Tag: Paris 2024

  • Olympics 2024: Jamaican athlete drags Federation to CAS

    Olympics 2024: Jamaican athlete drags Federation to CAS

    Even though the 2024 Olympic Games is billed to get underway on Friday in Paris, the global event has already began in other areas.

    One of such is in the area of matters related to representation, with the Ad hoc Division of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) already registering its first arbitration procedure.

    Ms Nayoka Clunis of Jamaica who was qualified and selected has taken the Jamaica Athletics Administrative Association (JAAA) to CAS.

    She was to represent Jamaica in the hammer throw competition at the Olympic Games Paris 2024, but eventually her name was not submitted by the JAAA to World Athletics (WA).

    Ms Clunis now seeks a decision from the CAS Ad hoc Division directing that she be included on the appropriate list to participate in the hammer throw competition at the Olympic Games.

    A panel of arbitrators has already been appointed to decide this dispute, composed of Dr. Annabelle Bennett of Australia as President, Ms Carine Dupeyron of France and Ms Kristen Thorsness of U.S.

    It will hold a hearing with the parties on Saturday, with its decision expected to be issued on Sunday.

    The 2024 Olympic Games is billed for July 26 to Aug. 11.

  • Paris 2024: How D’Tigress lost to Germany in test match

    Paris 2024: How D’Tigress lost to Germany in test match

    Nigeria’s D’Tigress were defeated 77-63 by Germany in a pre-Olympic friendly match on Friday. Despite the loss, Rena Wakama’s team showed a spirited performance.

     

    Forward Amy Okonkwo was the leading scorer for Nigeria, contributing 16 points and grabbing two rebounds. Elizabeth Balogun added 14 points and secured five rebounds.

     

    Alexis Peterson from Germany was the game’s top scorer with 22 points.

     

    D’Tigress are set to play against Serbia and Puerto Rico in their upcoming friendlies. At the Olympics, Nigeria will compete against Australia, France, and Canada.

    The Paris Olympics will Kickstart on the 26th of July 2024 and it’s expected to run for a period of three weeks.

     

  • Olympics: Paris 2024 opening ceremony will be different – Organisers

    Olympics: Paris 2024 opening ceremony will be different – Organisers

    The opening ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris on July 26 will be a joyful, daring and atypical show, the ceremony’s organisers have said.

    The organisers assured on Friday that the event was going to be one in which artists and athletes together celebrate Paris, France and the Games alongside the river Seine.

    Unlike for previous Olympics, the Paris 2024 opening ceremony will not take place in a stadium.

    Instead, dozens of boats will carry thousands of athletes and performers on a six-kilometre route along the Seine.

    “We know the importance of the opening ceremony for the Olympic Games.

    “It’s key for the athletes, it’s key for the country which organises it,” Tony Estanguet, the head of the Paris Olympics Organising Committee, told reporters.

    “That’s why, from the start, we have been very ambitious, because we really want this opening ceremony to embody all the ambition of Paris 2024: daring, atypical Games, which shows the best of France.”

    Details including some of the artists taking part, who will last carry the torch and light the Olympic cauldron to mark the start of the Games, have been kept secret.

    The ceremony’s artistic team said they had been rehearsing in private to keep it all under wraps.
    But what is known is that there will be a floating parade, departing from Austerlitz bridge, sailing by Notre-Dame de Paris cathedral and arriving near the Eiffel Tower.

    The show will also be using nearby monuments and mixing music, light and dance.

    “We’ll have some clichés (about France) but also we are going to share what is Paris, what is France today,” Thomas Jolly, the artistic director of the opening ceremony, told reporters.

    More than 300,000 spectators will be watching from the riverbanks, with hundreds of millions more expected to watch on TV or on social media.

    “I’m very impatient … I want to share it now because (we’ve been) working on this ceremony for two years … and I’m so impatient to share it with the world,” Jolly said.

    “About the artists (who will take part in the ceremony), we are not going to say anything.

    “But it will be a beautiful night with a lot of important people who have something to celebrate with us about Paris.”

    Jolly said the show would last about three and three-quarter hours and be “a large fresco” which will “inter-weave the parade of athletes, the artistic paintings and the elements of protocol which are staged.”

    “That is the moment to celebrate the relationship that Paris, that France maintains with the world at the moment when the world enters Paris and when the world will look at Paris,” he said.

    Maud Le Pladec, the ceremony’s choreographer, said: “There will be this total show, everything will be mixed.”

    “This is a popular show, but (you’ll see) how we can make it chic also, how we can make it à la Francaise.”

    The 2024 Olympics will run from July 26 to Aug. 11, while the Paralympics will be held from Aug. 28 to Sept. 8.

  • Paris 2024: D’Tigress hit Berlin, for Germany friendly game

    Paris 2024: D’Tigress hit Berlin, for Germany friendly game

    As parts of the series of preparatory matches lined up by the Nigeria Basketball Federation to keep the team in top shape, ahead of the Paris Olympic games, the senior female basketball team, D’Tigress yesterday evening arrived Berlin, from its training camp in Saarbrucken, Germany, ahead of its scheduled friendly tie against Germany national female basketball team on Friday, July 19.

    The D’Tigress have been preparing hard for the female basketball events of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, with a full complement of the invited players under the watch of highly-regarded Coach Rena Wakama.

    Reports from the training camp revealed that the girls are in high spirit and are ready for the encounter against the Germany female team.

    D’Tigress, who are the reigning Afrobasket champions will test Serbia in another game in Belgrade, on July 21 and Japan in Lille, France on July 24, respectively,

     

  • Paris 2024: Super Falcons lose to Canada in friendly game

    Paris 2024: Super Falcons lose to Canada in friendly game

    Nigeria’s Super Falcons lost 1-0 to Canada in a friendly match at La Quinta Football Centre in Malaga, Spain, on Wednesday night, marking their final preparation before the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.

     

    Under head coach Randy Waldrum, Nigeria fielded their strongest lineup in a 4-4-2 diamond formation to maintain their impressive unbeaten streak. Chiamaka Nnadozie started in goal, with defenders Michelle Alozie, Chidinma Okeke, Oluwatosin Demehin, and Osinachi Ohale. The midfield included Deborah Abiodun and Christy Ucheibe, while Jennifer Echegini and Toni Payne led the attack alongside Chinwendu Ihezuo and Rasheedat Ajibade of Atletico Madrid.

     

    Canada took an early lead in the 18th minute. Despite Nigeria’s efforts to equalize throughout the match, the closest chance came in the second half when Echegini’s powerful strike hit the post.

     

    This defeat ended Nigeria’s 15-game unbeaten streak, with their last loss over 90 minutes occurring previously. It was also the Super Falcons’ first defeat in 2024, following two wins and two draws against Cameroon and South Africa earlier in the year.

     

    Nigeria will begin their Olympic campaign in eight days with a crucial match against Brazil in Bordeaux, followed by matches against Spain and Korea Republic.

  • Paris 2024: Super Falcons, Canada friendly to hold today in Spain

    Paris 2024: Super Falcons, Canada friendly to hold today in Spain

    Nigeria and Canada senior women teams go toe-to-toe for the second time in one year on Wednesday, in a closed-doors training match in Malaga which amounts to the final test for both teams ahead of the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament starting in France in eight days.

    The match will commence at 6.30pm Spain time (5.30pm Nigeria time) at the La Quinta Football Centre, Malaga. It also draws the curtain on the Super Falcons’ camping programme in Spain.

    Both teams were involved in a hard-fought FIFA Women’s World Cup Group B opener at the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium on 21 July 2023, with the game ending 0-0. Nigeria’s goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie saved a penalty kick by veteran Christine Sinclair, and made 14 other big saves in the afternoon encounter.

    Coach Randy Waldrum is unlikely to make many changes from the squad that played that match, though defender Ashleigh Plumptre and forward Francisca Ordega, who started that match, are not in Spain.

    Waldrum will most likely stick with goalkeeper Nnadozie, defenders Osinachi Ohale, Oluwatosin Demehin and Michelle Alozie (alongside, perhaps Chidinma Okeke), and midfielders Toni Payne, Christy Ucheibe and Deborah Abiodun.

    The strike-force may be entirely different with captain Rasheedat Ajibade (who missed the clash with Canada in Melbourne due to a red card bagged in the Women AFCON semi-final clash with Morocco in July 2022) coming in, alongside perhaps Uchenna Kanu and Chinwendu Ihezuo.

    The nine-time African champions will fly into France on Thursday, where they will spend a week in further training ahead of their first match of the tournament against Brazil at the Stade Bordeaux on Thursday, 25th July.

    Nigeria’s other matches in the group phase are against Spain (28th July) and Japan (31st July), both at the Stade de la Beaujoire in Nantes.

  • Paris 2024: D’Tigress to play Japan in warm -up game

    Paris 2024: D’Tigress to play Japan in warm -up game

    The Nigeria Basketball Federation (NBBF) has announced additional friendly games for D’Tigress, the country’s women’s basketball team, as part of their preparations for the Olympic Games. Initially, the NBBF scheduled games against Germany on July 19th and Serbia on July 21st. Now, D’Tigress will also face Japan in France in their final test game before the Olympics.

     

    Head coach Rena Wakama has expressed confidence in the team as they continue their training camp in Germany. Speaking to NBBF media, Wakama stated, “Things have been going well in the camp over the last few days. We’ve had great practice sessions, and the girls are in high spirits. They are responding well to training and improving daily. That’s what matters.”

     

    Wakama, who led D’Tigress to their fourth Afrobasket title in Rwanda, added, “I’m confident that the girls will display their talents when we get to Paris. I’m excited and looking forward to the games.”

  • Paris 2024: Super Falcons to have full camp by Friday

    Paris 2024: Super Falcons to have full camp by Friday

    The arrivals of forwards Uchenna Kanu and Chinwendu Ihezuo at the Super Falcons’ camp in Sevilla, Spain on Thursday afternoon brought the number of players in camp to 20, with only defender Oluwatosin Demehin and forward Chinonyerem Macleans still expected as the nine-time African champions intensify preparations for their return to the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament.

    Both players are scheduled to arrive at the team’s Hotel Barceló Montecastillo Golf and Resort on Friday afternoon.

     

     

     

    A full camp by Friday means Coach Randy Waldrum and his assistants will have five whole days to work with the entire playing body, as well as the alternates, ahead of Wednesday’s training match with reigning Olympic champions Canada.

     

     

     

    Team captain Rasheedat Ajibade was among the first arrivals, alongside goalkeepers Chiamaka Nnadozie and Tochukwu Oluehi, defenders Chidinma Okeke and Nicole Payne, midfielders Christy Ucheibe, Toni Payne, Deborah Abiodun and Jennifer Echegini, and forward Esther Okoronkwo. Two alternates – goalkeeper Morufa Ademola and forward Gift Monday were also early arrivals.

    The Super Falcons will fly into France on Thursday, 18th July – exactly a week to their tournament opening match against illustrious opponents Brazil at the Stade Bordeaux. Their two other games in the group phase, against Spain and Japan in that order, will take place at the Stade de la Beaujoire in Nantes

  • Paris 2024: Super Falcons camp bubbles with the arrival of Asisat Oshoala

    Paris 2024: Super Falcons camp bubbles with the arrival of Asisat Oshoala

    The Super Falcons camp in Seville, Spain is swelling with the arrival of the current African women’s Footballer of the Year, Asisat Oshoala.

    The Super Falcons set up camp at the Jerez de la Frontera last weekend to prepare for the 2024 Olympic Games.

    The number of players in camp has increased to 15 with the arrival of the Bays FC of United States forward.

    Seven more players are being expected in camp.

    Ifeoma Onumonu was named as replacement for the injured Halimat Ayinde on Tuesday.

    Midfielder Regina Otu will now take Onumonu’s place in the alternate players slot.

    The Super Falcons will take on Canada in a friendly next week Wednesday before departing for Paris a day later.

  • Paris 2024: Super Falcons begin training in sevilla

    Paris 2024: Super Falcons begin training in sevilla

    The Super Falcons of Nigeria began their first training session in Sevilla, Spain, on Sunday, kicking off their preparations for the 2024 Olympic Games. The team arrived in Sevilla for a two-week training tour on Friday.

     

    All 18 invited players are expected to join the camp this week. Randy Waldrum’s squad will play a friendly match against Olympic champions Canada on July 17.

     

    The Super Falcons will then head to Paris the following day.The nine-time African champions are set to compete against Spain, Japan, and Brazil in Group C at the Olympics.