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.”



‘Nerves Sharpen You’: Dortmund’s Kobel Relishing Bayern Showdown 

Soccer Football - UEFA Champions League - Play Off - Second Leg - Atalanta v Borussia Dortmund - New Balance Arena, Bergamo, Italy - February 25, 2026 Borussia Dortmund's Gregor Kobel looks dejected after the match. (Reuters)
Soccer Football - UEFA Champions League - Play Off - Second Leg - Atalanta v Borussia Dortmund - New Balance Arena, Bergamo, Italy - February 25, 2026 Borussia Dortmund's Gregor Kobel looks dejected after the match. (Reuters)
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‘Nerves Sharpen You’: Dortmund’s Kobel Relishing Bayern Showdown 

Soccer Football - UEFA Champions League - Play Off - Second Leg - Atalanta v Borussia Dortmund - New Balance Arena, Bergamo, Italy - February 25, 2026 Borussia Dortmund's Gregor Kobel looks dejected after the match. (Reuters)
Soccer Football - UEFA Champions League - Play Off - Second Leg - Atalanta v Borussia Dortmund - New Balance Arena, Bergamo, Italy - February 25, 2026 Borussia Dortmund's Gregor Kobel looks dejected after the match. (Reuters)

With the pain of a crushing Champions League exit still raw, Borussia Dortmund goalkeeper Gregor Kobel hopes Bayern Munich's high-stakes visit on Saturday will provide the spark for his side to save their season.

After a 2-0 first-leg win the 2024 Champions League runners-up looked set for the last 16, but Dortmund unraveled midweek in Bergamo and crashed out of Europe with a calamitous 4-1 defeat.

Speaking to AFP and other media hours after returning from Italy on Thursday, Kobel said the Bayern clash may be the tonic a wounded Dortmund need.

"Obviously it's a tough situation. Sometimes it's easier said than done, but you just have to keep going and focus on the next game," said Kobel.

"For us as professionals, it's really important we focus on what we can do. The training today, the training tomorrow and getting good energy in the team to play a nice game on Saturday."

Like Bayern, Dortmund have lost just once in the Bundesliga this season, but they trail Vincent Kompany's league leaders by eight points.

A Dortmund win wouldn't suddenly make them title favorites, but it would move them closer as the season enters its final stretch, especially with Bayern still balancing European and German Cup commitments.

Some players may look to distract themselves to shut out the nerves, but the 28-year-old Kobel welcomes the butterflies in his stomach.

"I'm a big fan of feeling the nerves a little bit. It gets you going. It makes you sharper in my experience," he said.

"A lot of people try and fight against it, push it away, but then you can get into problems.

"I think you can benefit a lot from it. I always feel confident when a little bit (of the feeling) comes. Because I know I'm going to be sharper."

- 'Failure part of the game' -

Against Atalanta, Karim Adeyemi's superb goal dragged Dortmund level in the tie with 15 minutes left, but a misplaced pass from Kobel deep into stoppage time spelled disaster.

That lapse led to Ramy Bensebaini conceding a last-gasp penalty as he caught Nikola Krstovic in the face with his studs while attempting to clear a cross.

Kobel immediately apologized to his teammates for his mistake and called on his side to put on a "great show at home against Bayern".

In rude financial health, Dortmund are European regulars, but Kobel admitted the club needs silverware.

"We have to win. If we win something again, then everything can change really quickly."

Arriving a month after their last German Cup victory in 2021, Kobel has come agonizingly close to lifting a trophy with Dortmund.

The Switzerland international was on the pitch when Dortmund drew at home on the final day of the 2022-23 season with lowly Mainz, allowing Bayern to pip them to the Bundesliga title on goal difference.

A year later, Kobel watched on as Dortmund dominated the opening 70 minutes of the Champions League final, only to fall to two late goals from Real Madrid, who won the competition for a record-extending 15th time.

Regardless of what happens on Saturday, Dortmund under Niko Kovac are heading back in the right direction.

The eight-time German champions are just three points off their best ever points tally at this stage in a season.

As is often the case though, Bayern are also in top form. With just three draws and one defeat, Bayern have dropped fewer points than any other side in Europe's top five leagues this term.

"If you watch Bayern this season, how they are doing and how they play, it's an amazing team. They win every game by a lot of goals," said Kobel.

"What we can do is focus on us, try to improve as a team, try to get better and compete with them.

"We try every day to achieve that goal. Failure is certainly part of the game, too."


Marseille Look for Way Out of Crisis Against Bitter Rivals Lyon 

Marseille's Italian newly head coach Habib Beye looks on during the French L1 football match between Stade Brestois 29 and Olympique de Marseille at Francis-Le Ble stadium in Brest on February 20, 2026. (AFP)
Marseille's Italian newly head coach Habib Beye looks on during the French L1 football match between Stade Brestois 29 and Olympique de Marseille at Francis-Le Ble stadium in Brest on February 20, 2026. (AFP)
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Marseille Look for Way Out of Crisis Against Bitter Rivals Lyon 

Marseille's Italian newly head coach Habib Beye looks on during the French L1 football match between Stade Brestois 29 and Olympique de Marseille at Francis-Le Ble stadium in Brest on February 20, 2026. (AFP)
Marseille's Italian newly head coach Habib Beye looks on during the French L1 football match between Stade Brestois 29 and Olympique de Marseille at Francis-Le Ble stadium in Brest on February 20, 2026. (AFP)

Away from Paris Saint-Germain's quest to hold off Lens and retain the Ligue 1 title, Marseille and Lyon are fighting it out for France's last automatic Champions League qualifying berth and face off in a huge game on Sunday.

PSG's crushing dominance of French football, with 11 league titles won in the last 13 seasons, means the biggest rivalry in Ligue 1 these days is arguably that between the clubs from the country's second and third-largest cities.

Marseille have not been champions since 2010 while Lyon won the last of their seven straight titles in 2008.

Often these days getting into the Champions League is as good as it can get for the clubs, and even if Lyon have not featured in Europe's elite competition since reaching the semi-finals in 2020.

However, OL are on course to qualify this season, with a recent seven-match winning run in the league propelling them above crisis-hit Marseille into third.

Only the top three in Ligue 1 qualify directly for the league phase of the Champions League, with the team in fourth having to go through two qualifying rounds.

Lyon, who had won 13 games in a row in all competitions before a 3-1 loss in Strasbourg last weekend, are currently five points better off than fourth-placed Marseille before travelling to face their rivals at the Velodrome on Sunday.

"It is no big drama, we just have to accept it," said Lyon coach Paulo Fonseca after last week's game.

"We are not going to win every game we play until the end of the season. We are not a super-team," added the 52-year-old from Portugal, whose first game in charge of Lyon was a 3-2 defeat in Marseille a year ago.

If he is relaxed right now, the same cannot be said of anyone at Marseille, who have not won any of their four Ligue 1 games played since being knocked out of the Champions League at the end of the league phase in late January.

Roberto De Zerbi's spell as coach ended after a 5-0 hammering by PSG on February 8, and his replacement Habib Beye's debut last weekend ended in a 2-0 loss at Brest.

Marseille have collected just eight points from seven league matches in 2026 and must turn that around as failure to return to the Champions League would have a huge impact on their finances.

"There is an understandable loss of confidence with the negative dynamic at the moment. It's getting to the players," said Beye before taking his squad off to Spain for a training camp in Marbella this week.

Player to watch: Esteban Lepaul

The Rennes striker's brilliant strike in a 3-0 victory at Auxerre last weekend was his third goal in three games and helped Franck Haise get off to a winning start in his first match as coach of the Brittany side.

Lepaul, 25, has now scored 12 goals in Ligue 1 this season including one for Angers before he joined Rennes in a reported 15 million-euro ($17.7m) transfer in late August.

Only Marseille's Mason Greenwood (14) and Strasbourg's Joaquin Panichelli (13) have scored more in Ligue 1 this season than Lepaul, a former Lyon academy player whose father Fabrice won the league with Auxerre in 1996 before dying in a road accident in 2020.

Key stats

3 - Marseille have won their last three home meetings with Lyon, and have lost just one of their last six.

6 - Just six points separate five teams in the fight for European qualification, from Marseille in fourth to Monaco in eighth.

9 - Former PSG coach Antoine Kombouare will take charge of Paris FC for the first time when they entertain Nice. They are the ninth club he has managed in the top flight of French football.


F1 Hopes to Fuel Growth in North America with Netflix and Apple

Formula One F1 - Pre Season Testing - Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain - February 20, 2026 Ferrari's Charles Leclerc during a practice start of a race in pre season testing REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed
Formula One F1 - Pre Season Testing - Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain - February 20, 2026 Ferrari's Charles Leclerc during a practice start of a race in pre season testing REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed
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F1 Hopes to Fuel Growth in North America with Netflix and Apple

Formula One F1 - Pre Season Testing - Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain - February 20, 2026 Ferrari's Charles Leclerc during a practice start of a race in pre season testing REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed
Formula One F1 - Pre Season Testing - Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain - February 20, 2026 Ferrari's Charles Leclerc during a practice start of a race in pre season testing REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed

Formula 1 is well anchored in the United States with its American owners and three Grand Prix races, but the sport hopes to push its growing popularity further with the help of Netflix and Apple.

The Netflix documentary "F1: Drive to Survive", which begins its eighth season on Friday, has already taken motor sport's top discipline into a new dimension.

The series provides a behind-the-scenes look at the sport's drivers, managers and team owners.

While critics complain that the series magnifies tensions between drivers and managers for entertainment value, it has introduced a younger audience, particularly women, to F1.

The documentary series and the additional races in the United States have been "seismic changes in terms of where we were as a sport," said Liam Parker, head of communications for F1, which has been a subsidiary of US group Liberty Media since 2016.

Founded in 1991, Nasdaq-listed Liberty Media has spent the last decade pushing hard to boost F1's audience in the United States, where NASCAR and IndyCar dominate.

"Drive to Survive" co-executive producer Tom Rogers believes F1 has enormous potential in the United States thanks to it now hosting three Grand Prix races -- in Miami, Austin and Las Vegas.

Out of F1's global audience of some 800 million viewers, only some 52 million are in the United States, according to Parker.

"We're not really scratching the surface in the US in terms of what we can do given the size of that audience," he said recently in Bahrain, where F1 held a series of pre-season tests.

The sport is also still basking in the success of "F1: The Movie" starring Brad Pitt. In addition to box office success last year, the film garnered four Oscar nominations, including for best picture.

This year five of the 24 Grand Prix races will be broadcast live at giant-screen IMAX theatres across the United States.

This year also sees a switch in TV broadcasting rights from Disney's ESPN to Apple TV.

The deal is worth a reported $150 million per year to F1, according to US media.

"When we are talking about Apple in the US, we are talking about a new partner of Formula 1 that is believing in us with a great plan of being the protagonist of the growth in the US," AFP quoted F1 chief executive Stefano Domenicali as saying.

But F1 is setting its sights on more than just the United States.

"I think we're all anticipating probably a Latin American boost in Formula One interest... with Franco" Colapinto, the Argentinian driver for Alpine, said Rogers.

"And I think Latin America is an enormous market, especially for Netflix," he added.

Mexican driver Sergio Perez with Cadillac and Brazilian Gabriel Bortoleto with Audi are also draws for Latin American viewers.