logo
Jakob Ingebrigtsen's father found guilty of hitting daughter

Jakob Ingebrigtsen's father found guilty of hitting daughter

Yahoo5 hours ago

The father of Jakob Ingebrigtsen has been found guilty of hitting his younger sister with a wet towel but has been cleared of abusing Norway's double Olympic champion.
Gjert Ingebrigtsen, 59, has been given a suspended 15-day prison sentence for whipping Ingebrigtsen's sister, Ingrid, in the face with a towel but was acquitted of all other charges after a trial in Norway.
Advertisement
Gjert, who coached Jakob at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics before they split, had been accused of enforcing a regime of 'physical and verbal abuse' during their upbringing.
Jakob, the 5,000m Olympic champion and one of the biggest stars in track and field, told the court that he had been a victim of domestic violence and said he had been punched and kicked by his father.
The court ruled there was insufficient evidence of Jakob's claims, but found Gjert of hitting Ingrid, who is now 19, in the face with a towel in 2022.
Ingrid, who quit athletics and left the family home aged 15, was awarded compensation of 10,000 kroner (£745) after prosecutors had called for Gjert to be handed a two-and-a-half-year sentence.
Advertisement
Gjert had denied all allegations of violence and abuse but accepted that he had been demanding in his coaching and admitted to once throwing a PlayStation out of a window.
Gjert's intense training methods were the subject of the popular documentary Team Ingebrigtsen, which shone a light on the family's almost cult-like obsession with sporting excellence, with the children put on strict professionalised training programmes at a young age.
Gjert Ingebrigtsen (NTB)
Jakob's older brothers, Henrik and Filip, are also professional athletes, and in October 2023, the trio published a joint letter in Norwegian outlet VG, spelling out the behaviour of their father.
Advertisement
Jakob, 24, told the court about several incidents of violence. Prosecutors alleged Gjert struck Jakob several times after he received a negative report about his behaviour from school when he was eight. He was also accused of kicking Jakob in the stomach after he had been playing in the street on a scooter.
Gjert coached his three sons until 2022, helping Jakob to secure his first Olympic gold at Tokyo 2020 in the 1500m as he forged a glittering career as one of the world's leading athletes. After the split, Jakob added 5,000m success at Paris 2024 along with a large collection of other global medals.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Laguna Beach's Fischer sisters honored with USA Water Polo retirement ceremony
Laguna Beach's Fischer sisters honored with USA Water Polo retirement ceremony

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Laguna Beach's Fischer sisters honored with USA Water Polo retirement ceremony

Makenzie Fischer was a record-setting water polo player at every stage of her career. Her U.S. national team coach, Adam Krikorian, explained why rather succinctly. 'She could, on any moment's notice, be the best player in the world in any phase of the game,' Krikorian said. 'Whether it was defending the center, playing perimeter defense, on the counterattack, playing six-on-five, shooting from the perimeter, she could literally be the best player in the world.' She holds the Laguna Beach High girls' water polo career scoring with 456 goals, winning two CIF Southern Section titles in 2014 and 2015. Three championships at Stanford University followed, along with Cutino Award nods in 2019 and 2022 for the nation's top collegiate women's water polo player. Fischer is also Stanford's all-time leading scorer with 288 goals, and won Olympic gold medals at the 2016 Rio Olympics and 2020 Tokyo Olympics alongside her younger sister Aria to only help cement that legacy. Both Makenzie and Aria Fischer were honored Friday night with a retirement celebration ceremony, prior to the U.S. national team playing an exhibition match against Spain at Irvine's Woollett Aquatics Center. 'I love the water polo community,' said Makenzie, 28, who actually retired back in 2022 after helping Stanford win the national championship, in a pre-match interview. 'It's been a huge part of my life. It's fun to see all of the national team girls and be reintroduced to the spirit of what I really love, which is the team aspect of everything. It's kind of fun to put a bow on everything, because water polo was a really big part of my life and something that still means a lot to me.' She now remains in the Bay Area working as a mechanical engineer. Aria Fischer, the 2023 Cutino winner who won three CIF championships at Laguna Beach and three NCAA titles at Stanford, was unable to be at Friday's ceremony. Makenzie said her younger sister, now 26, is working at a production company in London. Family members present included parents Erich and Leslie. Erich Fischer, who still coaches at Laguna Beach, was a two-time national champion in water polo at Stanford himself and an Olympian in 1992. 'I think it's fun to have water polo as a common thread,' Makenzie Fischer said. 'He clearly loves it, he's still coaching. It's always been a fun part of our family. We love watching the Stanford games, the national team games. It's kind of fun to be able to transition to a new role as a spectator, have a little bit less of a front seat but still be able to talk about it with him. It's definitely something that bonds us, for sure.' Team USA edged defending Olympic gold medalist Spain in the exhibition match that followed the ceremony, 9-8. Jenna Flynn led the Americans with three goals, while Ryann Neushul scored the match-winning power play goal with 1:06 remaining. Goalkeeper Amanda Longan made 13 saves. The match was the first international match of the new quad for Team USA, which finished fourth at the Paris Olympics last summer. 'We are a newer team, which is super exciting, and I think it gives us a lot of wiggle room,' said Flynn, who plays for Stanford and was a member of the Paris Olympics group last year. 'Spain is a super-talented team, and that competition between the U.S. and Spain is just really strong for as long as I've been in the water polo world. It's definitely a privilege to come here and explore with this young team, but against such good competitors.' Laguna Beach alumna Emma Lineback had a goal, an assist and a field block for Team USA. Lineback, a left-handed attacker coming off a second-team All-American season for UCLA as a redshirt junior, was aiming for a spot on the Paris squad but was not selected. Now, she said she has a short-term goal of making the U.S. roster for her first World Aquatics Championships next month in Singapore. 'It makes you rethink what the little wins are, because you're playing with the best of the best every day,' Lineback said of being back with the national team. 'It pushes you to work really hard, harder than you think is possible. That was kind of my motivation to come back, because I knew that I wasn't done growing. I just love this environment. It really is special. College is great, but the buy-in here is just different.' Spain beat Team USA 7-5 on Sunday in the second of the two-match exhibition series, led by a hat trick from Paula Camus. Emily Ausmus led the Americans with a pair of goals. Team USA opens play at the World Aquatics Championships on July 10, with a match against China.

Maria Taylor Named Lead NBA & WNBA Studio Host For NBC
Maria Taylor Named Lead NBA & WNBA Studio Host For NBC

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Maria Taylor Named Lead NBA & WNBA Studio Host For NBC

NBCUniversal is gearing up for its NBA coverage when it begins its long-term rights deal with the league this fall, tapping sports broadcaster Maria Taylor as lead studio host for both the NBA and WNBA. Taylor will host NBC Sports' NBA studio shows on Sunday and Tuesday nights alongside analysts Carmelo Anthony and Vince Carter on NBC and Peacock. Along with the studio gig, Taylor will also host select WNBA games on NBC and Peacock in 2026, according to Advertisement More from Deadline The NBA on NBC and Peacock will spotlight national coverage of regional doubleheaders on Tuesday nights beginning in October. After Sunday Night Football coverage concludes in Jan. 2026, NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1. Peacock will also livestream exclusive national Monday night games starting this fall. Taylor has been the lead host of Football Night in America since 2022. Taylor has also hosted for the Tokyo, Beijing, and Paris Olympics; Big Ten College Countdown and NBC Sports' primetime college football studio program among others. Due to her new NBA role, Taylor will no longer host Big Ten College Countdown. A new host will be announced soon. Advertisement Taylor won a Sports Emmy for Outstanding Live Special – Championship Event as part of NBCUniversal's coverage of the 2024 Paris Olympics. 'I'm deeply honored to be part of NBC Sports' incredible legacy covering the NBA and to return to the game that first captured my heart, women's basketball,' said Taylor. 'To know that I'll spend the next five years with my NBC family telling the stories of the Super Bowl, the Olympics, the NBA Playoffs, and the WNBA Finals is more than a dream come true — it's a full-circle moment.' Best of Deadline Sign up for Deadline's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

As an Historic Olympic Games Milestone Nears, the Architect of its Triumphant PR Campaign Reflects on its Lessons
As an Historic Olympic Games Milestone Nears, the Architect of its Triumphant PR Campaign Reflects on its Lessons

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

As an Historic Olympic Games Milestone Nears, the Architect of its Triumphant PR Campaign Reflects on its Lessons

Rally International Public Affair's Mike Holtzman Was Named "PR Professional of the Year" for His Role in China's 2008 Games Bid NEW YORK, June 23, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- When Beijing won the hosting rights for the 2008 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games on July 13, 2001, it was a pivotal moment not only for the Olympic movement but in China's development, signaling the country's growing stature and readiness to be a major global player. Mike Holtzman, the architect behind the unlikely international public relations campaign that propelled China's historic win, was named "PR Professional of the Year" by PR Week Magazine in recognition of his sophisticated, globe-trotting strategy to build a new bridge between China and the world. Today, Holtzman reflects on his game plan, and the long term-impact the Games have had on China, sport, and the world. "At the time, there was a significant debate about whether the west should engage or isolate China, which was operating largely outside of global institutions and norms," said Holtzman. "I had just spent some time as an Advisor to the US Trade Ambassador helping anchor China to the west by joining the World Trade Organization, and the feeling was that hosting the Olympic Games would throw open a window on China, get them further bound to the rule of law, and on the track to modernization." Holtzman, who now leads Rally International Public Affair's roster of international clients across the developing world, was a young executive with PR powerhouse Weber Shandwick when the Chinese, facing serious diplomatic headwinds to its nascent 2008 Olympic Games bid, came knocking. Beijing had lost a previous bid for the 2000 Games due to geopolitical factors. "The Olympic Games are not about politics, but friendship. Still, a nation's bid does not exist in a vacuum," Holtzman said. "There needed to be this undertone that hosting the Olympics would somehow change China for the better. This would give IOC voters and critics a reason to champion the Chinese bid. Paris (another 2008 competitor) would always be Paris, but a vote for China could change history." A team of professionals was assembled —including the global sport marketing team of Terrence Burns and George Hirthler, who were among the creative forces behind Atlanta's successful bid for the 1996 Games, plus sports branding specialist Jon Tibbs in the United Kingdom, to deliver this message of change to a skeptical global community. "China was the second most populous country in the world and had never carried the torch of the Games. Tens of millions of young Chinese had never been imbued with the values of Olympism," Holtzman said. "This made a very compelling case to the International Olympic Committee." When framed as an opportunity to spread and achieve the ideals of the Games and to modernize China, support for the bid grew, even among critics. "When the Dalai Lama and Luciano Pavarotti both jumped on board, we knew we had a winning message," Holtzman laughs. But what of the end game, where today's modernized China is now a global economic power and seen by some as a geopolitical competitor? "The Olympic movement did its job. The Games helped open China and allow the world in. They served as a catalyst for lasting change in Beijing's physical infrastructure and environmental sustainability. The question today, as it was then, is, 'what will you do with this newfound goodwill and clout? How will you use it?' And that is a question for others to answer." Media Contact:Julia@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Rally International Public Affairs

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store