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WATCH: Celtics star Jayson Tatum’s first press conference from Tokyo Olympics

The Boston All-Star spoke with the media early Thursday morning from Japan ahead of the pandemic-delayed 2020 Olympics.

Boston Celtics All-Star swingman Jayson Tatum made the trip overseas to Japan for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and took part in his first press conference with the media early in the morning on Thursday.

The St. Louis product spoke on a number of issues pertinent to the Olympics, working with new Celtics head coach Ime Udoka, playing against former teammates soon when Team USA takes on France in Olympic play, and the exit of lifelong friend Bradley Beal due to COVID precautions. With his sights firmly fixed on winning a gold medal with Team USA after some early turbulence in exhibition play, Tatum had plenty to say despite the early hour, and not just about the Games.

Watch the video embedded below courtesy of our friends at CLNS Media to hear all the Duke product had to share on his experience in Tokyo, with COVID, and much more.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LZYakhT2Lo

This post originally appeared on Celtics Wire. Follow us on Facebook!

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From swimming to 400m hurdles, 4 must-watch matchups at the Tokyo Olympics

You’re not going to want to miss these.

The Tokyo Olympics this summer officially start Friday with the Opening Ceremony, and some sports, like softball and soccer, actually already started playing in Games competition this week.

But with 339 medal events within 41 sports at the Tokyo Games — including several brand-new sports and two returning ones — schedules, games and individual matchups are a lot to keep track of.

So we here at For The Win are highlighting four must-see matchups at the Summer Games this year. Whether you’re a die-hard sports fan or a casual Olympics viewer, you’re probably not going to want to miss these. Let’s break them down.

RELATED: Meet some of the world’s best athletes ahead of the Tokyo Olympics

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The 400m IM is the most brutal swimming event, but Olympic medalist Chase Kalisz learned ‘to embrace the pain’

The 400 IM is perhaps the most grueling event in the pool.

Ask just about any long-time swimmer what event they’d absolutely dread racing, and it’s a good bet that many — if not, most — would point to the 400-meter individual medley in this hypothetical scenario.

The 400 IM is a wholly brutal event that conjures up feelings of agony, soreness and impossibility with 100 meters each of butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke and freestyle. So, obviously, to succeed in the event, swimmers’ versatility is crucial — but so is endurance and the strategy of knowing when and how to use your energy and muscle groups.

“The 400 IM is such a unique event because, I think personally, it is more strategic than any other event,” said Chase Kalisz, Team USA’s silver medalist in the 400 IM from the 2016 Rio Olympics. He also qualified for the Tokyo Olympics in both the 400 and 200-meter IMs — and the latter is 50 meters of each stroke.

“I think it’s a race that needs more planning than any other event. It needs [more] specialized training than any other event.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H5JKkKTeM0c

Prior to retiring from swimming after the 2016 Rio Games, Michael Phelps dominated the 400 IM for years, winning Olympic gold in 2004 and 2008. And it’s his last-standing individual world record with a time of 4:03.84, which he set at the 2008 Beijing Olympics on his way to winning a record-breaking eight gold medals.

Kalisz qualified for the Tokyo Olympics in June by winning the 400 IM with a time of 4:09.09 — the second-fastest time in the world this year in that event behind Japan’s Daiya Seto, who went 4:09.02 in April.

For 27-year-old Kalisz — a Maryland native who swam for Georgia in college who still trains with Bulldogs coach Jack Bauerle, along with Bob Bowman, who famously coached Phelps — that preparation involves focusing on the 400 IM in practice regardless of what kind of set he’s doing.

For example, Kalisz said that includes working to negative-split the second half — the breaststroke and freestyle legs — of 400 IMs in practice. He said it’s also about “being comfortable not using legs on my butterfly, even it was a butterfly-specific set,” because he can’t waste his legs on the opening 100 of the 400 IM if he wants to have a strong finish.

But make no mistake, even a top-notch swimmer like Kalisz thinks this event is a torturous one, but he said he’s worked to embrace the impending pain that’s guaranteed every time he dives into the water for the 400 IM.

“There’s a lot of really great 400 IMers out there,” Kalisz said. “But if you really want to break into that world-class, rarefied air of I guess, say, 4:07 or faster, that’s how you have to train, and that’s really kind of a mindset you have to have you have. You have to embrace the pain the 400 IM brings, and that’s what I spent the last year or so doing.

“I’ve had races where I was never really nervous for the race, but I was more so nervous for the pain that is about to come and how I was going to feel the next day. And that’s really what the culmination of this year for me has been, was embracing that, looking forward to that.”

Chase Kalisz and Michael Phelps practice at Arizona State in 2016. (Michael Chow, Arizona Republic/USA TODAY Network)

The 400 IM made its Olympic debut at the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, and 17-year-old American Dick Roth won gold and broke the world record, amazingly despite being told he needed to have an emergency operation for acute appendicitis. He refused the operation in favor of the Olympic final, and apparently the pain of the grueling race outweighed his illness because “I forgot my hot appendix during the race,” Roth said, via Swimming World magazine.

While Kalisz’s trials time in the 400 IM was a comfortable five seconds off Phelps’ world record, the Rio silver medalist owns the fourth-fastest time in history in the event at 4:05.90, which he swam at the 2017 world championships. After Phelps’ world record, Ryan Lochte has the second-fastest time ever (4:05.18) and Phelps has the third (4:05.25).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LY7QIrKSKOo

The 400 IM is so viciously taxing that Kalisz said he’s not sure how many more races he has left in him at this point in his swimming career.

“I could have two 400 IMs left in my career,” Kalisz said about the heats and final at the Tokyo Olympics (there are no semifinals in this event). “I don’t want to say that for sure. I don’t want to commit to anything for sure.

“I can go longer. But there’s not too many left of those for me, so I’m going to make every single one of them hurt as much as I can. And like I said, I’m looking forward to it.”

The heats of the men’s 400 IM open the swimming competition at the Tokyo Games on Saturday with the final set for the following day.

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Gators News: Josh Rivera an All-Star, plus soccer schedule and Olympics

Several Florida baseball players are chugging away in the summer leagues—with one earning an All-Star nod—while the soccer team gets ready for next season’s campaign by releasing its schedule.

It is humpday and so far this week has had a handful of stories from the Gator Nation to report on, especially between SEC Media Days and the start of play in the Tokyo Olympics. Additionally, several Florida baseball players are chugging away in the summer leagues — with one earning an All-Star nod — while the soccer team gets ready for next season’s campaign by releasing its schedule. Let us take a look at the latest from the Orange and Blue.

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Who will be playing for the USWNT at the Tokyo Olympics?

The U.S. Women’s National Team goes for gold.

The United States women’s national soccer team will be looking to avenge its disappointing fifth place finish from five years ago with a seat at the Tokyo Olympics medal podium this summer.

Led by head coach Vlatko Andonovski, the USWNT will feature 11 players from the 2016 Olympic team, including fan favorites such as Megan Rapinoe and Carli Lloyd. Seven members of the USWT will be competing in their first Olympic Games this year as well, blending both seasoned veterans and up-and-coming talent into a hopeful gold-medal contender.

With the Tokyo Olympics just around the corner, here is the full 18-player roster for the USWNT as the team takes to the global stage. Soccer at the Summer Games begins July 21, two days before the Opening Ceremony.

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Get to know Allyson Felix: 5 facts about the 5-time Olympian looking to make U.S. track and field history

Allyson Felix is on a quest to become the greatest track athlete ever.

For the Tokyo Olympics this summer, For The Win is helping you get to know some of the star Olympians competing on the world’s biggest stage. Leading up to the Opening Ceremony, we’re highlighting 23 athletes in 23 days. Up next up is Allyson Felix.

Allyson Felix is a name that people can easily take for granted.

When the Olympics come around, she’s always a name you hear being brought up by the broadcast crew. She’s never been the most flashy name, she’s never been the most hyped.

But she’s always been there and, most importantly, she’s always dominated.

Felix is one of the most decorated track stars in U.S. history. She’s done nothing but when medals on the biggest stages. She absolutely dominated in the 2016 games in Rio with three total medals, and she’s looking to do the same in Tokyo while making a little bit of history.

At Olympic Trials in June, Felix qualified for her fifth Olympic Games by finishing second in the women’s 400-meter final with a time of 50.02 seconds. She won silver in the event in 2016. This time around, she failed to qualify for the 200-meter race — the individual event in which she won gold at the 2012 London Games and silvers in both the 2008 Beijing and 2004 Athens Games.

Here’s what you need to know about one of Team USA’s best athletes.

READ MORE FROM OUR TOKYO OLYMPICS 23 in 23 SERIES HERE.

Lakers’ Marc Gasol makes Spain’s 12-man roster for Tokyo Olympics

Los Angeles Lakers center Marc Gasol will play for Spain at the Tokyo Olympics.

Los Angeles Lakers center Marc Gasol was named to Spain’s 12-man roster for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, the team announced.

Gasol, 36, will represent his country for the third time at the Olympic level. Gasol was on Spain’s roster in 2008 and 2012 when the country won the silver medal both times.

Spain had selected Gasol to its 18-man preliminary roster for exhibition games leading up the tournament, but six players needed to be cut as only 12 can head to Tokyo.

Joining Gasol on Spain’s roster are former Laker and brother, Pau Gasol, Ricky Rubio, Juancho Hernangomez and Willy Hernangomez; the latter three are in the NBA.

Here’s the full roster, via Team Spain’s basketball Twitter:

Gasol is slated to be the only Laker playing in Tokyo. Anthony Davis reportedly wanted to focus on healing from an injury-riddled season, and LeBron James subtly declined during a press conference by referencing his new movie, “Space Jam: A New Legacy”.

Dennis Schroder could’ve represented Germany, who won the qualifying tournament to make the Olympics, but his status as an unrestricted free agent posed insurance issues.

Spain kicks off the Olympics against the hosts, Japan, on July 26 at 5:00 a.m. PST.

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Team USA vs the world: USA Basketball’s schedule for the Tokyo Olympics

Pencil in these dates and times to catch Boston’s Jayson Tatum in action with Team USA in their quest for Gold in the Tokyo Olympics.

Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum and Team USA will be headed across the wide expanses of the Pacific Ocean soon to make the trip to Japan for the pandemic-delayed 2020 Tokyo Olympics soon. Headed there in order to compete for a Gold medal after a tough start and solid finish to a slate of exhibition games hosted in Las Vegas, Nevada, it is a “dream come true” for the Duke product.

USA Basketball got their act together after dropping their two initial friendlies to the Nigerian and Australian national teams before garnering wins against the Argentinian and Spanish national teams (a rematch with Australia was canceled over COVID concerns).

Let’s take a look at the schedule of Team USA in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics Men’s 5-on-5 competition.