
Coliseum officially set to make history co-hosting 2028 Olympic opening ceremony
During the near decade since L.A. was awarded the 2028 Olympics, new venues have arrived, proposed venues have fallen through and sports have shuffled, but the centerpiece of the ever-evolving plan has always been clear.
The Coliseum.
The iconic stadium will host the opening and closing ceremonies for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, LA28 announced Thursday, officially locking in the organizing committee's proposal. While the Coliseum will become the first venue to host three Olympic events, the 2028 Games will also showcase one of the region's newest cornerstones by using SoFi Stadium as a second venue for the Olympic opening ceremony and to host the opening ceremony for the Paralympic Games.
The dual-venue opening ceremony is a first for the Olympic Games, following another unprecedented format in Paris where athletes paraded down the Seine in boats.
'The venues selected for the 2028 opening and closing ceremonies will highlight Los Angeles's rich sporting history and cutting-edge future, showcasing the very best that L.A. has to offer on the world stage,' LA28 president Casey Wasserman said in a statement. 'These two extraordinary venues will create an unforgettable experience, welcoming fans from across the globe to an Olympic and Paralympic Games like never before.'
The Olympics will open on July 14, 2028 and close on July 30, while the Paralympics — the first to be hosted in L.A. — run from Aug. 15-27.
SoFi Stadium was one year into construction when L.A. was awarded the Games in 2017. The home of the Rams and Chargers will also host the Olympic swimming competition that was shifted to the second week of the Games while track and field at the Coliseum will take place during the first week.
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Tommy Fleetwood leads the Travelers after a flawless 63, while Scottie Scheffler falters early and Russell Henley vaults into contention with a 61. CROMWELL, Conn. – On a day when two rounds of 62 had already been posted before he even teed off, something rare happened to Scottie Scheffler at 3:15 p.m. Saturday at the Travelers Championship: his name slid off the first page of the leaderboard. Scheffler, who began the day tied for the lead at 9 under with Justin Thomas and Tommy Fleetwood, made a triple-bogey seven on the first hole and followed it with a bogey on the fourth. Suddenly, the No. 1 player in the world — arguably the steadiest golfer on Earth — had gone from tied for first to a tie for 10th. Then on the fifth hole, Scheffler's frustrations mounted. He watched as an 11-foot par putt burned the right edge and his jaw dropped. He was stunned. Flabbergasted. Pick your adjective. 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I think it's like an element of your career that everybody wants,' Fleetwood said Saturday evening. 'I've given myself like a back-end chance a couple of times this year, but I've not been in contention. So this is like my first real chance, so I'm really excited about that and looking forward to it.' Saturday, he was spotless off the tee—14 of 14 fairways—and hit 15 of 18 greens in regulation. But it was the putter that made the difference. He rolled in birdies from 13 feet, 66 feet, and 19 feet. His highlight? A 31-footer from off the green on 13 that dropped for eagle—his second of the week on the par-5. 'Today, hit the ball great off the tee,' Fleetwoods said. 'I didn't really know the numbers but I hit every fairway, so that's a really cool stat, that's a really nice stat.' Russell Henley, who won the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill in March, vaulted up the leaderboard with a 61. 'I putted great, I feel like I did everything pretty well,' Henley said Saturday evening. 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