Olympic torch begins journey across France after festive welcome in Marseille before Summer Games

First torch carrier in France French Olympic swimmer Florent Manaudou holds the Olympic torch after leaving The Belem, the three-masted sailing ship in the old port of Marseille, southern France. (AP)
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Updated 09 May 2024
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Olympic torch begins journey across France after festive welcome in Marseille before Summer Games

  • French Olympic swimmer Florent Manaudou became the first torch carrier in France after the Olympic flame arrived in Marseille’s Old Port
  • Marseille’s Mayor Benoit Payan said that more than 230,000 people attended Wednesday’s ceremony

MARSEILLE, France: Tens of thousands of people welcomed the Olympic torch Wednesday in the southern French city of Marseille, marking another milestone in the leadup to the Summer Games in Paris.

French Olympic swimmer Florent Manaudou became the first torch carrier in France after the Olympic flame arrived in Marseille’s Old Port on a majestic three-mast ship from Greece for the welcoming ceremony amid tight security.

The ship sailed into Marseille’s old port with the French national anthem “La Marseillaise” echoing from the embankment and a French Air force flyover with planes first drawing the five Olympic rings and then the red-blue-white colors of the nation’s flag.

The ship docked on a pontoon resembling an athletics track and Manaudou carried the torch to mainland France. He handed it to French Paralympic sprinter Nantenin Keita, who won a gold medal at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, to carry it to rapper Jul, a Marseille native, who lit a cauldron as tens of thousands cheered on the shore and thousands of others waved from balconies and windows.

“We can be proud,” said President Emmanuel Macron, who attended the ceremony to welcome the torch.

“The flame is on French soil,” Macron said. “The games are coming to France and are entering the lives of the French people.”

Marseille’s Mayor Benoit Payan said that more than 230,000 people attended Wednesday’s ceremony.

“Tonight, the people of Marseille won the first gold medal of these Olympic Games,” Payan said, beaming with pride.

The torch was lit in Greece last month before it was officially handed to France. It left Athens aboard a ship named Belem, which was first used in 1896, and spent twelve days at sea.

Paris 2024 Olympics Organizing Committee President Tony Estanguet said the return of the Olympic Games to France was cause for a “fantastic celebration.”

“As a former athlete, I know how important the start of a competition is. That is why we chose Marseille, because it’s definitely one of the cities most in love with sports,” added Estanguet, a former Olympic canoeing star with gold medals from the 2000, 2004 and 2012 Games.

Safety of visitors and residents has been a top priority for authorities in Marseille, France’s second largest city with nearly a million inhabitants. About 8,000 police officers have been deployed around the harbor.

Thousands of firefighters and bomb disposal squads have been positioned around the city along with maritime police and anti-drone teams patrolling the city’s waters and its airspace.

“It’s a monumental day and we have been working hard for visitors and residents of Marseille to enjoy this historical moment,” said Yannick Ohanessian, the city’s deputy mayor.

The torch relay will start on Thursday in Marseille, before heading to Paris through iconic places across the country, from the world-famous Mont Saint-Michel to D-Day landing beaches in Normandy and the Versailles Palace.

Heavy police and military presence was seen patrolling Marseille’s city center Tuesday, as a military helicopter flew over the Old Port, where a range of barriers have been set up.

French Interior Ministry spokesperson Camille Chaize said officials were prepared for security threats including terrorism.

“We’re employing various measures, notably the elite National Gendarmerie Intervention Group unit, which will be present in the torch relay from beginning to end,” she said.

The Olympic cauldron will be lit after the Games’ opening ceremony that will take place on the River Seine on July 26.

The cauldron will be lit at a location in Paris that is being kept top-secret until the day itself. Among reported options are such iconic spots as the Eiffel Tower and the Tuileries Gardens outside the Louvre Museum.


Drinking culture in English cricket ‘excluding’ British Muslims from attending, playing

Updated 31 min 38 sec ago
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Drinking culture in English cricket ‘excluding’ British Muslims from attending, playing

  • Former player Azeem Rafiq speaks at Hay Festival

LONDON: Cricket’s culture of drinking alcohol is alienating British Muslims, whistleblower Azeem Rafiq said at a literature festival this week.

Pakistan-born former off-spinner Rafiq, who first raised allegations of racism and bullying in September 2020 related to his two spells at Yorkshire County Cricket Club, was speaking at the Hay Festival on Thursday.

He said club cricket in England “revolved around alcohol,” which was “excluding Muslims specifically, but everyone who doesn’t drink,” The Times reported.

He added: “Every part of it, the minute you turn up to a club to the minute you leave, is around alcohol. The game needs to evolve its economy so it doesn’t at recreational level revolve around alcohol.”

This feeling of exclusion had led many British Asians and Muslims to set up their own cricket clubs away from mainstream club cricket, Rafiq added.

He told the festival that around 30 percent of players at recreational level were of British Asian heritage, but that this number plummeted to around 4 percent at professional level.

“The reason Asian people have gone and set up on their own is because they felt excluded from the system,” he said, adding that separate systems were “exactly the type of thing the racists want.”

The Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket report, known as the ICEC, was published last June and found the sport in England was “infected” with institutional racism, sexism and class-based discrimination.

Actor and comedian Stephen Fry, who was on the same panel as Rafiq, echoed its findings.

He slammed the influential Marylebone Cricket Club, the former custodians of the game, as having a public face that “stinks” of “privilege and classism.”

He added: “It (MCC) has a public face which is a deeply disturbing sort of beetroot-colored gentleman in yellow and orange blazer sitting in front of the Long Room at Lord’s Cricket Ground and looking as if they had come out of an Edwardian cartoon.

“The game will not survive (if it continues) giving off an atmosphere that puts people off.”


French security authorities foil a plan to attack soccer events during the Paris Olympics

Updated 31 May 2024
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French security authorities foil a plan to attack soccer events during the Paris Olympics

  • A Chechnyan man was arrested on May 22 on suspicion of being behind a plan to attack soccer events that will be held in Saint-Etienne
  • The planned attack was to target spectators and police forces

PARIS: France’s security authorities have foiled a plan to attack soccer events during the upcoming Paris Olympics, the country’s interior minister said Friday.
It was the first such thwarted plot targeting the Games, which start in eight weeks as France is on its highest threat alert level.
Gerald Darmanin said in a statement that members of the General Directorate of Internal Security arrested an 18-year-old man from Chechnya on May 22 on suspicion of being behind a plan to attack soccer events that will be held in the southern city of Saint-Etienne.
According to the initial investigation, the man was preparing an attack targeting the Geoffroy-Guichard stadium in Saint-Etienne that will host several soccer matches during the Summer Games. The planned attack was to target spectators and police forces, the statement said. The suspect wanted to attack the Olympic events “to die and become a martyr,” the statement also said.
The Paris Olympics will run from July 26-Aug. 11. Soccer matches will take place in cities across France before the final in Paris’ Stade de France.
France is on in its highest security alert ahead of the Paris Olympics and Paralympics, which are expected to draw millions of visitors.
Darmanin, the interior minister, did not cite a specific security threat against the soccer event, but has said there are multiple potential threats, including those from Islamic extremist groups, violent environmental activists, far-right groups and cyberattacks from Russia or other adversaries.
The Paris Olympics organizing committee said it was made aware of the arrest and praised intelligence and security services. ‘’Security is the highest priority of Paris 2024. We are working daily in close coordination with the Interior Ministry and all stakeholders — and will continue to be fully mobilized,” it said in a statement.
Security concerns are notably high for the exceptional opening ceremony, which brings more than 100 world leaders to the French capital. It involves boats carrying athletes along the Seine River on a 6-kilometer (3.7-mile) open-air parade and huge crowds watching from the embankments.
In April, French President Emmanuel Macron said the July 26 opening ceremony could be moved instead to the country’s national stadium if the security threat is deemed too high.
Organizers had originally planned to host as many as 600,000 people, most watching free of charge from riverbanks. But security and logistical concerns have led the government to progressively scale back its ambitions. Earlier this year, the overall number of spectators was reduced to around 300,000.
The French government also decided that tourists won’t be given free access to watch the opening ceremony because of security concerns. Free access will be invitation-only instead.
Extra security is also on hand for the Olympic torch relay, which passed on Friday through the monastery outcropping of Mont-Saint-Michel, which sees thousands of tourists daily.


Rublev falls to Arnaldi in the French Open third round while Gauff, Sinner move on

Updated 31 May 2024
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Rublev falls to Arnaldi in the French Open third round while Gauff, Sinner move on

  • Rublev showed frustration throughout over his lack of precision, committing 37 unforced errors and four double faults
  • After netting a forehand in the third set, he smashed his racket on his knee four times

PARIS: Sixth-seeded Andrey Rublev was knocked out of the French Open by Matteo Arnaldi 7-6 (6), 6-2, 6-4 in the third round on Friday.
Rublev showed frustration throughout over his lack of precision, committing 37 unforced errors and four double faults. After netting a forehand in the third set, he smashed his racket on his knee four times.
“I am completely disappointed with myself, with the way I behaved, the way I performed, and I can’t remember ever behaving worse in a Grand Slam tournament,” he said. “It was the first time I ever behaved that badly.”
Rublev entered the French Open as a contender after winning the Madrid Open this month.
Arnaldi, ranked 35th, will face Stefanos Tsitsipas or Zhizhen Zhang, who were scheduled to play later Friday.
No. 2 Jannik Sinner progressed by downing Pavel Kotov 6-4, 6-4, 6-4.
On the women’s side, No. 3-seeded Coco Gauff advanced to the fourth round after beating Australian Open semifinalist Dayana Yastremska 6-2, 6-4.
Gauff pressured her opponent into committing 38 unforced errors on Court Philippe Chatrier, and converted five of her 11 break points.
After several seeded players were knocked out on Thursday, Italy’s Elisabetta Cocciaretto pulled off another upset by defeating No. 17 Liudmila Samsonova 7-6 (4), 6-2 on Court Suzanne Lenglen. Cocciaretto, ranked 51st, reached the fourth round of a Grand Slam tournament for the first time.
She will play Gauff next. Gauff won both of their previous meetings but said, “She is definitely a fighter.”
Gauff is the reigning US Open champion and was a finalist at the French Open in 2022.
Qualifier Olga Danilovic, ranked 125th, beat Donna Vekic 0-6, 7-5, 7-6 (8) to make her first fourth-round appearance at a Grand Slam tournament.
For the fourth consecutive day, rain interrupted play. There was a delay of about 1 1/2 hours on Friday.


Babar defends loss in England, vows to step-up Pakistan performance in T20 World Cup

Updated 31 May 2024
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Babar defends loss in England, vows to step-up Pakistan performance in T20 World Cup

  • Accepts that players are performing individually but unable to click as a team
  • Babar Azam says players will ponder over mistakes like succumbing to pressure 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan skipper Babar Azam on Friday defended the cricket team’s performance against England, vowing to fix all mistakes ahead of the Twenty20 World Cup scheduled to begin on June 2.

England thrashed Pakistan by seven wickets at the Oval on Thursday in their last match before the race for the T20 World Cup title begins. Victory gave England a 2-0 win in a four-match T20 series with two games washed out without a ball bowled.

“I agree that we made mistakes in the middle overs during battling and bowling both,” Azam said at a press conference on Friday. “We will try and fix this as soon as possible.”

The skipper said it was important to take chances during high-scoring matches, adding that all team members would sit and discuss how they had read the situation wrong and succumbed to pressure after losing back-to-back wickets. 

“We need to settle down after losing wickets to gain momentum again.”

Babar admitted that the team was struggling throughout the middle overs and urged his teammates to step up and take responsibility for the loss. He said though the team had collapsed during batting and bowling, their confidence remained high as they got to learn new things after facing a series loss. 

When asked if the team was selected on merit, Azam said no one was given an extra edge and all players were chosen after a thorough discussion between seven selection committee members.

“We have to back the players that got selected,” Azam said.

Azam assured that the cricket team was right on track and that winning and losing were part of the game. However, he accepted that even though all the players were performing well individually, they were “unable to click as a team.”

“We are performing individually but not as a team,” he concluded. “We are lagging here.”

The Pakistan team flew out to the United States earlier today, Friday, for the T20 World Cup series. 


ESL FACEIT Group opens broadcast hub in Saudi Arabia

Updated 31 May 2024
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ESL FACEIT Group opens broadcast hub in Saudi Arabia

  • The hub in Riyadh will provide Arabic broadcasts for global esports events, including this week’s Overwatch Champions Series Dallas Major

RIYADH: Leading esports and video game entertainment company, ESL FACEIT Group, has announced the opening of a broadcast hub in Riyadh.

The move marks the growth of EFG’s regional footprint in one of the youngest and fastest-growing gaming communities in the world, making global premier esports events more accessible to Middle Eastern audiences.

The new hub, which will support the company’s ongoing growth in Saudi Arabia and the Middle East and North Africa region, will provide Arabic broadcasts of EFG’s global esports events.

First up is the Overwatch Champions Series Dallas Major, which is taking place at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Center until June 2 as part of international gaming festival DreamHack Dallas. The Arabic version of the tournament will be supported by homegrown casting and production staff.

The Major, a collaboration between Blizzard Entertainment and EFG, welcomes eight of the world’s top teams, including Saudi Arabia’s own Twisted Minds, for three days of premier Overwatch 2 competition.

Featuring a prize pool supported by crowdfunding, fans in Saudi Arabia and MENA can watch the action unfold as players aim to be the first to claim an international OWCS title and qualify to compete at the Esports World Cup.

The broadcast is the first initiative in a long-term commitment from EFG. To inspire next-generation gamers in MENA, the company will offer access to top-tier international competitions, including championships in its Snapdragon Pro Series. Fans will also have access to the Intel Extreme Masters Counter-Strike esports circuit.

EFG’s Arabic live-stream events will feature AAA game titles such as Moonton’s Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, with finals streamed live from Jakarta, Indonesia in August. Details of new titles and dates will be announced in the near future.

“Saudi Arabia is one of the fastest-growing esports markets in the world with a thriving gaming fanbase, and the national initiatives like Vision 2030 showcase the country’s desire to fuel not only local gaming growth but contribute to the industry’s international success,” said Franck Guignery, ESL’s senior vice president and MENA managing director.

“We are thrilled to bring our premier esports programming to the region and to help its passionate players, fans, and creators build deeper connections with the global community of their favorite brands and titles, and most importantly, with each other.”

The live broadcast can be watched on  ESL Arabia Twitch, and YouTube. For those unable to tune in at the time, they can also be watched on demand for free on the YouTube channel.