Athletes Stick Around Paris Games to Watch Other Sports and Get the Full Olympic Experience

Taylor Knibb, left, Morgan Pearson, Taylor Spivey and Seth Rider, right, of the United States, jump as they hold their medals at the end of the medal ceremony for the mixed relay triathlon at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Monday, Aug. 5, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
Taylor Knibb, left, Morgan Pearson, Taylor Spivey and Seth Rider, right, of the United States, jump as they hold their medals at the end of the medal ceremony for the mixed relay triathlon at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Monday, Aug. 5, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
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Athletes Stick Around Paris Games to Watch Other Sports and Get the Full Olympic Experience

Taylor Knibb, left, Morgan Pearson, Taylor Spivey and Seth Rider, right, of the United States, jump as they hold their medals at the end of the medal ceremony for the mixed relay triathlon at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Monday, Aug. 5, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
Taylor Knibb, left, Morgan Pearson, Taylor Spivey and Seth Rider, right, of the United States, jump as they hold their medals at the end of the medal ceremony for the mixed relay triathlon at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Monday, Aug. 5, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)

For many athletes at the Paris Olympics, the fun was just beginning after they were done competing.
During the second full week of the 2024 Olympics, going home wasn't an option. Now that the pressure of having to compete is gone, it was time to become a fan: Enjoy Paris and watch other sports.
“I’m a huge track fan,” said triathlete Morgan Pearson, who won the silver medal with the US team in the mixed relay on Monday. “I hope to go to some of those races. I’m a huge Olympic fan in general.”
American sport climber Zach Hammer, who was finished competing on Tuesday, also was headed to the track, The Associated Press reported.
“I would definitely be excited to watch the men’s 200(-meter) with (Noah) Lyles. He’s one of my favorite athletes,” he said. “I’m definitely excited to get the full Olympic experience, and I’ll go watch whatever there is to watch. It will definitely be cool to see Americans competing on the biggest stage.”
US rower Jacob Plihal was among those who stayed in town after competing during the first week.
“Hopefully I can watch a little handball if that’s still going, maybe 3x3 basketball," he said. “I don’t know what the schedules are. I’ve been focused on the racing but I’m excited to stick around and watch other sports, cheer Team USA on and get to know some athletes at the (Olympic) Village.”
Another American sport climber, Sam Watson, who broke the speed world record in an elimination heat on Tuesday, was making the most out of his stay at the village. He was challenging fellow athletes to chess games and trying to get selfies with a member of every delegation at the Games.
Some of the American women rowers who competed last week were at the women's basketball game between the US and Nigeria on Wednesday.
Molly Thompson-Smith, a British sport climber, was interested in watching some of the other smaller sports that don’t often get much attention. She said “it’s been really cool to kind of learn how they work and all the weird things about them.”
Thompson-Smith added that she "did see a bit of beach volleyball,” but “I think everyone wants to see the athletics, just to see something like that and feel the atmosphere of the crowd would be incredible. But I’m open to seeing anything now ... I’m here to make as many memories and see as much as I possibly can.”
Rower Viktorija Senkute, who won Lithuania’s first medal at the Games last week, was sticking around to watch her boyfriend, Simonas Maldonis, compete in canoe sprint.
Athletes can watch their own discipline with their accreditation, but need tickets for other sports. Some said they can get them through their national Olympic committees, or with the International Olympic Committee, which gives each athlete one free ticket per day.
There was an additional Olympic experience for athletes this time in Paris, as for the first time in the Summer Games organizers gave them a place to be closer to fans and celebrate their medals. In the new Champions Park, athletes got a chance to parade with their medals and interact with fans.
“I feel as if this year they’ve done a really good job of treating after winning athletes with memories that we’re going to cherish forever,” French rugby player Aaron Grandidier Nkanang said after going to the Champions Park. “We’re just in front of the Eiffel Tower, and there’s thousands of people out to come and cheer us on.”



Newcastle Eye History in Champions League Clash With Barcelona

Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Newcastle United v Manchester City - St James' Park, Newcastle, Britain - March 7, 2026 Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe looks dejected after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)
Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Newcastle United v Manchester City - St James' Park, Newcastle, Britain - March 7, 2026 Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe looks dejected after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)
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Newcastle Eye History in Champions League Clash With Barcelona

Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Newcastle United v Manchester City - St James' Park, Newcastle, Britain - March 7, 2026 Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe looks dejected after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)
Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Newcastle United v Manchester City - St James' Park, Newcastle, Britain - March 7, 2026 Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe looks dejected after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)

Eddie Howe has challenged Newcastle to produce the performance of a lifetime as they aim to win the "biggest game" in the club's history against Barcelona on Tuesday.

Howe's side will make only their second appearance in the Champions League last 16 when the Liga leaders arrive on Tyneside for a highly anticipated first leg clash.

For the first time since 2002-03, when they reached the second group phase, Newcastle are one of the 16 clubs remaining in a Champions League campaign.

But having eased past Azerbaijani underdogs Qarabag in the playoff round, Howe knows Newcastle will have to make a significant step up in class to stun Hansi Flick's star-studded team.

"We've never been in this position in the Champions League before and it's the best competition there is, so for obvious reasons it's a massive game in our history," Howe said.

"We need to approach it that way and we need the supporters to think that way."

Newcastle famously beat Barca 3-2 thanks to a Faustino Asprilla hat-trick in the clubs' first Champions League meeting in 1997.

That was the peak of the Magpies' brief spell as the Premier League's great entertainers.

Decades in the doldrums followed, reducing the club to laughing stock status under unpopular former owner Mike Ashley.

Those dark days included two relegations to the second tier in 2009 and 2016.

Starved of success for so long, Newcastle have enjoyed a welcome renaissance since their Saudi owners took charge in 2021.

Barca's visit is the kind of glamour night that Toon Army has dreamt of since the takeover.

Last season, Newcastle ended a 56-year trophy drought by beating Liverpool in the League Cup final.

Now they are hoping to reach the Champions League quarter-finals for the first time.

- 'Geordie boys are taking over' -

Beating the five-time European champions would be a massive moment in Newcastle's history, especially as their progress has been in danger of stalling this season.

Newcastle are languishing in 12th in the Premier League and were knocked out of the FA Cup fifth round by Manchester City on Saturday.

Booed off following a 3-2 loss against Brentford at St James' Park earlier this season, Howe has struggled to balance Newcastle's ambitions with the reality of financial rules that have restricted the club's ability to use the vast wealth of their Saudi backers.

Having sold Alexander Isak to Liverpool in September, Newcastle have been unable to reproduce the dynamic form that carried them to silverware and Champions League qualification last season.

Saturday's game was Newcastle's 47th of the season and 19th in 63 days, a grueling schedule that has taken a toll on a squad depleted by injuries.

Howe will try to assemble a fresh line-up against Barcelona having rested Dan Burn, Joelinton and Anthony Gordon for the Manchester City clash.

"I don't think we've got the strength at the moment to make loads of changes and keep the same strength in our performance," Howe conceded.

"We need to try to find some energy from somewhere that will elevate our performance to a level that we've not seen before this season because I think that's the only way we'll get through."

Despite all their problems, Newcastle have won six Champions League games in a single campaign for the first time.

Their European success has inspired Newcastle supporters to chant: "Is this the way to Barcelona? Bayern Munich? Lazio? Roma? Geordie boys are taking over, Champions League awaits for me!"

Defeated by Barcelona in all four of their meetings since 1997 -- including a 2-1 home loss in the group stage this season -- Newcastle will have to defy the odds to give their fans more opportunities to serenade the heroes in Europe.


Mercedes Set Gold Standard at Australian GP but New F1 Rules ‘Suck’

Kimi Antonelli (C-L) and George Russell (C-R) of Mercedes celebrate with the pit crew and team following the 2026 Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne, Australia, 08 March 2026. (EPA)
Kimi Antonelli (C-L) and George Russell (C-R) of Mercedes celebrate with the pit crew and team following the 2026 Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne, Australia, 08 March 2026. (EPA)
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Mercedes Set Gold Standard at Australian GP but New F1 Rules ‘Suck’

Kimi Antonelli (C-L) and George Russell (C-R) of Mercedes celebrate with the pit crew and team following the 2026 Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne, Australia, 08 March 2026. (EPA)
Kimi Antonelli (C-L) and George Russell (C-R) of Mercedes celebrate with the pit crew and team following the 2026 Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne, Australia, 08 March 2026. (EPA)

George Russell claimed victory at the Australian Grand Prix to open the season with a bang as Mercedes showed they are clear early pacesetters under sweeping new regulations.

AFP Sport looks at what we learned from the opening race of the 24-stop calendar:

- Mercedes set standard -

Mercedes came into the Melbourne race as the pre-season favorites and lived up to the billing.

After a front-row lockout in qualifying, pole-sitter Russell weathered an early battle with Ferrari's Charles Leclerc to claim a statement victory over teammate Kimi Antonelli.

Russell called the win "very sweet" and team chief Toto Wolff is confident they have a package that can challenge for the drivers' and constructors' world title.

"To see us take a solid 1-2 in race one with the season ahead hopefully means we can try and fight for a world championship," said Wolff.

"It will take a lot of hard work and we know our competitors will be chasing us down, but this is exactly how we wanted to start the year."

- New rules 'suck' -

Melbourne was the first race under F1's most radical regulation overhaul in years.

The cars are smaller and lighter and the power units now 50 percent battery.

Russell said drivers should give the new rules time, but the likes of Lando Norris and Max Verstappen were not impressed.

"We've come from the best cars ever made in Formula One, and the nicest to drive, to probably the worst. It sucks," McLaren world champion Norris raged.

"Everyone knows what the issues are. It's just the fact the engine is a 50-50 (combustion-electric) split and it just doesn't work."

Williams' Carlos Sainz said the public criticism by drivers was "self-harming" for the sport and should be kept private.

- Lindblad one to watch -

Just one rookie started their first full season as a Formula One driver in Australia and 18-year-old Arvid Lindblad showed no fear.

In his first F1 race, the Racing Bulls driver stormed to a composed eighth, surging as high as third at one point.

The Briton finished ahead of a slew of more experienced competitors, including teammate Liam Lawson, after showing his potential all weekend.

"I know I'm sort of the 'young kid' and I'm the rookie, but when I'm in the car, I'm a fierce competitor," said Lindblad, who has Indian heritage.

"I'm going to take every opportunity I get, and I think I showed that."

Lindblad replaced Isack Hadjar, who moved up to partner Verstappen at Red Bull.

- Haas stake midfield claim -

There is always speculation how the midfield will shape up at the start of each season behind the big four of McLaren, Ferrari, Red Bull and Mercedes.

Haas, Racing Bulls and Audi (formerly Sauber) staked an early claim to be "best of the rest" in Melbourne with all three getting cars into the top 10.

Ollie Bearman in his Haas finished seventh, with teammate Esteban Ocon 11th.

"To come away with P7 for the team is unbelievable -- only beaten by the top four teams," said team chief Ayao Komatsu.

"We have a huge learning curve over the next few races but I don't think we could have started the year any better."

- Aston Martin pain -

Silverstone-based Aston Martin endured a horror start after serious issues with their Honda power unit and a lack of spare parts.

Amid fears that extreme vibration in the chassis could cause permanent nerve damage, Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll were never going to challenge.

Team boss and design maestro Adrian Newey said he felt "powerless" as new partner Honda work on the problem.

"It's not going to be a quick fix," he warned.

- Cadillac's rude awakening -

Cadillac made its debut in Melbourne -- the first independent constructor to enter the sport since Haas in 2016.

It was a rude awakening with Sergio Perez 16th and last, three laps behind, and Valtteri Bottas failing to finish.

But team principal Graeme Lowdon was happy with how they started.

"We're up against incredible competition, who we have huge respect for, but I've got enormous belief in the team that we're building here," he said.

"This is a really good start to our journey."


Liverpool Go Back to Galatasaray Cauldron in Champions League Last 16

Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Liverpool - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - March 6, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)
Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Liverpool - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - March 6, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)
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Liverpool Go Back to Galatasaray Cauldron in Champions League Last 16

Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Liverpool - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - March 6, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)
Football - FA Cup - Fifth Round - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Liverpool - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - March 6, 2026 Liverpool manager Arne Slot celebrates after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)

AFP Sport looks ahead to Tuesday's Champions League last-16, first-leg clashes, as Liverpool go to Istanbul for the second time this season and Newcastle United prepare to host Barcelona again:

- Galatasaray v Liverpool -

Liverpool's Premier League title defense collapsed during a horrific run of results from late September, and they face a battle even to qualify for next season's Champions League. Now Arne Slot's side head back to Istanbul, where they lost 1-0 to Turkish champions Galatasaray during the league phase.

A deep run in the Champions League would be a major boost for Slot, who has come under fire from frustrated fans during Liverpool's slump. Significantly, German playmaker Florian Wirtz made his return from a back injury as a late substitute in Friday's FA Cup win against Wolverhampton Wanderers, while Slot played down concerns over Argentina midfielder Alexis Mac Allister after the World Cup winner limped off.

Galatasaray held off Juventus in the play-off round, after winning 5-2 at home in the first leg and then losing 3-2 after extra time in the return. They lead the Turkish Super Lig and won 1-0 at Istanbul rivals Besiktas on Saturday, with Victor Osimhen scoring the goal -- that was his 18th of the season, with seven coming in Europe.

- Atalanta v Bayern Munich -

Bayern probably deserve to be considered among the leading three or four contenders to win the Champions League, as the German giants chase what would be a seventh title in Europe's elite club competition. Vincent Kompany's team head to Italy with an 11-point lead at the top of the Bundesliga and having won seven of eight games in the Champions League so far.

With the Bundesliga title all but wrapped up, Bayern gave Harry Kane a rest and left Michael Olise on the bench in Friday's 4-1 win against Borussia Moenchengladbach. With 45 goals in 37 games in all competitions this campaign, Kane is in ominous form, reaching his best ever mark in a season by February. In leaving the England captain out for the first time this season, Kompany said Kane had a knock on his calf and would be back to his best in a couple of days.

Atalanta knocked out Borussia Dortmund in the last round and have also beaten Eintracht Frankfurt this season, so will be relishing another test against German opposition. Gianluca Scamacca scored twice as they came from behind to draw 2-2 with Udinese in Serie A on Saturday.

- Atletico Madrid v Tottenham Hotspur -

Tottenham go back to the Metropolitano, where they lost to Liverpool in the 2019 Champions League final. The current Spurs side is a shadow of Mauricio Pochettino's exciting team, however, and they find themselves in the strange position of still being involved in Europe and locked in a relegation battle in the Premier League at the same time.

A long way off the pace in La Liga, Diego Simeone's Atletico are fully focused on cup goals for the remainder of the season. The Argentine coach led them to the Champions League final in 2014 and 2016 but came up short against rivals Real Madrid both times, and Atletico are desperate to win the competition for the first time in their history.

Hosting a crumbling Spurs, they will aim to build a strong first-leg lead and try to capitalize on being in the theoretically weaker side of the draw.

- Newcastle United v Barcelona -

Having already beaten Newcastle 2-1 at St James' Park in the league phase thanks to a Marcus Rashford brace and without teenage star Lamine Yamal, Barcelona will be confident when heading to Tyneside.

Hansi Flick's entertaining side still have their flaws though, particularly the exploitable high defensive line which makes them vulnerable to pace in behind, with Anthony Gordon likely to cause the Catalan giants trouble.

Newcastle have found the going tougher in the Premier League this season after several years of sustained progress under Eddie Howe. They beat Manchester United last week before crumbling in the FA Cup against a Manchester City team that had made 10 changes.

Nick Woltemade started against City after a brief illness while Tino Livramento was on the bench. Howe said Lewis Miley will not be ready to face Barcelona.