.3, narrowing the gap, but still found himself in fourth place behind Xiao, Nagornyy and Sun.

In the final event, fans booed when Xiao scored just 14.066, enough to take the lead, but not enough to separate him from Hashimoto and Nagornyy. When Hashimoto stepped up to the high bar, the last competitor, Nagornyy knew the end was near.

“I told him he could do it,” the Russian said. “He’s very good on the high bars.”

Indeed, Hashimoto executed a more difficult series of moves that pushed him back into the lead for good. After he nailed the dismount, Hashimoto smiled, confident he’d done enough to win.

His victory capped an emotional week for the Japanese team of first-time Olympians. Uchimura, a seven-time Olympic medalist, entered these Games as an individual event specialist in the horizontal bar. But Uchimura, 32, fell during the qualifying round, ending his career on a disappointing note.

By winning a gold medal, Hashimoto is bound to turn into a pop star much like Uchimura before him. He took up gymnastics at the age of 6, influenced by his older brothers. In high school, he was outperforming many of his older competitors. His coach gave him the nickname “Mr. Infinite” because of his stamina.

Like Uchimura, he has also shown a knack for changing his program on the spot to incorporate more difficult moves as a way to move up the standings. On Wednesday, on the biggest stage, Hashimoto showed again he is capable of vaulting past his biggest competitors.

“I want to not be satisfied with what I have now and keep on aiming higher,” he said.

Enya Toyama and Tariq Panja contributed reporting.

Simone Biles pulled out of the women’s gymnastics team final on Tuesday night.
Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

Simone Biles, the four-time Olympic gold medalist, will not compete in Thursday’s individual all-around competition after withdrawing from the team finals because of a mental health issue, according to an emailed statement from U.S.A. Gymnastics.

Biles will be evaluated daily to see if she will participate in the event finals next week.

“We wholeheartedly support Simone’s decision and applaud her bravery in prioritizing her well-being,” the statement said. “Her courage shows, yet again, while she is a role model for so many.”

Biles, 24, had qualified for all four event finals and was expected to win gold in at least three of those events. In the all-around, she was hoping to repeat her title from the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games to become the first woman to win back-to-back titles in the all-around in 53 years.

Biles stepping back from the Olympic all-around marks the end of an era in the sport. She hasn’t lost an all-around competition since 2013 when she was 16 and still wore braces. The contest tests individual athletes on all four disciplines: vault, uneven bars, balance beam and floor competition, to determine the most complete gymnast.

While she had come to the Tokyo Olympics feeling “pretty good,” the weight of expectations on her as Team U.S.A.’s biggest star at the Tokyo Games became tougher by the day, and in the hours before the team final she said she was shaking and couldn’t nap. In the end, the pressure was just too heavy for her to bear, she said after withdrawing from the team final on Tuesday.

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Credit…Photographs by Emily Rhyne; Composite image by Jon Huang

During her vault, the first event of the team final, Biles got lost in the air and didn’t know where her body was in relation to the ground. She ended up performing a much simpler vault than her usual daring ones. On the landing, she bounded forward, trying to stay on her feet.

Biles told her coach and a team doctor that she was not in the right “head space” to continue because she was afraid of injuring herself, and also because she didn’t want to jeopardize the team’s chances at winning a medal.

“I’m still struggling with some things,” Biles said after the event. “It just sucks when you are fighting with your own head.”

The U.S. team had dominated the sport for more than a decade before the Russians won the gold medal on Tuesday. The U.S. team, with Sunisa Lee, Jordan Chiles and Grace McCallum, finished the competition while Biles cheered them on. They won the silver medal.

Jade Carey, who had the ninth highest score in qualifications, will take Biles’s place in the all-around final. Lee, of St. Paul., Minn., will be the other gymnast in the all-around for the U.S. team. It is not clear whether Biles will compete in any of the individual apparatus finals.

In the days leading up to the Olympics, Biles had been struggling with a few skills and was trying to overcome a mental block that kept her from easily performing her routines. That mental block is not uncommon in gymnastics, Jess Graba, Lee’s coach, said, but it usually happens at practice, not at a competition.

“I think a lot of people don’t realize that it’s such a mental sport,” Graba said in a telephone interview on Wednesday, explaining that the mental blocks take a while to work through before a gymnast can begin trusting herself enough to perform her skills again.

Regarding Lee’s experience with those mental blocks, he added, “If you have a week or two to prepare, you could probably get her back to what she needed to do.”

In Biles’s case at these Games, however, she did not have two weeks to spare.

Clockwise from top, Allisha Gray, Kelsey Plum, Jackie Young and Stefanie Dolson of the United States celebrated their victory over the Russian team.
Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

TOKYO — Every game of three-on-three basketball, which made its debut this summer as an Olympic sport, began the same way: a countdown from 10 over the arena speakers that finished “five … four … THREE … X … THREE!”

Kelsey Plum, a member of the American women’s team, described the scene as “pandemonium, like you’re shot out of a cannon.”

Time will tell whether three-on-three — or 3×3, as it is officially known here — catches fire as an Olympic sport, but the five-day run of games at the Aomi sports complex in Tokyo provided precisely the type of spectacle that its organizers had hoped for: a high intensity, visually dynamic, low-bar-of-entry diversion from the more structured feel of five-on-five basketball.

With a higher standard for fouls, players grappled like wrestlers. With few breaks in play, they huffed for air like sprinters.

The United States women ended their Olympic experience with a bang, cruising to a 18-15 win over the Russian team in the gold medal game. Stefanie Dolson led the team in scoring with 7 points.

“I didn’t come all the way out here to win nothing less than a gold medal,” said Allisha Gray, who scored 4. “I’m glad we were able to finish what we came out here to accomplish.”

The Russian team also fell just short of a gold medal in the men’s competition, when Karlis Lasmanis of Latvia hit a game-winning 2-pointer on the move to seal a 21-18 win. (Shots are worth 1 and 2 points instead of 2 and 3, and a team can win if it hits 21 points even before the 10-minute game clock expires.)

The Americans were always one of the favorites in the women’s tournament, a group of W.N.B.A. players tossed together only recently but expected to succeed on the basis of their superior skill. (The United States men’s three-on-three team did not qualify for the Olympics.)

Jackie Young joined the squad on July 19, cutting short a vacation in Florida, after Katie Lou Samuelson tested positive for the coronavirus.

“Ten days ago, maybe, I was on vacation, and my life changed like that, and now I’m a gold medalist,” said Young, who scored 2 points. “It’s crazy how things work out.”

The group brushed aside the distractions and delivered on their expectations, going 6-1 in the pool stage, dropping their only game to Japan, the host nation.

Their final day of competition began with a tough semifinal matchup against France, an athletic squad that ran a smooth offense. Sunlight and shadows streaked across the court for the early evening game, and the day’s stifling heat left players grabbing at their shorts and holding ice packs on their bodies. The United States won, 18-16, after holding off a late French surge.

The gold medal game, in comparison, was a far less stressful affair. With Thomas Bach, the president of the International Olympic Committee, occupying a first-row seat, the Americans mostly had their way with the Russians, getting to the basket with relative ease. Plum had 5 points, initiating the offense for the United States.

When the buzzer sounded, the four players embraced in the middle of the court, the first ever winners of an Olympic gold medal in a fledgling, raucous sport.

The only question left was how to celebrate amid the strict, pandemic-related restrictions.

“I think we’ll just do something fun at the hotel with our group,” Plum said with a laugh.

Simone Biles’s withdrawal from Thursday’s individual all-around final has opened a spot in the competition for her teammate Jade Carey, who would have qualified for the event if not for a rule that allows only two gymnasts from any country to compete in it.

Carey, who finished ninth in the all-around during qualifying and third best among the Americans, will take Biles’s place, joining Sunisa Lee. It is not clear whether Biles will withdraw from any of the individual apparatus finals.

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Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

Sunisa Lee, known as Suni, is the second-best all-around gymnast in the United States, behind Biles, and is a strong contender for a medal in the all-around final. She also has a good chance of being the Olympic champion on the uneven bars, where she performs the most difficult routine in the world.

She finished third in the all-around in qualifying, behind Biles and Rebeca Andrade of Brazil, and second on the bars, behind Nina Derwael of Belgium, though she outdid herself on the bars in the team final.

At the Olympic trials, she outscored Biles on one of the two days of competition, something no other gymnast has done since 2013.

Lee, 18, who is the first Hmong American to represent the United States at the Olympics, said on social media this month that her goals for the Games were to win gold with the American team, silver in the all-around, gold or silver on bars and a medal of any color on beam.

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Credit…Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

Jade Carey, 21, is primarily a vault and floor specialist, though her performance on the other apparatuses in qualifying was good enough for ninth overall. She secured her own spot at the Olympics, separate from the U.S.A. Gymnastics selection process, by finishing first on vault in the multiyear World Cup series.

She is capable of winning medals on vault and floor and has already qualified for both of those finals. She placed second on both at the 2017 world championships and second on vault at the 2019 world championships.

She can also execute the hardest tumbling pass ever performed by a woman, a layout triple-double. That’s a double back flip with three twists, like Biles does — but while Biles does it with her knees tucked toward her chest, Carey does it with her body straight, which is significantly harder. If she attempts the skill in Olympic competition — which would be risky — and lands it successfully, it will be named after her.

Sunisa Lee of the United States on the uneven bars during the women’s gymnastics final on Tuesday.
Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

It was expected to be a coronation. A triumphant run to the gold medal for the highest-profile athlete at the Games.

But suddenly the women’s all-around event on Thursday is completely different. With the withdrawal of Simone Biles because of a mental health issue, it is now an actual competition.

So, who’s going to win?

There is a strong field of contenders, and their scores and abilities are close. Here are our best guesses for the podium:

Lee placed third in the qualifiers, but she has an ace up her sleeve: Based on the preliminaries, her degree of difficulty will be higher than anyone’s, other than Biles. That gives her a big upside. If she nails her routines, the other gymnasts may not be able to match her no matter how well they do. Lee’s bars routine in particular is a marvel: harder even than the one Biles planned.

As the second-placed qualifier behind Biles, Andrade automatically slips into a favorite’s role, too. Few predicted she would do that well; she has struggled with injuries in her career, and Brazil has never won a women’s Olympics gymnastics medal. But her routines are comparable to the rest of the field’s, and she could be underestimated.

Melnikova was the bronze medal winner at the most recent world championships in 2019. Both she and Urazova were part of the Russian team that knocked off the United States in the team competition after Biles pulled out. The two have similar strengths and weaknesses — Melnikova is a bit stronger on the floor and Urazova on the beam — and either could medal with a good performance.

Only eighth in qualifying, she is another competitor who could benefit from her degree of difficulty. Her beam routine could be the best (not counting Biles). She also has the highest honor in the field, a silver medal behind Biles at the world championships.

Given that she qualified ninth, got a spot in the all-around only with Biles’s withdrawal, and did not even participate in the team event for the United States, Carey would seem like a long shot. Her beam is weak, but she has a special floor routine and can score well on the vault as well. She could be a surprise medalist.

Katie Ledecky won the inaugural women’s Olympic 1,500-meter freestyle by a margin of more than four seconds.
Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

In her third Summer Games, Katie Ledecky was finally able to swim for Olympic gold in what is essentially her best event: the 1,500-meter freestyle, the longest race contested in the pool.

Since 1904, the event had been available only to men in the Olympic Games. Women who contested the event in other meets had to settle for the 800 meters at the Games, an event that Ledecky will try to win for a third time on Saturday.

On Wednesday morning, though, she finally got her chance in the 1,500 and delivered her first gold of the Tokyo Games. Ledecky’s time of 15 minutes 37.34 seconds was more than four seconds faster than her American teammate Erica Sullivan (15:41.41), who won the silver, and more than five seconds ahead of the bronze medalist, Sarah Kohler of Germany (15:42.91).

Ledecky holds the world record and had the top qualifying time on Monday. Her victory in the event — a grueling marathon that requires 30 trips up and back the length of the pool — came a little more than an hour after Ledecky had finished fifth in the 200 freestyle final.

But in just competing in the race, Ledecky — who has won three 1,500-meter world championships and has set world records six times, more than any swimmer in the event, male or female — was getting an opportunity denied to distance-swimming greats like Janet Evans, Debbie Meyer, Shane Gould and Jennifer Turrall.

Until 1968, the longest Olympic event in women’s swimming was only 400 meters. Meyer won the first 800-meter Olympic race for women at the Mexico City Games that year, as well as the 200 and 400 freestyle.

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Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

She held the world record in both the 800 and the 1,500 back then, and she told The Times in 2014 that she questioned why the longer race was not available at the Olympics. Meyer said she had been told that there weren’t enough countries with women competing in the 1,500.

“It really was all about the thinking then,” she said, “which was, women were the weaker sex and because men were stronger people, they could last the distance.”

Over the years, other discrepancies in swimming have been resolved. From 1984 to 1996, for example, the men had three relays and the women two. At the Atlanta Games, the women gained parity, with a 4×200-meter freestyle relay.

Swimming: Women’s 1,500m Freestyle Final

But FINA, the international governing body for aquatics, had long resisted allowing women to compete in the 1,500 at the Summer Games, despite efforts in every sport to make the Olympic experience equal for women and men.

In 2015, Julio Maglione, the FINA president, said he doubted that the 1,500 could be added to the Olympic program, which was already packed with races at multiple distances for every stroke.

Yet now, not only have women gained the 1,500, but male distance swimmers also have an 800 on their schedule for the first time since 1904. A mixed medley relay has been added, with two men and two women on each team.

The longest swim in Tokyo, however, will not take place in the pool. The 10-kilometer open-water event was added to the Olympics in 2008, with races for men and women.

Damian Lillard of the U.S. team shoots over Mohammadsina Vahedi of Iran during the United States’ blowout basketball win.
Credit…Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

SAITAMA, Japan — The United States men’s basketball team got a morale-boosting victory on Wednesday, shellacking Iran, 120-66.

Ever since the first Dream Team was assembled in 1992, convincing victories like this one have been expected from the U.S. men’s team. Just one Olympic team in that era has failed to win gold, and the bronze medal the 2004 team did win was treated as a disaster.

So there was plenty of disquiet after this year’s men’s team lost exhibitions to Nigeria and Australia, then its Olympic opener, 83-76, to France.

But while each of those U.S. opponents had at least some N.B.A. and N.B.A.-quality players, Iran was simply overmatched on Wednesday. A glance at its roster reveals that its best players are employed by the Sichuan Blue Whales of China and Iranian teams like Chemidor Qom.

The U.S. was up by 16 after the first quarter and by 30 at the half. The Americans’ speed and ball rotation helped them get more than their share of open shots, particularly 3-pointers, and their defensive intensity prevented Iran from gaining any real momentum on offense.

Damian Lillard led the U.S. with 21 on seven 3-pointers, six of them in the first half. At one point in the second quarter, after Lillard swished a perfect 3, his defender, Hamed Haddadi, Iran’s best player, raised his hands in a gesture that said, “What are you going to do?

“Today we came out with more freedom as individuals and took the shots that we normally like to take, and they went in tonight,” Kevin Durant of the U.S. said. “And we guarded up, so it was a good step.”

Iran’s Saeid Davarpanah said: “We play against superstars of the world and we just enjoy it.”

The U.S. will finish its pool play on Saturday night against the Czech Republic, a team that beat Iran by only 6 points. The top two squads in each of the three groups will advance to the quarterfinals, along with the two top third-place teams, so a U.S. berth in the knockout stage was never in doubt. And the team still has undeniably the most accomplished roster at the Games.

But matchups against some serious teams led by N.B.A. stars — perhaps Spain with Ricky Rubio and the Gasol brothers, or Slovenia with Luka Doncic — are still to come. And the U.S. must win three straight knockout games to take the gold medal that everyone expected.

As the U.S. team integrates the three players who played in the N.B.A. finals and did not join the team until Sunday — Devin Booker, Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday — it should continue to improve.

But in an Olympics that has already had its share of upsets, no one is booking a sure gold medal for the U.S. yet.

Latest Medal Count  ›

Total

United States

11 11 9 31

China

12 6 9 27

Russian Olympic Committee

7 10 6 23

Japan

13 4 5 22

Australia

6 1 9 16

Novak Djokovic moved into the quarterfinal of the men’s singles tennis tournament with a win on Wednesday.
Credit…Matt Ruby/The New York Times

Tennis, an incredibly difficult game, has become incredibly easy for Novak Djokovic, or at least it looks that way.

Djokovic, the superstar from Serbia, captured his third consecutive victory of this Olympic tennis tournament without losing a set, defeating Alejandro Davidovich Fokina of Spain, 6-3, 6-1, in 83 minutes.

6 6

Alejandro Davidovich Fokina

3 1

The win was not a surprise. Djokovic has established himself as far and away the top player in the world right now. But the ease of the victory was impressive. Davidovich Fokina is one of the better young players on the tour and has been playing deeper into the most important tournaments.

Davidovich Fokina was largely helpless against Djokovic, who pinned him toward the back of the court for most of the match. Djokovic even sent him sprawling to the ground twice, not by headhunting but by keeping him so off-balance.

Djokovic plays a hometown favorite, Kei Nishikori, in the quarterfinal on Thursday. He is now 10 more wins away from becoming the first man to win a “Golden Slam” — the four Grand Slam tournaments and the gold medal in a calendar year.

Players from Hungary celebrate their win over the United States in a preliminary round women’s water polo match.
Credit…Kacper Pempel/Reuters

Hungary stunned the top-ranked United States in women’s water polo, rallying for a 10-9 victory in preliminary round play on Wednesday against an American squad that has won gold at the last two Olympics.

Hungary scored twice in the final two minutes and won on a backhanded, overhead flip by its New Zealand-born star Rebecca Parkes with 45 seconds remaining. It was Parkes’s third goal of the game, and her second of the fourth quarter.

Hungary, which finished fourth at the last three Olympics, is only the second country to beat the Americans since they won their second consecutive Olympic title at the 2016 Rio Games.

In the five years since collecting that medal, the United States went 128-3, losing only to Australia. But after starting the Tokyo Games with a 25-4 win over host Japan, the Americans had to rally to beat China on Monday. They remain the favorites to win the group.

Japan players celebrate a walk-off single by Hayato Sakamoto in their Olympic opener.
Credit…Jae C. Hong/Associated Press

TOKYO — A day after the softball tournament ended at the Tokyo Games, it was time for the return of another long-absent sport: baseball.

And if not for a furious ninth-inning rally, the tournament would have begun on Wednesday with a remarkable upset. Trailing 3-1 with two outs to go, host Japan, the top-ranked team in the world, came back to beat the Dominican Republic, 4-3.

At Fukushima Azuma Baseball Stadium, the closer for the Dominican Republic, Jairo Asencio imploded, in the bottom of the ninth inning. Japan’s Yuki Yanagita, Kensuke Kondoh and Munetaka Murakami each singled, the last driving in a run and trimming Japan’s deficit to 3-2.

Japan then tied the score when Takuya Kai bunted up the first-base line and pinch-runner Sosuke Genda slid home in time.

Dominican Republic Manager Hector Borg hooked Asencio, replacing him with Jhan Marinez, but that couldn’t stop Japan. Hayato Sakamoto, the longtime standout shortstop in baseball-mad Japan’s top professional league, smacked a single to center field, scoring Murakami for the walk-off victory.

Thomas Bach, the president of the International Olympic Committee, was in attendance and congratulated Japan’s players after the win. Like softball, baseball made its Olympic comeback after 13 years out of the Games.

Through the first six innings on Wednesday, the game was scoreless thanks to the stout pitching of Cristopher Mercedes and Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Japan’s hard-throwing 22-year-old. But after taking leads of 2-0 and 3-1, the Dominican Republic couldn’t hold on.

While disappointing for the seventh-ranked Dominican team, the loss hasn’t doomed its medal chances. The team plays Mexico on Friday to wrap up pool play before the modified double-elimination format begins.

Israel, the lowest seed in the tournament, plays its first-ever Olympic baseball game on Thursday, against a young South Korean squad. The last time baseball was played in the Olympics, in Beijing in 2008, South Korea bested Cuba, 3-2, for the gold medal.

Simone Biles pulled out of the team competition on Tuesday. Earlier, she faltered badly on her vault.
Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

No one could imagine the pressure. No one could understand the difficult decision she faced. After all, there’s only one greatest gymnast of all time.

Simone Biles’s decision to leave the Olympic gymnastics team event on Tuesday because she wasn’t in the right head space sparked an outpouring of support from fellow athletes, politicians, celebrities and others.

Her withdrawal follows similar decisions by other top Black athletes, including Naomi Osaka, who withdrew from the French Open in May, to prioritize their mental health over competing.

Biles said after the team final that she had hoped to compete for herself, but “felt like I was still doing it for other people.” She added, “So that just, like, hurts my heart, because doing what I love has been kind of taken away from me to please other people.”

It’s impossible to understand the pressure Simone Biles—the greatest gymnast in the history of the sport—and Naomi Osaka are feeling, but we’re lucky to live in a time where young Black trailblazers are publicly prioritizing their mental health above all else. That’s power.

— Evette Dionne (@freeblackgirl) July 27, 2021

Black women are continuously shifting the narrative on what it means to be a “strong Black woman”. To be strong is to thrive, and not suffer. There is strength in putting yourself first. Especially in these systems that do not serve us. Thank you @naomiosaka and @Simone_Biles.

— Dr. Raven the Science Maven (@ravenscimaven) July 27, 2021

Some noted that Biles’s decision signaled a larger shift in the culture of professional sports.

It might be nothing, but Simone and Naomi were both born in 1997, the same year that the WNBA started, Venus Williams made her first Grand Slam final, and Serena broke into the Top 100. pic.twitter.com/3nRPzufAt5

— Franklin Leonard (@franklinleonard) July 27, 2021

“Watching these Black women athletes use and navigate power over the last 25 years,” Franklin Leonard, a film producer, said. “What an extraordinary gift it has been.”

The journalist Wesley Lowery echoed Mr. Leonard’s assessment.

it’s still playing out, but this new generation of young athletes setting a new set of boundaries around mental health/what they owe the public and the media//their own agency (in part downstream of them having more power but not only that) feels paradigm shifting

— Wesley (@WesleyLowery) July 27, 2021

Some criticized U.S.A. Gymnastics as having placed too much pressure on Biles.

Simone Biles is the greatest gymnast of all time, but USAG’s strategy of not caring about team composition or lineups because Simone will save the day is not a healthy or sustainable method. It’s too much to put on a person, no matter how great she is.

She deserves better.

— m!a j merr!ll (@ameliamerr_) July 27, 2021

And if anyone could relate, it was her fellow athletes.

Just a friendly reminder: Olympic athletes are human & they’re doing the best they can. It’s REALLY hard to peak at the right moment & do the routine of your life under such pressure. Really hard.

— Alexandra Raisman (@Aly_Raisman) July 26, 2021

Propsss to @naomiosakaa1 and @Simone_Biles for reminding us the importance of taking care of ourselves!! Grateful we get to watch how they’re gonna keep changing the game for future generations in AND outside their sports

— Jeremy Lin (@JLin7) July 27, 2021

So glad @Simone_Biles made that call tonight.

As a gymnast, I can tell you, if you don’t trust yourself, you can’t keep going. It’s no joke; you could get seriously hurt. It’s not worth the risk. No medal is worth the risk.

Let’s normalise putting your mental health first.

— Mary-Anne Monckton (@Monckton07) July 27, 2021

Ashleigh Barty, the No. 1 player on the women’s tennis tour, lost in the first round of the Olympic singles tournament.
Credit…Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

There are favorites, and there are underdogs. And the favorites usually win, of course.

But with more than 300 gold medals to be awarded at these Olympics, the laws of chance say that sometimes the favorites will stumble. It has happened before. The Russian ice hockey team in 1980. The wrestler Aleksandr Karelin in 2000. The American softball team in 2008.

In just the first few days of the Tokyo Olympics, some big names are joining the list.

After Simone Biles abruptly withdrew from the team competition Tuesday night, the U.S. took home the silver medal in an event they had long dominated and were favored to win. Russia won gold, and Britain claimed bronze.

Osaka became the face of the Games when she lit the cauldron at the opening ceremony. A gold medal in tennis would seem to have been the logical end to her story. Yet Osaka lost Tuesday to the 42nd-ranked player in the world, Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic, in a third-round trouncing, 6-1, 6-4. It took less than an hour.

Barty, the Australian tennis player who is the world No. 1, was eliminated in the first round after she fell in straight sets to Sara Sorribes Tormo of Spain, 6-4, 6-3.

The United States men’s basketball team had a couple of stumbles in exhibitions leading to the Games but was still a big favorite going in. It lost its opening game to France.

The World Cup-winning U.S. women’s soccer team showed little of its customary swagger in a 3-0 capitulation to Sweden. It also played Australia to a scoreless draw, although that was good enough for the U.S. to advance to the knockout round. On the men’s side, the pretournament favorite, Spain, opened with a draw against Egypt.

Japan beat the U.S., 2-0, on Tuesday in a replay of the last time these two rival teams faced off for the gold medal at the 2008 Beijing Games, when Japan won and softball was then dropped from the Olympics. The win marks Japan’s second consecutive Olympic gold in the event.

China rarely loses in diving, and even less often in synchronized diving. Yet the men’s team lost to Britain in the synchronized platform event.

Another bad day for China, as Japan ended China’s dominance in table tennis with a gold medal in mixed doubles.

China won all four gold medals at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games and the team of Xu Xin and Liu Shiwen was a heavy favorite this time. But Jun Mizutani and Mima Ito defeated them.

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Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

Granted, it was foretold, as her emerging rival, Ariarne Titmus of Australia, had posted better times than her recently in the 400-meter freestyle. But it was still stunning to see Ledecky, one of the most dominant distance swimmers in a generation, out-touched at the wall to be relegated to the silver medal.

There’s a long way to go, and many more favorites. The U.S. women’s basketball team. The Russian synchronized swimmers. Believe it or not, the Sinkovic brothers of Croatia in the pair rowing event.

Here’s a not very daring forecast: They might not all win.

Naomi Osaka of Japan after losing her match against Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic on Tuesday.
Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

TOKYO — Just four days after Naomi Osaka mounted the stairs to light the Olympic cauldron, an event presented as a symbol of a new, more inclusive Japan, that image was undermined on Tuesday by a backlash that followed her surprise defeat in Tokyo.

Many Japanese were stunned by Osaka’s third-round loss to Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic after she had been favored to take the women’s tennis gold medal on home soil.

But as the face of a Summer Games riddled with scandal and anxiety over an unstinting pandemic — Tokyo posted a record number of new coronavirus cases on Tuesday — Osaka took a drubbing on Japanese social media, with some questioning her identity or her right to represent the country at all.

“I still can’t understand why she was the final torchbearer,” one commenter wrote on a Yahoo News story about her loss. “Although she says she is Japanese, she cannot speak Japanese very much.” Several comments like that one that were harshly critical of Osaka were given “thumbs up” by 10,000 or more other Yahoo users.

Her selection as the final torchbearer at the opening ceremony demonstrated how eager the Olympic organizers were to promote Japan as a diverse culture. The Washington Wizards star Rui Hachimura, who is of Japanese and Beninese descent, also featured prominently as a flag-bearer for the Japanese Olympic team.

But in some corners of society, people remain xenophobic and refuse to accept those who don’t conform to a very narrow definition of what it means to be Japanese.

The Japanese softball team practicing at Yokohama Baseball Stadium on Tuesday. A total of 20 athletes are confirmed to have tested positive since arriving in Tokyo.
Credit…James Hill for The New York Times

Tokyo 2020 organizers on Wednesday reported 16 new coronavirus infections among Olympic personnel, bringing to 174 the total number of people connected to the Games who have tested positive since July 1.

No new infections were reported among athletes. Organizers also removed two earlier cases from their tally, including of one athlete, but did not offer details.

A total of 20 athletes are confirmed to have tested positive since arriving in Tokyo, derailing many of their Olympic hopes, but so far Covid-19 has mostly been a sidelight to the Games.

That is far from the case outside the Olympic bubble, where the virus is surging. Tokyo officials said on Tuesday that 2,848 people had tested positive for the virus, the city’s highest total in one day since the pandemic began. Government data also showed that 14.5 percent of coronavirus tests in the city were turning up positive, suggesting that many cases may be going unrecorded.

Tokyo is currently under its fourth state of emergency since early 2020, with bars and restaurants closing early and sales of alcohol tightly restricted. But health experts said that the continuing surge in cases suggests that the measures, which had helped subdue earlier outbreaks, may no longer be as effective as the more contagious Delta variant accounts for a larger proportion of new cases.

Athletes who have tested positive for the coronavirus

Scientists say that positive tests are expected with daily testing programs, even among the vaccinated. Little information on severity has been released, though public reports suggest that cases among athletes have generally been mild or asymptomatic. Some athletes who have tested positive have not been publicly identified.

July 25

Jon Rahm

Spain

Golf

Spain

July 24

Bryson DeChambeau

United States

Golf

United States

July 23

Jelle Geens

Belgium

Triathlon

Belgium

Simon Geschke

Germany

Road cycling

Germany

Frederico Morais

Portugal

Surfing

Portugal

July 22

Taylor Crabb

United States

Beach volleyball

United States

Reshmie Oogink

Netherlands

Taekwondo

Netherlands

Michal Schlegel

Czech Republic

Road cycling

Czech Republic

Marketa Slukova

Czech Republic

Beach volleyball

Czech Republic

July 21

Fernanda Aguirre

Chile

Taekwondo

Chile

Ilya Borodin

Russian Olympic Committee

Swimming

Russian Olympic Committee

Amber Hill

Britain

Shooting

Britain

Candy Jacobs

Netherlands

Skateboarding

Netherlands

Pavel Sirucek

Czech Republic

Table tennis

Czech Republic

July 20

Sammy Solis

Mexico

Baseball

Mexico

Sonja Vasic

Serbia

Basketball

Serbia

Hector Velazquez

Mexico

Baseball

Mexico

July 19

Kara Eaker

United States

Gymnastics

United States

Ondrej Perusic

Czech Republic

Beach volleyball

Czech Republic

Katie Lou Samuelson

United States

Three-on-three basketball

United States

July 18

Coco Gauff

United States

Tennis

United States

Kamohelo Mahlatsi

South Africa

Soccer

South Africa

Thabiso Monyane

South Africa

Soccer

South Africa

July 16

Dan Craven

Namibia

Road cycling

Namibia

Alex de Minaur

Australia

Tennis

Australia

July 14

Dan Evans

Britain

Tennis

Britain

July 13

Johanna Konta

Britain

Tennis

Britain

July 3

Milos Vasic

Serbia

Rowing

Serbia