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Entertainment

Kanye West lives within the Mercedes-Benz Stadium to complete his ‘DONDA’ album

It looks like Kanye’s listening event at the Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta was so successful for his upcoming album “DONDA” that he will stay in the building until the album is finished.

According to TMZ, sources connected with Ye announced that he will miss his Rolling Loud appearance in Miami as he remains at the Mercedes Benz Stadium. He was spotted playing the Atlanta United soccer game on Saturday and rocked the same fit from the night of his audio event.

Kanye also posted a video from the game on his Instagram account. The outlet also states that Ye and his team created a studio space and living quarters, and that he also has a chef who prepares his meals. During Thursday’s listening session, he was so inspired by the crowd that he decided to hang around to finish things off on his album, which now has August 6th as its target release date.

We received an exclusive video of Kanye working on the music for the album at the stadium.

As previously reported, thousands of people came to the Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Thursday to hear new music from Kanye’s upcoming album. Officials also declared July 22nd to be Kanye West Day in the city of Atlanta. The official proclamation was presented to him backstage at his listening event in the stadium.

Roommate, are you looking forward to Kanye’s “DONDA” album?

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TSR STAFF: Jade Ashley @ Jade_Ashley94

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Science

some nonetheless on the ocean ice, some inflicting hassle – Watts Up With That?

From polar bear science

By Monday (July 19), more polar bears had landed near Churchill and on the banks of Wakusp National Park, but some are still in the bay. The pattern of ice breaking this year means that most bears come ashore far south of Churchill and migrate north in summer and fall. There have been two Churchill “problem” bear reports so far, but none for this week, so I’ll go ahead and post without them.

Note that the earliest average date on land for all bears (not the date the first bear hit the beach) for WH bears was June 9th (Julian Day 160), which happened in 1999 after which most bears had Ashore in mid-June (2003, 2011) [Day 180 is 29 June]. However, this means that the first bear on the beach on June 28 this year is far from “early”. From Castro de al. Guardia et al. 2017, which only lasts until 2015, which shows that the average date that bears were on land was late June-early July (but it’s been later since then, especially in recent years):

Three of Andrew Derocher’s six remaining collared females were ashore on Monday, so three are still offshore, along with all the other bears doing the same. The first came ashore two weeks ago, so there was hardly any rush. Note the two bears that appear to be in open water but are almost certainly ice that the satellites cannot “see” or have a concentration of <50%:

According to his map, there’s only a little bit of ice left in Hudson Bay. But even polar bear researchers know that satellites are notoriously bad at determining the correct amount of ice at this time of year and can underestimate the amount of ice in Hudson Bay by up to 50%. They’re usually forced to acknowledge this in their papers, but don’t care about social media or talking to reporters. The evidence that Andrew Derocher is aware of this comes, for example, from one of the work of a student on which he is co-author (Castro de la Guardia et al. 2017: 227) [my bold]:

In general, sea ice data from passive microwaves is associated with an underestimation error of up to 30% during breakup and freezing in the entire ice rim and seasonal ice regions of the northern hemisphere (e.g. Cavalieri et al. 1991, Comiso et al 1997, Markus & Dokken 2002). In Hudson Bay, passive microwave sea ice concentration can make sea ice concentration compared to CISDA. underestimate by up to 50% (Agnew & Howell 2003). Underestimated distortion of passive microwave data is associated with the presence of wet snow and melt ponds during breakup, and with areas covered by frazil ice and young ice during freezing (Agnew & Howell 2003).

In other words, contrary to predictions by polar bear specialists, some bears would rather deal with melt ponds and wet snow than go ashore, especially in Hudson Bay. Rather, this brings havoc with the latest predictive model using old Hudson Bay data – which was collected before this propensity to stay with waning ice was fully apparent – to predict a future of polar bear extinction worldwide (Castro de la Guardia et al. 2013; Molnar et al. 2020). And it means that there was likely a lot more ice in Hudson Bay for the week of July 19 than even the following table from the Canadian Ice Service suggests:

To me, it looks like the average land date for GH polar bears in 2021 will be around the first week of July, but it could be 10 years or more before we see dates appear in a publication. Funnily enough, some of these researchers seem to have lost their urge to publish data as soon as possible now that it no longer fits their narrative.

Churchill Problem Bear Reports

I note that this year there are no comments on the condition of the bears causing problems in Churchill (the same was the case last year). Strange compared to 2019 and 2017. Maybe I’m wrong, but I would assume that whoever authored these reports was advised that it is “not helpful” to let the public know that bears are in excellent State.

References

Castro de la Guardia, L., Derocher, AE, Myers, PG, Terwisscha van Scheltinga, AD and Lunn, NJ 2013. Future Sea Ice Conditions in Western Hudson Bay and Consequences for Polar Bears in the 21st Century. Biology of Global Change 19: 2675–2687. doi: 10.1111 / gcb.12272

Castro de la Guardia, L., Myers, PG, Derocher, AE, Lunn, NJ, Terwisscha van Scheltinga, AD 2017. Sea ice cycle in western Hudson Bay, Canada, as seen by a polar bear. Marine Ecology Progress Series 564: 225-233. http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v564/p225-233/

Molnár, PK, Bitz, CM, Holland, MM, Kay, JE, Penk, SR and Amstrup, SC 2020. The length of Lent sets time limits on the global persistence of polar bears. Nature climate change. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-0818-9

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Sport

Why is water sprayed on Olympic swimming swimming pools? Clarification of the protection measures for diving occasions

Attentive observers of diving events at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics may have noticed a curious sight: water splashing on the surface of plunge pools.

It may seem harmless, but the water spray is a safety feature not only at Olympic diving events, but also at all international competitions, as prescribed by the Fédération Internationale de Natation (FINA). The organization that oversees competitions in six water sports – swimming, diving, high jumping, artificial swimming, water polo, and open water swimming – requires this for all diving events.

Why? Because it’s a surface agitator; It provides divers with a visual cue to help them visualize where the pool is in relation to their dive. Essentially, it helps them judge when to enter their rotation when diving into the water.

MORE: Olympic Swimming Results: Updated 2021 medalists for every event at the Tokyo Games

Below are the applicable (5.3.11) of the FINA facility rules:

“A mechanical surface movement must be installed under the diving systems in order to make it easier for divers to visually perceive the water surface. In pools that are equipped with an underwater whirlpool machine, the machine may only be used for this purpose if it generates sufficient water movement when working with very low pressure, otherwise only a horizontal water sprinkler system may be used.

When you consider that a horizontal sprinkler system is currently being used at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, it seems like an underground bubble machine is also being used in Tokyo to help prevent diver injuries.

Nor are these the only safety measures for divers. FINA has rules for everything from light sources and glare, depth of plunge pools, water temperature, and color of floor tiles (when a pool serves a dual purpose for swimming and diving, which Tokyo doesn’t).

Categories
Science

Unbelievable! Astronomers see a moon-forming disk round a newly rising planet

Planet formation is a complicated, complex process. Despite the influx of data on exoplanets, there are still only two known planets that are not yet fully formed. Known as PDS 70b and PDS 70c, the two planets originally found by the Very Large Telescope are some of the best objects we have for concretizing our planet formation models. And now it has been confirmed that one of them has a moon-forming disk around it.

This additional finding arose from observations made by ALMA. Astronomers had long predicted that the planet PDS 70c was surrounded by such a disk, but the images they had previously taken did not confirm its existence. Now it is physically confirmed beyond any doubt.

UT video about the formation of our own moon.

At this point in time, the formation of the moon is even less well understood than the formation of planets. Even the origins of our own moon are still up for debate. But the discovery of the PDS 70c has the potential to shed light on the making of at least one as we observe it. In fact, there is enough material in the disk to create three moons the size of our own around the Jupiter-like planet.

The lunar formation process also plays a key role in planet formation, with circumplanetary disks that can form moons also affecting the formation of the planet itself. Watching this disk evolve will aid scientists in their models of both lunar and planetary formation.

UT video about exomoons with Dr. David Kipping

This development will certainly take millions of years, but so far PDS 70c is the only known planet with some kind of circumplanetary disk. The same dataset that confirmed its existence showed that its Saturn-like twin, PDS 70b, does not have a disk that some scientists had previously suggested. Others could be found with more powerful telescopes, but until then this system is the best we have.

Because of its uniqueness, the PDS 70 system will remain a focal point for much observation fire power. Now there is one more important detail to consider with these instruments – hopefully there are even more details to be discovered.

Learn more:
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy – Astronomers clearly identify a moon-forming disk around an exoplanet for the first time
Astrophysical Journal Letters – A circumplanetary disk around PDS70c
NYT – Astronomers see moons form in a disk around a distant exoplanet
Space.com – Astronomers discover the first moon-forming disk around an alien world

Mission statement:
ALMA image of the PDS 70 system, with a close-up of the circumplanetary disk around PDS 70c.
Credit- ALMA (ESO / NAOJ / NRAO) / Benisty et al.

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Entertainment

Meet Caeleb Dressel, the Quickest Swimmer within the World

Move aside Michael Phelps, because Caeleb Dressel has entered the pool.

The 24-year old swimmer is the fastest swimmer in the world and has the potential to be the fourth swimmer in history to earn seven medals in a single Olympic Games.

Does his name sound a bit familiar? Well, that’s because the 2020 Tokyo Olympics will be the second time Caeleb swims for Team USA. At the 2016 Games, he won two gold medals. And now, this summer, he will be swimming alongside 52 teammates, including Katie Ledecky and Ryan Murphy, in events such as the 50m freestyle, 100m freestyle and 100m butterfly.

Not to mention, he holds multiple world records plus seven gold medals from the 2017 World Championships and eight gold medals at the 2019 World Championships. No other swimmer in history has earned eight medals at one World Championships competition. So, yes, safe to say he’s a BFD.

But there is way more to Caeleb—who doesn’t actually enjoy the spotlight, according to NBC Sports—than just the waves he’s making. Keep scrolling to find out who he is outside of the pool.

Categories
Health

Covid instances are on the rise once more in all 50 states of the USA, because the delta variant is tightening its grip

Covid cases are on the rise in all 50 states and the District of Columbia as the Delta variant spreads rapidly in the US and the virus once again tightens its grip.

The U.S. reports an average of about 43,700 new cases per day over the past week – well below pandemic highs but up 65% in the past seven days and nearly three times what it was two weeks ago, data compiled by Johns Hopkins University were indicates. Cases hit a 15-month low in late June before starting to rise again as fewer people were vaccinated and the more contagious Delta variant caught on in the country.

Vaccination rates peaked in April, at more than 3 million vaccinations per day, but have declined significantly in recent months to around 530,000 per day, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Florida and Nevada reported the highest daily average of new cases per capita for the past week, all of which are at least twice the US rate.

Each of these states also have vaccination rates below statewide levels, with the largest gap visible in Louisiana, where 47.7% of the eligible population ages 12 and older received vaccination or more, compared with 65.9% across the country.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, hospital admissions for Covid patients have increased by 32% compared to a week ago. The number of daily Covid deaths, which typically lag a few weeks or more behind a surge in case numbers, has increased, but not at the same pace as cases or hospitalizations. Many Americans who are most susceptible to the virus now also have some level of protection, with 89% of seniors having at least one vaccination.

“The death toll has not increased because we have done an incredible job to fully vaccinate the populations most likely to die from Covid-19, especially those over 65 and nursing home residents,” said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California at San Francisco, said in an interview. “The deaths are also lagging behind the infection rate in some cases, but I also assume that the death rate will not change.”

The overwhelming majority of severe Covid cases – 97% of hospital admissions and 99.5% of Covid deaths – occur in those who are not vaccinated, U.S. surgeon general Vivek Murthy told reporters at a White House briefing Thursday .

President Joe Biden and CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky have both described the current state of the outbreak as “a pandemic of the unvaccinated”.

US officials are urging Americans to get vaccinated against the Delta variant, which Walensky says is one of the most contagious respiratory diseases scientists have ever seen. With 68.6% of the adult population at least partially vaccinated, the US still hasn’t met Biden’s July fourth goal of 70% of Americans 18 years of age and older to receive one or more vaccinations.

The variant is highly contagious, mainly because people infected with the Delta strain can carry up to 1,000 times more virus in their nasal passages than those infected with the original strain, according to new data.

“The Delta variant is more aggressive and much more transmissible than previously circulating strains,” Walensky told reporters at a briefing Thursday. “It’s one of the most contagious respiratory viruses we know and that I’ve seen in my 20-year career.”

Local officials across the country are now asking Americans to return to wearing masks indoors. Several California and Nevada counties are now advising all residents to wear masks in public indoor spaces, regardless of whether they are vaccinated or not. Local leaders in at least three other states have reintroduced mask mandates, issued face-covering recommendations, or threatened the return of strict public health limits for all residents – despite CDC guidelines that vaccinated individuals do not use these protocols in most settings must follow.

“The easiest and best and most effective way to prevent a new variant from emerging and destroy the existing Delta variant is to get everyone vaccinated,” said Dr. White House Chief Medical Officer Anthony Fauci in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday.

– CNBC’s Bob Towey contributed to the coverage.

Categories
Sport

Olympics 2021 — USWNT’s Rose Lavelle emerges as a reluctant star

THE CICADAS HAVE arrived at Rose Lavelle’s woodsy childhood home, surrounding the Cincinnati cul-de-sac in a siren of shrieking and clattering. A doorbell rings and Janet Lavelle, matriarch of the family, answers and eagerly steps outside. She wants to show a squeamish visitor the backyard, once the playground for one of the world’s most exhilarating soccer players, but now the site of an apocalypse.

“Look at this guy,” she says as she points to a cluster of red-eyed creatures on a tree. “My son ate one of these when he was 14. On purpose!

“Seventeen years they waited underground. This is the party.”

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Janet admits she used to be afraid of the cicadas, but then she had kids, and they needed to play outside in the summer. So she got over it.

She casually picks up a cicada and holds it in her hand as if it’s a pet.

It’s late May, and Rose Lavelle, the left-footed wonder for the United States Women’s National Team, was just here between jaunts from Manchester City to the Seattle area (and the OL Reign) and eventually to Tokyo for the Summer Olympics. Now she’s gone. Lavelle is elusive these days, in part because of the breakneck schedule, but also because two years after scoring the tournament-clinching goal in the 2019 World Cup final, she’s still trying to navigate the fame that accompanied it.

She doesn’t particularly care for it. It’s a befuddling dichotomy: Lavelle’s play is so mesmerizing that it demands you watch, yet she prefers the focus elsewhere. Her personality is also … unique. In February, the midfielder tweeted a list of things she’s embarrassed about for no particular reason, and it included using a shopping cart at the grocery store, being shoeless in the airport security line and wearing jeans.

The 2,200-square-foot ranch house where Lavelle grew up is a window into the life of Team USA’s reluctant superstar. Wilma Jean Wrinkles, the family’s 9-year-old English bulldog, is yawning and lazily shuffling from the couch to a leather chair soliciting attention, the antithesis of Lavelle.

Her parents — Janet and Marty — are in the family room, overlooking a vast green yard with tall oaks. Their second-youngest daughter used to live in the yard, kicking soccer balls into a goal that finally rusted away two years ago.

When she was 5, she broke her leg on a swing set out there, but didn’t tell anyone and managed to cover it up for at least two days. She wanted to keep playing.

Janet, who’s from a 12-sibling family with 65 first cousins, says each of her four children is probably “a little goofy.” She’s not sure if that’s nature or nurture. Janet does most of the talking, demonstrating the pet cam/treat feeder that Lavelle uses to engage with Wilma Jean when she’s on the road, mimicking, in a British accent, how her daughter’s teammates at Man City would talk to Wilma Jean over the app. But the conversation keeps floating back to the cicadas. Marty, a quiet, measured man who owns a construction company, mostly listens, slipping in a few deadpans.

“Take as many as you want,” he says of the cicadas.

Like her mom, Lavelle is unnaturally excited about the Brood X cicada invasion of 2021. They stay up past midnight to watch the cicadas emerge, cheering them on as they come out of their shells.

It’s not in the least bit goofy.

Lavelle says she has childhood coach Neil Bradford to thank for her love of the game. Bradford died of cancer in 2016. Lavelle family

THEY HELD AN Olympics watch party last week at Rose Lavelle’s old high school, which doesn’t have a plaque or shrine honoring her — that would be embarrassing. More than 100 girls jammed into the auditorium at Mount Notre Dame and woke up in the middle of the night to watch the match at 4:30 a.m. ET.

Sweden shocked Team USA 3-0, snapping its 44-game unbeaten streak. Afterward, USWNT veteran Kelley O’Hara tried to inspire the Americans, who are favored to win gold. She told them they had to be “ruthless.”

Three days later, Lavelle started the onslaught against New Zealand, scoring in the 9th minute in a 6-1 victory. It was Lavelle’s first goal in her first Olympics, and while COVID-19 might have robbed Janet and Marty Lavelle the opportunity to fly to Tokyo and see their daughter play, they take solace in the fact that they had a seat at the Parc Olympique Lyonnais in France on July 7, 2019, before the world turned. The day that currently defines Lavelle’s career.

2 Related

The Goal is so legendary it’s captured in 14 different angles in one YouTube clip. The U.S. was clinging to a 1-0 lead over the Netherlands; the World Cup was still in doubt. There have been many poetic words used to describe Lavelle’s play, but the most apt is probably “magician.” Her feet move so fast it’s as if she’s in a salsa video on fast-forward. Lavelle, perpetually the smallest on the field, maneuvers herself out of tight spaces with grace. The ball found its way through four defenders. Sam Mewis passed to Lavelle at center circle in the 69th minute, and Lavelle glided up the middle to the top of the penalty box. With the stadium on its feet and two Dutch players hounding her, she feinted with her right foot, then fired a rocket with her left. The place erupted.

The kick, from 17 yards out, was so powerful that she left her feet, crashing into a defender. She landed on the ground just as the ball touched the lower corner of the net.

In high school, she filled out one of those athlete-of-the-month questionnaires for a pizza parlor. In the “MOST LIKE TO MEET” question, Lavelle answered: Megan Rapinoe.

Rapinoe was one of the first people to mob her.

“I’d thought of that moment,” Lavelle says. “I thought I’d bawl my eyes out, like, ‘Oh my gosh, we did it.’ It all felt so … It was obviously fun, but I was shocked at how normal I felt once the whistle blew. I was so, so happy, but I really thought I was going to cry. And I didn’t.

“It sounds so bad, but I always hear people ask me how my life changed after that moment, and I don’t really feel like it did at all. I always felt like after I accomplished this big thing in my life that I’d feel some kind of different. But I just don’t. I think for me it’s less about moments and it’s more about the journey that led me to the big moments.”

That six-second moment, however, cemented her legacy. She was 24 and the future of American women’s soccer. The national team flew home to a parade in New York, and Remy Cherin, Lavelle’s agent, wanted to meet and talk about the future.

Things were about to change, and Cherin wanted to prepare her for it. He’s always thought of Lavelle as more of an eccentric artist than an athlete, never wanting to sacrifice her body of work, or authenticity, for a quick buck tweeting out discount codes 10 times a day. But the window for a female athlete to cash in is narrow, and in the summer of 2019, it was wide open for Lavelle.

Her endorsement money was about to quadruple, but Lavelle didn’t want to deal with it at the time. She just wanted to enjoy the moment with her teammates.

“Cool,” she told Cherin. “Let’s see how things go.”

Lavelle (right) celebrates The Goal with Alex Morgan (middle) and Megan Rapinoe (left) during the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup Final in Lyon, France. Brad Smith/ISI Photos/Getty Images

SHE WAS BORN on Mother’s Day, and, if she’d been a boy — for much of her pregnancy, Janet was certain she was carrying a boy — her name would’ve been Patrick. Instead, she was “Rosie.” She arrived shortly after a tornado warning, which seemed fitting two years later when she was climbing so many things that they had to put the medicines in a lockbox on top of the refrigerator.

She scored her first goal at 5, playing in a co-ed YMCA league game. Lavelle turned to her parents, and twirled her tongue inside her cheek to keep from smiling. She didn’t want to let anyone know how happy she was. The Lavelles didn’t have a clue about soccer then — Marty’s dad, Charles “Red” Lavelle, was a star quarterback for Xavier in the 1940s — but lugged their lawn chairs in the dewy southern Ohio heat to watch the chaos of youth soccer because their daughter seemed motivated.

She’d dribble and stop to wait for the defender to make a move. “Mom, I tricked ’em,” she’d say.

Her interest intensified when she met Neil Bradford, an optimistic Englishman who frequently used the word “brilliant!” loved soccer and relished teaching it to children. Lavelle was 8 when she joined Bradford’s Greater Sycamore Soccer Association team, and all those days of dribbling and juggling in the backyard were paying off.

The first day Joe Wuest started coaching another team in the program, Bradford approached him and said that he had a player who was special, and wanted to see if Wuest could pick her out in the sea of flailing limbs.

“OK,” Wuest told him. “It’s that short little girl. She’s amazing.”

Parents, especially those on a tight schedule, didn’t always love Bradford. If practice was supposed to last an hour and a half, it inevitably would run late because Bradford always had to finish a fun drill that would get the kids excited and last forever. Practices spilled into the night, and the children played to the glow of headlights.

Lavelle says Bradford made her fall in love with soccer. Years later, whenever she’d return to see him, she’d try to thank him and he’d eschew any credit, insisting she got there on her own. Bradford died in 2016 of cancer at the age of 44 and never got to see her play in a World Cup, or the Olympics. But so much of him stayed with her. A few days after his death, she honored him by wearing his No. 8 in a match at Stanford.

“When things aren’t going well or I’m just having a tough time, I go back to why I’m still playing,” Lavelle says. “It’s because it’s always been something so fun that makes me happy.

“I feel like I have him to thank for that.”

Rose Lavelle averaged roughly 30 minutes per game in FA Women’s Super League play in one injury-marred season at Manchester City. She joined the NWSL’s OL Reign in Seattle this past May. Joe Prior/Visionhaus/Getty Images

THE GOAL, INEXPLICABLY, isn’t even her favorite. The one she loves the most happened 10 years earlier, freshman year of high school. The Mount Notre Dame Cougars were locked in a tie game with undefeated Lakota West in the state tournament. With 25 seconds to go, Lavelle booted the winning score.

It was the only year she got to play with her older sister Nora, a senior.

“She was the first person I got to hug after I scored,” Lavelle says.

In Cincinnati, when someone asks what school you went to, they aren’t referring to college. There’s a deep pride in one’s high school matriculation, especially if it’s a Catholic school. Mount Notre Dame is a private Catholic all-girls school that considers itself a sisterhood, and oftentimes, it literally is. At least 25 of Lavelle’s relatives have attended the school.

Her best friend — outside of Wilma Jean — is her cousin Jodi Folzenlogen, an aspiring veterinarian who’s one month younger and has very little interest in soccer. But Lavelle has many people who could be considered good friends, including Mount Notre Dame’s admissions director, Donna Groene.

Groene used to be her homeroom teacher. She’s part of Lavelle’s small book club that was started during the pandemic, when she was in Europe and homesick. High on their reading list was the Nancy Drew Mystery Stories Collection. Lavelle loved the books in sixth grade and was curious to see if they still held up.

“We made it through the first two books, I think,” she says. “They were a little more boring than I remember. So that was that.”

When Lavelle is in town, she texts Mount Notre Dame athletic director Mark Schenkel, whom she just calls “Schenkel,” and asks if the soccer field is available, and of course it is, because how often does a small private school have a U.S. National Team player running around on its field? Lavelle trains there alone, regardless of the weather, while starstruck students stare at her during class.

A couple of years ago, MND teacher Sally Knoll was giving an exam, and couldn’t figure out why her class was clearly distracted, pointing and whispering. Lavelle was outside training. After class, Knoll took the girls outside to meet Lavelle. “It was just fun because Rose is just Rose; it was no big deal,” Knoll says. “[But] they thought they saw the Beatles.”

Relationships are important to Lavelle. That’s one of the reasons she landed at Wisconsin, a solid program back in the early 2010s but not a North Carolina or Notre Dame. Badgers coach Paula Wilkins was also a youth coach in the Olympic Development Program and noticed that it would take Lavelle a couple of days to get comfortable with her surroundings, the players and coaches, before she really started to play well. By then, most of the would-be recruiters had moved on.

American soccer is based more on physicality than finesse, and Lavelle wasn’t much to look at, 5-foot-2 and maybe 100 pounds. But opponents couldn’t keep up with her.

“Her ability to stop on a dime is a lot like Mia Hamm,” Wilkins says. “As a defender, you’re at full speed trying to keep up with her, and then she just stops and goes in a different direction. That’s really hard for people to deal with.

“It’s not even like speed, but dribbling with the ball, she’s as fast as most players are without a ball. I think that’s where she has an advantage, even at the highest level now. She’s able to negate the physicality of people.”

Wilkins, who’s big on relationships too, figures it was a cosmic thing. Lavelle landed where she was supposed to be. Her first match, freshman year, was a scrimmage against Marquette, which was ranked No. 14. Lavelle had two goals and an assist, and the Badgers beat their in-state rivals 5-1.

“It was like holy s—,” Wilkins says. “I think that’s the first moment maybe she realized or we realized what she could do.”

Wilkins would always wonder if she was hard enough on Lavelle, if she’d done enough to get her to a World Cup, or the Olympics. Nutrition — or lack thereof — was a longtime issue for Lavelle. (Her only demerit in high school came when she brazenly ate a bag of Skittles during class.) So Wilkins would hound her about eating something, particularly something that couldn’t be found in the candy aisle. Lavelle relented and started putting her banana peels on Wilkins’ clipboard. Her last game, she left something else: Her headband.

It all worked out. Lavelle was a three-time All-American, and Wisconsin upped its soccer profile. Lavelle and Wilkins still talk, because of course they do, and it’s clear that Lavelle isn’t that little girl who needed to get comfortable in her surroundings before shining anymore. She doesn’t need validation.

“She’s more than just a player,” Wilkins says. “She’s become part of my family. The relationship and trust I have with her is kind of why I coach.”

When she was 5 years old, Lavelle (far left) broke her leg on a backyard swing set. She didn’t tell anyone for three days. She couldn’t bear the thought of not being able to play soccer. Lavelle family

INJURIES HAVE DOGGED Lavelle most of her adult life. Soccer is a punishing sport, and you don’t glide through the forest without smashing into a few trees. In June 2017, two months after she scored her first international goal, Lavelle tore a muscle in her left hamstring. She rehabbed, made it back on the field, then tore another hamstring muscle that fall. The hamstring has three muscles, and in early 2018, she tore the last one.

Lavelle was devastated. She was just getting started with the USWNT, and couldn’t even play. But Jill Ellis, the U.S. coach at the time, believed in Lavelle. Even when Lavelle didn’t believe in herself.

She’d jog alone while her teammates practiced.

“I mean, it felt like it was a whole year where all I saw was her jogging around the edge of the field,” Rapinoe says. “And that’s so difficult, especially being around this team, to do.

“Just seeing her grind through that knowing how hard that was … I’m just like, that mother—— is tough as nails inside and out.”

That following spring, three months before the World Cup, Lavelle was injured in a friendly against Australia. The hamstring injuries had consumed her, and the first thing that went through her head was that one of those three muscles along the back of her thigh had failed her again. She thought about France. But it was a foot injury, and was minor, and Lavelle was a go for the World Cup. She scored two goals in the United States’ 13-0 win against Thailand in the first group stage match and drew a penalty kick that Rapinoe converted in a 2-1 victory over Spain in the Round of 16.

But even Lavelle couldn’t have dreamed what would come next.

Longtime USWNT press officer Aaron Heifetz, who was there in Los Angeles when Brandi Chastain ripped her shirt off after her World Cup-winning penalty kick in 1999, said Lavelle’s goal was “a moment that transcended” sports.

“Any other player who scores in a World Cup Final with that kind of drama would likely have ridden that goal for way longer than she did, as one should. But that’s just not Rose.”

Lavelle did have a nine-month stint with Man City, but it was a disappointing foray into FA Women’s Super League. She battled injuries, was asked to change positions and saw her playing time diminished, making just three starts. “I think [it] was actually a number of things,” City coach Gareth Taylor says. “The pandemic, the transition across the states wasn’t ideal and she arrived injured. I think we were just starting to see the best of Rose Lavelle toward the end of the season.”

It was a long winter for Lavelle. When soccer wasn’t going well, it fueled her homesickness and the time change made it harder to call her family when she needed a lift. (She has an older brother, John, and two sisters — Nora and Mary).

But Lavelle has no regrets about Europe. She said the adversity made her a better player and teammate, and that it was the best thing she could have done for her career.

Lavelle, 26, will be relied upon heavily as the U.S. aims for its fifth gold at the Olympics. Coach Vlatko Andonovski says he can always count on her doing something special.

“Rose is in that middle generation,” he says. “She was a little bit of the past, the present and the future of this team. Her role is going to grow, not just on the field [but] off the field. She’s one of those players that everybody loves.”

A scene out of the Lavelles’ backyard bash, sans cicadas, following the United States’ 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup victory. Lavelle family

LAVELLE NEVER DID go Hollywood. She went back to Cincinnati and bought a house a mile and a half away from her parents and within eyeshot of her old babysitter’s house. She still hasn’t properly furnished it, and sleeps on a queen mattress with a king frame.

It’s not out of a lack of money; the bloom of the World Cup allowed her endorsements with Nike, Yuengling, American Girl and IcyHot. “I’m lazy,” she says about her relatively empty house. “I still consider it new because I still do not have it furnished.”

The woman who refuses to talk up The Goal, or the Bronze Ball she received for being the third-best player at the World Cup, was, however, incredibly pleased in January when Forward Madison FC, a professional soccer team from her college town, named its team cow after her. Rose Cowbelle.

Sometimes, Rapinoe is still mystified by her teammate. They were boarding a flight recently, and Lavelle was embarrassed and mumbling because the overhead luggage bin was full and she was one of the last ones on the plane.

“She gets embarrassed about all of these little things,” Rapinoe says.

“I think she has a big personality, but she doesn’t have a loud personality. I have a big personality and a loud personality.”

When told of Lavelle’s high-school questionnaire, and the line about wanting to meet her, Rapinoe at first said she was going to give Lavelle grief, then conceded that it was sweet and endearing.

When the World Cup was over in 2019, they stood together on the field, Rapinoe with the Golden Ball honoring the tournament’s top player, and Lavelle with the Bronze Ball. There’s a picture, Rapinoe says, of her pointing to the newbie, telling her that she’s arrived.

“I don’t even think Rose has scratched the surface on how good she will eventually be,” Rapinoe says.

The fact that Lavelle didn’t feel different doesn’t seem all that surprising. She doesn’t want things to change. Wherever soccer takes her, she likes that she can return home, with family members picking her up at the airport, and make a beeline to Skyline Chili and order the usual: four cheese coneys, even though she can only eat three.

She loves that she can work out at her high school, dote over her dog and lapse into the mundanity of Midwestern life.

In late May, with the anticipation of her daughter’s first Olympics high, Janet Lavelle texted a photo of her daughter. It’s classic Rose, slyly grinning and looking away from the camera.

With a giant cicada on her face.

Categories
Science

Hubble returns to full scientific observations and publishes new photos – with that?

From NASA

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope is back in business, exploring the universe near and far. The scientific instruments are fully functional again after recovering from a computer anomaly that interrupted the telescope’s observations for more than a month.

These images, taken from a program led by Julianne Dalcanton of the University of Washington at Seattle, show Hubble’s return to full academic operation. [Left] ARP-MADORE2115-273 is a rarely observed example of a pair of interacting galaxies in the southern hemisphere. [Right] ARP-MADORE0002-503 is a large spiral galaxy with unusual, elongated spiral arms. While most disk galaxies have an even number of spiral arms, this one has three.Credits: Science: NASA, ESA, STScI, Julianne Dalcanton (UW) Image processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)

Scientific observations resumed on the afternoon of Saturday, July 17th. One of the telescope’s targets last weekend was the unusual galaxies shown in the images above.

“I’m very excited to see Hubble have the universe back in view and recapturing the kind of images that have fascinated and inspired us for decades,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “This is a moment to celebrate the success of a team that is truly dedicated to their mission. Through their efforts, Hubble will continue its 32nd year of discovery and we will continue to learn from the observatory’s transformative vision. “

These snapshots from a program led by Julianne Dalcanton of the University of Washington in Seattle show a galaxy with unusually extended spiral arms and the first high-resolution glimpse of a fascinating pair of colliding galaxies. Other initial targets for Hubble were globular clusters and polar lights on the giant planet Jupiter.

Hubble’s payload computer, which controls and coordinates the scientific instruments on board the observatory, was suddenly stopped on June 13th. When the main computer did not receive a signal from the payload computer, it automatically put Hubble’s scientific instruments into safe mode. That meant the telescope would no longer do science while mission specialists analyzed the situation.

The Hubble team moved quickly to investigate what hit the observatory, which is about 547 kilometers above the earth. Engineers worked together from mission control at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, as well as remotely due to COVID-19 restrictions, to pinpoint the source of the problem.

To make matters worse, Hubble was launched in 1990 and has been observing the universe for over 31 years. In order to repair a telescope built in the 1980s, the team had to fall back on the knowledge of the employees from its long history.

Hubble alumni returned to assist the current team in the recovery effort and to impart decades of missionary expertise. For example, retired workers who helped build the telescope knew the details of the Science Instrument and Command & Data Handling unit that houses the payload computer – important expertise in determining the next steps for recovery. Other former team members helped by searching Hubble’s original papers and surfacing 30 to 40 year old documents that would help the team find a way forward.

On June 13, 2021, the Hubble Space Telescope’s payload computer unexpectedly stalled. However, the Hubble team methodically identified the possible cause and how to compensate for it, Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

“That’s one of the great things about having a program that has been running for over 30 years: the incredible amount of experience and expertise,” said Nzinga Tull, Hubble Systems Anomaly Response Manager at Goddard. “It was humbling and inspiring to get in touch with both the current team and those who moved on to other projects. There is so much dedication to their Hubble colleagues, the observatory, and the science that Hubble is famous for. “

Together, team members new and old worked their way through the list of likely culprits, trying to isolate the problem to ensure they had a full inventory of hardware that was still working in the future.

At first the team thought the most likely problem was a deteriorating memory module, but switching to backup modules didn’t solve the problem. The team then designed and ran tests, turning on Hubble’s backup payload computer for the first time in space, to see if two other components could be responsible: the standard interface hardware that handles communications between the computer’s central processing module and other components, or the central processing module itself. Switching on the backup computer did not work, however, which also eliminated these possibilities.

The team then examined whether other hardware was faulty, including the Command Unit / Science Data Formatter and the Power Control Unit, which is supposed to ensure a stable voltage supply to the hardware of the payload computer. It would be more complicated to address any of these issues, however, and more risky for the telescope in general. Changing to the backup units of these components would also require changing several other hardware boxes.

Nzinga Tull, Hubble Systems Anomaly Response Manager at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, is working in the control room on July 15 to get Hubble back into full scientific operation.Credits: NASA GSFC / Rebecca Roth

“The switch required 15 hours of spacecraft commanding from the ground. The main computer had to be turned off and a backup computer in safe mode temporarily took over the spacecraft. In addition, several boxes had to be switched on that had never been switched on in space before, and the interfaces of other hardware had to be switched, ”said Jim Jeletic, Deputy Project Manager for Hubble at Goddard. “There was no reason to believe that none of this would work, but it’s the team’s job to be nervous and think about what could go wrong and how we can compensate for it. The team meticulously planned and tested every small step on site to make sure it went right. “

From then on, the team proceeded carefully and systematically. Over the next two weeks, more than 50 people worked to review, update, and review the backup hardware transition procedures, test them on a high fidelity simulator, and conduct a formal review of the proposed plan.

At the same time, the team analyzed the data from its previous tests and its results suggested the power control unit as a possible cause of the problem. On July 15, the planned change to the backup side of the Science Instrument and Command & Data Handling unit, which contains the backup power control unit, took place.

The win came around 11:30 p.m. EDT on July 15 when the team discovered that the move was successful. The scientific instruments were then brought into operational status and Hubble began collecting scientific data again on July 17th. Most of the observations missed while the scientific operations were suspended will be rescheduled.

This isn’t the first time Hubble has relied on backup hardware. The team made a similar switch in 2008, bringing Hubble back to normal operations after another part of the Science Instrument and Command & Data Handling (SI C&DH) unit failed. Hubble’s final maintenance mission in 2009 – a much-needed adjustment championed by former US Senator Barbara Mikulski – then replaced the entire SI C&DH unit and significantly extended Hubble’s operating life.

Since that service mission, Hubble has made more than 600,000 observations, bringing its total lifespan to more than 1.5 million. These observations continue to change our understanding of the universe.

Members of the Hubble operations team will be working in the control room on July 15 to restore Hubble to scientific operation. Credits: NASA GSFC / Rebecca Roth

“Hubble is in good hands. The Hubble team has again demonstrated their resilience and skill in dealing with the inevitable anomalies created by operating the world’s most famous telescope in the harsh space conditions, ”said Kenneth Sembach, Director of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducting Hubble science operations. “I am impressed with the dedication and shared goal of the team over the past month to get Hubble back up and running. Now that Hubble is once again offering unprecedented views of the universe, I expect it will continue to surprise us with many more scientific discoveries. “

Hubble has contributed to some of the most significant discoveries of our cosmos, including the accelerated expansion of the universe, the evolution of galaxies over time, and the first atmospheric studies of planets outside our solar system. His mission was to spend at least 15 years exploring the most remote and weakest areas of the cosmos, and this goal continues to be far exceeded.

“The sheer amount of record-breaking science Hubble has delivered is overwhelming,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, assistant administrator of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. “We can learn so much from this next chapter of Hubble’s life – alone and with the capabilities of other NASA observatories. I couldn’t be more excited about what the Hubble team has achieved in the past few weeks. They faced the challenges of this process head on and made sure the days of exploring Hubble are far from over. “

Further information on the first scientific images that were added to the scientific community with Hubble after his return: https://hubblesite.org/contents/news-releases/2021/news-2021-045

More information about Hubble can be found at: www.nasa.gov/hubble

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Categories
Entertainment

Twitter Creates Customized “GOAT” Emoji For Simone Biles—Making Her The First Olympian To Ever Obtain One

Roommates, after waiting what seems like forever, fans finally get to see Simone Biles compete at the Tokyo Olympics—and to celebrate her being the GOAT, Twitter just created a special emoji in her honor. This means that Simone Biles is now the first-ever Olympian to receive their own emoji as the Olympics are officially underway!

As the world gathers to watch record-breaking multiple gold-winning gymnast Simone Biles add to her accomplishments during the Tokyo Olympics, popular social media platform Twitter decided to give her the ultimate honor and distinguish her from the rest of the Olympians.

During the duration of the Tokyo Olympics, whenever anyone tweets #Simone or #SimoneBiles her very own emoji will appear…and it’s none other than a goat dressed in a leotard, perfectly honoring Simone’s GOAT status as the world’s greatest female athlete.

Speaking about giving Simone her own emoji, Twitter stated that the honor is meant to recognize Biles’s “legacy, achievements and epic usage of the platform.”

Twitter also revealed that so far this year, Simone was the second-most talked about Olympic athlete on the social media platform, behind only Japanese swimmer Rikako Ikee.

After making history once again at the U.S Gymnastics championships, Simone Biles is set to put on a historic performance at the Tokyo Olympics. During her recent practice sessions, she absolutely nailed her signature double-pike move on the balance beam that has been deemed so difficult and dangerous that other gymnasts are forbidden to try it.

 

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Categories
Sport

Olympic Swimming Outcomes: Up to date 2021 medalists for each occasion on the Tokyo Video games

The world’s greatest swimmers have gathered at Tokyo Aquatics Center and are ready to compete for the most prestigious international sports equipment.

Former medalists such as Katie Ledecky, Penny Oleksiak, Caeleb Dressel and Brent Hayden will be among the hundreds of stars swimming in the hunt for bronze, silver and, of course, gold medals.

The international field is particularly strong this year, with countries like Australia, Great Britain and Russia all full of talent, while other titans of the swimming world like Hungarian Katinka Hosszu, Italian Gregorio Paltrinieri, Japanese Daiya Seto and Swede Sarah Sjostrom all stand for some of the toughest competitors to beat in 2021.

Who will take home the most gold medals? Which country can handle the most hardware? Sporting News keeps track of the medalists of each event, including the athlete, the country and time reported for winning the various medals, as well as the countries with the most total medals in swimming.

MORE: Watch the Olympics Live on fuboTV (7-day free trial)

Olympic swimming results 2021

Men’s events

event gold silver bronze
50 freestyle
100 freestyle
200 freestyle
400 freestyle Ahmed Hanfaoui (Tunisia) Jack McLoughlin (Australia) Kieran Smith (USA)
800 freestyle
1500 freestyle
100 backs
200 backs
100 breaststroke
200 breaststroke
100 butterfly
200 butterfly
200 individual medley
400 individual medley Chase Kalisz (USA) Jay Litherland (USA) Brendon Smith (Australia)
4×100 freestyle relay
4×200 freestyle relay
4×100 layer relay

* Indicates new Olympic record

** Indicates new Olympic and world records

Women events

event gold silver bronze
50 freestyle
100 freestyle
200 freestyle
400 freestyle
800 freestyle
1500 freestyle
100 backs
200 backs
100 breaststroke
200 breaststroke
100 butterfly
200 butterfly
200 individual medley
400 individual medley Yui Ohashi (Japan) Emma Weyant (USA) Hali Flickinger (USA)
4×100 freestyle relay Australia Canada United States
4×200 freestyle relay
4×100 layer relay

* Indicates new Olympic record

** Indicates new Olympic and world records

Mixed event

event gold silver bronze
4×100 layer relay

Overall winner of swimming medals

Item country gold silver bronze total
1 United States 1 2 2 5
2 Australia 1 1 1 3
3 Japan 1 0 0 1
4th Tunisia 1 0 0 1
5 Canada 0 1 0 1

Here’s how to watch Olympic swimming competitions

  • TV channel: ABC (USA) | USA network (USA) | CBC (Canada)
  • Live broadcast: NBCSports.com | NBCOlympics.com | Peacock | fuboTV (7-day free trial)

NBC and CBC have exclusive rights to all Olympic content in the United States and Canada, respectively, and will therefore host all swimming competitions during the 2021 Tokyo Games.

Fans who want to stream the events can find them on the NBC platforms NBCSports.com, NBCOlympics.com or Peacock as well as on fuboTV, which offers a 7-day free trial.

Television program

With the exception of July 31, each day of the heats begins at 6:00 a.m. ET and ends with the finals, which begin each day at 9:30 p.m. ET. The USA Network will host the heats in the USA and NBC will host the finals, while CBC will cover both events in Canada.

Those in the United States hoping to rerun the qualifiers can tune in to NBC each afternoon to see how the swimmers did earlier in the morning.

Saturday July 24th

event Time (ET) Channel (USA) Canal (Canada)
Heats 6 o’clock in the morning USA CBC
final 9:30 p.m. ABC CBC

Sunday 25th July

event Time (ET) Channel (USA) Canal (Canada)
Heats 6 o’clock in the morning USA CBC
final 9:30 p.m. ABC CBC

Monday July 26th

event Time (ET) Channel (USA) Canal (Canada)
Heats 6 o’clock in the morning USA CBC
final 9:30 p.m. ABC CBC

Tuesday July 27th

event Time (ET) Channel (USA) Canal (Canada)
Heats 6 o’clock in the morning USA CBC
final 9:30 p.m. ABC CBC

Wednesday July 28th

event Time (ET) Channel (USA) Canal (Canada)
Heats 6 o’clock in the morning USA CBC
final 9:30 p.m. ABC CBC

Thursday July 29th

event Time (ET) Channel (USA) Canal (Canada)
Heats 6 o’clock in the morning USA CBC
final 9:30 p.m. ABC CBC

Friday July 30th

event Time (ET) Channel (USA) Canal (Canada)
Heats 6 o’clock in the morning USA CBC
final 9:30 p.m. ABC CBC

Saturday July 31st

event Time (ET) Channel (USA) Canal (Canada)
final 9:30 p.m. ABC CBC

Olympic swimming schedule

Swimming fans will spend days practicing their favorite sport.

Every day from July 24th to July 30th there will be preliminary heats in the early morning and semi-finals and finals in the evening. On July 31, there will only be five final runs in the evening to complete the swimming at the Olympic Games. Each day, the morning events begin at 6:00 a.m. ET, while the evening events begin at 9:30 p.m. ET.

Saturday July 24th

tomorrow Eve
Men’s 400 Individual Medley (Heats) Men’s 400 Individual Medley (Final)
Women 100 butterfly (heats) Women 100 butterfly (semifinals)
Men’s 400m Freestyle (Prelims) Men’s 400 Freestyle (Final)
Women, 400 individual layers (heats) Women’s 400 Individual Medley (Final)
100 Men’s Breaststroke (Heats) 100 men’s breaststroke (semi-finals)
Women’s 4×100 Freestyle Relay (Prelims) Women 4×100 freestyle relay (final)

Sunday 25th July

tomorrow Eve
Women 100 backstroke (prelims) Women 100 butterfly (final)
Men’s 200 Freestyle (Prelims) Men’s 200 Freestyle (Semifinals)
Women’s 100 Breaststroke (Heats) Women’s 100 Breaststroke (Semi-Finals)
Men’s 100 Backstroke (Heats) 100 Men’s Breaststroke (Final)
Women’s 400 Freestyle (Prelims) Women’s 400 Freestyle (Final)
Men’s 4×100 Freestyle Relay (Prelims) Men’s 100 back (semifinals)
Women 100 backs (semifinals)
Men’s 4×100 freestyle relay

Monday July 26th

tomorrow Eve
Women’s 200 Freestyle (Prelims) Women 200 Freestyle (Semifinals)
Men’s 200 Butterfly (heats) Men’s 200 Freestyle (Final)
Women’s 200 Individual Medley (Heats) Women’s 100 backstroke (final)
1500 freestyle women (prelims) Men’s 100 back (final)
100 Women’s Breaststroke (Final)
Men’s 200 Butterfly (semifinals)
Women’s 200 Individual Medley (Semifinals)

Tuesday July 27th

tomorrow Eve
Men’s 100 Freestyle (Prelims) Men’s 100 Freestyle (Semifinals)
Women 200 Butterfly (heats) Women 200 Freestyle (Final)
Men’s 200 Breaststroke (Heats) Men’s 200 Butterfly (Final)
Men’s 4×200 Freestyle Relay (Prelims) Women 200 Butterfly (semifinals)
Men’s 800 Freestyle (Prelims) 200 men’s breaststroke (semi-finals)
Women’s 200 Individual Medley (Final)
1500 freestyle women (final)
Men’s 4×200 Freestyle Relay (Final)

Wednesday July 28th

tomorrow Eve
Women’s 100 Freestyle (Prelims) Men’s 800 Freestyle (Final)
Men’s 200 backs (heats) 200 men’s breaststroke (final)
200 breaststroke women (heats) Women’s 100 Freestyle (Semifinals)
Men’s 200 Individual Medley (Heats) Men’s 200 backs (semi-finals)
Women’s 4×200 Freestyle Relay (Prelims) 200 women’s butterfly (final)
Men’s 100 Freestyle (Final)
200 women’s breaststroke (semi-finals)
Men’s 200 Individual Medley (Semifinals)
Women 4×200 Freestyle Relay (Final)

Thursday July 29th

tomorrow Eve
Women’s 800 Freestyle (Prelims) Men’s 100 Butterfly (semifinals)
Men’s 100 Butterfly (Prelims) 200 women’s breaststroke (final)
Women 200 backstroke (heats) Men’s 200 back (final)
Mixed 4×100 Medley Relay (Prelims) Women’s 100 Freestyle (Final)
Men’s 200 Individual Medley (Final)
Women 200 backs (semi-finals)

Friday July 30th

tomorrow Eve
Men’s 50 Freestyle (Prelims) Men’s 100 butterfly (final)
Women 50 Freestyle (Prelims) Women 200 backstroke (final)
Men’s 1500 Freestyle (Prelims) 800 freestyle women (final)
Women 4×100 medley relay (prelims) Men’s 50 Freestyle (Semi-Finals)
Men 4×100 individual medley relay (prelims) Women’s 50 Freestyle (Semifinals)
Mixed 4×100 individual medley relay (final)

Saturday July 31st

Eve
Men’s 50 Freestyle (Final)
Women’s 50 Freestyle (Final)
Men’s 1500 Freestyle (Final)
Women 4×100 individual medley relay (final)
Men 4×100 Layer Relay (Final)