Best moments from bonkers Olympic Sunday, plus the White Sox's sad place in history


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Top Five: A delightfully dizzying Sunday in Paris

The Olympics have been great so far. No doubt about that. But yesterday, the worldwide obsession flexed. The top five wildest moments, plus some honorable mentions:

5. Team USA’s medley relay record
The U.S. women ended their Olympic run with an incredible showing in the 4×100-meter medley relay, a race that went from tight to blowout quickly. Regan Smith, Lilly King, Gretchen Walsh and Torri Huske finished in 3:49.63, a world record, and beat the field by more than three seconds. Maybe just as shocking: the Chinese men winning their 4×100-meter relay, marking the American men’s first-ever loss in the event. The upset brought more attention to a doping controversy, too.

4. Kristen Faulkner’s breakaway win
Since 1984, no American woman had won an Olympic road racing gold medal until yesterday. Faulkner — a replacement athlete in these Games, no less — broke away from the field with three kilometers to go to claim top honors. Faulkner’s road here is even wilder: from venture capitalist in 2020 to Olympic gold medalist in 2024.

3. Scottie Scheffler’s incredible back nine
It has been a dumbfounding year for Scheffler, who won the Masters, welcomed his first child, got arrested before a major tournament and still played … and is now an Olympic gold medalist, posting a 29 on the home stretch to win after Jon Rahm collapsed. It was touching to see Scheffler, famously stoic, get emotional on the podium.

Andrew Redington / Getty Images2. Bobby Finke’s unbelievable stamina
Every Olympics, I watch the 1500-meter swim and wonder how anyone survives. It is a long event by Olympic swimming standards, but instead of boring you, each lap ratchets up tension as you watch a person keep swimming faster than you ever could. That was Finke yesterday, leading wire-to-wire in the sport’s most grueling event. His gold medal is the only individual male swimming gold won by an American in these Olympics.

1. Noah Lyles, of course
More than 24 hours have passed since the 27-year-old’s shocking victory in the 100-meter dash yesterday, and you could still convince me he maybe didn’t win. That’s how close this race was, with the top four runners finishing within one-tenth of a second of each other. Just look at this:

GettyImages 2164852099


Rodolfo Buhrer / Eurasia Sport Images / Getty Images

Lyles’ win — the first for an American in this event in 20 years — was even more impressive, considering his poor start. He didn’t lead a second of this race until he crossed the finish line, and that’s after weeks’ worth of his bravado. As Marcus Thompson III wrote, Lyles’ mouth wrote the check before the Olympics — and his feet cashed it.

Honorable mentions from yesterday: 


News to Know

Michigan coach could face NCAA penalty
New Michigan football head coach Sherrone Moore could be subject to a Level II charge from the NCAA in connection to the school’s spying scandal last season, sources confirmed to The Athletic’s Austin Meek. Moore allegedly deleted text messages with former Wolverines assistant Connor Stalions, the center of the supposed spying operation, instead of handing them over to the NCAA. All this information comes from a draft notice of allegations, which Michigan received yesterday. See the full report here.

Freeman’s son discharged
Freddie Freeman’s son Maximus was discharged from the hospital after an eight-day stay, according to a post on Instagram from Freeman’s wife, Chelsea. Last week, Chelsea disclosed that Maximus had been diagnosed with Guillain-Barré syndrome, a rare neurological condition in which the body’s immune system attacks its nervous system. According to Chelsea’s post, Maximus will have to learn how to walk again. More details here.

More news


The Worst Ever? How low can the White Sox sink?

The Chicago White Sox have lost 20 straight games after a 13-7 defeat against the Twins yesterday. The longest losing streak since the 1988 Orioles lost 21 in a row, it’s four shy of setting a modern-era MLB record and seven shy of an all-time record.

This may be the worst MLB team we’ve seen in many decades. Consider:

  • They are on pace for just over 50 wins right now, which is still miles from the Philadelphia Athletics’ 36-win season in 1916, the worst on record. But the ChiSox just offloaded a ton of talent at the trade deadline. The pace is worsening with every loss.
  • I asked Levi Weaver, of Windup fame, whether this team was the worst he’s watched in his career. He immediately said yes, but did give caveats to the 2013 Astros (51-111), 2018 Orioles (47-115) and 2019 Tigers (47-114), which are corollaries here.
  • Something Levi said that piqued my interest: The true mark of an actually awful baseball team is its defense. These White Sox rank last in advanced defensive metrics right now (Defensive Runs Saved, Fielding Run Value), while ranking 29th in Outs Above Average.

Johnny Flores wrote a good roundup of all the awful stats here. Unbelievably, the White Sox are the first AL team to produce two separate 14-game losing streaks in the same season.

The “good” news: Chicago gets the 46-67 A’s for a three-game series starting tonight, which could provide an opening to break the losing streak. A sweep loss would tie the MLB record. Gulp.


Olympics HQ

What to watch

All times Eastern

We are already in the Olympics’ final week, and today is the final Biles Day. That, plus what else to watch: 

  • Women’s gymnastics: balance beam and floor, 6:38 a.m. and 8:23 a.m. on E! and Peacock
  • Kayak cross: women’s final and men’s final, 10:55 a.m. on USA and Peacock
  • Women’s 3×3 basketball: semifinals and final, 11:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. on NBC and Peacock

Other medals decided today: triathlon, shooting, archery, badminton, canoeing, cycling, track and field, surfing.

Medal count

  1. 🇺🇸 United States — 71 (19 gold, 26 silver, 26 bronze)
  2. 🇨🇳 China — 45 (19 gold, 15 silver, 11 bronze)
  3. 🇫🇷 France — 44 (12 gold, 14 silver, 18 bronze)

Pulse Picks

Andrew Marchand has a fascinating play-by-play of how the NBA media rights deal got done, and what lies beyond — which is both scary and exciting. Read it here. 

I really enjoyed Tashan Reed’s story on Ravens assistant coach Megan Rosburg, one of just 12 full-time female coaches in the NFL. She’s the real deal. 

How did Brandon Marsh catch that ball last night? A gift from the baseball gods, as Matt Gelb writes, helped the sagging Phillies rebound. 

We finally get breaking’s debut this week at the Olympics. David Aldridge chronicled its incredible arc from the Bronx to Paris. 

Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Our explainer on the Olympics gender controversy in women’s boxing. 

Most-read on the website yesterday: Dan Pompei’s touching story from the Hall of Fame ceremony done at Steve McMichael’s bedside.
Top podcast in The Athletic network: Meg Linehan, Tamerra Griffin and Steph Yang recapped USWNT’s wild win over Japan this weekend from France. Give it a listen. 

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(Top photo: Ulrik Pedersen / DeFodi Images via Getty Images)



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