ADVERTISEMENT

Sonya Massey...

Makes my stomach turn. Glad the other officers were there or this piece of shit may have gotten away with murder. We need higher pay, better training and higher standards to be a police. How this f-cking guy ever got a badge is beyond me. Karma is literally going to get him in the ass every night here soon. Good.

It's high time my sperm gets citizenship and voting rights.

I got millions of Harris votes in me.

So so funny....Trump and his Diet Mt Dew drinking mini-me now get to battle a woman of color. lol

The whole "women should stay in abusive marriages because it's their Heavenly prescribed duty" angle is gonna do well w the womens, fellas. lol

I think my sperm comment is clever, btw. Sperm are half people, after all. And, better yet, THEY ARE ALL MALE! And the universe exists because of us, right?

None of you can prove that each sperm placed in our balls isn't divinely inspired...so check mate, bitches.

"Turn the page"

That's the White House message regarding Biden's debate debacle last week.

The problem with the message is that you can't turn the page on age. The unfortunate reality is that Father Time eventually catches up with everyone. That's happened with Biden.

If it was a cold, fatigue from recent travel or just a bad day, his staff would have him out there speaking with reporters, publicly taking questions, talking without a TelePrompter and a script, etc. There's been none of that.

Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) yesterday became the first Democrat in Congress calling for Biden to step aside. I think that's just the beginning. I'm sticking with my prediction last week that Biden will announce - - by July 22 - - that he's ending his campaign. If I'm wrong and it remains Biden/Trump in November, then selfishness will be Biden's legacy.

@unclemark why was @myteamisonthefloor ‘s

thread locked? Bc of Harris? Joe Brown is an LA guy. UCLA undergrad and ucla law. He was commenting on stuff from the la times and I doubt he’d say what he said without at least some personal knowledge. No big deal but I’m not sure this should be a topic that’s off limits. The board belabors the shit out of trump’s former sex life etc yet Harris is off limits? Is it not character? Like trump?

Laughable Mike Johnson

I see the dumb a## said he’s encouraging states to stop Harris from being the Dem nominee. Not right that Biden isn’t running anymore. Sounds scared.
Good Christian Mike backs a convicted felon who was also found guilty of sexual assault, stole national defense secrets and shared them. Been trying hard as I can to find where those qualities are found in the Bible. Think I found them when sin is talked about. Mike obviously doesn’t pay attention to those parts. He’s what we call a convenient Christian. Only when it suits his agenda.

Twenty Olympians to Represent Indiana University in Paris

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Twenty Indiana University athletes and coaches will participate in the 2024 Paris Olympics. Indiana has tied its second-largest group of Olympians all-time, having produced 20 Olympians in 1976 and a record 23 in 1968. Hoosiers will represent nine different countries, marking a school record. The 2024 Paris Games will officially kick off with the opening ceremony July 26 at 1:30 p.m. ET, with IU athletes competing the next day. NBC and Peacock will provide live video coverage throughout the Olympics. Stay tuned to IUHoosiers.com/Olympics for full coverage of IU athletes in Paris, including feature stories, recaps and athlete schedules.

IU is represented in five unique sports, including, for the first time ever, open water swimming. Within that, four different IU athletic programs produced Olympians – 17 from swimming and diving (13 swimming, four diving), two from water polo and one from track and field. Ten Hoosiers will represent Team USA in France, Indiana’s largest contribution to the U.S. Olympic Team since Seoul 1988. All 10 Team USA Hoosiers emerge from the IU swimming and diving program – six swimmers, three divers and two coaches.

Indiana has produced a U.S. Olympic diver at every Summer Games since 1964. Tokyo 2020 medalists Andrew Capobianco and Jessica Parratto return for their second and third Olympics respectively. Reigning NCAA Champion Carson Tyler is set to make his Olympic debut in the 3-meter and 10-meter competitions as the first U.S. male diver since 2000 to qualify in both events. The remaining 10 Hoosiers combine to represent eight more countries. For the first time ever, Indiana sends Olympians from the British Virgin Islands, Singapore, Lithuania and the Netherlands. IU athletes will also compete for Egypt, Germany, Israel and Canada.

In addition to the 20 individuals that currently train or coach at Indiana University, or have graduated from IU, three more Olympians have cream and crimson ties. Swimmers Matt King (United States) and Zalán Sárkány (Hungary) are set to transfer into the IU program following their summer in Paris. U.S. Olympic Diving head coach Drew Johansen will be joined on deck by Jenny Johansen, named an assistant coach by USA Diving. Jenny Johansen is a two-time Olympian, coach at the Johansen Diving Academy at IU and Parratto’s personal coach. Together, the Johansens become the first married pair to coach U.S. diving together at an Olympic Games.

Eleven Hoosier Olympians have previous Olympic experience. Drew Johansen leads the way, coaching his fourth consecutive Summer Games. Five more Hoosiers will attend their third Olympics, including Lilly King, Ray Looze, Parratto, Blake Pieroni and Marwan Elkamash (all swimming and diving), who became the first Egyptian swimmer to qualify for three consecutive Olympics. King announced prior to U.S. Olympic Swim Trials that the Paris Games will be her final cycle.

Nine Hoosiers – Rikkoi Brathwaite (track and field), Cory Chitwood, Mariah Denigan, Ching Hwee Gan, Josh Matheny, Rafael Miroslaw, Anna Peplowski, Carson Tyler and Kai van Westering (swimming and diving) – will participate in their first Olympics.

See the full list of Indiana University Olympians below.

Olympic History:

Few universities, or even nations, can match Indiana University's Olympic record. Indiana boasts 261 total Olympic berths, representing 30 countries. On 21 occasions, Olympic coaches have come from Indiana. The Indiana University athlete medal count is at 121 including 60 gold, 23 silver and 38 bronze after the 2020 Tokyo Games. The Hoosiers have earned a medal at every Olympic Games they have competed in except 2004. IU’s most productive year was 1968, with 17 medals for IU competitors in Mexico City.

Hoosiers at the 2024 Paris Games

NameNo. of OlympicsNationSportEvent
Rikkoi Brathwaite1British Virgin IslandsTrack & Field100-meter
Andrew Capobianco2United StatesDiving3-meter
Cory Chitwood1United StatesOpen Water SwimmingAssistant Coach
Mariah Denigan1United StatesOpen Water Swimming10K
Marwan Elkamash3EgyptSwimming1,500-meter freestyle
Tomer Frankel2IsraelSwimming100-meter freestyle, 100-meter butterfly, 4x100-meter freestyle, 4x200-meter freestyle
Ching Hwee Gan1SingaporeSwimming800-meter freestyle, 1,500-meter freestyle, 4x100-meter medley
Jessica Gaudreault2CanadaWater Polo
Drew Johansen4United StatesDivingHead Coach
Lilly King3United StatesSwimming100-meter breaststroke, 200-meter breaststroke
Shae La Roche2CanadaWater Polo
Ray Looze3LithuaniaSwimmingAssistant Coach
Josh Matheny1United StatesSwimming200-meter breaststroke
Rafael Miroslaw1GermanySwimming200-meter freestyle
Jessica Parratto3United StatesDivingSynchronized 10-meter
Anna Peplowski1United StatesSwimming4x200-meter freestyle
Blake Pieroni3United StatesSwimming4x200-meter freestyle
Kotryna Teterevkova2LithuaniaSwimming100-meter breaststroke, 200-meter breaststroke
Carson Tyler1United StatesDiving3-meter, 10-meter
Kai van Westering1NetherlandsSwimming100-meter backstroke, 200-meter backstroke, 4x100-meter medley


Additional Olympians with Indiana University Ties

NameNo. of OlympicsNationSportEventIU Affiliation
Jenny Johansen3United StatesDivingAssistant CoachCoaching Jessica Parratto, Coach at Johansen Diving Academy
Matt King1United StatesSwimming4x100-meter freestyle2024-25 Transfer
Zalán Sárkány1HungarySwimming800-meter freestyle, 1,500-meter freestyle2024-25 Transfer
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT