The Evening Leader

First medals to be awarded at Games

- By JENNA FRYER AP Sports Writer

TOKYO — The first day of full competitio­n of the Tokyo Games could mark the turning point for an uneasy Japanese public that overwhelmi­ngly disapprove­d of the Olympics being held during the pandemic.

The first medal of the Games will go to the winner of the women’s 10-meter air rifle, with more hardware handed out Saturday in archery’s Olympic debut of the mixed team event, the men’s cycling road race, fencing and weightlift­ing. Japan’s first opportunit­y to win gold is in a pair of judo events. Here are some things to watch. (all times Eastern):

JUDO

This homegrown sport on the opening day of the Olympics might be the event that could give the Japanese public something to celebrate at these Games.

Naohisa Takato (men’s 60 kg) and Funa Tonaki (women’s 48 kg) both can make their nation proud by claiming Japan’s first gold medals of these games. The Japanese media has focused heavily on the opening-day judokas under the assumption strong showings might sway citizens into supporting the Olympic Games.

The Nippon Budokan is a revered arena that has crowned countless martial arts champions since it opened in 1964 with the first Olympic judo tournament. The Budokan will be mostly empty because of pandemic restrictio­ns, but all of Japan will be watching. The medals will be awarded at the end of a session aired during USA Network’s all-day coverage.

3-ON-3 BASKETBALL

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee added several events meant to lure in a younger audience and the first to begin play will be 3-on-3 basketball.

What is it, you ask? It’s essentiall­y a formal pickup game between teams of three players on a court roughly half the size of a traditiona­l court.

It is divided into two areas by a semicircle and baskets scored inside the arc are worth one point; two points from outside the arc. The first team to score 21 points wins, but the game is only 10 minutes and the victory will go to whichever team is ahead at the buzzer.

The United States men’s team failed to qualify, but the women’s team makes its debut against France at 10:45 a.m. on NBC.

SWIMMING

Nine days of swimming action begins at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre with four finals aired during primetime on NBC.

The Americans won 33 medals — 16 gold — in Rio and have topped the medals table at every Olympics since Seoul in 1988. The women’s 4x100 free relay closes Saturday night action with the Americans seeking their first win since 2000.

It should be an Australia vs. the U.S. showdown, and the Aussies have won three out of the past four Olympics.

Medals will also be decided in the men’s 400-meter individual medley, the men’s 400 freestyle, the women’s 400-meter IM and finally the women’s 4x100 relay scheduled for 10:45 p.m.

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