Tag Archives: Olympian

Transgender Olympian Laurel Hubbard fails to win medal in Olympic debut

New Zealand weightlifter Laurel Hubbard, one of the first transgender athletes to compete in the Olympics, failed to win a medal Monday in the women’s over-87-kilogram division weightlifting event. It was her first and only event at the Tokyo Games. 

The inclusion of Hubbard, 43, who transitioned in her mid-30s and has competed at the women’s international level since 2017, was divisive, with her supporters welcoming her participation while critics questioned the fairness of transgender athletes competing against cisgender women.

Prior to the Olympic Games, Hubbard had largely declined interviews, and she has remained off social media in recent years. After winning two silver medals at the 2017 International Weightlifting Federation world championships, she told Radio New Zealand, “I am who I am. I’m not here to change the world,” adding, “I just want to be me and just do what I do.”

Despite not coming away with an Olympic medal, Hubbard has the distinction of being part of sports history. While openly transgender athletes have been permitted to compete in the Olympics since 2004, this is the first year they have done so.

In addition to Hubbard, at least three other transgender and/or nonbinary athletes were — or still are — in Tokyo: Canadian soccer star Quinn, American skateboarder Alana Smith and American BMX Freestyle rider Chelsea Wolfe. While Smith failed to win a medal and Wolfe, an alternate, did not compete, Quinn — who uses they/them pronouns and goes by one name — is guaranteed to win a medal after Canada’s upset win over the U.S. Women’s National Team in Monday’s semifinals. 

Laurel Hubbard of New Zealand celebrates after a lift in the women’s over-87-kilogram division weightlifting event at the Olympics, on Aug. 2, 2021, in Tokyo.Seth Wenig / AP

A record number of LGBTQ athletes are competing in the Olympics this year, with at least 179, more than triple the number at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics, according to Outsports.

Follow NBC Out on TwitterFacebook & Instagram

Dan Avery contributed.



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Algerian Olympian withdraws from Games due to potential matchup with Israeli competitor

Fireworks go off after Naomi Osaka lit the Olympic cauldron. Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images

With no fans in attendance and a reduced number of athletes joining the parade, the Tokyo Olympics’ Opening Ceremony officially kicked off the Summer Games on Friday as tennis star Naomi Osaka lit the cauldron.

The ceremony drew to a close around midnight in Japan as a spectacular firework display illuminated the Tokyo night sky.

The surreal circumstances of the Games’ curtain raiser — unlike any other previous opening ceremony — provided a glimpse of what is to come over the next 16 days with the coronavirus pandemic set to loom large over proceedings.

In case you missed it, here’s what happened at the Opening Ceremony:

The attendance: According to Tokyo 2020 organizers, 950 people attended the opening ceremony — only a handful in a venue with a capacity of 68,000 — as the 206 delegations competing were officially welcomed to the Games. US first lady Jill Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron attended the event. With athletes expected to arrive in the Olympic Village five days prior to their competition and depart a maximum of two days after, fewer took part in the parade of nations compared to previous Olympics. Team USA, for example, had more than 200 athletes walking through the stadium out of a team that is over 600 strong, while 63 of Australia’s 472 athletes took part.

Tongan Pita Taufatofua made a return: Taufatofua first caught the attention of Olympic spectators in Rio five years ago when he appeared shirtless wearing traditional Tongan dress and covered in oil. He then repeated the act at the PyeongChang Winter Olympics two years later. However, Taufatofua had competition this time around, with Vanuatu’s flag-bearer, rower Riilio Rii, also coming out shirtless and oiled.

Athletes remained socially distant: Many of the athletes remained socially distant as they walked through the stadium, but others — such as Argentina and Portugal — were exuberant, breaking into cheering and dancing. The procession began with Greece, the first nation to host the modern Olympic Games, whose athletes were followed by those from the 29-strong Refugee Olympic Team, which debuted at the 2016 Rio Olympics. It concluded with the US and France — the two countries hosting the next two editions of the Games — and finally Japan.

Covid-19 victims remembered: There were also tributes to those who have lost their lives during the pandemic, as well as to the 11 Israeli athletes killed in a terror attack at the 1972 Munich Olympics. How the coronavirus pandemic has affected athletes over the past 18 months was also acknowledged. Japanese boxer and nurse Arisa Tsubata — whose Olympic dreams were dashed when a qualifying event was canceled — was seen running alone on a treadmill in darkness at the start of the opening ceremony.

What to expect next: Starting Saturday, the first medals of the Games will be distributed; after months of challenges and uncertainties, Olympic organizers will finally be able to let sport do the talking.

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Olympian Rhys McClenaghan puts so-called anti-sex beds to the test

Rhys McClenaghan, who will be representing Ireland on the pommel horse during the Olympics, sought to debunk rumors of anti-sex beds in athletes’ rooms during the Games.

McClenaghan, 21, posted a video of himself in his room at the Olympic Village on Saturday and jumped on the bed to prove it isn’t going to break with any sudden movements.

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American runner Paul Chelimo tweeted about the so-called anti-sex beds in the Olympic Village on Friday.

“Beds to be installed in Tokyo Olympic Village will be made of cardboard, this is aimed at avoiding intimacy among athletes,” he wrote. “Beds will be able to withstand the weight of a single person to avoid situations beyond sports. I see no problem for distance runners, even 4 of us can do.”

TOKYO OLYMPIC ORGANIZERS: CONDOMS ‘NOT FOR USE AT THE ATHLETE’S VILLAGE’

According to Dezeen magazine, officials set up about 18,000 cardboard beds. The 100% recyclable beds were made by the Japanese company Airweave.

But from the looks of McClenaghan’s video, any athlete who is planning on participating in some extracurricular activities might be able to do so without the threat of their bed falling apart.

Officials are planning to hand out some 150,000 condoms at the Games but for awareness purposes only. According to Reuters, athletes have been warned against mingling with each other in hopes of curbing the spread of the coronavirus.

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“The distribution of condoms is not for use at the athlete’s village, but to have athletes take them back to their home countries to raise awareness” of HIV and AIDS issues, a Tokyo 2020 official told Reuters.

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Olympian Gwen Berry’s problematic tweets unearthed amid anthem uproar

Hammer thrower Gwen Berry, who is set to represent Team USA later this month at the Tokyo Games, is back in the spotlight after problematic tweets have been uncovered.

Based on tweets posted to her verified account, some being decades old – which were still public as of publication – she has tweeted the R-word extensively, made facetious threats to stomp a child, made jokes about rape, offered commentary on White people and made generalizations about Chinese people.

Berry initially came under fire on Saturday for turning her back to the American flag while the national anthem played. She also draped a shirt that read “Activist Athlete” over her face. 

Her demonstration led to calls from conservative voices for her to step aside. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, and Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., have been among the loudest voices. Berry has also received support from many on social media, including Olympic legend Michael Johnson. But she vowed to compete.

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“The point is to compete … which I will be doing,” she fired back at critics.

On Friday, internet sleuths unearthed decades-old tweets from the Olympian. The National Pulse was first to report on the tweets.

USA Track and Field and representatives for Berry didn’t immediately respond to Fox News’ requests for comment. Puma, one of Berry’s sponsors, also didn’t immediately respond to Fox News’ request for comment.

Some of the tweets unearthed came before Berry made the Olympic team in 2016 and 2021, and even before she was on Team USA for the 2014 Pan American Sports Festival and the 2019 Pan American Games, respectively – in both events she took home the gold medals.

IOC ALLOWS ATHLETE PROTESTS BEFORE OLYMPIC EVENTS, BARS POLITICAL GESTURES ON PODIUMS AND DURING COMPETITION

The 32-year-old’s tweets likely came from when she was in her early 20s. As of Friday afternoon, the tweets were still active.

Berry has been one of the athletes who has protested during Team USA events. Last week, she raised a fist before one of her completions and was later scrutinized over the anthem.

On the playing of the anthem, Berry said she felt like she was set up. She claimed she was told that the anthem would be played before she took the podium. 

“They had enough opportunities to play the national anthem before we got up there,” Berry said, according to The New York Post. “I was thinking about what I should do. Eventually I stayed there and I swayed, I put my shirt over my head. It was real disrespectful.”

GWEN BERRY VOWS TO COMPETE AT OLYMPICS DESPITE MOUNTING PRESSURE AFTER ANTHEM SNUB

“They said they were going to play it before we walked out, then they played it when we were out there,” she continued. “… But I don’t really want to talk about the anthem because that’s not important. The anthem doesn’t speak for me. It never has.”

“My purpose and my mission is bigger than sports,” she added. “I’m here to represent those … who died due to systemic racism. That’s the important part. That’s why I’m going. That’s why I’m here today.”

In this Aug. 10, 2019, file photo, Gwen Berry of the United States waves as she is introduced at the start of the women’s hammer throw final during athletics competition at the Pan American Games in Lima, Peru. 
(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A spokesperson for USA Track and Field disputed Berry’s claim that it was a setup.

Berry asserted in an interview with Black News Channel that she never said she didn’t want to represent the U.S. at the Olympics and never said she hated this country.

“I never said that I didn’t want to go to the Olympic Games, that’s why I competed and got third and made the team,” Berry said.

OLD GWEN BERRY PHOTO OF HER HOLDING AMERICAN FLAG GOES VIRAL AMID ANTHEM UPROAR

“I never said that I hated the country. I never said that. All I said was I respect my people enough to not stand for or acknowledge something that disrespects them,” she said.” I love my people. Point blank, period.”

As far as protesting during the Olympics, Berry said she’s still considering it.

“We’ll see. You know, it just depends. It depends,” she told CNN’s Don Lemon. “You know everything is a spur of the moment. It depends on how I’m feeling and depends on what I want to do in that moment and what I want to do for my people in that moment. And I will do whatever comes upon me and whatever is in my heart.”

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Berry is a decorated athlete. Aside from the two gold medals she has won in Pan American competitions, she finished third in the NACAC U23 Championships. She also won indoor track and field national titles in the weight throw in 2013, 2014 and 2016, respectively, and an outdoor track and field national title in the hammer throw in 2017.

Berry is not the only national figure to be under fire over past tweets. Megan Rapinoe and others have been scrutinized for things they’ve said or done on social media in the past.



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6’9″ Cosplaying Olympian Is Now Resident Evil’s Tall Vampire Lady

This is Yekaterina Lisina, a bronze medal-winning Olympian with the Russian basketball team and now model, with what is surely the most 1:1 cosplay possible of Resident Evil’s Lady Dimitrescu.

I mean…just look at this:

And this:

It took a whole team to get this shoot looking this good, with the dress made by osqurobviously, hair and makeup by beautybyblas, photos by nikolayshlykov, photo editing by shotbyshepherd and assistance by lugovskav and themushroomxiii.

While the character of Lady Dimitrescu is 9’6″, and Lisina “only” 6’9″, it’s important to put those numbers in context, especially since this shoot was done solo.

You can see more of Ekaterina’s modelling and cosplay at her Instagram page.

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Pregnant former Olympian Shawn Johnson is COVID-19 positive

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Olympic gold medal gymnast Shawn Johnson, who has is pregnant with her second child with husband Andrew East, revealed Sunday that she has tested positive for COVID-19.

The gold medal winner in the 2008 Olympic games revealed her coronavirus test results in a lengthy note posted on her Instagram Stories.

“They came back positive for COVID,” Johnson, 29, wrote. “Not going to lie… I’m nervous knowing I’m positive.”

The “Dancing With the Stars” standout revealed earlier this month that she is pregnant with the couple’s second child. Johnson said Sunday that “my body is just exhausted” after already spending the last two weeks caring for the couple’s 15-month-old daughter Drew Hazel, who had contracted RSV (respiratory syncytial virus).

“I don’t want to get my family sick,” wrote Johnson, who added that she has had a pre-existing condition of asthma her entire life. “So this scares me a little extra.” 

Further, Johnson had a close family member “fight for his life last month while battling COVID, so it’s a serious topic of concern/hits home in our household.”

Shawn Johnson: Breaks down after video shows husband’s collapse and ER visit

As of Sunday, Johnson said she had “a cough, terrible sore throat and headache” as well as fatigue. She suspects that her pregnancy adds to the fatigue.

Johnson said that she was making the news public as a service.

“Not looking for any pity party, just a reminder to take care of yourself,” the Nashville-based Johnson wrote, urging readers to drink water and wash their hands. She also felt increased empathy for others undergoing health struggles.

“Oh, and I just need to say, praying so hard for all of those babies out there (sappy mama here) and everyone fighting for their health,” she wrote.

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