NBC’s prime-time broadcast of Day 2 of the Paris Games has concluded.
Here are some of the medal events happening tomorrow:
Shooting — 10-meter air rifle women’s and men’s final — 9:30 a.m. Paris/3:30 a.m. ET and 12 p.m. Paris/6 a.m. ET, respectively
Diving — Men’s synchronized 10-meter platform final — 11 a.m. Paris/5 a.m. ET
Equestrian — Eventing team jumping final and eventing individual jumping final — 11 a.m. Paris/5 a.m. ET and 3 p.m. Paris/9 a.m. ET, respectively
Cycling — Men’s cross-country mountain biking — 2 p.m. Paris/ 8:10 a.m. ET
Team USA’s women have won nine of the 12 medals Americans have collected in Paris so far.
That includes two of the U.S.’ three gold medals — one earned by Lee Kiefer in women’s individual foil fencing and one achieved by Torri Huske in the 100-meter butterfly.
Huske was also part of the 4×100-meter freestyle team, winning silver alongside teammates Kate Douglass, Gretchen Walsh and Simone Manuel.
Sarah Bacon and Kassidy Cook won silver in the women’s 3-meter synchronized springboard event, securing Team USA’s first medal of the Games.
Japan and Australia are tied with four gold medals each, but the Americans thus far have the most medals overall.
The U.S. men’s basketball team’s gold medal defense tipped off in earnest today, with a 110-84 win vs. Serbia to open group play.
Kevin Durant led the way for the U.S., scoring 23 points on 8-of-9 shooting. Durant, who missed all of exhibition play leading up to Paris, looked dominant coming off the bench.
LeBron James, playing in the Olympics for the first time since 2012, recorded 21 points, eight rebounds and nine assists, picking up where he left off in London 12 years ago.
Highlights: U.S. women’s soccer team leads group after 4-1 victory over Germany
The U.S. women’s soccer team pulled out to lead its group at the Olympics today with a 4-1 win against Germany, allowing a decent cushion as it heads into its next game against Australia later this week.
Going into their game against Germany, the American women were tied for first, but their gap in the standings this morning was quickly closed after Australia scored six goals against Zambia in the afternoon.
But the Americans played beautifully under pressure, forcing Germany’s defense to spend the majority of the game in its own box as they kept possession of the ball. Sophia Smith, who made her World Cup debut only last year, scored two goals and showed pure offensive drive.