
Ski world champion Venier quits, saying hunger has gone
In her 13-year World Cup career, the speed specialist scored three wins and 12 other podium finishes.
She shone in World Championships, winning a downhill silver in St Moritz in Switzerland in 2017 and a team-combined bronze as well as the Super-G gold in her native country last season.
"I more than fulfilled my greatest dream of winning a medal at the home World Championships in Saalbach with a gold and a bronze," she said. "Even though the Olympic Games are coming up next year, it feels like the right time for me to draw a line under my racing career."
"As the saying goes: The peak of your career is the best time to retire," she said.
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France 24
8 hours ago
- France 24
Ski world champion Venier quits, saying hunger has gone
Venier won the woman's Super-G world title in Saalbach in February but said on the Austrian Ski Federation web site that "the unwavering will required for elite sport simply hasn't been there in recent months to the extent I expect it to be". In her 13-year World Cup career, the speed specialist scored three wins and 12 other podium finishes. She shone in World Championships, winning a downhill silver in St Moritz in Switzerland in 2017 and a team-combined bronze as well as the Super-G gold in her native country last season. "I more than fulfilled my greatest dream of winning a medal at the home World Championships in Saalbach with a gold and a bronze," she said. "Even though the Olympic Games are coming up next year, it feels like the right time for me to draw a line under my racing career." "As the saying goes: The peak of your career is the best time to retire," she said.
LeMonde
2 days ago
- LeMonde
Trump creates task force to prepare for a 'historically successful' 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles
President Donald Trump on Tuesday, August 5, established a task force on the 2028 Olympic Games being held in Los Angeles that he said would ensure the event is "safe, seamless and historically successful." The 2028 Games will be the first Olympics to be hosted by the US since the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City, Utah. "The LA Olympics is shaping up to be a wonderful moment for America. It's going to be incredible. It's so exciting," Trump said as he signed an executive order at the White House establishing the task force. The executive order calls for the task force to coordinate security and planning for the Games, streamline visa processing and credentialing for the athletes, coaches, media and other visitors coming to the US. Trump will serve as chair of the task force, with Vice President JD Vance as vice chair. Other members include a number of Cabinet secretaries and administration officials. At the event, Trump praised Gene Sykes, chair of the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee board of directors, for the USOPC's move to effectively bar transgender women from competing in women's sports. "The United States will not let men steal trophies from women at the 2028 Olympics," Trump said. He questioned why he didn't hear applause from the room when he praised Sykes for it, and then received some claps from some people in the room. 'A great honor' Trump "considers it a great honor to oversee this global sporting spectacle," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement, calling sports one of the president's "greatest passions." LA28 president and chair Casey Wasserman said the task force "marks an important step forward in our planning efforts and reflects our shared commitment to delivering not just the biggest, but the greatest Games the world has ever seen in the summer of 2028." Along with the 2028 Summer Games, Trump has said that the 2026 FIFA World Cup being hosted by the US, Canada and Mexico is among the events he's most looking forward to in his second term. In preparation for next year's competition, the governments of all three countries on Tuesday said they had held the first meeting of a trilateral coordinating council of government officials, industry leaders and security professionals discussing a variety of issues, including preparedness for any security threats ahead of the World Cup.


France 24
2 days ago
- France 24
Jobe Bellingham 'anxious' about following Jude at Dortmund
Jobe, 19, is two years younger than Jude, who joined Real Madrid in 2023 after three years at Dortmund. A centrepiece of the England national team, Jude has emerged as one of the best players in the world in recent seasons. The younger Bellingham joined Dortmund in June from Sunderland after their promotion to the Premier League. Jobe admitted he understood what the perception would be ahead of the move to Germany. "It's something you do think about. You have these anxieties, especially me as I'm only young," Bellingham told reporters at Dortmund's pre-season camp in Austria. "I'm not perfect. I do think about these things, but that was down to the club convincing me that these things wouldn't have much bearing on me. "This was a decision I made and it's for myself. My journey is not anyone else's to understand," he added. Bellingham made his Dortmund debut in the Club World Cup in the United States, scoring once and providing an assist in four games. Like he did at Sunderland, the younger Bellingham wears his first name Jobe on the back of his jersey rather than his last name to avoid comparisons with his sibling. Jobe said his older brother was "extremely proud -- he didn't have much to say other than 'embrace it'," when he found out he was off to Dortmund, but added "our conversations aren't usually that serious." The midfielder, who usually plays in a deeper role than his brother, said he did "not want to be a superstar... I don't want to be a big character away from the pitch. "When I play I just want to be one of the highest performing players and get my head down." Dortmund open their season at Essen in the first round of the German Cup on August 18.