July 26 Tokyo 2020 Olympics news and results | CNN

July 26 Tokyo 2020 Olympics news and results

Visitors look at the Olympic rings floating in the water at Odaiba Marine Park, where triathlon and marathon swimming events will be held, on the eve of the pandemic-delayed 2020 Summer Olympics, Sunday, July 25, 2021, in Tokyo, Japan. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
Tokyo 2020 Games officially underway after yearlong delay
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Lydia Jacoby, 17, is the the first American Olympic swimmer from Alaska. She just won gold

American swimmer Lydia Jacoby celebrates after winning the gold medal in the 100m breaststroke final on July 27.

American swimmer Lydia Jacoby has won the gold medal in the women’s 100m breaststroke.

Jacoby, just 17, was not expected to win the event. She beat South Africa’s Tatjana Schoenmaker, who clinched silver, and Lilly King of the US, who collected bronze.

Jacoby is the first-ever Olympic swimmer from Alaska.

She went to high school in Seward, a small, picturesque city in the south of the state with a population of fewer than 3,000 people.

Russian swimmers take gold and silver in the men's 100m backstroke

Russian swimmers Evgeny Rylov and Kliment Kolesnikov celebrate after finishing first and second respectively in the 100m backstroke final on July 27.

Russian swimmers Evgeny Rylov and Kliment Kolesnikov have finished first and second respectively in the men’s 100m backstroke final.

American Ryan Murphy, who won gold in the event at the Rio Olympics in 2016 and holds the world record, collected bronze.

US men had won six consecutive Olympic golds in the event before the Tokyo Games.

Australia's Kaylee McKeown had a particularly passionate reaction after winning gold in the pool

Australia's Kaylee McKeown celebrates after winning the 100m backstroke on July 27.

Australia’s Kaylee McKeown has won gold in the women’s 100m backstroke, setting an Olympic record with a time of 57.47 seconds.

It is the first Olympic medal of McKeown’s career, and the adrenaline was flowing in the 20-year-old’s post-race interview with CNN affiliate 7 News Australia.

When asked by the network if she had a message for her mother Sharon and sister Taylor, who were watching, she responded: ““F*** yeah!”, before realizing she swore and covering her mouth. Then she followed it up with a celebratory “Woo!”

On 7 News, her mother said “I’ll have a word to her later,” while laughing.

Canada’s Kylie Masse clinched silver and the United States’ Regan Smith bronze in the event.

McKeown set the world record for the women’s 100m backstroke in June with a time of 57.45 seconds.

Cancer survivor Kevin McDowell made US history at the Olympics

America's Kevin McDowell dives into the water to start the individual triathlon on July 26.

Kevin McDowell finished sixth in the men’s individual triathlon on Monday, the highest finish ever by an American man in the event at the Olympics.

The achievement is harder fought than most people realize, since McDowell was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma back in 2011.

McDowell attributed some key advice to getting through chemotherapy.

McDowell next competes in the mixed triathlon relay on Saturday.

Flora Duffy wins Bermuda's first ever Olympic gold medal

Bermuda's Flora Duffy competes during the Women's Individual Triathlon on July 27.

Bermuda’s Flora Duffy has won the women’s triathlon at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

The victory earns Bermuda’s first ever Olympic gold medal. A four-time Olympian who finished eighth at the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro, Duffy won with a winning time of 1:55:36.

Great Britain’s Georgia Taylor-Brown took silver while Katie Zaferes of the US earned bronze.

This is the second-ever Olympic medal in Bermuda’s Games history. Heavyweight boxer Clarence Hill earned the bronze medal at the 1976 Games in Montreal.

These are the athletes who've had to drop out of the Olympics because of Covid-19

Competition at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo began Wednesday, more than a year after the original start date after the Games were delayed due to the pandemic.

But with Covid-19 still spreading unchecked in Japan, organizers have been forced to take unprecedented steps to keep competitors and the public safe.

Athletes who contracted coronavirus have seen their Olympic dreams dashed. Some tested positive in Japan, some before coming.

These are the athletes we know who have publicly dropped out due to Covid-19 health and safety protocols.

Team USA:

  • Bradley Beal – Men’s basketball (Placed in health and safety protocol but hasn’t publicly disclosed a positive Covid-19 test)
  • Taylor Crabb – Men’s beach volleyball
  • Kara Eaker – Women’s gymnastics
  • Coco Gauff – Women’s tennis
  • Katie Lou Samuelson – Women’s 3x3 basketball
  • Bryson DeChambeau — USA Golf

Team Czech Republic:

  • Barbora Hermannova – Women’s beach volleyball (Ruled out because her partner Sluková-Nausch tested positive for Covid.)
  • Simon Nausch – Coach, women’s beach volleyball
  • Ondrej Perusic – Men’s beach volleyball
  • Michal Schlegel – Men’s cycling
  • Pavel Širuček – Men’s table tennis
  • Markéta Sluková-Nausch – Women’s beach volleyball

Team Great Britain:

  • Dan Evans – Men’s tennis
  • Amber Hill – Women’s shooting
  • Johanna Konta – Women’s tennis

Team Mexico:

  • Hector Velazquez – Baseball
  • Sammy Solis – Baseball

Team Netherlands:

  • Finn Florijn – Men’s rowing
  • Candy Jacobs – Women’s skateboarding
  • Reshmie Oogink — Taekwondo

Team South Africa:

  • Kamohelo Mahlatsi – Men’s football
  • Thabiso Monyane – Men’s football

Team Australia:

  • Alex de Minaur – Men’s tennis

Team Chile:

  • Fernanda Aguirre – Women’s taekwondo

Team Portugal:

  • Frederico Morais – Men’s surfing

Team ROC (Russian Olympic Committee):

  • Ilya Borodin – Men’s Swimming

These are the key Olympic events to watch tonight in the US

The 2020 Summer Olympics — which were delayed a year for the Covid-19 pandemic — are underway in Tokyo. While Japan is 13 hours ahead of the US East Coast, you can watch some events live and NBC broadcasts tonight.

Here’s a look at some of the events we’re watching this evening:

  • Beach Volleyball: Team USA’s April Ross and Alix Klineman will face Liliana Fernandez and Elsa Baquerizo of Spain. The events airs at 8 p.m. ET on USA and also streams live.
  • Swimming: Ryan Murphy (men’s 100m backstroke) and Lilly King (women’s 100m breaststroke) are competing. Swimming finals kick off at 9:30 p.m. ET on NBC and on live streams.
  • Surfing: Both the men’s and women’s surfing competitions move into the quarterfinals (subject to change depending on wave conditions.) Quarterfinals and semifinals start at 6 p.m. ET. Live streams will be as follows: men’s quarterfinals at 6 p.m. ET, women’s quarterfinals at 8:20 p.m. ET, men’s semifinals at 10:45 p.m. ET and women’s semifinals at 12 a.m. ET.
  • Women’s basketball: Look for Sue Bird, Diana Taurasi and Breanna Stewart. The US women’s basketball team is favored to win a seventh-straight gold medal in Tokyo. Heading into Tuesday morning, you can watch the United States vs. Nigeria at 12:40 a.m. ET on USA.

Japan stuns China to win historic mixed Olympic table tennis gold

Japan's Mizutani Jun and Mima Ito react during their table tennis mixed doubles gold medal match against China on July 26.

Japan’s mixed doubles pair of Jun Mizutani and Mima Ito claimed their country’s first ever Olympic table tennis gold medal with a dramatic victory over China’s Xu Xin and Liu Shinwen on Monday.

It was the first time the mixed doubles event had been played at the Olympics and Monday’s finale didn’t fail to disappoint.

Mizutani and Ito came back from 2 sets down to win 4-3, clinching the final set 11-6.

Victory for the pair ended years of incredible Chinese dominance in the sport.

China had won every Olympic title in the table tennis since South Korea’s Ryu Seung-min triumphed in the men’s singles competition at the 2004 Athens Games.

Mizutani and Ito’s victory sees Japan end Monday top of the Olympics medals table with eight gold medals, one more than the United States.

Here's who took home the 21 gold medals won on Monday

The Olympics are in full swing in Tokyo, with 21 gold medals won on Monday. You can track the medal count here.

Here’s who walked off a winner:

Archery 

  • Men’s Team: Republic of Korea

Artistic Gymnastics

  • Men’s Team: Russian Olympic Committee (ROC)

Canoe Slalom

  • Men’s Canoe: Benjamin Savsek, Slovenia

Cycling Mountain Bike

  • Men’s Cross-country: Thomas Pidcock, Great Britain

Diving

  • Men’s Synchronized 10m Platform: Great Britain

Fencing

  • Women’s Sabre Individual: Sofia Pozdniakova, ROC
  • Men’s Foil Individual: Cheung Ka Long, Hong Kong, China

Judo

  • Women’s -57kg: Nora Gjakova, Kosovo
  • Men’s -73kg: Shohei Ono, Japan

Shooting

  • Women’s Skeet: Amber English, United States
  • Men’s Skeet: Vincent Hancock, United States

Skateboarding

  • Women’s Street: Momiji Nishiya, Japan

Swimming

  • Women’s 100m Butterfly: Margaret MacNeil, Canada
  • Men’s 100m Breaststroke: Adam Peaty, Great Britain
  • Women’s 400m Freestyle: Ariarne Titmus, Australia
  • Men’s 4 X 100m Freestyle Relay: United States

Table Tennis

  • Mixed Doubles: Jun Mizutani/Mima Ito, Japan

Taekwondo

  • Women’s -67kg: Matea Jelic, Croatia
  • Men’s -80kg: Maksim Khramtcov, ROC

Triathlon

  • Men’s Individual: Krisitan Blummenfelt, Norway

Weightlifting

  • Women’s 55kg: Hidilyn Diaz, Philippines

Daughter of Russian Olympic Committee president wins fencing gold

The Russian Olympic Committee's Sofia Pozdniakova celebrates after winning the Sabre Individual Fencing Gold Medal Bout on July 26.

Sofia Pozdniakova, daughter of Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) President Stanislav Pozdniakov, secured a gold in the individual women’s sabre fencing competition on Monday.

Two-time world champion Pozdniakova, who was making her Olympic debut, defeated ROC teammate Sofya Velikaya 15-11 in the final.

For 36-year-old Velikaya it was a third Olympic silver medal after she finished runner-up at London 2012 and Rio 2016. 

Pozdniakova follows in the footsteps of her father Stanislav who previously won 4 Olympic gold medals in the sabre competitions – 3 coming in the team competition at Barcelona 1992, Atlanta 1996 and Sydney 200, respectively, and 1 in the individual competition at Atlanta 1996.

Pozdniakov was appointed President of the Russian Olympic Committee in May 2018.

Remember: Due to a ban by the World Anti-Doping Agency for doping non-compliance, Russian athletes are note competing under their country’s name, flag and national anthem at major international sporting events until Dec. 16, 2022. They are officially recognized as members of ROC.

Hidilyn Diaz wins the Philippines' first ever gold medal

The Philippines' Hidilyn Diaz competes in the 55kg weightlifting event on July 26.

Weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz has won the Philippines’ first ever Olympic gold medal after she won the women’s 55kg event at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, setting an Olympic record with a total mark of 224 kg.

Prior to Diaz’s gold, the Philippines had claimed 10 Olympic medals (3 silvers and 7 bronzes). She won the silver medal in the women’s 53kg event at the 2016 Rio Games. 

The Philippines captured their first medal of the Summer Games.

Liao Qiuyun of China took silver with 223 kg and Kazakhstan’s Zulfiya Chinshanlo won bronze with 213 kg. 

Hong Kong fencing athlete wins gold medal — the city's first in 25 years

Hong Kong's Edgar Cheung celebrates after winning against Italy's Alessio Foconi in the individual foil qualifying bout on July 26.

Hong Kong fencing athlete Edgar Cheung has won the city’s first gold medal at the Summer Olympics in 25 years, beating Italy’s Daniele Garozzo at the men’s foil finals.

Cheung beat Garozzo — who won gold at the 2016 Rio Olympics — by 15 to 11 on Monday night local time in Tokyo, becoming the first Hong Kong fencing athlete to win a medal at the Olympics.

Speaking to the media after the victory, Cheung said he still could not believe his win.

Hong Kong has now won two gold medals at the Olympics, the first of which was won by windsurfer Lee Lai-shan in 1996.

The Russian Olympics Committee clinches the gold in men's gymnastics

The Russian Olympic Committee celebrates after winning gold during the Men's Team Final on July 26.

The Russian Olympic Committee has captured the gold medal in men’s all-round gymnastics.

Nikita Nagornyy, Denis Abliazin and Artur Dalaloyan and David Belyavskiy together scored a total of 262.500, which is the top mark.

Japan claimed the silver with a total of 262.397, and China took the bronze medal with a score of 261.894.

What is the Russian Olympic Committee? Due to a ban by the World Anti-Doping Agency for doping non-compliance, Russian athletes aren’t competing under their country’s name, flag and national anthem at major international sporting events until Dec. 16, 2022. They are officially recognized as members of ROC, an abbreviation of Russian Olympic Committee.

Olympic champion Tom Daley hopes his gold medal can provide "hope" to LGBT community

Team Great Britain’s Tom Daley ended his long wait to top an Olympic podium after winning the men’s synchronized 10-meter diving competition with his partner Matty Lee on Monday.

In December 2013, Daley came out on YouTube and almost eight years later, the Briton says he is proud of the LGBT representation that he has witnessed at the Games.

He said that he hopes they don’t feel “so frightened and scared and alone.”

Daley’s husband, screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, posted a video on Instagram of him screaming and celebrating the win from Canada as they watched the live event from afar. The couple have a three-year-old son together.

In comments after the event, Daley said he also felt he’d grown since becoming a husband and father.

“My husband, he said to me that my story wasn’t finished, and that my son … needed to be there to watch me win an Olympic gold medal,” he said.

Read more about Tom Daley here:

Britain's Tom Daley and Matty Lee hug after winning the synchronized 10m platform diving final on July 26.

Related article TV star. Lover of crochet. And now after four Olympics, Tom Daley has elusive gold medal

Nora Gjakova earns a Judo gold for Kosovo

Kosovo's Nora Gjakova celebrates after defeating France's Sarah Leonie Cystique in their -57kg judo final match on July 26.

Kosovo’s Nora Gjakova further extended the country’s golden Olympic judo record by winning the women’s under-57kg final on Monday.

Two-time world champion Gjakova defeated France’s Sarah-Léonie Cysique to claim her maiden gold medal.

Gjakova’s gold is Kosovo’s second of the Tokyo Games after Distria Krasniqi’s victory in the women’s under-48 kg category on Saturday.

It’s Kosovo’s third Olympic medal in total since the country made its debut at the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro.

Majlinda Kelmendi earned the country’s first historic gold in the women’s under 52kg at Rio 2016. 

Defending champion Kelmendi, though, was eliminated in her first round contest in Tokyo on Sunday.

The Olympics are in full swing. Here's what you need to know

Japan's Aori Nishimura competes during the street prelims on July 26.

Here are some highlights from the first Monday of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics (in 2021).

Big surprises and upsets:

In the performance of a lifetime, Austria’s Anna Kiesenhofer won the cycling gold medal, after she raced so far ahead that she was out of sight of the other cyclists. She only took up the sport in 2014 and does not have a professional contract at the moment.

Tunisia’s Ahmed Hafnaoui shocked the swimming world by winning gold in the 400m freestyle. During the preliminary round, he qualified in 8th place with the slowest qualifying time of all finalists.

The US men’s basketball team, flush with NBA stars, lost its first game to France. The French used the size of three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert and a magnificent performance from fellow NBAer Evan Fournier to shock the Americans, who could not capitalize on multiple attempts to close out the game.

Some firsts:

Anastasija Zolotic became the first American woman to win Olympic gold in Taekwondo and Fencer Lee Kiefer is the first US woman to win gold in individual foil.

At just 13, Nishiya Momiji of Japan, is now one of the youngest gold medal winners in Olympic history, after she won the women’s street skateboarding event. She is just months older than the current female record-holder, American diver Marjorie Gestring, who was 13 years and 267 days old when she won gold at the Berlin Games in 1936.

What’s on tap today in Japan:

  • Swimming: Britain’s Adam Peaty won the 100m breaststroke gold, while Ariarne Titmus beat American great Katie Ledecky in the women’s 400m freestyle final.
  • Rugby sevens: Rio 2016 winner Fiji beat host Japan 24-19 in the morning, while New Zealand, another favorite, took care of business against South Korea 50-5. A second round of matches will be held starting at 4:30 p.m. in Japan.

Covid-19 continues to loom large:

The Games have been overwhelmingly unpopular among the Japanese public, according to polls. But the mood appears to be shifting as Japan brings in gold medals.

Meanwhile, Tokyo continues to report a rising number of daily new coronavirus cases, with at least 153 cases linked to the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, organizers said Monday.

The full schedule can be found on the Olympics website here.

All three Olympic women skateboarding medalists are teenagers

When the three athletes on an Olympic podium have a combined age of 42, you know — in the words of English rock band The Who — that the kids are alright.

That was the case as women’s street skateboarding made its bow at the Olympics, with 13-year-old Momiji Nishiya of Japan taking gold ahead of Brazil’s Rayssa Leal — also 13 — and 16-year-old Funa Nakayama, also from Japan.

If organizers wanted to engage a younger audience by adding skateboarding to the Olympic program, then it was mission accomplished at Tokyo’s Ariake Urban Sports Park.

“I’m simply very, very delighted. I am so happy,” Nishiya told reporters, adding that she felt her success had “nothing to do with her age.”

Full report below:

(LtoR) Brazil's Rayssa Leal (silver), Japan's Momiji Nishiya (gold) and Japan's Funa Nakayama (bronze) pose during the medal ceremony of the podium ceremony of the skateboarding women's street final of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Ariake Sports Park in Tokyo on July 26, 2021. (Photo by Jeff PACHOUD / AFP) (Photo by JEFF PACHOUD/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article Teenage kicks at the Olympics' first women's skateboarding final as 13-year-old Momiji Nishiya takes gold

Tokyo reported more than 1,400 new Covid-19 cases, nearly double of last Monday's number

Tokyo reported 1,429 new Covid-19 cases on Monday, nearly doubling the amount of new cases from the previous Monday when the capital reported 727 new cases, according to Tokyo Metropolitan Government.

This daily jump is the highest increase reported on a Monday, Japanese public broadcaster NHK reported. Mondays typically see lower daily increases of new cases.

Meanwhile, at least 153 cases have been linked to the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, organizers said Monday.

Are Japan’s gold medal wins softening the country’s mood at the Games?

Minoru Omori told CNN that festival-loving Koto ward in Tokyo had been looking forward to the Olympics.

Polls have consistently shown that the Games have been overwhelmingly unpopular among the Japanese public amid health and safety concerns.

Still, the mood appears to be shifting as competitions kick-off and Japan brings in gold medals.

IOC official Mark Adams said nearly 70 million watched the opening ceremony, with the Olympic broadcast services saying it was the most-watched event in Japan over the past decade.

Even though the buzz and excitement is a far cry from what you would expect for a city hosting the Olympics – people are trying to experience the Games in any way possible.

Minoru Omori, a shopkeeper in Tokyo’s Koto ward – home to ten Olympic venues – was elated when he found out Tokyo had been chosen to host the 2020 Summer Games.

His district decked out Tokyo 2020 banners and posters and was expecting a tourist boom, but then the pandemic struck.

He told CNN he was happy the event hadn’t been cancelled but that the spectator ban in the capital was for the best.

South Korean dominance in archery continues as men’s team secures gold

South Korea’s Kim Je-deok celebrates winning the gold medal in the archery team competition on July 26.

South Korea claimed gold in the archery men’s team event on Monday, extending their reign and winning the country’s third archery gold at the Tokyo Games.

The men’s team dominated Chinese Taipei in Monday’s final with a 6-0 clean sweep victory.

Five of the last six men’s team Olympic titles have been won by South Korea – the only exception was Italy breaking their winning streak at London 2012.

The country has already swept two gold medals in archery, with the women’s team tying the longest gold streak in Olympic history with nine medals.

Kim Je-deok secured the mixed title with An San.