Here’s what happened on Tuesday at the Rio Games — PHOTOS
August 9, 2016 - 11:17 pm
RIO DE JANEIRO — Good old Michael Phelps, golden again.
For teenagers Katie Ledecky and Simone Biles, their star turns in the Summer Olympics might be just beginning.
From the pool to the gymnastics floor, Team USA had nice day at the Rio de Janeiro Games.
Not all the American stars were winners Tuesday, though. Serena Williams lost on the tennis court and the U.S. women’s soccer team gave up a late goal and ended up in a draw with Colombia.
But a new generation of U.S. athletes is ready to take up the banner of Olympic standard-bearer from Phelps, a grizzled veteran at 31.
Phelps earned his 20th career gold medal after taking the 200-meter butterfly. He erased the bad memories from his loss in the same race in London to South African Chad le Clos.
Phelps got off to a rousing start at the Rio Games by leading his 4×100 freestyle team to the gold medal on Sunday.
On Tuesday, Phelps’ face bared a familiar scowl as he walked out on to the deck. He held off Japan’s Masato Sakai by four-hundredths of a second, with Hungary’s Tamas Kenderesi taking the bronze.
His 21st gold came later Tuesday night after swimming the anchor leg on the 4×200-meter relay.
Ledecky strode atop the medal podium again with a bright smile after taking gold for winning the 200-meter freestyle. Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden claimed the silver and Emma McKeon of Australia took the bronze.
Ledecky, just 19, won her second gold. At this pace, she could challenge Phelps’ medal haul someday.
At the other end of Olympic Park, the U.S. women’s gymnastics team captured a second straight gold with a high-flying and dominating performance.
The triumph was never in doubt, their score of 184.897 at the Rio Games was more than eight points clear of the field. The day was capped by the 19-year-old Biles, a fan favorite, whose boundary-pushing floor exercise showed just how far ahead they are of everyone else.
Biles, Lauren Hernandez, Gabby Douglas, Madison Kocian and Aly Raisman also gave retiring national team coordinator Martha Karolyi a fitting send off with powerful performances on all the apparatuses.
The golden girls dubbed themselves “The Final Five” in honor of Karolyi’s retirement at the end of the Olympics and the fact that the format is changing for Tokyo in 2020 so that only four team members will take part in the team competition.
The normally stern Karolyi broke down in tears when she was told of the nickname the team adopted.
“I think at this moment we can say that that the United States dominates the world of gymnastics,” Karolyi said.
Russia took the silver medal and China earned bronze.
Other highlights from Day 4 at the Rio Games:
MURKY POOL : At Maria Lenk Aquatics Center, there was more buzz over the color of the water than the diving competition. It had turned a murky green since Monday night’s events. Chen Ruolin and Liu Huixia didn’t seem to care about the color. They won the women’s 10-meter synchronized platform title to make China 3-for-3 in the competition so far.
SOUR SERENA : Williams shanked shots all over the court in getting upset by Elina Svitolina of Ukraine. The top-ranked American won’t get a chance to defend the gold she won in London. Williams looked out of sorts and irritated, accumulating 37 unforced errors. She had five double-faults in one game alone in the 6-4, 6-3 loss to the 20th-ranked Svitolina. Williams wiped her forehead, picked up her rackets and headed back quickly to the locker room. Svitolina, who had never before played in an Olympics, smiled and stuck her arms out in front of her, palms up, as if waking up from a dream.
ON THE PITCH : Catalina Usme beat U.S. goalie Hope Solo on a pair of free kicks to draw Colombia to a 2-2 tie with the United States. The first, in the 26th minute, was Colombia’s first ever Olympic goal, and first ever goal against the United States. Team USA still emerged at the top of Group G of the women’s soccer tournament and will play in the quarterfinals.
Host country Brazil played to a 0-0 draw with South Africa. The Brazilians had already secured a spot in the women’s soccer quarterfinals before their match. The team and star Marta have drawn more attention while Brazil’s men have struggled at the Olympics. The women’s team will face Australia in a quarterfinal match on Friday.
MEDAL STRIPPED : A Ukrainian javelin thrower was stripped of his silver medal from the 2012 London Olympics, becoming the latest athlete disqualified after the retesting of stored doping samples. Oleksandr Pyatnytsya tested positive for the steroid turinabol and was retroactively disqualified from the London Games and ordered to return his medal, the International Olympic Committee said.
RUGBY STUNNER : Sonny Bill Williams was helped off with an ankle injury during New Zealand’s shocking 14-12 loss to Japan in its first game of rugby sevens. New Zealand is a 12-time world series champion and one of the top contenders for the first rugby medals awarded at an Olympics in 92 years.
PELE IMPROVING: Pele tweeted that he hopes to appear at the closing ceremony after missing the opening because of his health. The soccer great was the organizers’ preferred choice to light the cauldron, but first cited sponsorship commitments and later health concerns for staying away.
MEN’S JUDO : American Travis Stevens won the silver medal in the men’s 81-kilogram division in judo, losing to Russia’sKhasan Khalmurzaev in the final.
Stevens was in top form throughout the day, winning most of his fights by the maximum score in judo, including a hard-fought semifinal where he caught his opponent in a stranglehold, forcing him to tap out in submission.
Stevens finished fifth at the London Games and was determined not to leave Rio empty-handed.
WOMEN’S WATER POLO : U.S. coach Krikorian returned to the pool deck for his first game since his brother’s suddendeath last week, and the U.S. made life easy on him with a dominant 11-4 victory over Spain.
Maggie Steffens, Courtney Mathewson and Kiley Neushul scored two goals apiece, and Ashleigh Johnson had 11 saves whilebecoming the first black woman to play water polo for the United States in the Olympics.
“Arriving back at home was probably the hardest thing to do, just to see the family for the first time, and then leavingagain, home, where your family is,” Krikorian said.
MEN’S EQUESTRIAN : Phillip Dutton became the oldest American to win an Olympic medal since 1952 when he tookbronze in eventing.
Dutton, who had come to within one fence of an individual medal in every major championship since 1994, took third onMighty Nice.
Michael Jung of Germany and Sam FBW won a second consecutive gold in the event, making Jung only the third rider in Olympic history to win back-to-back individual gold medals.
MEN’S ARCHERY : For American Brady Ellison, there’s no better feeling than moving on — and no worse feeling that itwas at the expense of his best friend.
Ellison made it through the second round of the men’s archery tournament at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics by knocking offteammate/hunting buddy Jake Kaminski. At one point in the match, Ellison put six straight arrows in the top scoring ring onhis way to a 6-2 win.
MEN’S BEACH VOLLEYBALL : Americans Phil Dalhausser and Nick Luena won their second match of Pool C play, defeatingRodolfo Lombardo Ontiveros Gomez and Juan Ramon Virgen Pulido of Mexico 21-14, 21-17.
The match featured several long rallies that appeared to tire both teams but Dalhausser insisted afterwards his injured calfwas unaffected by the action.
MEN’S VOLLEYBALL : The Americans — with eight first-time Olympians — responded from a sweep by Canada in theirOlympic opener with a far more steady performance but still lost 28-26, 20-25, 25-23, 25-23 to Italy.
Fourth-seeded Italy, which won bronze four years ago in London, won despite captain Emanuele Birarelli injuring his rightankle in the third set.
WOMEN’S BEACH VOLLEYBALL : American beach volleyball team Brooke Sweat and Lauren Fendrick lost to the defendingworld champions and fell to 0-2 at the Olympics.
Larissa Franca and Talita Antunes won 21-16, 21-13. The Americans now need to win their final match, against Russia onThursday, to guarantee themselves of at least one more day on the sand in at the Copacabana venue.
MEN’S RUGBY : The U.S. men conceded a last-minute try in a 17-14 loss to Argentina and rebounded with a 26-0 winover Brazil in their first two matches of the Olympics.
New England Patriots safety and special teams ace Nate Ebner scored a try before his late tackle led to a yellow card againstBrazil.
The Americans now have plenty of the line Wednesday when they play Fiji, as the match will help determine if they advanceto quarterfinals or fall into the losers’ bracket.
MEN’S TENNIS : Steve Johnson and Jack Sock of the United States advanced to doubles semifinals, beating the eighth-seeded duo of Roberto Bautista Agut and David Ferrer of Spain 6-4, 6-2.
Rafael Nadal and Marc Lopez of Spain are also in the semifinals, but Johnson and Sock will next play against No. 5 FlorinMengea and Horia Tecau of Romania on Wednesday.